Google

Sunday, October 31, 2010

The Democracies of Central and South American Countries

are setting an excellent example in electing talented, capable and socially conscious leaders. Brazilian people have chosen their first female President, Ms. ROuseff. Nicaragua had elected Ms. Violeta Chamorrow in the 1980s- the first female leader from Central America.

In a First, Brazil Elects a Woman as President - NYTimes.com: "Dilma Rousseff was elected the country’s first female president on Sunday, as Brazilians voted strongly in favor of continuing the economic and social policies of the popular president, Luiz In�cio Lula da Silva.

Ms. Rousseff, who served as Mr. da Silva’s chief of staff and energy minister, joins a growing wave of democratically elected female leaders in the region and the world in the past five years, including Michelle Bachelet in Chile, Cristina Fern�ndez de Kirchner in Argentina and Angela Merkel in Germany."

Saturday, October 30, 2010

The rally that restored Sanity, at least for hundreds of thousands

The trip to DC to attend the Rally was energizing and invigorating. Taking the B30 bus from BWI to Greenbelt Metro was the first step. Nearly all the passengers were headed for the rally..three young Indian ladies from New Jersey, some high school kids and some older folks, all headed for the same destination. One of the young college students pulled out his laptop and had the event streaming. The appearance of the Mythbusters and Stephen Colbert were quite funny. I did my part by giving up my seat to an older lady who was also headed to the event. She had come from New Hampshire.

The Metro train from Greenbelt to the Archives was packed with the rally goers and their posters. Had engaging conversation with Luke and Tanya- two young kids from Boston. Both of them had traveled quite a bit around the world, and it was very motivating talking to them. Arriving at the Rally one could only see an ocean of humanity, full of friendly people and clever signs.
It gives one hope that there is some semblance of sanity left, and it is good to see that people, at least some, do care.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Simple Math: Pollution for China, Rare Earth Metals for others

China’s Rare Earth Embargo Changes Incentive for Toxic Work - NYTimes.com: "Whatever it was called, a shipping suspension that started amid China’s diplomatic dispute with Japan over a wayward fishing trawler escalated into a broader international trade issue.

The episode alarmed companies around the world that depend on rare earths, minerals that help make a wide range of high-tech products, including smartphones and smart bombs. China currently controls almost all of the world’s supply of rare earths, for which demand is soaring.

To many outsiders, the undeclared embargo looked like a pure power play — a sign China would wield its growing economic might and apply its chokehold on an important industrial resource with little regard for the conventions of international trade. The export quotas China continues to impose on rare earths, even when it does let ships leave the docks, are restricting global supplies and causing world market prices to soar far beyond what Chinese companies pay."

Astro-logical

Is Astrology Rubbish? Don't Get Me Started : Discovery News: "Look at the statistics and you'll see that there are more people now than ever before who read their star signs in the daily news. We live in a time that is more scientifically aware than any other period in history and yet people still believe the stars and planets can determine their fate.

Interestingly, astronomy and astrology share the same origins; in fact it's accurate to say that astrology came first. Ancient civilizations tried to find sense in the happenings in the sky and attribute them to their lives."

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Much Needed Energetic Push

Remember Renewable Energy? - NYTimes.com: "The George W. Bush administration was fixated on oil and gas exploration. The Obama administration was slow to get going. Until a little over three weeks ago, the Interior Department had approved more than 73,000 oil and gas leases since 2005, but only one offshore wind energy project and not a single solar project.

Things are beginning to turn around. In recent weeks, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has approved six large-scale solar power projects on public land — five in California, one in Nevada — that together will provide enough power for as many as two million homes.

He also gave final approval to the country’s first commercial offshore wind farm, off the coast of Massachusetts. And a group of companies including Google announced plans to build an underwater transmission system to carry wind-generated power from public lands on the Atlantic Coast to Eastern cities."

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Memories of an Rx's Past...

Early on in my career I worked on marketing strategies for pharma products, many of which are still on the market. The news about Glaxo's settlement involving Paxil and Tagamet and other products brought back memories of many depressing work days and ulcer-inducing work nights.

GlaxoSmithKline Pays $750 Million Over Tainted Drugs - NYTimes.com: "GlaxoSmithKline, the British drug giant, has agreed to pay $750 million to settle criminal and civil complaints that the company for years knowingly sold contaminated baby ointment and an ineffective antidepressant — the latest in a growing number of whistle-blower lawsuits that drug makers have settled with multimillion-dollar fines.

Altogether, GlaxoSmithKline sold 20 drugs with questionable safety that were made at a huge plant in Puerto Rico that for years was rife with contamination.

Cheryl D. Eckard, the company’s quality manager, asserted in her whistle-blower suit that she had warned Glaxo of the problems but the company fired her instead of addressing them. Among the drugs affected were Paxil, an antidepressant; Bactroban, an ointment; Avandia, a troubled diabetes drug; Coreg, a heart drug; and Tagamet, an acid reflux drug. No patients were known to have been sickened, although such cases would be difficult to trace.

In a rising wave, recent lawsuits have asserted that drug makers misled patients and defrauded federal and state governments that, through Medicare and Medicaid, pay for much of health care..."

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Innovation, Peta Style

The Hindu : Life & Style / Food : Wrap it up, peta style!: "Remember the song ‘Peta Rap' from the film “Kaathalan”? Here's a new twist to those words — PetaWrap. Brainchild of Rakesh Raghunanthan, PetaWrap is a kiosk that sells vegetarian and non-vegetarian wraps, shaped like Mexican burritos. Designed to resemble autos, these kiosks are set up near upmarket stores. A steady stream of customers at the Gandhi Nagar kiosk, set up near a Pantaloon showroom, includes college students with bikes and executives who drive around in cars."

