Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Does France have right plan to revive its economy?

PARIS (AP) ? The man charged with reviving France's shrinking economy and attracting businesses to invest here is gaining a reputation for doing the opposite.

As the country's first-ever minister for industrial renewal, Arnaud Montebourg has told the world's largest steelmaker it is not welcome in France; exchanged angry letters with the head of an American tire company he was supposedly wooing; and scuttled Yahoo's offer to buy the majority of a video-sharing website.

Montebourg, a 50-year-old lawyer from Burgundy, is the public face of President Francois Hollande's plan to revitalize Europe's second-largest economy, which is in recession and grappling with 11 percent unemployment. The plan is to make the French economy more competitive globally ? especially for manufacturers ? by making it easier to fire workers, offering a payroll tax credit and investing in small businesses.

Economists have praised the labor reforms as a step in the right direction. But mostly they say France's economic plan is all wrong: It is too complicated; it favors a top-down approach to innovation; and it ignores some of the most serious problems plaguing France's economy, such as high labor costs.

And then there is Montebourg, whose public spats with international companies and efforts to block layoffs are making France look like an unappealing place to do business.

In fairness to Montebourg, he's not so much the problem as he is the symbol of it, analysts say. Even if Hollande were to replace him ? and that's looking increasingly likely ? it's unclear whether the substance of the industrial renewal strategy would change.

The sheer size of France's economy has cushioned it somewhat from the worst of Europe's debt crisis, which has brought depression-level unemployment to countries like Spain and Greece. It is home to many huge industrial companies, like EADS, parent company to plane-maker Airbus; Total, the world's fifth-largest investor-owned oil company; and Sanofi, the world's fourth-largest pharmaceutical company. France is also a cradle for design, high fashion and fine wine, embodied by world leaders like LVMH and L'Oreal.

But make no mistake, analysts warn: The French economy, which had no growth in 2012 and shrank at an annualized rate of 0.8 percent in the first three months of 2013, is in slow-motion free fall.

Profit margins at French companies are the lowest they have been in 30 years. In the past decade, one in six industrial jobs has been lost. And economists forecast unemployment will rise to 11.6 percent next year.

Hollande says the decline in French manufacturing ? from 16 percent of gross domestic product in 1999 to 10.7 percent a decade later ? is at the heart of his country's stagnation. Many European economies have seen a similar trend, but France's slide has been more pronounced than most. Reverse the decline, Hollande believes, and you reverse the stagnation.

"The goal of reindustrialization is a perfectly legitimate goal. The only question to ask for France is ... whether it's too late," says Elie Cohen, an economist at Sciences Po university in Paris. "It's probably too late."

Serge Lelard, who started a plastics company called Microplast in 1984, feels the same way. Montebourg, who buzzes around France touring businesses on a near-weekly basis, recently visited Microplast's factory outside Paris. He held it up as an example of the kind of small manufacturing businesses that France needs to keep and attract.

But Lelard is dismissive of the government's reindustrialization plan. He says there is too much talk and not enough action that addresses the competitive disadvantages French companies face in the global marketplace.

Microplast, which sells plastic bits that connect the wires in cars, has struggled along with the French auto industry. Lelard is pessimistic about the company's chances of survival.

France's economic challenges are rooted in government policies that protect workers at the expense of their employers. It has the highest payroll taxes in the European Union to fund generous health and retirement benefits. It has the highest tax on capital, which discourages investment. It aggressively fights companies that try to outsource jobs. And it makes firing an employee expensive and difficult.

These problems have existed for decades, but a growing global economy and France's control over its own currency and spending policies masked them. Slowly, however, those masks have been removed.

First, the euro was introduced at the turn of the millennium. Europe's strongest economies, like Germany, gained a competitive advantage: The value of the euro, held down by the weaker nations that used it, made German exports more affordable overseas. By contrast, countries like France suffered because the euro was valued more highly than their own currency, making French exports more expensive for buyers outside the eurozone.

Then the global recession dried up demand for French products at home and around the world. Finally, Europe's debt crisis prompted the government to cut spending and raise some taxes to reduce its budget deficit.

With these crutches pulled away, France's industry was pushed to its breaking point.

But Hollande, a Socialist, came to power last year by promising more of the same: He vowed to spark growth without cutting generous benefits.

There are three main planks to Hollande's reindustrialization plan: up to a 6 percent rebate for companies on some payroll taxes, labor reforms that make it easier to fire employees or cut their salaries during hard times, and a public investment bank with 42 billion euros ($55 billion) to invest in small businesses.

But new programs are announced frequently. Millions in grants and other incentives have been promised for everything from spurring the construction of electric cars to bringing robots to factory floors.

"That's exactly what you should not do. They're ... complicating instead of simplifying," says Anders Aslund, an economist with the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. Aslund says the government should avoid giving grants for specific industries and instead help all industries ? with permanent tax breaks, for example.

Last year, Montebourg unveiled a plan to give several hundred million euros in grants and tax credits to car companies and subcontractors in an effort to encourage the development of electric cars and batteries.

But economists say the French government should not try to invent successful sectors. Never mind that France is an unlikely place to incubate an auto revolution. Its car industry can't compete with global rivals like Volkswagen and Hyundai that have lower labor costs and stronger cultures of innovation. For example, French research institutions lack the strong links to industry that allow entrepreneurs in other countries to quickly convert lab discoveries into products.

The flip side of France's efforts to create booming new industries is its aversion to letting struggling ones die out.

"A saved job is always a victory," Montebourg, who is on the far left of the Socialist party, said at a recent lunch with journalists. He declined to be interviewed for this story.

But that's not how many economists see it. Part of Germany's success is its willingness to let some lower-level manufacturing jobs move to other countries, says Christian Ketels, a researcher at Harvard Business School. That allows German companies to stay competitive and keep high-skilled, higher-paid jobs at home.

"To my knowledge, France is really the only country in Europe that is upset about outsourcing," says Aslund.

One of the most glaring examples of this no-job-left-behind policy has been France's campaign to block steelmaker ArcelorMittal from shuttering the two blast furnaces at its processing plant in Lorraine, eastern France ? in spite of the fact that local mines are used up, it's far from ports and its furnaces are out of date.

That plant is "a perfect example of what you should close down," says Aslund.

Instead, Montebourg took up the cause, threatening to nationalize the plant and declaring that the company wasn't welcome in France. It's unclear how much of this rhetoric was in line with government policy ? the suggestions of nationalization were quickly struck down by the prime minister ? but the affair deeply bruised France's reputation as a serious place for business. In the end, the company will close the furnaces but other steel-processing operations at the plant will continue.

Montebourg also tried to save a Goodyear plant in northern France by asking American tire manufacturer Titan if it was willing to invest. The answer from Titan's CEO mocked France's work practices in an embarrassing public letter ? and Montebourg took the bait, shooting back an equally chest-thumping missive.

There looks to be little hope of saving the Goodyear plant, but litigation could drag on for months if not years.

Just this month, Montebourg vetoed Yahoo's attempt to take a 75 percent stake in video-sharing website, Dailymotion. Citing concerns about Yahoo's health as a company, Montebourg said the government, which owns a stake in Dailymotion's owner, France Telecom, would only approve a 50-50 deal. Yahoo walked away.

