“France, Poland want Polanski released on bail - Delaware Online” plus 4 more |
- France, Poland want Polanski released on bail - Delaware Online
- Pro, anti-casino forces' only focus: jobs - Cincinnati.com
- SCSU to award Graves, other alumni - St. Cloud Times
- Jobs debate continues to rage ahead of casino vote - Zanesville Times Recorder
- Negative Bond Returns Converge With Mortgage Miracle (Update2) - Bloomberg
France, Poland want Polanski released on bail - Delaware Online Posted: 28 Sep 2009 06:31 AM PDT (2 of 4) That means the procedure for extradition could also be lengthy for the United States. Its request for Polanski's transfer must first be examined by the Swiss Justice Ministry, and once approved it can be appealed at a number of courts. The 2005 saga over Adamov's extradition, eventually to Russia and not the U.S., took seven months. The case also sets a possible precedent for France, which may wish to try one of its own nationals in a domestic court rather than in Los Angeles. For now, Polanski is living in a Zurich cell where he receives three meals a day and is allowed outside for one hour of daily exercise. Rebecca de Silva, spokeswoman for the Zurich prison authorities, refused to say exactly where Polanski was being held for security reasons, but said cells are usually single or double occupancy and that each room contains a table, storage compartment, sink, toilet and television. Family and friends can only see Polanski for an hour each week, but that does not include official visits from lawyers and consular diplomats, de Silva said. The Justice Ministry insisted Sunday that politics played no role in its arrest order on Polanski, who lives in France but has spent much time at a chalet in the luxury Swiss resort of Gstaad. That has led to widespread speculation among his friends and even politicians in Switzerland that the neutral country was coerced by Washington into action. Polanski's French lawyer Herve Temime told the daily Le Parisien that Polanski stayed in Gstaad for months this year. "He came here, but I have no idea how frequently," said Toni von Gruenigen, deputy mayor of Saarnen, where the famously discreet community is located. Von Gruenigen said he was unaware of any attempt to arrest Polanski in the town where Elizabeth Taylor, Roger Moore and Richard Burton have also sought refuge from pressures at home. "He kept a low profile," von Gruenigen told The AP. The U.S. has had an outstanding warrant on Polanski since 1978, but the Swiss said American authorities have sought the arrest of the director around the world only since 2005. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Pro, anti-casino forces' only focus: jobs - Cincinnati.com Posted: 28 Sep 2009 06:24 AM PDT Backers of casino gambling in Ohio point to a University of Cincinnati study to prove that Issue 3 "will create 34,000 new jobs." Opponents use that same study to assert "at no time will 34,000 Ohioans be put to work." A pro-Issue 3 ad touts "Ohio jobs for Ohioans." An anti-Issue 3 ad purports to have proof that out-of-state casino workers will "come take Ohio jobs." Previous campaigns for casino gambling in Ohio - and there have been four, all unsuccessful - have focused on other issues: Moral objections to gambling, its social costs or the geographic unfairness of the particular plans. But with unemployment figures in double digits - Ohio's jobless rate is 10.5 percent and Greater Cincinnati's is 9.9 percent, a near 26-year high - casino backers are clearly banking on a message of jobs to sway skeptical voters. They'll decide Nov. 3 whether Ohio will allow casinos in Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo. The debate over how many jobs will be created - and who will get them - has dominated the television and radio ad war in recent weeks. It's a debate that's spilled over into charges, countercharges and complaints of dirty campaign tactics Bottom line: Proponents can justifiably claim the 34,000 new jobs - but the number includes both permanent and temporary positions, full- and part-time, created directly and indirectly from casinos. The number doesn't take into account an unknown number of job losses that could result from competing industries. And while casino operators would undoubtedly hire some positions from out-of-state, claims that they're already hiring people from Las Vegas and Atlantic City - for jobs that won't be available for up to four years - are dubious. 