Monday, October 25, 2010

The Globalization of Education

Two interesting stories highlight the globalization of education. The Indian Academic Institutions bemoan the lack of qualified math and science teachers to educate students, while tutoring services are catering to the needs of students in the West.


British Kids Log On and Learn Math — in Punjab - NYTimes.com: "Once a week, year six pupils at Ashmount Primary School in North London settle in front of their computers, put on their headsets and get ready for their math class. A few minutes later, their teachers come online thousands of kilometers away in the Indian state of Punjab.Ashmount is one of three state schools in Britain that decided to outsource part of their teaching to India via the Internet. The service — the first of its kind in Europe — is offered by BrightSpark Education, a London-based company set up last year. BrightSpark employs and trains 100 teachers in India and puts them in touch with pupils in Britain through an interactive online tutoring program.The feedback from pupils, the schools and parents is good so far, and BrightSpark said a dozen more schools, a charity and many more parents were interested in signing up for the lessons. The one-on-one sessions not only cost about half of what personal tutors in Britain charge but are also popular with pupils, who enjoy solving equations online, said Rebecca Stacey, an assistant head teacher at Ashmount.But the service also faces some opposition from teacher representatives who are fearful that it could threaten their jobs at a time when the government is pushing through far-reaching spending cuts. The 3 percent that is to be cut from the budget for educational resources by 2014 might be small compared with cuts in other areas, like welfare and pensions, but money at schools will remain tight.Online learning is still controversial in Britain. Some teachers said tutors based elsewhere lacked the cultural empathy and understanding of a pupil’s social environment that could influence study habits and performance. There is also concern about the qualifications of teachers abroad.At the same time, many parents said they had struggled to find qualified private tutors who were conveniently located and whose fees were affordable. With online learning, they can keep an eye on their children’s progress by listening to the lessons, and many said that being taught by someone in India also opened the children to foreign cultures.But Chris Keates, general secretary of NASUWT, Britain’s largest teachers’ union, said he was concerned about the precedent BrightSpark was setting. “This is wrong on so many levels,” Mr. Keates said. “What next — do without maths teachers? What about the follow-up lessons for the pupils, and the interaction with teachers?”Tom Hooper, the founder of BrightSpark, said teachers’ unions were missing the point. “This is supplementary and in no way replacing teachers,” he said. And Ms. Stacey was quick to point out that Ashmount was using BrightSpark’s program in addition to, and not instead of, its traditional math classes.“For children, it’s a novelty that catches their attention for longer and engages them in a different way,” Ms. Stacey said. “Eleven-year-olds aren’t always enthusiastic about math classes, so any way we can make it more fun for them is good.”BrightSpark tutors in India are math graduates or former math teachers and go through a month of training on the British school curriculum. Pupils in Britain log on to the service via BrightSpark’s Web site and interact with their teachers via a video phone and a so-called white board on their computer screen, which can be written on by both parties. Lessons can be booked as long as 24 hours in advance for any day of the week, and all sessions are recorded and can be replayed by the pupil or the pupil’s parents.For Marie Hanson, who runs the charity Storm in South London, the online teaching tool is helpful in keeping children away from drugs and crime. “The kids love it because they love computers,” said Ms. Hanson, “and I love it because it helps them with their education while keeping them off the streets.”


The Hindu : Education : The quest for good teachers: "Any one deliberating on deterioration of quality in higher education always deplores the declining standards in teaching. From an exalted position, many teachers have tumbled down the pyramid basically because of lack of commitment, failure to communicate and an unwillingness to update. At times the impression is that students are smarter than their teachers....

As per the UGC's latest regulations, any assistant professor (lecturer) must have cleared the National Eligibility Test (NET) or the State-level Eligibility Test (SLET) or must have a Ph.D to teach in college. The UGC has done away with the M. Phil. qualification after discovering that the teachers cleared M. Phil. in large numbers leading to deterioration in teaching. “One of the main problems is that the teaching is no longer an attractive career for students,” says Nirmala Prasad, principal, MOP Vaishnav College for Women. “The real problem is that the attitude of the students in clearing national-level exams. The number of engineers clearing GMAT and those clearing NET will be the least from the State,” says a senior official in the higher education department. “The students lack in attitude. The main reason is rote learning and the other being systematic lowering of standards of examinations to make it easier for students to score high,” he says.

NET primarily tests the subject knowledge of the student. An interaction with a cross-section of principals revealed that the institutional heads themselves have a perception that NET is a difficult test to clear.

The scenario in technical education is worse than in arts and sciences as most of the engineering graduates prefer industry to teaching, senior academicians say..."

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Musical Reunion

Attending a wonderful concert by our Wind Ensemble and in the process meeting former students who continue to play adds a creative dimension to this faculty member. It is always rewarding to meet former students, especially those with whom one has shared knowledge and many pleasant events.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

It's not a surprise- Republicans are against health care reform..

The GOP appears to take particular delight in administering pain, not curing the patient.

G.O.P. Is Poised To Seize House, If Not Senate - NYTimes.com: "There are Democratic candidates who still appear to be in the race, but our candidates are delivering the fatal blow,” said Representative Pete Sessions of Texas, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee. “If we look all across the country, we are seeing incumbent Democrats in a world of hurt.”
Republicans went after Mr. Taylor with a TV ad that opens with the precise moment Mr. Taylor supported Representative Nancy Pelosi for speaker in 2007 to the applause of his colleagues on the House floor. “This is the moment Democrat Gene Taylor turned his back on us,” the narrator said, echoing a theme that has emerged in district after district.

Friday, October 22, 2010

The Business of Education: Public Money Funneled to Private Shareholders

Florida investigating 5 for-profit colleges - Yahoo! Finance: "Florida is investigating five private, for-profit colleges to determine if they've engaged in unfair or deceptive practices in recruitment and other areas, the state attorney general's office said Friday.