Business owners say that the government remains more of a hindrance than a help. There are too many regulations and too much paperwork even for mundane tasks.

But the fundamental problem French manufacturers face is simple: Workers get paid too much to make products that cost too little.

The French government argues that its hourly labor costs are not much higher than Germany's ? 34.20 euros per hour on average in 2012 versus 30.40 euros per hour, according to Eurostat. But France's range of products ? with some notable exceptions, like Chanel handbags or Moet & Chandon champagne ? is generally of a lower quality than Germany's.

In other words, if it costs the same to make a Peugeot as it does a BMW, guess which company is going to have more left over to reinvest in innovation? And investing in innovation is how you make a Peugeot more like a BMW.

And it's not even that France pays top dollar to attract the best workers. Its wages are above average, though not spectacularly so. But its payroll taxes are the highest in Europe.

The government's new "competitiveness tax credit," which will eventually give companies up to 6 percent back on some workers' salaries, is a step toward lessening this burden for a time. Early surveys, however, show few companies are taking advantage of it, according to study by consultancy Lowendalmasai.

How come? The paperwork is too complex.

___

Follow Sarah DiLorenzo at http://twitter.com/sdilorenzo.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/does-france-plan-revive-economy-092441481.html

i am legend san antonio spurs greta van susteren tony parker the five year engagement chris kreider correspondents dinner 2012

Video: Can Corporate Profits Sustain the Rally

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51946372/

nikki minaj album of the year grammy red carpet grammy award winners the band perry grammy awards whitney houston autopsy

Samsung to exhibit 13.3-inch notebook display with 3,200 x 1,800 resolution

Samsung to exhibit 133inch notebook display with 3,200 x 1,800 resolution

On top of yesterday's 4K announcement, Samsung has also given us a quick heads-up on one of the prototype displays it's planning to show off at this year's Display Week event. It's a highly gawp-worthy 3,200 x 1,800 ("WQXGA+") panel destined for 13-inch laptops that insist on taking things further than the Retina MacBook Pro (2,560 x 1,600) or Samsung's Series 9 prototype (2,560 x 1,440, shown above). As an added advantage, the panel is promised to deliver "30 percent greater power-savings" compared to existing LCDs thanks to a reduction in the number of driver circuits as well as more efficient backlight units. Display Week starts today, so we should soon have a first-person account of this unheard-of pixel density straight from Samsung's stall.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/lhSM0qnP48c/

paul ryan michele bachmann donald trump Election 2012 map Election Results Map Early voting results Dick Morris

Scotland says better off without Britain, but with the pound

By William James

LONDON (Reuters) - Ending Britain's 306-year rule would allow Scotland to reverse generations of economic mismanagement and free its lawmakers to boost economic growth, say Scottish nationalists campaigning to split from the UK.

Independence would not only bring the long-standing and sometimes-troubled union to an end, but allow tax cuts and investment focused on boosting exports to spur growth on the Scottish side of the border.

In an attempt to sour support for independence ahead of a Scottish referendum in September 2014, Britain's rulers have issued a flurry of warnings in recent months about the dangers of Scotland scrapping its union with England.

Scotland, according to the British government, would have trouble keeping the pound, its economy would be dangerously exposed to the vicissitudes of the oil market and its banking sector would be vulnerable to a Cyprus-style debt crisis.

But the Scottish government hit back at those gloomy views with a report entitled "Scotland's Economy: The Case for Independence" which said years of shoddy London policies had cost Scotland 19,000 new jobs and hampered growth for decades.

"The UK government's economic policies have been holding Scotland back for generations," said Scotland's Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. "Only with the powers of independence can Scotland meet its full potential."

Scotland's $190 billion economy -- roughly the size of New Zealand's -- makes up about 8 percent of the United Kingdom's $2.4 trillion economy, according to most international measures and Scotland's own economic forecasts.

Opinion polls show about a third of Scottish voters want independence, while nearly 60 percent want to stay part of Britain.

KEEP THE POUND

Scotland said that if granted independence it wanted to keep using the British pound under a currency union arrangement and strengthen ties with the European Union, steps which it said could increase exports by 50 percent over four years.

"A currency union would provide the full flexibility to vary tax and spending decisions to target key opportunities and challenges in Scotland," the report said.

It cited tourism, food and drink and manufacturing as some of the industries that would benefit from independence and the freedom to deal directly with partners in Europe and beyond.

Opponents of independence in London have warned Scotland it would have to renegotiate European Union membership as a separate sovereign state and that its share of North Sea oil revenues would also be the subject of discussion.

Alistair Darling, a Scottish politician who served as finance minister under the Labour government between 2007 and 2010, said the economic case for an independent Scotland was "totally unconvincing".

He said oil, gas and renewable energy sectors were dependent on large UK subsidies and that Scotland's financial sector relied heavily upon access to the rest of the British market.

The remaining oil and gas reserves of the North Sea could be worth up to $2.28 trillion according to Scottish government analysis, and the report backs creating a Norwegian-style oil wealth fund to cushion the blow of any future economic shocks.

"Nothing lasts for ever but we know that oil and gas resources are going to last a long time," said Alex Salmond, Scotland's first minister and leader of the Scottish National Party.

An independent Scotland could attract investment by cutting corporation tax, simplifying regulatory structures and providing incentives for companies to invest in training their workers.

A three percent cut in corporation tax could boost economic output by 1.4 percent and raise employment by 1.1 percent by attracting investment over the next 20 years, the report said.

Scotland could also save money with a trimmed down regulation system compared to that of the UK, that created greater certainty for industries and higher levels of protection for consumers, the report said.

($1 = 0.6570 British pounds)

(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scotland-says-better-off-without-britain-pound-164525121.html

carlos pena amanda bynes arrested f 18 jet crash in virginia beach john tortorella

LA jeweler pleads guilty in KPMG case

(AP) ? The owner of a jewelry store has pleaded guilty in Los Angeles for his role in an insider-trading case involving a former senior partner at accounting firm KPMG.

Federal prosecutors say 52-year-old Bryan Shaw entered his plea Monday to one count of conspiracy. He's scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 16 when he faces a maximum of five years in prison.

Authorities say Shaw made over $1 million in illicit profits by trading in advance of company announcements on earnings results or mergers. In exchange, he gave former KPMG accountant Scott London bags filled with cash, along with a Rolex watch and jewelry for his wife, among other items.

London also is charged with conspiracy and is scheduled to be arraigned later this week.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-20-KPMG-Jeweler/id-eea609dccf0c4d48862778ad60fed10f

april fools Good April Fools Jokes Dumpster Diaper the beach Fear Airport Terminal

Nationwide plans to issue new loss-absorbing debt

LONDON (Reuters) - Nationwide, Britain's biggest customer-owned financial services group, plans to issue a new form of so-called loss-absorbing debt in order to bolster its capital position.

Loss-absorbing debt is used by financial companies to protect themselves against a potential market downturn. Under certain circumstances, the debtholders would incur losses, thereby easing the burden on the issuer.

Nationwide could raise between 300 million and 500 million pounds through the issue of so-called core capital deferred shares (CCDS), though a source close to the building society said the size and timing of the issue had not yet been finalised.

Chief Executive Graham Beale said in an interview on the Financial Times website that Nationwide had been working on creating the new instrument as an alternative to permanent interest-bearing shares (Pibs), which are no longer regarded as core Tier 1 capital - a measure of financial strength favoured by regulators.