34,000 jobs?The debate begins at the University of Cincinnati's Economics Center for Education and Research, a think tank that has developed a cottage industry of economic impact studies. The Ohio Jobs & Growth Committee, which is pushing a constitutional amendment to allow casino gambling in Ohio, paid the UC economists to determine how many jobs would be created if the four casinos were built. Neither UC nor the Ohio Jobs & Growth Committee would discuss how much it paid for the study, and many of the conclusions rely on a separate marketing study also paid for by casino proponents.) Their number: 34,551. The economists admit they don't have a good handle on how many of those are part time. The number includes jobs created directly by the casinos (17,204), plus indirectly through increased economic activity (17,347). The casino might use a local linen service, for example, and casino workers might spend their paychecks at a local grocery store. So even though only 7,500 workers - making an average of $33,000 a year - will be employed directly by the casinos, thousands more jobs will be created by building the casinos and providing services and supplies, the study's authors said. Salaries will range from $19,500 for food preparation workers - the single biggest category of employment - to $82,000 for managers, who will account for 2 percent of the jobs. The study's authors suggest that the number of low-wage, low-skill jobs is a benefit, because it will help transition currently unemployed people into the workforce. But after the pro-Issue 3 campaign ran the "34,000 jobs" number in a television commercial, the anti-Issue 3 forces pounced. "According to the out-of-state casino owner's own study, at no time will 34,000 Ohioans be put to work." That's true enough. The jobs will come in two phases: 23,444 jobs (9,704 direct and 13,740 indirect) out of the construction phase, lasting an average of one year, the study predicts. Once the casinos are open and those jobs go away, 15,807 permanent new jobs (7,500 direct and 8,307 indirect) will be created. Potential job lossesIn Cincinnati, the study predicts 2,134 jobs in the construction phase, followed by 2,754 once the casino gets running. But Ohio's horse industry says the UC study failed to take into account potential job losses if people stop going to racetracks and start going to casinos. Horses constitute one of Ohio's largest agricultural industries, employing at least 12,300 people, according to the Ohio State Racing Commission. In addition to the seven racetracks, the industry helps support farmers, trainers, stable hands and county fair workers. With casino competition - and without the right to install video lottery terminals at tracks - the Racing Commission estimates that no more than two of those tracks could survive. They are Beulah Park outside Columbus and Northfield Park outside Cleveland. "If you were to close down this industry, and lose 12,000 or 13,000 jobs, that's more than closing down an auto plant," said Tom Zaino, a former state tax commissioner under Gov. Bob Taft and a member of the racing commission, which opposes Issue 3. The UC economists say they didn't examine those impacts, for two reasons: They weren't asked to by the pro-casino group, and because those effects are too speculative. In fact, they say, it's just as possible that casinos could help other entertainment industries. People who come to Cincinnati to gamble may also eat in local restaurants, see a play or catch a game. There's another way the casinos could help create jobs. Through one-time licensing fees, the casinos would pay $200 million to the state for workforce development. That investment would create 4,700 new