The office is also looking into whether the colleges misled students about financial aid.

Ryan Wiggins, a spokeswoman for Attorney General Bill McCollum, confirmed Friday his office was conducting a civil investigation.

Wiggins said the investigation began in response to consumer complaints and a federal report that accused some for-profit schools of encouraging fraud and engaging in deceptive marketing practices.

'It's all in its infancy right now,' Wiggins said. She said officials are unsure how long the civil investigation will take.

According to McCollum's office, the colleges being examined are Kaplan Inc. of Alpharetta, Ga.; University of Phoenix Inc. of Arizona; Argosy University of Florida Inc.; Everest College, a subsidiary of Corinthian Colleges Inc. of Santa Ana, Calif., and Medvance Institute Inc., of Miami."

Taking it to the Bank(s)

7 banks closed in Fla., Ga., Ill., Kan., Ariz. - Yahoo! Finance: "Regulators on Friday shut down a total of seven banks in Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas and Arizona, lifting to 139 the number of U.S. banks that have fallen this year as soured loans have mounted and the economy has sputtered.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. took over the banks, the largest of which by far was Hillcrest Bank, based in Overland Park, Kan., with $1.6 billion in assets.

A newly chartered bank subsidiary of Boston-based NBH Holdings Corp. was set up to take over Hillcrest's assets and deposits. The new subsidiary is called Hillcrest Bank N.A.

The FDIC and Hillcrest Bank N.A. agreed to share losses on $1.1 billion of the failed bank's assets. Its failure is expected to cost the deposit insurance fund $329.7 million.

Also shuttered were First Bank of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Fla., with $81 million in assets; Progress Bank of Florida, based in Tampa, with $110.7 million in assets; First National Bank of Barnesville in Barnesville, Ga., with $131.4 million in assets; Gordon Bank of Gordon, Ga., with $29.4 million in assets; First Suburban National Bank in Maywood, Ill., with $148.7 million in assets; and First Arizona Savings, based in Scottsdale, Ariz., with assets of $272.2 million.

Ameris Bank, based in Moultrie, Ga., agreed to assume the assets and deposits of First Bank of Jacksonville. Bay Cities Bank, based in Tampa, is buying the assets and deposits of Progress Bank.

United Bank, based in Zebulon, Ga., is assuming the assets and deposits of First National Bank of Barnesville, while Morris Bank of Dublin, Ga., is assuming the deposits and $11.5 million of the assets of Gordon Bank. The FDIC will retain the rest for eventual sale.

Seaway Bank and Trust Co., based in Chicago, is assuming the assets and deposits of First Suburban National Bank.

The FDIC was unable to find a buyer for First Arizona Savings, and it approved the payout of the bank's insured deposits. The agency said it will mail checks to depositors for their insured funds on Monday.

In addition, the FDIC and Ameris Bank agreed to share losses on $60 million of First Bank of Jacksonville's loans and other assets. The FDIC and Bay Cities Bank are sharing losses on $82.6 million of Progress Bank of Florida's assets, while the agency and United Bank are sharing losses on $107.3 million of First National Bank of Barnesville's assets.

The FDIC and Seaway Bank and Trust are sharing losses on $116.6 million of First Suburban National Bank's assets.

The failure of First Bank of Jacksonville is expected to cost the deposit insurance fund $16.2 million; the failure of Progress Bank of Florida is expected to cost $25 million; that of First National Bank of Barnesville, $33.9 million; that of Gordon Bank, $9 million; First Suburban National Bank, $31.4 million; and First Arizona Savings, $32.8 million.

Florida, Georgia and Illinois are among the states hardest hit by bank collapses, stemming from the meltdown in the real estate market that brought an avalanche of soured mortgage loans. The shutdowns Friday brought the number of bank failures in Florida this year to 27, and to 16 each for Georgia and Illinois."

Buying Elections, Anonymously

Top Companies Aid Chamber of Commerce in Policy Fights - NYTimes.com: "Prudential Financial sent in a $2 million donation last year as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce kicked off a national advertising campaign to weaken the historic rewrite of the nation’s financial regulations.

Dow Chemical delivered $1.7 million to the chamber last year as the group took a leading role in aggressively fighting proposed rules that would impose tighter security requirements on chemical facilities.

And Goldman Sachs, Chevron Texaco, and Aegon, a multinational insurance company based in the Netherlands, donated more than $8 million in recent years to a chamber foundation that has been critical of growing federal regulation and spending. These large donations — none of which were publicly disclosed by the chamber, a tax-exempt group that keeps its donors secret, as it is allowed by law — offer a glimpse of the chamber’s money-raising efforts, which it has ramped up recently in an orchestrated campaign to become one of the most well-financed critics of the Obama administration and an influential player in this fall’s Congressional elections."

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Operational Efficiency, Defined

IBM to cut 190 jobs in Dublin, move them to China - Yahoo! Finance: "IBM Corp. said Wednesday it plans to cut 190 jobs at its Ireland server-manufacturing lines and move them to China.

The move is the latest sign of traditional manufacturing operations deserting high-wage Ireland in favor of Eastern Europe and Asia. Such cuts have helped to drive Irish unemployment to 13.7 percent, second-highest in the euro zone after Spain.


IBM, one of Ireland's largest private-sector employers with a work force of about 3,000, said the 190 layoffs at its main facility in Mulhuddart, west Dublin, would be completed by March. The company said it expected to rehire some workers for new jobs at its growing software services division in Ireland.

In a statement IBM said the transfer of server manufacturing to one of its Shenzhen, China, facilities "will place us closer to our growth markets and suppliers, while providing greater operational efficiency and cost savings."

Earlier this year IBM sought 310 voluntary resignations from its Irish staff as it began transferring its higher-end server assembly lines to another IBM operation in Singapore. But it also announced plans to hire up to 200 for a new development center for urban-planning software."