"We've been working with the regulators to design a new instrument and we've come up with something called core capital deferred shares or CCDS," Beale said. "It's not been issued yet but will ultimately replace Pibs so that organisations can top up capital or respond to needs for additional capital by using that new instrument."

The capital position of mutuals has been brought into focus by difficulties at the Co-operative Bank, which is facing a capital shortfall that some analysts say could be as large as 1.8 billion pounds.

Credit agency Moody's downgraded Co-op's debt ratings earlier in May, prompting the departure of the bank's chief executive, Barry Tootell.

Beale said Nationwide planned to issue the debt in the near future.

"I would say within the next 12 months is a realistic timeframe, nothing big, it's just really an issue to prove that there is an appetite," he said.

(Reporting by Matt Scuffham; Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nationwide-plans-issue-loss-absorbing-debt-171244767.html

rashard lewis curacao curacao home run derby kourtney kardashian kourtney kardashian DNS Changer

Avril Lavigne Says Wedding Planning Is 'Full-Time Job'

'Here's to Never Growing Up' singer tells MTV News about her upcoming celebration with Nickelback's Chad Kroeger.
By Christina Garibaldi

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707673/avril-lavigne-wedding-plans-chad-kroeger-nickelback.jhtml

nick cannon lindsay lohan saturday night live

Videos of tornado and close ups of destruction

By Andrea Shalal-Esa WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force plans to start operational use of Lockheed Martin Corp.-built F-35 fighter jets in mid-2016, a year earlier than planned, using a similar software package as the Marine Corps, two sources familiar with the plans said on Monday. The Air Force's decision to accelerate its introduction with a slightly less capable version of the F-35 software package means the planes will carry fewer weapons at first, although the software will later be upgraded to the final version, said the sources, who were not authorized to speak publicly. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/videos-massive-tornado-rips-oklahoma-215949606.html

Green Coffee Bean Extract september 11 9/11 Memorial 911 masterchef Dictionary.com Chicago teachers strike

Monday, May 20, 2013

Obama Aide Chides GOP for 'Fishing' (WSJ)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306873894?client_source=feed&format=rss

budweiser shootout animal house invincible jesse jackson whitney houston funeral video tyler perry whitney houston r kelly

Springs-area attractions investing in big improvements for tourists ...

Share via email

Elephant-1Colorado Springs area attractions and tourist destinations have invested, or plan to invest, almost $134 million in improvements this year.

The Colorado Springs Convention and Visitors Bureau reached out to its members to find out what they had planned. The results provided an impressive list of local attractions planning to invest anywhere from tens of thousands to $90 million in their properties, as the CVB shared at its annual business meeting earlier this month.

?After talking about the fire last year and our Welcome Back campaign, we really wanted to showcase everything these attractions are doing and the way they?re investing in the season and in the future,? said Chelsy Murphy, director of communications for the CVB.

The CVB has not historically collected data from members about how much they invest in their properties each year to improve facilities. But Doug Price, CVB president and CEO, said he felt strongly that local tourism businesses were doing more this year than they had in the past several years.

?I can say for sure that the economy has kept a number of our members kind of on the sidelines, and they haven?t been able to make these kinds of investments,? Price said.

The CVB presented investment figures to the public, announcing big-dollar improvements like the $90 million worth of upgrades to The Broadmoor and the $13.5 million Encounter Africa exhibit at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo.

?All these improvements help us tell a new and better story about all the new things there are to see and do in Colorado Springs,? Price said. ?And I think it means our members have the confidence to make significant investments. It improves our visitor experience.?

Improvements

Among the big investments was more than $22.5 million in improvements at the Colorado Springs Airport, which includes the new Bristol Brewing Co. bar, aesthetic enhancements and security upgrades, Murphy said.

The Pikes Peak Highway added a new toll gate and ranger station for $250,000.

Royal Gorge Bridge and Park is spending $50,000 on a new children?s playground, complete with state-of-the-art equipment like a child-size maze and a 76-foot simulated cave crawl.

Garden of the Gods Campground and RV Park is investing more than $800,000 in upgrades.

?These are just the investments that we know our members are making,? Murphy said. ?There are probably even more that we don?t know about.?

The stories of attractions and their projects differ as much as the attractions themselves.

The Broadmoor

Since Colorado billionaire Philip Anschutz purchased the company that owns The Broadmoor in late 2011, he has been investing in property improvements.

?Right now we?re on Phase One of a two-year renovation,? said Dennis Lesko, marketing manager for The Broadmoor. The first phase has concentrated on enhancing the hotel?s dining options. Its newest restaurant, Play, includes six lanes of bowling and menu items including milkshakes.

Lesko said part of the aim of the new restaurant is to bring more locals into the hotel for dining and entertainment.

?It has become very popular very quickly,? he said.

The Broadmoor also expanded its Golden Bee, adding 50 indoor seats and 80 patio seats, which more than triples the capacity of the restaurant and bar.

Inside the main hotel, the Tavern was also remodeled and now includes a French bistro-style addition called Le Jardin that features a 16-foot chandelier centerpiece. All the new dining, along with Emerald Valley Ranch ? 10 luxury cabins set eight miles into the mountains above the resort, designed to offer an off-the-beaten-path, woodsy experience for guests ? will improve the resort?s attractiveness to convention visitors and bring more local traffic to The Broadmoor, Lesko said.

Starting in the fall, the hotel will close its West Building and begin extensive renovations on it, updating rooms and turning its Charles Court restaurant into one that will be known for upscale Italian fare.

Cheyenne Mountain Zoo

When the zoo opened its big Encounter Africa exhibit earlier this month, a lot of visitors might not have known that the $13.5 million exhibit only represents about a third of the money the zoo has invested in permanent improvements over the past eight years, said Bob Chastain, president and CEO of the zoo. The elephants, meerkats, lions and year-round alligators that visitors will soon enjoy are all part of a larger plan to continue growing zoo attendance, Chastain said.

The zoo funds its operations with revenue from admissions and uses donor funds to make improvements. It?s one of just about 10 zoos among the 220 nationally accredited zoos that don?t receive tax funding.

Chastain noticed after the zoo opened its new giraffe exhibit in 2003 that visitor numbers increased, but immediately dropped off again.

?We kept making small improvements,? he said, ?and we started to hear people say, ?Every time I come to the zoo, I see something new.??

That?s when zoo administration decided to stop investing in traveling exhibits and instead continue putting money into reasonably priced permanent improvements.

?We?ve been passionately pursuing that goal ever since 2008,? Chastain said, ?and it has paid off.?

Zoo numbers climbed at a rate of 20,000 to 50,000 a year until the total attendance hit a record high of 607,000 two years ago. That number slipped last year, which Chastain credits directly to the Waldo Canyon fire.

The zoo was ranked among the top 10 zoos in the country by TripAdvisor last year.

?That?s pretty impressive,? Chastain said. ?That puts us in the same breath as the San Diego Zoo.?

As long as the zoo keeps investing, he said, he expects visitor numbers and national recognition will continue to grow.

Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument

The monument has a new $2.5 million Visitor and Nature Center. It?s a state-of-the-art Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Gold-certified facility, which means it?s one of the greenest buildings in the region.