jobs, the U.C. study estimates. That's in addition to the 34,551 jobs, but the pro-casino side says it's not including them in its promised job creation number in an effort to be conservative. Once the casinos are in operation, the annual sales, property, income and casino taxes coming to local governments and school districts would total $53 million to Hamilton County alone, the study said. Hamilton County Commissioner David Pepper has not endorsed the casino amendment, but worries that Ohio is losing ground on economic development to states that allow casinos. He said Cincinnati almost lost Graeter's Inc. - the iconic Queen City ice cream manufacturer - to Lawrenceburg, Ind., home of the Hollywood Casino. "So not only are they taking our money in the form of Ohioans driving to Indiana to go gamble, but they're using the tax revenues from that gambling to offer tax incentives to our companies to locate there," Pepper said. "It's a double whammy." Pepper pledged that the $12 million a year casino taxes would generate for county coffers would be used in part to fund economic development efforts. Help wantedThe latest intrigue in the casino battle comes out of a mysterious classified ad placed in the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Press of Atlantic City, N.J. this month. The ad leads with "Ohio Opportunity" in bold type. The Buckeye State needs experienced dealers, pit bosses, accountants and tellers for "the most exciting emerging gaming destination in the country," the ad says. "No union card required." Issue 3 opponents have seized on the ads as evidence that "out-of-state gambling interests" are recruiting "workers from other states to come take Ohio jobs." It reinforces their message that the constitutional amendment - unlike Gov. Ted Strickland's proposal to expand gambling at racetracks - contains no "Hire Ohioans" provision. But the developers of the proposed casinos - Penn National Gaming and Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert - deny any connection to the hiring effort. While no decision has been made on union organizing, Penn National has a history of running unionized casinos, they say. The ad carries the logo of Ixtapa Gaming LLC, a gaming supplier with no apparent background in staffing casinos, but which does have ties to two Michigan casinos that could be competitors of Toledo's. Ixtapa Gaming CEO Candice S. Chandler did not return phone calls and e-mails from the Enquirer, but she told the Associated Press that she has no affiliation with either campaign. Her e-mailed statement did not fully explain how, then, she could be hiring for casinos that don't yet exist. The operators of the proposed casinos acknowledge that they'll have to recruit some out-of-state jobs eventually, because they'll need people with casino experience. "Some of the top management jobs, no question, will go to people who are not currently Ohioans, because we have no casinos," said Bob Tenenbaum, a spokesman for the pro-casino effort. From a strictly economic perspective, the debate over where the jobs would come from is meaningless, said Jeff Rexhausen, the associate director of the UC group that wrote the casino owners' study. Once out-of-state workers come to Ohio, they'll be Ohioans, he said. They'll buy houses in Ohio, shop in Ohio and pay taxes in Ohio. "It's not like we don't want any more people coming here," he said. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
SCSU to award Graves, other alumni - St. Cloud Times Posted: 28 Sep 2009 05:41 AM PDT James Graves, chief executive officer of Graves Hospitality Corp., will receive St. Cloud State Universitys Distinguished Alumni award during ceremonies at the school next month. St. Cloud State will recognize several alumni as part of its annual homecoming celebration. The awards will be presented at a reception and dinner that start at 4 p.m. Oct. 9 in the Alumni Room and Ballroom at Atwood Memorial Center on campus. The St. Cloud State University Alumni Association also will have a ribbon cutting and grand opening for its new Alumni Room