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Celebrating Ignorance, the Palin Way

FT.com / US / Politics & Foreign policy - Tea Party gets tough with foes in media: "Even Fox News, for which Ms Palin is now a paid contributor, has on occasions caused embarrassment. Earlier this year, in an interview with Glenn Beck, the talk-radio tycoon, Ms Palin was unable to name one Founding Father, despite constantly invoking them in her speeches. “Well all of them,” she said after a long pause, “because they came collectively together with so much diversity in terms of belief.” On being pressed, Ms Palin alighted on George Washington.

Partly as a result, most Tea Party candidates in this election are avoiding outlets other than Fox News and sympathetic radio stations and internet sites.


“We do get advice not to do interviews and not to be overly candid,” Rand Paul, the Tea Party-supported Senate candidate in Kentucky, admitted to Fox News recently.

In a debate last week Ms O’Donnell, who is considered unlikely to win her race, taunted Wolf Blitzer, the CNN moderator, over the fact that she had turned down his interview requests. Then, in an echo of Ms Palin, who appears to be a role model, she teased Chris Coons, her Democratic opponent, by saying: “You’re just jealous you haven’t appeared on Saturday Night Live.”

Ms O’Donnell’s only national interviews have been with Fox News. But even they appear to have been curtailed. In her last one, two weeks ago, she wasasked about her “plan for Pakistan”.

Referring to it as a Middle Eastern country, Ms O’Donnell said the US should work to create democracy there. Then she praised Pervez Musharraf, the country’s last military dictator. “Pakistan was a great ally for us in the war on terror,” she said. “We have to help them get back to where they were.”

Monday, October 18, 2010

Meaty Research

The Hindu : Health / Policy & Issues : Eating less meat could save 45,000 lives a year: "Cutting meat consumption to 210g a week would hugely reduce deaths from heart disease and cancer, research in a report for Friends of the Earth shows More than 45,000 lives a year could be saved if everyone began eating meat no more than two or three times a week, health experts and Friends of the Earth claim.


Widespread switching to low-meat diets would stop 31,000 people dying early from heart disease, 9,000 from cancer and 5,000 from strokes, according to new analysis of British eating habits by public health expert Dr Mike Rayner contained in an FoE report.

Dramatically reduced meat consumption would also save the NHS GBP1.2bn and help reduce climate change and deforestation in South America, where rainforests are being chopped down to grow animal feed and graze cows which are exported to Europe, the report states.

Eating too much meat, particularly processed meat, is bad for health because doing so can involve consuming more fat, saturated fat or salt than official guidelines recommend, the FoE say...."

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Don’t Bite Off More Than You Can Chew...thoughts from the young students

Observations by Students on the topic of Food...


It also highlights growth. We like thinking that we are going somewhere, improving on something. Large majorities of people do not always have the facts, so they do not realize what they are missing with this “growth.” They also do not realize the affect it is having on other people and animals.

Because these companies have such tremendous power currently, it is more difficult to pass a law that would take power from companies and return it to the government. As history shows us, once a government surrenders or loses power, it is difficult or impossible to regain.

The Western Diet is the promoter of “in a hurry” food. Fast food of all types, from greasy McDonald’s to that in-between-meal snack food, costs society a great deal. Because food is so much more accessible and convenient, people miss out on the social part of eating that is still held as a major cultural identifier in countries like France.

Along with the Western Diet comes individually packaged Western Diseases. Diabetes, heart disease, obesity, cancer, and even tooth decay have been potentially linked to the types of foods we eat in this country. And rather than fix the root of the problem, we develop around these diseases with healthcare advances and lifestyle changes. Hearth replacement, insulin shots, chemo therapy, and even the diabetics’ cookbook are ways we have attempted to work around the dangerous effects of our diets. And with these, costs in healthcare rise right alongside the environment and society.

Our culture, rather than value the importance of whole foods and healthy eating, values value. “Cheap food and lots of it” has been the standard for decades. But even these two values will not change things that drastically. Capitalism is the final nail in the coffin, as companies desire to find new ways to sell to consumers. The Big Mac has to look perfect, and has to have an incredible shelf life. So producers pack it full of preservatives and additives, flavor enhancers and dyes, to make it look tasty and taste filling. Nutritional value, however, suffers. “Cheap food, lots of it, and make it taste good…and can I have fries with that?”

But, in my opinion, none of the drawbacks out way [sic] the possibility of safer food.

On Technology...
Technology is quickly becoming a major form of socialization. It is also becoming a way to create a rank-and-file order of society.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

A Whale of a Journey

The Hindu : Sci-Tech / Energy & Environment : Humpback whale beats long-distance record: "A humpback whale has broken the world record for travel by any mammal, swimming at least 9,800 kilometres (6,125 miles) from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean in search of a mate, marine biologists reported in Biology Letters.

The female humpback was first photographed among a group of whales at a breeding ground on Abrolhos Bank, off Brazil's southeastern coast, on August 7 1999.

Sheer chance

By sheer chance, it was photographed more than two years later, on September 21 2001 by a commercial whale-watching tour at a breeding ground near the Ile Sainte Marie off the eastern coast of Madagascar."

Friday, October 15, 2010

Too Hot for an A

Most Americans Lack Basic Knowledge of Climate Issues, Study Finds | Reuters: "According to the survey, 57 percent of respondents know that the greenhouse effect refers to heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere; 45 percent understand that carbon dioxide traps heat from the planet's surface; and only 25 percent are aware of coral bleaching or ocean acidification. And the majority of respondents had significant misconceptions about climate science, including the incorrect belief that the hole in the ozone layer, toxic waste, aerosol spray, and acid rain cause global warming. Based on these results, the authors say only 8 percent of respondents would have knowledge equivalent to a grade of an A or B, and more than 52 percent would receive an F grade."