Florissant Fossil Beds administrators and volunteers have been fighting for more than 40 years to get a visitors center for the area, which is managed by the National Park Service, said Jeff Wolin, lead interpreter for the fossil beds.

He said the monument was able a few years ago to get money for plans, which just happened to be ready when the Parks Service released its line-item construction budget and started looking for shovel-ready projects last year. The new facility provides space for researchers along with a big information center that Wolin is filling this month with fossils and exhibits.

?We?re going from 96 square feet of exhibit space to 870 square feet,? Wolin said.

The new visitors center and exhibits have inspired the monument staff to reach out and work on promoting it more to local organizations like the Woodland Park Chamber of Commerce and area schools.

Wolin said the addition of the new center and the excitement that comes with it could boost visitor numbers considerably from their current 60,000 a year.

?I feel really proud and happy to have such a nice building for our visitors,? Wolin said.

Echo Canyon River Expeditions

The CVB reported that this Ca?on City whitewater rafting outfitter has invested $35,000 in its new facility this year.

?That?s peanuts,? said owner Andy Neinas.

He says he actually has invested more than $2 million in his facility over the past two years. And the investment has fundamentally changed his revenue stream. After 13 years as the owner of the rafting company, he built a shiny new building with nice changing rooms, lobby area, and a restaurant-bar seating 200.

?Very plainly, I think the consumer public has more and more expectations,? Neinas said. ?Whether they?re conscious of it or not, they?re seeking more amenities.?

But it?s not just about being more competitive. It?s also about generating a new revenue stream.

The restaurant and bar make it easier for guests to hang out. It has allowed Neinas to create an apr?s-rafting culture that encourages continued spending in the same way apr?s-ski has in mountain town bars and restaurants for years.

?It?s all about capturing that discretionary dollar,? he said.

His cost to get customers through his door is high, Neinas said. He spends a lot on media and marketing campaigns.

?Once people are here, the only reason they leave is because they run out of things to do and see,? Neinas said. ?They?re obviously going to eat before or after they raft with us. So now they can do it here.?

He said future expansion plans include adding lodging options.

Miramont Castle

The Manitou Springs Historical Society received a matching grant from the Colorado Historical Society that will allow the Manitou organization to make a $60,000 investment in the exterior stonework of the Miramont Castle building.

?The elements have taken their toll,? said Peggie Yager, treasurer for the Manitou Historical Society.

The society bought the castle in 1976 and has carefully preserved it since then, collecting revenue for the castle?s upkeep from admissions, tea-room sales, special events and donations.

About 24,000 visitors go through the castle each year. The stonework improvements probably won?t attract new guests, Yager said, but they will preserve the castle so visitors can continue to tour it safely for years to come.

Iron Springs Chateau

Two couples with long histories working at the Iron Springs Chateau Melodrama Dinner Theater in Manitou Springs bought the business in January.

?We absolutely love it and couldn?t reconcile with the idea of it closing down,? said Rebekah Ratterree, one of the new owners.

The former owners wanted to retire, she said.

Ratterree and her partners have invested $10,000 in updating the kitchen so a chef can prepare the dinner theater food to order. In the past, meals had to be premade.

The new owners want to tackle a lot of projects over the next 10 years, Ratterree said. But the kitchen was the most pressing. She said she expects visitor numbers to climb from an average of 7,000 a year to about 10,000 a year as the once-seasonal business will now be open year-round.

Making progress

The following members of the Colorado Springs Convention and Visitors Bureau have made or plan to make significant capital investments this year.

Attraction Investment
The Broadmoor $90 million
Airport upgrades/additions $22.5 million
Cheyenne Mountain Zoo Encounter Africa $13.5 million
Cheyenne Mountain Resort golf course $3.8 million
Florissant Fossil Beds Visitor & Nature Center $2.5 million
Garden of the Gods Campground & RV Park $800,000
Pikes Peak Gateway Phase II $250,000
Miramont Castle Restoration $60,000
Royal Gorge Bridge & Park, new play park $50,000
Echo Canyon Rafting Expeditions $35,000
Iron Springs Chateau $10,000
May Museum Gift Shop $8,000

Source: http://csbj.com/2013/05/20/springs-area-attractions-investing-in-big-improvements-for-tourists/

kasey kahne angelina jolie right leg saving face academy award winners best picture 2012 oscar winners channel 3 news

Mark Suster Talks Founder CEOs, The Acqui-Hire Frenzy, And Much More [TCTV]

marksustertctvMark Suster of Los Angeles' GRP Partners is known for his unique insights on the tech and digital media worlds, having famously had success on "both sides of the table" as a repeat entrepreneur turned investor over nearly two decades in the industry. And he hit headlines several times this week, with his viewpoints on acqui-hires (he says they're often very bad) and founders stepping down from the CEO role (he says sometimes, it's the best thing that can happen.)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QgYSEJ67IVA/

badminton Dominique Dawes Gabby Olympic Gymnast Robyn Lawley Gore Vidal mlb trade rumors Misty May And Kerri Walsh

CA-NEWS Summary

Rome protest turns up heat on new PM Letta

ROME (Reuters) - Thousands of people protested in Rome on Saturday against austerity policies and high unemployment, urging new Prime Minister Enrico Letta to focus on creating jobs to help pull the country out of recession. "We hope that this government will finally start listening to us because we are losing our patience," said Enzo Bernardis, who joined the sea of protesters waving red flags and calling for more workers' rights and better contracts.

North Korea fires three short-range missiles

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea fired three short-range missiles from its east coast on Saturday, South Korea's Defence Ministry said, prompting Western powers to urge Pyongyang to exercise restraint. Launches by the North of short-range missiles are not uncommon but, after recent warnings from the communist state of impending nuclear war, such actions raise concerns about the region's security.

Thirteen killed, 10 police kidnapped in Iraq violence

RAMADI, Iraq (Reuters) - Suspected Sunni Muslim militants killed four state-backed Sunni fighters in Iraq on Saturday, security sources said, apparently viewing them as collaborators with the Shi'ite-led government of a nation plagued by sectarian hatred. Sunni-Shi'ite tensions in Iraq have been amplified by the conflict between mostly Sunni rebels and President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite-dominated forces in neighboring Syria.

Gunmen kill senior woman member of Pakistani party led by Imran Khan

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Gunmen killed a senior female politician from a reformist party in Pakistan on Saturday night, the latest violent incident in a bloody election campaign and one that set off a war of words between two major opposition parties. Around 150 people were killed in the run-up to national elections held last week, which handed a landslide victory to opposition leader Nawaz Sharif and his PML-N party.

Syria's Assad: Little chance peace talks would succeed - newspaper

LIMA (Reuters) - Proposed peace talks for Syria would not curb "terrorism" in the country and it is unrealistic to think they would succeed, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said in an interview published in an Argentine newspaper on Saturday. Speaking in Syria with the newspaper Clarin, Assad said he was doubtful that mediation the United States and Russia have proposed could settle a deadly conflict that has convulsed the country for two years.

Enraged by kidnapping, Egyptian police block Gaza border

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian police angered by the kidnapping of seven colleagues by Islamist gunmen kept a crossing into the Gaza Strip closed again on Saturday, stranding hundreds of Palestinian travelers, witnesses said. The protest began on Friday when police strung barbed wire across the Rafah border post and chained up the gates, local residents said, a day after the abductions.