in Atwood as part of the event. Other alumni award recipients this year are: Robert White, former chief executive officer at Wolters Kluwer Financial Services, Alumni Service Award; James Bullard, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Leadership Award from the G.R. Herberger College of Business; Kathy Grundei, arts education consultant at the Perpich Center for Arts Education, Leadership Award from the College of Fine Arts and Humanities; Michael Spanier, Sartell Middle School principal, Leadership Award from the College of Education; Gary Lee, chairman and professor of sociology at Bowling Green State University, Leadership Award from the College of Social Sciences; Dennis Tuel Sr., founder of ShoreMaster Inc., Leadership Award from the College of Science and Engineering; Joseph Nayquonabe, corporate vice president of marketing, for the Corporate Commission of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, Graduate of the Last Decade award; Edward Bouffard, former associate director of Atwood Memorial Center, St. Cloud State, University Leadership Award. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Jobs debate continues to rage ahead of casino vote - Zanesville Times Recorder Posted: 28 Sep 2009 05:41 AM PDT Backers of casino gambling in Ohio point to a University of Cincinnati study to prove that Issue 3 "will create 34,000 new jobs." Opponents use that same study to assert "at no time will 34,000 Ohioans be put to work." A pro-Issue 3 ad touts "Ohio jobs for Ohioans." An anti-Issue 3 ad purports to have proof that out-of-state casino workers will "come take Ohio jobs." Previous campaigns for casino gambling in Ohio -- and there have been four, all unsuccessful -- have focused on other issues: Moral objections to gambling, its social costs or the geographic unfairness of the particular plans. But with unemployment figures in double digits -- Ohio's jobless rate is 10.5 percent -- casino backers clearly are banking on a message of jobs to sway skeptical voters. They'll decide Nov. 3 whether Ohio will allow casinos in Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo. The debate about how many jobs will be created -- and who will get them -- has dominated the television and radio ad war in recent weeks. It's a debate that's spilled over into charges, countercharges and complaints of dirty campaign tactics Bottom line: Proponents justifiably can claim the 34,000 new jobs -- but the number includes both permanent and temporary positions, full- and part-time, created directly and indirectly from casinos. The number doesn't take into account an unknown number of job losses that could result from competing industries. And, while casino operators undoubtedly would hire some positions from out-of-state, claims that they're already hiring people from Las Vegas and Atlantic City -- for jobs that won't be available for up to four years -- are dubious. 34,000 JOBS?The debate begins at the University of Cincinnati's Economics Center for Education and Research, a think tank that has developed a cottage industry of economic impact studies. The Ohio Jobs & Growth Committee, which is pushing a constitutional amendment to allow casino gambling in Ohio, paid the UC economists to determine how many jobs would be created if the four casinos were built. Neither UC nor the Ohio Jobs & Growth Committee would discuss how much it paid for the study, and many of the conclusions rely on a separate marketing study also paid for by casino proponents. Their number: 34,551. The economists admit they don't have a good handle on how many of those are part-time. The number includes jobs created directly by the casinos (17,204), plus indirectly through increased economic activity (17,347). The casino might use a local linen service, for example, and casino workers might spend their paychecks at a local grocery store. So, although only 7,500 workers -- making an average of $33,000 per year -- will be employed directly by the casinos, thousands more jobs will be created by building the casinos and providing services and supplies, the