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Buying Local Food...at a neighborhood Wal-Mart

Wal-Mart Plans to Buy More Local Produce - NYTimes.com: "The local-and-sustainable food movement has spread to the nation’s largest retailer.

Wal-Mart Stores announced a program on Thursday that focuses on sustainable agriculture among its suppliers as it tries to reduce its overall environmental impact.

The program is intended to put more locally grown food in Wal-Mart stores in the United States, invest in training and infrastructure for small and medium-size farmers, particularly in emerging markets, and begin to measure how efficiently large suppliers grow and get their produce into stores.

Advocates of environmentally sustainable farming said the announcement was significant because of Wal-Mart’s size and because it would give small farmers a chance at Wal-Mart’s business, but they questioned how “local” a $405 billion company with two million employees — more than the populations of Alaska, Wyoming and Vermont combined — could be.

Given that Wal-Mart is the world’s largest grocer, with one of the biggest food supply chains, any change it made would have wide implications. Wal-Mart’s decision five years ago to set sustainability goals that, among other things, increased its reliance on renewable energy and reduced packaging waste among its suppliers sent broad ripples through product manufacturers. Large companies likeProcter & Gamble redesigned packages that are now carried by other retailers, while Wal-Mart’s measurements of the environmental efficiency of its suppliers helped define how they needed to change.

“No other retailer has the ability to make more of a difference than Wal-Mart,” the retailer’s president and chief executive, Michael T. Duke, said in remarks prepared for a meeting on Thursday morning. “Grocery is more than half of Wal-Mart’s business. Yet only four of our 39 public sustainability goals address food.”

Wal-Mart said it expected to meet the goals by the end of 2015.

In the United States, Wal-Mart plans to double the percentage of locally grown produce it sells to 9 percent. Wal-Mart defines local produce as that grown and sold in the same state.

Still, the program is far less ambitious than in some other countries — in Canada, for instance, Wal-Mart expects to buy 30 percent of its produce locally by the end of 2013, and, when local produce is available, increase that to 100 percent.

“Our food business in Canada is brand new, so there’s a lot they can do,” said Andrea Thomas, senior vice president of sustainability, at a news conference. She said the program allowed each country to set its own specific goals.

In emerging markets, Wal-Mart has pledged to sell $1 billion of food from small and medium farmers (which it defines as farmers with fewer than 20 hectares, about 50 acres). It will also provide training for the farmers and their laborers on how to choose crops that are in demand and on the proper application of water and pesticides.

Both in the United States and globally, Wal-Mart will invest more than $1 billion to improve its supply chain for perishable food. For example, if trucks, trains and distribution centers could help farmers in Minnesota get crops to Wal-Mart more quickly, the result would be less spoiled food, a longer shelf life and presumably more profit for the farmers and for Wal-Mart.

Wal-Mart said it planned to reduce food waste in emerging-market stores by 15 percent and in other stores by 10 percent.

Michelle Mauthe Harvey of the Environmental Defense Fund, who worked with Wal-Mart on the goals, said this was significant.

“As we’ve moved to reliance on key locations like California and Florida,” she said, “we’ve made it very difficult for local farmers to actually get their food to market.”

As Wal-Mart is doing with consumer products, it will begin asking agricultural producers questions about water, fertilizer and chemical use. The eventual goal is to include that information in a sustainability index.

Customers would see sustainability ratings, so they could decide whether to choose one avocado over another based on how efficiently it was grown and shipped. Wal-Mart could use index information when it decided from whom to buy.

Finally, the company announced specific guidelines for the sources of its products, including a requirement that palm oil from sustainable sources be used in all its private-label products (the Wal-Mart house brands) and that any beef it sold not have contributed to the deforestation of the Amazon region because of cattle ranch expansion.

While the overall goals include Sam’s Club, the warehouse store wing of Wal-Mart, that division also has other specific goals, including a 15 percent increase in fair trade or Rainforest Alliance certified flowers and produce.

Some local food supporters said that while the environmental goals were positive, Wal-Mart could not provide some benefits that other buy-local movements did.

For instance, said Linda Berlin, director of the Center for Sustainable Agriculture at the University of Vermont, farmers’ markets help return money to the local economy.

“The local-food movement has been, certainly, about taste and quality of food, about providing good incomes for farmers, and also about other things that have to do with building smaller economies so we as a society aren’t dominated by the more industrial complexes,” she said. “This initiative doesn’t necessarily address that.”

Other environmental and agricultural specialists said it would have a big impact.

“It’s very impressive,” said Margaret Mellon, director of the food and environment program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “It’s encouraging that Wal-Mart understands that the path forward in agriculture isn’t through making the big bigger, it’s really through encouraging the small and medium-sized farms,” she said. Still, she said she was disappointed that goals around organic food were not included, and surprised that Wal-Mart did not address genetically modified seeds and produce.

The agricultural sustainability index was particularly noteworthy, said one academic who worked with Wal-Mart on the goals.

“The index represents a real number that will mean improvement on the ground: improving ecosystem health, soil health and food quality,” said Marty Matlock, a professor of ecological engineering at the University of Arkansas, which “will move agricultural producers en masse.”

A first...for the FDA

Finally....President Obama's actions on enforcement are showing results.


F.D.A. Vows to Revoke Approval for Menaflex Knee Patch - NYTimes.com: "The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday that it would rescind the approval of a patch for injured knees that it granted in error in 2008 after being unduly pressured by four New Jersey congressmen and its own commissioner.

The patch, known as Menaflex and manufactured by ReGen Biologics, was so different from earlier devices that it should have been tested far more thoroughly before approval, officials determined.