Regional force boosts troop numbers in Central African Republic

LIBREVILLE (Reuters) - African military chiefs agreed on Saturday to more than double the size of a regional peacekeeping force deployed in Central African Republic, where authorities have struggled to contain violence after a rebel takeover. Thousands of fighters from the Seleka rebel coalition led by Michel Djotodia marched into the capital Bangui on March 24, forcing President Francois Bozize to flee to neighboring Cameroon.

At least four suspected militants killed in Yemen drone strike

ADEN (Reuters) - At least four people were killed and a number of others wounded in a drone strike on a vehicle carrying suspected al Qaeda members in southern Yemen, a local official said on Saturday. The official said the strike took place at dawn on Saturday on a road to the north of Jaar in Abyan Governorate, near Aden. He did not say who was behind the strike, but previous drone strikes have been carried out by the United States.

Israel warns against Russian arms supply to Syria

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel said on Saturday that advanced weapons supplied by Russia to war-torn Syria could end up in the wrong hands and be used against the Jewish state. A Russian shipment of Yakhont anti-ship missiles to Syria was condemned by the United States on Friday and Israel is also alarmed by the prospect of Russia supplying S-300 advanced air defense missile systems to Damascus.

Church must help the poorest, not dissect theology, pope says

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis shared personal moments with 200,000 people on Saturday, telling them he sometimes nods off while praying at the end of a long day and that it "breaks my heart" that the death of a homeless person is not news. Francis, who has made straight talk and simplicity a hallmark of his papacy, made his unscripted comments in answers to questions by four people at a huge international gathering of Catholic associations in St. Peter's Square.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ca-news-summary-003416837.html

esperanza spalding jessica sanchez robert kennedy cardinals san diego weather frances bean cobain north korea missile launch

Miguel Jumps on Fans' Heads During Billboard Music Awards Performance

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/miguel-jumps-on-fans-heads-during-billboard-music-awards-perform/

josh smith presidents day mindy mccready mindy mccready downton abbey nba all star game danica patrick

Helicopter money as a policy option ? naked capitalism

By Lucrezia Reichlin, Professor of Economics at London Business School; co-founder, Now-Casting Economics and CEPR Research Director, Adair Turner, Member of the UK Financial Policy Committee; Senior Research Fellow, Institute for New Economic Thinking, and Michael Woodford, John Bates Clark Professor of Political Economy, Columbia University and CEPR Research Fellow. Originally published at VoxEU.

With persistently weak economic conditions becoming the norm in Europe, economists are considering increasingly unconventional policy options. One tool that has yet to be taken out of storage is ?helicopter money?, i.e. the overt monetary financing of government deficits. This column recounts a policy debate on helicopter money that was held at LBS in April 2013 among three of the world?s leading monetary economists.

Introduction by Reichlin

Since the crisis central banks have implemented a variety of non-standard monetary policies aiming at stabilising nominal demand in the presence of major disruptions in financial markets. These policies had different intermediate objectives: market making, controlling long term interest rates or asset prices, support of credit via subsidies. They had a role in stabilising financial markets after the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the banking crisis which followed. Their effects on the real economy, however, are uncertain.1

Notwithstanding this uncertainty the Bank of Japan has recently engaged in bold action, announcing that it will double the monetary base and its holding of government bonds in the next two years.

  • Some think that quantitative easing will fuel the next financial bubble and that exiting will create financial instability (see Stein 2013).
  • Others think that more should be done to sustain the real economy.

Adair Turner has recently put a different option on the table (Turner 2013): ?helicopter money? or permanent money creation. This is an idea that was discussed in the thirties in the US as a response to the great recession (see Friedman 1948 and Simon 1936) and more recently by Bernanke in relation to the zero lower bound problem in Japan (Bernanke 2003). As Bernanke has suggested it can be implemented via transfers to households and businesses via a tax cut coupled with incremental purchases of government debt, so that the tax cut is in effect financed by money creation.

Although the idea has been around a long time it is a taboo today. Non-standard monetary policies in response to the recent crisis have all led to an increase in the size of central banks? balance sheets but in the recent experience no central bank, including the Bank of Japan, has purposefully increased the monetary base and committed to keep this additional money in circulation permanently. The idea, however, gets some support from academia.

In his 2012 Jackson Hole speech Michael Woodford suggested a version of flexible inflation targeting whereby the central bank commits future monetary policy to a permanently higher nominal target (such as the path of nominal GDP) and discussed various tools within that framework, including permanent increases in the monetary base via fiscal transfers (Woodford 2012).

In a situation of persistently weak economic conditions it makes sense to consider all options including tools that have stayed long in the closet.
The following is a summary of the questions posed by Reichlin and the answers by Turner and Woodford.

Question one : Adair, can you explain why, in your view, helicopter money is an option for monetary policy that is relevant to today?

?Helicopter money? ??by which we mean overt money finance of increased fiscal deficits ??may in some circumstances be the only certain way to stimulate nominal demand, and may carry with it less risk to future financial stability than the unconventional monetary policies currently being deployed.

The crucial first question is: do we want more nominal demand? The answer should be yes if (i) we are confident that some of the increase will take the form of increased real output or (ii) if some increase in the inflation rate is in itself desirable. These conditions seem likely to apply in some developed economies today, with nominal GDP growth rates very low, depressed by private sector deleveraging in the aftermath of the financial crisis. And if these conditions do not pertain, we should not be trying to stimulate nominal GDP by any means.

So let?s assume that increased nominal GDP growth is desirable. The problem is that other levers may be ineffective or have adverse side effects. Monetary policy, in both its conventional and unconventional forms, may be ?pushing on a string?. Reducing policy interest rates to the zero bound fails to stimulate credit supply and demand in a ?balance sheet recession? in which the private sector is deleveraging. Cutting long-term interest rates by quantitative easing may be equally ineffective. And very low interest rates, sustained for many years, will encourage a search for yield, hence financial innovation and carry trades, which create risks to financial stability.

Fiscal stimulus, in its conventional funded form, financed by bond issues, may be more effective. Fiscal multipliers may be high when central banks are committed to keeping interest rates low for the foreseeable future. But with public debt levels already high and rising, concerns about future debt sustainability may create ?Ricardian equivalence? effects with households and companies aware that tax cuts today will have to be offset by tax rises later.

In this specific environment ?? ?helicopter money? ??should be regarded as an available option. Ben Bernanke proposed this for Japan in 2003. If Japan had used it then, it would now have some mix of a higher real GDP level, a higher price level, and lower public debt to GDP.

Question 2: Mike, what in your view are the potential effects of this policy on the economy as compared to traditional quantitative easing and how do you relate it to your framework of targeting the path of nominal GDP?

It is possible for exactly the same equilibrium to be supported by a policy of either sort. On the one hand (traditional quantitative easing), one might increase the monetary base through a purchase of government bonds by the central bank, and commit to maintain the monetary base permanently at the higher level. On the other (?helicopter money?), one might print new base money to finance a transfer to the public, and commit never to retire the newly issued money. Suppose that in either case, the path of government purchases is the same, and taxes are raised to the extent necessary to finance those purchases and to service the outstanding government debt, after transfers of the central bank?s seignorage income to the Treasury. Assuming the same size of permanent increase in the monetary base, the perfect foresight equilibrium is the same in both cases. Note that the fiscal consequences of the two policies are actually the same. Under the quantitative easing policy, the central bank acquires assets, but it rebates the interest paid on the government bonds back to the Treasury, so that the budgets of all parties are the same as if no government bonds were actually acquired, as is explicitly the case with helicopter money.