study's authors said. Salaries will range from $19,500 for food preparation workers -- the single biggest category of employment -- to $82,000 for managers, who will account for 2 percent of the jobs. The study's authors suggest that the number of low-wage, low-skill jobs is a benefit, because it will help transition currently unemployed people into the workforce. But after the pro-Issue 3 campaign ran the "34,000 jobs" number in a television commercial, the anti-Issue 3 forces pounced. "According to the out-of-state casino owner's own study, at no time will 34,000 Ohioans be put to work." That's true enough. The jobs will come in two phases: 23,444 jobs (9,704 direct and 13,740 indirect) out of the construction phase, lasting an average of one year, the study predicts. Once the casinos are open and those jobs go away, 15,807 permanent new jobs (7,500 direct and 8,307 indirect) will be created. POTENTIAL JOB LOSSESIn Cincinnati, the study predicts 2,134 jobs in the construction phase, followed by 2,754 once the casino gets running. But Ohio's horse industry says the UC study failed to take into account potential job losses if people stop going to racetracks and start going to casinos. Horses constitute one of Ohio's largest agricultural industries, employing at least 12,300 people, according to the Ohio State Racing Commission. In addition to the seven racetracks, the industry helps support farmers, trainers, stable hands and county fair workers. With casino competition -- and without the right to install video lottery terminals at tracks -- the Racing Commission estimates that no more than two of those tracks could survive. They are Beulah Park outside Columbus and Northfield Park outside Cleveland. "If you were to close down this industry, and lose 12,000 or 13,000 jobs, that's more than closing down an auto plant," said Tom Zaino, a former state tax commissioner under Gov. Bob Taft and a member of the racing commission, which opposes Issue 3. The UC economists say they didn't examine those impacts, for two reasons: they weren't asked to by the pro-casino group and because those effects are too speculative. In fact, they say, it's just as possible that casinos could help other entertainment industries. People who come to Cincinnati to gamble may also eat in local restaurants, see a play or catch a game. There's another way the casinos could help create jobs. Through one-time licensing fees, the casinos would pay $200 million to the state for workforce development. That investment would create 4,700 new jobs, the U.C. study estimates. That's in addition to the 34,551 jobs, but the pro-casino side says it's not including them in its promised job creation number in an effort to be conservative. Once the casinos are in operation, the annual sales, property, income and casino taxes coming to local governments and school districts would total $53 million to Hamilton County alone, the study said. Hamilton County Commissioner David Pepper has not endorsed the casino amendment, but worries that Ohio is losing ground on economic development to states that allow casinos. He said Cincinnati almost lost Graeter's Inc. -- the iconic Queen City ice cream manufacturer -- to Lawrenceburg, Ind., home of the Hollywood Casino. "So not only are they taking our money in the form of Ohioans driving to Indiana to go gamble, but they're using the tax revenues from that gambling to offer tax incentives to our companies to locate there," Pepper said. "It's a double whammy." Pepper pledged that the $12 million per year casino taxes would generate for county coffers would be used in part to fund economic development efforts. HELP WANTEDThe latest intrigue in the casino battle comes out of a mysterious classified ad placed in the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Press of Atlantic City, N.J. this month. The ad leads with "Ohio Opportunity" in bold type. The Buckeye State needs experienced dealers, pit bosses, accountants and tellers for "the most exciting emerging gaming destination in the country," the ad says. "No union card