“We are concluding that the science does not support a decision to clear the device, and therefore we’ll move forward to rescind” its approval, Dr. Jeffrey E. Shuren, director of the F.D.A.’s device center, said in an interview.
The F.D.A. has never admitted that it approved a drug or device mistakenly, never rescinded such an approval without citing new information about the product, never admitted that a regulatory decision was influenced by politics, and never accused a former commissioner of questionable conduct.

Gerald E. Bisbee Jr., chairman and chief executive of ReGen, said in a statement that the company was “weighing its options.”..."

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Nutritious Battle...till the hogs come home and land on the dinner plate

How can society ensure that the populace is educated and can exercise due diligence? Should the government put into place procedures to mitigate the lack of education of the public? The debate over food labels illustrates this dilemma.




Report Suggests Food Label That Highlights Harmful Nutrients - NYTimes.com: "The report suggests a package-front label that would do essentially the opposite. It called for the label to emphasize the potentially harmful nutrients in the food product — for example, those that promote obesity, diabetes or heart disease — and exclude information on beneficial nutrients like fiber or vitamins. That was partly to avoid a mixed message and partly because including information on positive ingredients could encourage food companies to unnecessarily fortify foods with nutrients in order to score better in the labeling system, the report said.

“What we’re suggesting is that food products be labeled in a consistent way with information that will help the general public decrease their risk for chronic diseases and this is the type of information that is unlikely to currently appear on the front of the package, “ said Alice H. Lichtenstein, a professor of nutrition at Tufts University, who was vice chair of the institute committee that prepared the report." Marion Nestle, a nutrition professor at New York University, said that the nutrition information that companies currently provide on package fronts is intended to help sell products and so it emphasizes healthy nutrients that consumers want in their foods, like fiber or whole grains. For that reason, she said, the food industry is not likely to embrace a system that focuses only on nutrients that most people want to avoid.

“All of this is about food industry marketing,” she said. “If it weren’t about marketing all this stuff would go off the packages and we would go back to packages that just said what the products were.”"

Abusing marketing

Marketing, when done ethically, creates value to society by understanding and educating customers. The advisers to the politicians and political candidates and the news media, at times, focus more on selling the candidate. In this process they are either silent participants or active workers in the effort to keep the public ignorant, fearful, and hateful.
Here is one example, where the writer is offering "suggestions" to the politicians to "sell" themselves.

Christine O'Donnell: three ways she could turn things around tonight - CSMonitor.com: "Everybody’s heard all those stories about witchcraft dabbling, and so forth, but Wednesday night will be O’Donnell’s first and best chance to introduce herself to Delaware voters unfiltered. If her ads are any indication, she will continue to say of herself, “I’m you” – as in, “I’m a regular Delawarean.” This approach would be helped by lots of references to regular-person stuff, like struggles with money and her nonownership of any Ivy League degrees. (Coons has two from Yale.)

If unfortunate past statements come up, don’t get defensive. Just sigh, and say that everybody did stuff in their youth that they regret later. To an adult, what’s adolescence but a foreign country?

In her modified limited media rollout of recent days, in which she’s sat down for interviews with mainly local reporters, O’Donnell has done pretty well with this approach."

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Not Helicopter Ben but Helicopter Parents

Good topic in the NYT:

Have College Freshmen Changed? - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com: "Are social, academic and financial pressures on freshmen becoming more intense? Have freshmen changed? Does the fact that many students are used to 'helicopter' parents monitoring and guiding all of their activities affect the transition to college?"

The technical festival

The Hindu : Education : Where innovation ruled supreme: "At Shaastra '10, technical excellence blended with utility, creativity and intuition, pushing the limits of engineering.

They say the legacy of technology lies in the IITs (Indian Institute of Technology). The ones, who witnessed the wackiest complex electronics of Robo-sapiens meet, the world of automated gadgets, and the replication of natural wonders in a unique Biomimicry session, would barely disagree. The 12th edition of IIT-M tech fest, Shaastra 2010 that opened on September 30 saw the terrains of technology exceptionally harmonise with humankind."

Monday, October 11, 2010

Amar Chitra Katha - Stories in a New World

Amar Chitra Katha- the stories we all grew up with. Now finding a different life in a new era.

Kishore Biyani eyes 40% in Amar Chitra Katha - The Economic Times: "Kishore Biyani, the CEO of Future Group, has often said retail is like religion. His group, like any other retail group, is known to factor in religious and cultural issues when preparing sales campaigns, and Mr Biyani himself is known to believe that Indian mythology holds a number of management lessons for India Inc.

So, it is not much of a surprise that the entrepreneur-retailer is in talks with the promoters of ACK Media, which owns iconic Indian comic content such as Amar Chitra Katha, Tinkle and Karadi Tales, to buy an over 40% stake.

“Mythology and storytelling has always been part of the Future Group DNA. We are looking at newer ways to impart values to the new generation and a modern way of storytelling through digital, entertainment, animation or theme parks,” Mr Biyani told ET.

“ Amar Chitra Katha was the biggest storyteller of our times and this is an opportunity for us to be the Disneyland of this country,” Mr Biyani said."

The Man Who Grabbed the Bees' Nest from a Boy

A young boy in our neighborhood spotted a bees' nest that appeared to have been vacated. It was on a branch of a tree that was in Mr. X's yard. We helped the young boy remove the nest which he then carefully took home. However the tree belonged to Mr. Y who kicked up a big fuss over boys and adults trespassing on his property. He then went to the little boy's home and took the nest back to his house. A man who never understood the joy of giving!

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Keeping a Job is not a Tweety thing...

Twitter appears to be growing fast and is looking at "monetizing" the eyeballs. However some businesses are concerned about the distractions caused by SNS (social networking sites) and the associated LOP (loss of productivity). Some others are concerned about confidential information leaking out.