The effects could be different if, in practice, the consequences for future policy were not perceived the same way by the public. Under quantitative easing, people might not expect the increase in the monetary base to be permanent ??after all, it was not in the case of Japan?s quantitative easing policy in the period 2001-2006, and US and UK policymakers insist that the expansions of those central banks? balance sheets won?t be permanent, either ??and in that case, there is no reason for demand to increase. Perhaps in the case of helicopter money, it would be more likely that the intention to maintain a permanently higher monetary base would be believed. Also, in this case, the fact people get an immediate transfer should lead them to believe that they can afford to spend more, even if they don?t think about or understand the consequences of the change for future conditions, which is not true in the case of quantitative easing.

But while I grant this advantage of Adair?s proposal, I believe that one could achieve a similar effect, with equally little need to rely upon people having sophisticated expectations, through a bond-financed fiscal transfer, combined with a commitment by the central bank to a nominal GDP target path (the one that would involve the same long-run path for base money as the other two policies). The perfect foresight equilibrium would be exactly the same in this case as well; and as in the case of helicopter money, the fact that people get an immediate transfer would make the policy simulative even if many households fail to understand the consequences of the policy for future conditions, or are financially constrained. Yet this alternative would not involve the central bank in making transfers to private parties, and so would preserve the traditional separation between monetary and fiscal policy.

Question three: Adair, do you agree with Mike that a bond financed fiscal transfer, combined with central bank action in pursuit of a nominal GDP level target would be desirable and better than pure helicopter money?

Well as Michael quite rightly says, if there is perfect foresight, the equilibrium resulting from the two strategies is exactly the same. But perfect foresight may not naturally arise. It may need to be created by the transparency of overt money finance.

Michael?s proposal is essentially that (i) the government increases its fiscal deficit, directly putting money into people?s pockets (whether by tax cuts or public spending increases); and (ii) the central bank commits to maintaining a nominal GDP growth path, buying government bonds as necessary to achieve this even if, as is highly likely, achieving and maintaining that path of GDP level is likely to entail a permanent increase in the monetary base.

And if individuals and companies perceive that the increase in the monetary base will in fact be permanent, they will not rationally worry about any Ricardian equivalence cost of the future increase in government debt burden. They will understand that the fiscal stimulus is effectively going to be paid for with permanent central bank money.

Clearly therefore, Michael?s proposal is substantially very close to open monetary financing. But it isn?t quite overt. And that creates a danger that perfect foresight will not pertain and that individuals and companies will still worry unnecessarily about future government debt burdens. As a result, we might have to do even more quantitative easing type bond purchases to achieve Michael?s nominal GDP level target, creating the financial stability risks I referred to earlier.

The crucial question to me therefore is whether the more overt form of the strategy can be made consistent with central bank independence and with appropriate discipline against overuse of money finance. I believe it can.

Question 4: Helicopter money is a form of fiscal policy. The question arises of whether it is the central bank, the Treasury or both in coordination that should implement it. This has the potential to threaten the principle of central bank independence or at least it may force us to reconsider the rules that govern the relation between Treasury and central banks today. Mike, what is your view on how we can deal with the problem of moral hazard possibly caused by an unclear separation between them?

I think this would indeed be a problem with outright ?helicopter money?, and it is why I prefer the alternative sketched above. The policy that I proposed would require coordination of monetary and fiscal policy actions, but it could be carried out while preserving a traditional separation of roles. The fiscal authority would make the transfers, issue debt to pay for them, and later tax people to service its debt; the monetary authority would conduct open-market operations in the amounts needed to keep nominal GDP on the target path (or to keep nominal interest rates at zero, if undershooting of nominal GDP is unavoidable), hold assets against the liabilities that it issues, and distribute its earnings to the Treasury. The fact of such coordination on joint efforts to achieve a desirable equilibrium would in no way imply that the Treasury gets to dictate monetary policy, and so I don?t see it as raising moral hazard concerns. Indeed, it could be implemented by a central bank that commits itself to its policy (namely, use of monetary policy to achieve the nominal GDP target) regardless of what the fiscal authority does. I believe that the policy would be more certain of success (assuming an economy initially at the zero lower bound) if the fiscal authority were to cooperate, because success would not depend purely on the expectation channel; but it would be a sensible one for the central bank regardless.

Question five: Adair, how do you respond to the concern that your proposal dangerously undermines central-bank independence?

I absolutely agree that there are dangers in breaking a taboo by recognising that Outright Monetary Financing is possible: but I think there are ways to guard against that danger. And conversely, I think we should recognise that Michael?s proposal might also undermine appropriate fiscal discipline.

Michael and I both agree that optimal policy today requires closer coordination of monetary- and fiscal-policy actions. In his option the fiscal authority can increase the fiscal deficit, directly stimulating the economy, confident that there will be no crowding out offset, since it knows that the central bank, committed to a nominal-GDP target, will purchase and in all likelihood permanently keep much of that debt. But that in itself might endanger fiscal indiscipline; the fiscal authority might run increased fiscal deficits to a greater extent than reasonably justified by the nominal GDP target and by the likely permanent increase in the monetary base.

Under the Outright Monetary Financing approach that I propose, by contrast, the scale of money financed fiscal deficits would be clearly determined in advance by an independent central bank. The fiscal authority would decide how to spend the money (the balance between tax cuts and public expenditure): but the central bank would determine the amount of permanent money finance, consistent with an appropriate inflation or money GDP target. And it would do so as an independent central bank, and through the same decision making processes which govern the use of other monetary-policy tools.

Editor?s note (as first lines of the body of the column): This column summarises a CEPR-London Business School debate between Adair Turner and Michael Woodford on this policy option chaired by Lucrezia Reichlin that was held in April 2013 at LBS.

References

Bernanke, B (2003), ?Some Thoughts on Monetary Policy in Japan?, speech, Tokyo, May.

Friedman, Milton (1948), ?A Monetary and Fiscal Framework for Economic Stability?, The American Economic Review 38, June.

Giannone, D, Lenza, M, Pill, H and Reichlin, L (2012), ?The ECB and the interbank market?, Economic Journal.

Khrishnamurthy A and Vissing-Jorgensen, A (2011), ?The Effects of Quantitative Easing on Interesta Rates?, Brooking Papers of Economic Activity, Fall.

Lenza, M, Pill, H and Reichlin L (2010), ?Monetary policy in exceptional times? Economic Policy 62, 295-339.

Simons, H ?Rules and Authorities in Monetary Policy?, The Journal of Political Economy 44(1), February.

Stein, AJ (2013), ?Overheating in Credit Markets: Origins, Measurement, and Policy?, speech at the research symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, 7 February.

Turner, A (2013), ?Debt, Money and Mephistopheles?, speech at Cass Business School, 6 February.

Woodford, M (2012), ?Methods of Policy Accommodation at the Interest-Rate Lower Bound?, speech at Jackson Hole Symposium, 20 August.