required." Issue 3 opponents have seized on the ads as evidence that "out-of-state gambling interests" are recruiting "workers from other states to come take Ohio jobs." It reinforces their message that the constitutional amendment -- unlike Gov. Ted Strickland's proposal to expand gambling at racetracks -- contains no "Hire Ohioans" provision. But the developers of the proposed casinos -- Penn National Gaming and Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert -- deny any connection to the hiring effort. While no decision has been made on union organizing, Penn National has a history of running unionized casinos, they say. The ad carries the logo of Ixtapa Gaming LLC, a gaming supplier with no apparent background in staffing casinos, but which does have ties to two Michigan casinos that could be competitors of Toledo's. Ixtapa Gaming CEO Candice S. Chandler did not return phone calls and e-mails from the Enquirer, but she told the Associated Press she has no affiliation with either campaign. Her e-mailed statement did not fully explain how, then, she could be hiring for casinos that don't yet exist. The operators of the proposed casinos acknowledge they'll have to recruit some out-of-state jobs eventually, because they'll need people with casino experience. "Some of the top management jobs, no question, will go to people who are not currently Ohioans, because we have no casinos," said Bob Tenenbaum, a spokesman for the pro-casino effort. From a strictly economic perspective, the debate about where the jobs would come from is meaningless, said Jeff Rexhausen, the associate director of the UC group that wrote the casino owners' study. Once out-of-state workers come to Ohio, they'll be Ohioans, he said. They'll buy houses in Ohio, shop in Ohio and pay taxes in Ohio. "It's not like we don't want any more people coming here," he said. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Negative Bond Returns Converge With Mortgage Miracle (Update2) - Bloomberg Posted: 28 Sep 2009 06:24 AM PDT
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Telecommunication Terms for Taiwanese Customers 美商彭博新聞有限公司台北分公司 彭博高速資訊網路業務營業規章 第 一 條 彭博高速資訊網路(英文名稱: Bloomberg High Speed Data Network)業務(以下簡稱「本業務」),係指美商彭博新聞有限公司台北分公司(以下簡稱「本公司」)利用彭博高速資訊網路所提供之各項財經資訊服務。 第 二 條 本業務之營業項目為「存取網路服務(Store and Retrieve Network)」(如電話秘書、線上資訊接取、電子佈告欄(BBS)、電子資料交換、統合信息服務(Unified message service)、電子文件服務、語音訊息、語音信箱服務),及「存轉網路服務(Store & Forward Network)」(如傳真存轉、交易服務、數據網路服務)。 第 三 條 用戶租用本業務,應依本公司規定向本公司申請並簽訂相關用戶合約,載明各項權利義務。第 四 條 自用戶端連結至彭博高速資訊網路之電信機線設備,應由本公司負責向第一類電信事業承租,其租用條件應依該第一類電信事業之規定訂之,且其架設、維修、通信品質等均由該第一類電信事業負責,本公司僅負責代用戶與該第一類電信事業聯繫。第 五 條 本業務系統所需各項硬體及軟體設備之取得、設置以及所有權,均依本公司相關業務規定或用戶合約約定辦理。第 六 條 本公司提供本業務所收取之服務費主要可分為系統建置費、設定費、網路系統維護費、資訊服務費、其他電信事業所收取之通訊費用等。本公司應於用戶合約中載明詳細付費項目以及各項費用之計算標準。第 七 條 本公司若對於服務費有所調整或變更時,除報請主管機關備查外,應於彭博高速資訊網路之網站以及本公司營業場所公告,並事前個別通知用戶。用戶若不同意服務費之調整或變更,得立即終止用戶合約,本公司應退還用戶所預付之服務費。第 八 條 用戶於向本公司申請使用本業務時,應提出正確之用戶資料,並於變更時通知本公司,否則概由用戶自行負責。第 九 條 本公司對於因提供本業務所取得之用戶資料應加以保密,並遵守「電腦處理個人資料保護法」之規定處理用戶資料。惟於下列情形,本公司得提供用戶資料予第三人: 一、經用戶同意。 二、司法機關或犯罪偵查機關,為偵查或調查犯罪依法所為之命令。 三、其他政府機關因執行公權力而依法所為之命令。 四、與公眾生命安全有關之機關為進行緊急救助者。 五、符合「電腦處理個人資料保護法」第二十三條之規定者。第 十 條 本公司預定暫停或終止本業務之一部或全部時,應於預定暫停或終止日一個月前報請主管機關備查,並立即通知用戶。 前項暫停營業之時間最長不得超過一年。 第十一條 若本公司營業許可遭主管機關廢止,或本公司預定暫停或終止本業務之一部或全部時,本公司應退還用戶所預付之費用,並應依法律規定以及用戶合約約定賠償用戶之損失。第十二條 用戶若有拒絕或遲延給付本業務之服務費之情事,本公司應定相當期限催告該用戶給付所積欠之服務費,並告知該用戶若未於所定期限內給付時,本公司有權依用戶合約之規定停止提供本業務,或期前終止用戶合約。第十三條 若本公司發現用戶使用本業務有下列情形之一時,本公司有權立即停止對該用戶提供本業務,且該用戶應自行負擔任何責任: 一、危害國家安全、擾亂治安。 二、妨害公共秩序、善良風俗。 三、竊取、更改、破壞他人資訊。 四、危害本公司或他人網路系統安全。 五、妨礙通訊秘密。第十四條 用戶使用本業務,如因本公司或其他電信業者之系統設備障礙、阻斷,以致發生錯誤、遲滯、中斷或不能傳遞時,本公司依電信法第二十三條之規定不負損害賠償責任,但應依下列規定扣減服務費: 一、若服務中斷達十二小時以上,而本公司仍未能使其恢復者,每中斷十二小時扣減每月服務費之三十分之一。 二、當月因通信不通所扣減之服務費總額應以當月所應繳納之服務費總數為限。 三、服務中斷之起始時間,以本公司察覺服務中斷或接獲用戶服務中斷之通知時為準,但若有紀錄證明服務中斷之實際起始時間者,以中斷實際發生之時為準。第十五條 本公司接獲用戶有關服務中斷之通知後,應立即展開系統之檢查及修復,並儘速排除服務中斷之原因,以維持本業務之服務品質。第十六條 用戶若對於本業務有任何意見或申訴,得利用客服電話:+886-2-7719-1592與本公司聯絡。 第十七條 本公司應遵守電信法之相關規定,確保用戶使用本業務之通訊秘密。 第十八條 若用戶有利用本業務從事非法活動者,本公司有權向相關單位檢舉,並有權將之視為拒絕往來戶。第十九條 本營業規章未盡事宜,悉依相關適用法令以及用戶合約之規定辦理。 第二十條 本營業規章自公告日起施行,於有變更時亦同。
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