Using too much Facebook and Twitter may cost you your job - The Economic Times: "Government and council employees in the UK using social networking sites at work or posting inappropriate comments from home are likely to face serious action, which includes being sacked.

Police censured eight employees last year after they found using police computers to chat with their friends online.

Another council caught staff using special software to get around a ban on using office computers to tweet on Twitter and 'update their status' on Facebook during working hours.

Now, government departments and quangos, including officials planning the 2012 Olympics, have issued written guidelines to staff detailing their restrictions on using the sites, reports the Daily Mail.

They are also paying thousands of pounds of taxpayers' money to outside consultants for courses on the do's and don'ts of how to behave on Facebook and similar sites."

Porsche employees banned from social networking - The Economic Times: "Luxury car manufacturer Porsche has banned employees from using internet sites such as Facebook, Google Mail or Ebay during office hours, for fear of industrial spying, German media reported on Saturday.

Corporate security chief Rainer Benne told business weekly Wirtschaftswoche that the company feared information could be leaked via social networking site Facebook in particular."

Twitter, After Number of Users Surges, Turns to Ads - NYTimes.com: "Twitter at last looks serious about making money.

In the last two weeks, the company has introduced several advertising plans, courted Madison Avenue at Advertising Week, the annual industry conference, and promoted Dick Costolo, who has led Twitter’s ad program, to chief executive — all signs that Twitter means business about business. It’s Twitter’s biggest financial effort since April, when it introduced its first, much-anticipated ad program, Promoted Tweets.

Twitter’s startling growth — it has exploded to 160 million users, from three million, in the last two years — is reminiscent of Google and Facebook in their early days. Those Web sites are now must-buys for advertisers online, and the ad industry is watching Twitter closely to see if it continues to follow that path."

Saturday, October 09, 2010

Auto Sales to Auto Traffic

Auto sales in India are rocketing upwards, but auto traffic on roads is at a grinding halt...

The Hindu : Business / Industry : Auto sales clock new record in September: "Domestic automobile sales clocked a new record of 13,29,086 units in September, driven by best ever monthly sales in passenger cars and motorcycles.

Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) said sales beat expectations, but warned that the party could be spoiled, by a possible rate hike in November by Reserve Bank of India.

The industry had witnessed a total sales of 12,63,293 units in August this year. On an annual basis, vehicle sales in September grew by 21.63 per cent."

Healing Butterflies

Butterflies Cure Themselves with Plants : Discovery News: "Monarch butterflies can cure themselves and their offspring of disease by using medicinal plants, according to a new paper in the journal Ecology Letters.

The disease is caused by a protozoan parasite called Ophryocystis elektroscirrha. The parasite invades the gut of the caterpillars and then persists when the caterpillars become adult monarchs.

Project leader Jaap de Roode in eScience Commons today said, “We have shown that some species of milkweed, the larva’s food plants, can reduce parasite infection in the monarchs. And we have also found that infected female butterflies prefer to lay their eggs on plants that will make their offspring less sick, suggesting that monarchs have evolved the ability to medicate their offspring.”"

Friday, October 08, 2010

Taking "Stock" of Jobs...

The stock market leaped ahead today, apparently because a lousy jobs report is expected to result in further cheap credit and other monetary debasement, courtesy the Fed.
It is also safe to conclude that the market would have zoomed ahead had the jobs report been positive.
So the market moves forward irrespective of the job situation...and Obama is getting blamed for the job situation but gets no credit for the market gains.

Dow closes above 11,000 after jobs report - Business - Stocks & economy - msnbc.com: "NEW YORK�— The Dow Jones industrial average closed Friday above 11,000 for the first time since early May as the markets digested news of another weak report on unemployment, fueling expectations the Federal Reserve will step in to help the economy.

High unemployment remains a major hurdle as economic growth continues to be sluggish. The Labor Department's report, considered the most important piece of news on the economic calendar, did little to alter the view that the economy remains weak.

While job creation remains scarce, however, there could be a silver lining. Expectations are growing that the Fed will try to stimulate the economy by stepping up its purchases of government bonds. The gloomy jobs report could give the U.S. central bank more incentive to act."

Thursday, October 07, 2010

Overweight and Overpaid...Admission to Men Only

Life Inc. - Women's pay packets linked to their waistlines: "Separate studies of 11,253 Germans and 12,686 U.S. residents found that very thin women (who weigh 25 pounds less than the group's norm) earned an average $15,572 a year more than women of 'normal' weight, according to the study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology the findings of which are reported in The Wall Street Journal.
For overweight men, however, the trend is reversed. Overweight guys tend to earn more than their skinnier colleagues, the study found. Thin guys earned $8,437 less than men of average weight, and they were consistently rewarded for getting heavier. The highest pay point, on average, was reached for guys who weighed a strapping 207 pounds, the Journal said.
Maybe employers will start examining their assumptions about employees' weight? Fat chance."

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Learning to Drink and Drinking to Learn

Rampant Fraud Threat to China’s Brisk Ascent - NYTimes.com: "China devotes significant resources to building a world-class education system and pioneering research in competitive industries and sciences, and has had notable successes in network computing, clean energy, and military technology. But a lack of integrity among researchers is hindering China’s potential and harming collaboration between Chinese scholars and their international counterparts, scholars in China and abroad say.

“If we don’t change our ways, we will be excluded from the global academic community,” said Zhang Ming, a professor of International Relations at Renmin University in Beijing. “We need to focus on seeking truth, not serving the agenda of some bureaucrat or satisfying the desire for personal profit.”

Pressure on scholars by administrators of state-run universities to earn journal citations — a measure of innovation — has produced a deluge of plagiarized or fabricated research. Last December, a British journal that specializes in crystal formations announced that it was withdrawing more than 70 papers by Chinese authors whose research was of questionable originality or rigor.