1 For quantitative evidence on the macroeconomic effects for the US see, amomgst others, Khrishnamurthy and Vissing-Jorgensen, 2011. On ECB non-standard policies, see Lenza, Pill and Reichlin, 2010 and Giannone, Lenza, Pill and Reichlin, 2012.

Source: http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/05/helicopter-money-as-a-policy-option.html

barbara walters 24 kermit gosnell arrested development arrested development revenge revenge

State of Social Media Advertising - Business Insider

The media constellation has become increasingly fractured.?The Web produced the initial fissure, but mobile created new cracks in the landscape. Today, no single medium earns more than 45% of our media consumption.

How can you solve this problem??Social media offers a solution.

Social networks like Facebook and Twitter are daily destinations for millions of consumers. Increasingly, their ad products offer targeting according to specific demographics, social connections, interests, and habits.?

In a new report?from?BI?Intelligence,?we analyze the state of social media advertising and where it is heading, offering a comprehensive guide and examination of?the advertising ecosystems on?Facebook and Twitter, offer a?primer on Tumblr as an emerging ad medium, and detail how mobile is an important part of this story as mobile-friendly as?native ad formats?fuel growth in the market.

Access The Full Report And Data By Signing Up For A Free Trial Today >>

Here's an overview of some major players in the mobile advertising ecosystem:

  • The lure of social media advertising is massive:?As brands look across a fractured media landscape, social networks offer them an interesting proposition. Social networks have scale - ?enormous user bases and deep databases. They have high engagement - Americans were spending an average of 12 hours per month on social networks as of July 2012, with 18-24 year olds averaging 20 hours.?And potentially, social media gives brands offer a uniquely captive audience for their content.
  • Guaranteed placement is getting advertisers to pay up: Brands are paying to get their content or copy in front of a quantifiable audience, an increasingly rare feat in an era of scattered consumer attention.?This desire for guaranteed attention also helps to explain social media's move away from traditional display ads ? like Facebook's right-rail ads?? and toward so-called native ads that surface in a user's stream, either as a tweet or a Facebook post.?A consensus seems to be forming around in-stream advertising as the most promising social advertising format.?
  • Social media advertising is set to explode:?Social media advertising is a young market and so far, it only represents 1% to 10% of ad budgets for a wide majority of advertisers. There's significant opportunity for that share to grow.?BIA/Kelsey recently came out with a study that offers one view -?forecasting $11 billion of social ad spend in 2017, up from $4.7 billion last year.?That estimate is large - but still seems pessimistic, because...
  • Increased mobile usage will be a huge growth driver: The BIA/Kelsey prediction calls for mobile to account for only $2.2 billion of that in 2017 - a 20% market share. This could easily be surpassed. Both Twitter and Facebook have passed the 50% mobile usage mark and,?given the continued growth of mobile devices, it will only rise.?Mobile accounted for 11% of Facebook's ad revenue last year even though it didn't release mobile ads until the tail end of the second quarter. By the fourth quarter, it was up to 23%. And now, Twitter is reporting that its mobile ad revenue now regularly outpaces its desktop ad revenue. Social media advertising is therefore uniquely positioned to grab an increasing share of the fast growing mobile advertising market.?

In full,?the?report includes:

To access BI Intelligence's full reports on The State Of Social Media Advertising, sign up for a free trial subscription here.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/state-of-social-media-advertising-2013-5

snooki pregnant gbc hedy lamarr kowloon walled city ronda rousey vs miesha tate lindsay lohan snl lindsay lohan on snl

Vegan sloppy Joes and roasted potato and tomato salad

Make a tasty, veggie-friendly dinner with mushroom vegan sloppy Joes, and a roasted potato and tomato salad with crispy capers and dill.?

By France Morissette and Joshua Sprague,?Beyond the Peel / May 19, 2013

Use juicy mushrooms, onions, and garlic as a sloppy Joe substitute. Serve them up on a bun or a lettuce wrap, and top with your favorite veggies.

Beyond the Peel

Enlarge

I?m craving a juicy beef burger! Correction. A juicy beef burger with fries.?You gotta love those ?comes out of nowhere food cravings.??I mean really, I never crave a burger. Never.

Skip to next paragraph France Morissette and Joshua Sprague

Beyond The Peel

Cookbook author, France Morissette, and her husband Joshua Sprague believe that healthy food should be uncompromising when it comes to flavor. They creatively explore the world of natural, whole foods, leaving no stone unturned in their quest to create mouth watering, flavor packed, whole food meals. Through stories, photos, recipes and their online show Beyond The Peel TV, they're on a mission to help you eat healthy and enjoy every last bite in the process.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

But you know how cravings go? They rarely go away unless you give in. At least a little.

I guess I could have gone with a?veggie?burger, but in my experience, there?s nothing ?juicy? about a veggie patty. Sure they?re delicious but never juicy. Maybe moist at best. I could have driven into town. It?s a 2-1/2-hour round trip drive. And to be honest, I might have if the craving had been strong enough. The good news is I had a moment of sanity. I decided to stay put and deal with it in a more healthy way.?

I decided to go with mushroom vegan sloppy Joes. Nowhere near a burger, I know, but I thought I?d give it a try. After all, there?s not ground meat of any kind anywhere near me, while I'm camped out in this fire tower cottage.?I don?t know if you?ve tried this before but it was delicious.?Like,?really good.

So good in fact, I kind of surprised myself. Sure I thought a meatless sloppy Joes would be OK. I mean, after all, all the ingredients going in were good on their own. I wasn?t doubting that it would be tasty, but I wasn?t prepared for mouth watering, juicy goodness wrapped up in a bun!

I had this for three meals straight and was feeling a little disappointed when it was all gone. I would have made more if I had more mushrooms. Crisis has be averted. Burger craving satiated, at least for now. I know you were all worried about me, but we can all sleep well tonight. Phew.

This vegan/vegetarian sloppy Joes recipe is perfect if you?re a mushroom lover, but I think my hubby would even have enjoyed this, and he is not exactly a mushroom-loving freak like me. Even if you?re not a mushroom fanatic, I think you could probably do this same recipe with eggplant or shredded zucchini. If you don?t do grains of any kind, consider putting this mushroom heaven in lettuce wraps.

Mushroom sloppy Joes (vegan)
Serves 4

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 onion, thinly sliced

3 garlic cloves, minced

6 cups sliced mushrooms

3 tablespoons tomato paste

1 teaspoon grainy mustard

1 tablespoon Soya Sauce

1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika

1/4 cup of water

Salt and pepper, to taste

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/UW-ClssyY_s/Vegan-sloppy-Joes-and-roasted-potato-and-tomato-salad

taylor swift and zac efron basketball wives manny ramirez easter 2012 jeremy lin espn sassafras mardi gras 2012

Moore stays unbeaten as Rays top Orioles

By DAVID GINSBURG

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 5:08 p.m. ET May 19, 2013

BALTIMORE (AP) - Matt Moore isn't only breaking records set by Cy Young winner David Price, he's performing at a level that's drawing comparisons to a pretty good southpaw named Babe Ruth.

Moore pitched seven innings of five-hit ball to stay unbeaten, Luke Scott and Matt Joyce homered and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Baltimore Orioles 3-1 Sunday for a three-game sweep.