In an editorial published earlier this year, The Lancet, the British medical journal, warned that faked or plagiarized research posed a threat to President Hu Jintao’s vow to make China a “research superpower” by 2020."

Cheers as Delhi lets ladies behind the bar - Yahoo! Finance: "Twenty-year-old scotch whisky, vintage champagne. You can find almost anything in the sparkling high-end bars of India's capital, except a female bartender.

Soon you'll find that, too, after Delhi this week changed a century-old law that banned women from serving alcohol.

For activists and alcohol industry insiders, it was long overdue."

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Throwing "cold" water on cold fighting treatments

A good counter-intuitive insight into the common cold...

Op-Ed Contributor - How Not to Fight Colds - NYTimes.com: "You might think this was key, given the number of nutritional supplements, cold remedies and fortified cereals on the market that purport to augment the immune system — often with the help of vitamins, zinc or ginseng — and by so doing stave off colds.

But science and experience don’t back this up. On the contrary, if you’re keen on tamping down your own cold, “boosting” your immunity may be the last thing you want to do."

Monday, October 04, 2010

Safe betting on this one

A week or so ago my students discussed the implications of the "The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act" of 2006. Today NYT reported that the Casinos are considering supporting online gambling. The law was created to discourage "immoral" behavior...

Casinos Weigh an Online Bet - Yahoo! Finance: "Many of the country’s largest casinos, long opposed to gambling games like poker on the Internet, are now having second thoughts.

Although online gambling is popular with millions of Americans, it is illegal in the United States, and the casino industry has considered it a threat.

But a trade group that represents major casinos like Harrah’s Entertainment, MGM Resorts and Wynn Resorts is working on a proposal that would ask Congress to legalize at least some form of online gambling, the group’s chief executive said."

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Local Choices, Global Effects

is the title of my First Year Seminar Course on Sustainability. The title can be applied to a number of varied areas, one of which is education, specially foreign students.
An interesting article in the NYT notes the growth in foreign students worldwide. There are a number of forces, one of which is mentioned in the article as 'Globalization of Knowledge." I have referred to the Globalization of Talent, where employers are searching for talent worldwide. Students studying in other countries is going to push this globalization even further. However the effects of "virtual education" are harder to estimate. Will technology advances allow us to simulate social learning virtually?

Traffic Picks Up in World Education - NYTimes.com: "Though there may be disagreement on the implications, the scale of the global traffic is beyond dispute: depending on how you count, there are currently between 2.5 and 3 million foreign students (some countries count only foreign citizens who stay for longer than a year). By 2025 that figure is expected to reach 8 million. Dr. Salmi cites both “push factors — things that make you decide to leave your own country — and pull factors” behind the projected growth. “Push factors could be students aren’t happy with the quality of instruction on offer at home — or perhaps they just didn’t find a place,” he said. “For example, medical education is very selective in Germany. So many German students go to Austria.”"

Saturday, October 02, 2010

Business of Employment

Google world's most attractive employer: Survey - The Economic Times: "According to Universum's -- The world's most attractive employers 2010 - index, Google retains its number one position for the second consecutive year.

The Universum survey saw auditing majors -- KPMG, Ernst and Young, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Deloitte -- dominating four of the top five positions...
Other world's most attractive employers in the list include Procter & Gamble (6th), Microsoft (7th), Coca Cola Company (8th), J P Morgan (9th) and Goldman Sachs (10th).

In the engineering category, the IT companies continue to dominate. With Google, Microsoft and IBM as the top three most lucrative employers in the segment..."


IIM-A proposes pan-India placement standards - The Economic Times: "MUMBAI: THE IIMs, private B schools and blue-chip recruiters on Fridaytoyed with uniform placement standards, a proposed system that would calculate salary figures as per a common formula and announce placement results in a pre-decided format.

'Indian Placement Reporting Standards', the new system put forth by the IIM-A at a recruiters conclave in Mumbai, sought consensus from other IIMs and B-schools as well as recruiters for adopting the new uniform system, which aims at achieving goals similar to those envisaged in the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)."

Friday, October 01, 2010

Pollution of Many Kinds

Air Pollution Strongly Linked to Diabetes : Discovery News: "What's causing the diabetes epidemic in the United States? Poor diet, lack of exercise, obesity, and a smoking habit are commonly cited as the big factors. But what about pollution in the environment, and specifically air pollution? Could small particles from haze, smoke and car exhaust have a hand in doubling the number of diagnosed cases of the disease over the last 15 years?

A new study argues there is a strong link between pollution and diabetes rates, and that even current pollution limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency may not be stringent enough to protect us from harm."


Syphilis Experiment Is Revealed, Prompting U.S. Apology to Guatemala - NYTimes.com: "From 1946 to 1948, American public health doctors deliberately infected nearly 700 Guatemalans — prison inmates, mental patients and soldiers — with venereal diseases in what was meant as an effort to test the effectiveness of penicillin.

American tax dollars, through the National Institutes of Health, even paid for syphilis-infected prostitutes to sleep with prisoners, since Guatemalan prisons allowed such visits. When the prostitutes did not succeed in infecting the men, some prisoners had the bacteria poured onto scrapes made on their penises, faces or arms, and in some cases it was injected by spinal puncture.

If the subjects contracted the disease, they were given antibiotics.

“However, whether everyone was then cured is not clear,” said Susan M. Reverby, the professor at Wellesley College who brought the experiments to light in a research paper that prompted American health officials to investigate."

CNN Fires Rick Sanchez for Remarks About Jon Stewart - NYTimes.com: "Rick Sanchez, a daytime anchor at CNN, was fired on Friday, a day after telling a radio interviewer that Jon Stewart was a bigot and that “everybody that runs CNN is a lot like Stewart.”"