Moore (8-0) gave up one run, struck out three and walked one to become the first eight-game winner in the majors. The left-hander has won nine straight decisions, breaking the franchise record of eight set last year by Price.

Not only that, but the 23-year-old is the youngest lefty to start the season 8-0 since Ruth did it in 1917 at age 22.

"Historically speaking, it's been wonderful," Rays manager Joe Maddon said of Moore's season.

Moore is delighted with the results, especially because Tampa Bay is 9-0 in his nine starts.

"It's good for our team. That's the biggest thing we can take away from my record," he said. "On my days to pitch, we're winning all the games. That's the most important part. "

The Rays' ninth victory in 11 games left them a season-high three games over .500 (23-20) and lifted Tampa Bay into a third-place tie with skidding Baltimore in the AL East. The Rays had been in fourth since April 20.

"It puts us back in with a tie, standings-wise, which I think is important," Maddon said. "You got to get over each team that is in front of you before you can get back to the top. To come in here (and get a sweep) indicates how much better we've been playing."

Adam Jones had two hits, stole two bases and drove in a run for the Orioles, who have dropped five straight - all at home. Baltimore managed only five hits, none after the sixth inning.

"He's dealing right now," Jones said of Moore.

Baltimore was outscored 22-16 in the first two games of the series. This time, poor pitching could not be blamed for the defeat.

"Pitching wasn't the issue today," manager Buck Showalter said. "It was trying to solve Moore. He was the difference-maker."

Chris Tillman (3-2) allowed three runs and five hits in six innings. He's 1-5 lifetime against the Rays.

Tampa Bay led 2-1 in the sixth inning when Joyce hit a drive that appeared to bounce off the wall near the right-field foul pole. First base umpire Dan Iassogna called it a fair ball but not a home run.

Showalter argued that it was a foul ball and Maddon contended it was a home run.

"It's kind of unusual for us both to be out there at the same time," Maddon said. "I had to argue the point that it could be a home run."

After a lengthy meeting, the umpires adjourned to watch a replay and returned with their decision: home run.

"I've got a guy who lets me know if I have a good argument, so I knew once they went inside it was going to be a home run," Showalter said.

Moore and the Tampa Bay bullpen made the 3-1 lead stand up. Joel Peralta worked a perfect eighth and Fernando Rodney got three straight outs for his eighth save.

Neither team had a base runner until Yunel Escobar drew a two-out walk in the third. Desmond Jennings followed with an RBI double on a 3-2 pitch.

In the bottom half, Danny Valencia hit a leadoff double in his first at-bat with Baltimore but was stranded.

One inning later, Manny Machado was credited with a triple after Jennings and Joyce nearly collided on a line drive to right that ticked off Joyce's glove and rolled to the wall. Jones followed with a run-scoring single, then stole two bases but was left at third.

Scott, who played for Baltimore from 2008-11, connected in the fifth for a 2-1 lead. He has at least one RBI in nine of 13 starts this season.

NOTES: Tampa Bay's Evan Longoria extended his hitting streak to a career-high 13 games. ... Tampa Bay has held the lead in 30 of its past 31 games. ... The Rays recalled LHP Jeff Beliveau from Triple-A Durham and optioned LHP Alex Torres to the same club. Beliveau was sent back to Durham to make room for RHP Jake Odorizzi, who will be recalled Monday to start an afternoon game in Toronto. It will be his debut with the Rays. ... The Orioles recalled Valencia from Triple-A Norfolk after sending 2B Ryan Flaherty to Norfolk after Saturday's game. ... Baltimore opens a three-game series Monday night against the AL East-leading New York Yankees. Freddy Garcia will start for the Orioles. ... Jones has been successful on all seven stolen base attempts this season.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


advertisement

More newsGetty Images
Chooch's hammy a worry for Phils

HBT: Carlos Ruiz was lifted from Sunday afternoon?s game against the Reds after straining his right hamstring while running the bases in the bottom of the second inning.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/51935041/ns/sports-baseball/

hocus pocus mta schedule PECO Hurricane Sandy update ellen degeneres tomb of the unknown soldier tomb of the unknown soldier

Want To Buy A 1950s Humanoid Robot?

Sometimes it's important to just take a moment and reflect on life. It can be a real relief to let go of technology for a moment and think about something else. History maybe. And there's no better way to slow down than by taking a walk with an eight-foot-tall, 1,000-pound robot that moves 10-feet per minute. Ahh, how quaint.

Gygan, also called Cygan and Mr. Moto, is one of the first robots, built in 1957 by Italian engineer Ing Fiorito and brought to London (somehow) in 1958. Now at 56, Gygan is on the move and will go on sale at Christie's "Out of the Ordinary" auction on August 5. The auction house projects that the humanoid robot will bring between ?6,000 and ?8,000.

It's unclear how much functionality Gyga has today, but in its heyday the robot could walk backwards and forwards, turn side to side, move its arms and hold/crush items in its "hands." Apparently it could even respond to spoken commands and other signals. So not exactly a return to simpler times. [The Telegraph]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/one-of-the-first-humanoid-robots-is-up-for-auction-508760204

augusta national blake griffin pau gasol marlins park marbury v. madison 2013 lincoln mkz burger king mary j blige

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Fab Sale Roundup: GILT Baby & Kids, Giggle and More!

Check out our roundup of this week's best mommy and baby deals.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/-dfLlLv0Cvc/

colbert colbert report legionnaires disease underwear bomber unclaimed money godspell media matters

Debt limit unlikely to be hit till after Labor Day, Treasury Secretary advises (Washington Bureau)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306567268?client_source=feed&format=rss

westboro baptist church meteor shower NBA Al Michaels Canelo vs Trout

Love on Top: Beyonce Pregnant, Allegedly | Black and Married With ...

Black Celebrity Marriages

by Briana Myricks ?|? on May 17th, 2013 ?|?

Rumors have been flying around the Internet about whether Beyonce is expecting baby #2. New source E! Online posted an article saying multiple sources have confirmed the pregnancy.

It?s hard to know whether this is confirmed or not compared to her first announcement, which was made very public at the MTV Music Awards, where the infamous belly rub seen round the world followed her performance of ?Love on Top?. Russell Simmons and his site Global Grind tweeted it it, which increased the attention the possible confirmation is getting. Others close to the couple such as Solange, Gwyn Paltrow and Dream Hampton haven?t said a word as of yet.

Fans have been tweeting their congratulations while others have been voicing their concerns about how a possible pregnancy will affect the Mrs. Carter tour. Beyonce has already canceled a show in Belgium due to ?dehydration and exhaustion?, so some are wondering if the same will happen for her North American tour dates.

Beyonce?s HBO documentary Life is But A Dream showed a more personal side to the star, including her opening up about her miscarriage, and her pregnancy with Blue Ivy. She also recently told ABC News that she would? ?like more children? to keep Blue company.

If the rumors are true, congratulations to Beyonce, Jay-Z, and Blue Ivy for the new addition to the family.


About the author

Briana Myricks is a 20 something wife, Social Media Specialist, and student of life. She blogs about her world at BrianaMyricks.com.


Source: http://blackandmarriedwithkids.com/2013/05/love-on-top-beyonce-pregnant-allegedly/

nfl 2012 schedule gmail down tim lincecum ryan oneal file taxes online tupac shakur sledge hammer