Posts Tagged ‘DETROIT’

US newspapers, magazines to slash thousands of jobs

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

(IANS)

New York, Nov 2 (Xinhua) Gannett Company Inc., the largest US newspaper chain, has announced that it will lay off about 10 percent of its workforce by early December.

The move, together with projected job cuts at Time, New York Times and other big-name media organisations, has made the US economic scenario look even gloomier for many.

Over the past few weeks, a number of US newspapers and magazines have announced their plans to shed jobs so as to lower their operating costs as the pain of the financial crisis spreads well beyond Wall Street.

According to a New York Times report, Gannett’s layoffs will not apply to the company’s flagship paper, USA Today, but to the company’s 84 other daily newspapers in the United States, and more than 800 small, non-daily local papers.

Gannett, the largest US newspaper publisher in terms of daily circulation, reportedly declined to say how many people would lose their jobs. The 10-percent figure translates to roughly 3,000 people.

Besides, Time Warner’s Time Inc., the world’s largest magazine company, plans a restructuring that could lead to as many as 600 job cuts, or about six percent of its workforce, according to media.

The move was taken in response to the onset of the world financial crisis, which is aggravating an already difficult decline in advertising spending at US newspapers and magazines, particularly as more people shun printed publications in favour of free information on the Internet.

It affects some of the most well-known US magazines, including the Time Weekly news magazine, People, Sports Illustrated and Fortune. All these titles are part of parent company Time Warner, which owns the AOL Internet service as well as the CNN, the popular cable news television network.

‘Industry conditions have been challenging due to the financial crisis, which has produced sharp decreases in advertising spending. This is expected to continue through most of 2009,’ Time Chairman and Chief Executive Ann Moore was cited as writing in a memo to employees.

Just as it prepares for its 100th birthday, the Christian Science Monitor has announced that it will discontinue its Monday-Friday print and will be replaced by a weekly paper edition, as the daily news is picked up by its website, CSMonitor.

The Monitor’s editor, John Yemma, was quoted by a report on a website as saying that there will likely be layoffs, but refused to talk about the exact number. The layoffs will likely occur when the shift goes into effect sometime next April.

The decision was reportedly made as Monitor is feeling the pressure to be more self-supporting. The paper, which tends to cover global and political news from a liberal, analytic perspective, reportedly had $18.9 million in net losses last year with about $12.5 million dollars in revenue.

Earlier in September, The New York Times, the largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States with 98 Pulitzer Prizes, reported that it was shutting down City and Suburban Delivery Systems, a unit that distributed the Times and 200 other publications to newsstands in the New York, New Jersey and Connecticut areas.

With it, the newspaper was reducing 550 full-time union jobs, but a source later said the likely number would be 300 to 600.

As a result of the worsening economic situation, an increasing number of businesses in various sectors have announced their job-cut plans.

In the past two weeks, the list of companies announcing their intention to reduce workforce reads like a Who’s Who of corporate America: Merck, Yahoo, General Electric, Xerox, Pratt & Whitney, Goldman Sachs, Whirlpool, Bank of America, Alcoa, Coca-Cola, the Detroit automakers and nearly all the airlines, the International Herald Tribune reported.

When the October job losses are announced Nov 7, three days after the presidential election, many economists expect the number to exceed 200,000. The current US unemployment rate of 6.1 percent is likely to rise, perhaps significantly.

‘My view is that it will be near eight or 8.5 percent by the end of next year,’ said Nigel Gault, the chief domestic economist at Global Insight. That would be the highest rate since the deep recession of the early 1980s.

Analysts say that effective measures must be taken to help people weather the current situation.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has taken the lead in adopting some measures to cope with the situation.

On Thursday, he announced 18 initiatives to help New Yorkers cope with the increasing challenges brought by the global, national and local economic downturn.

The initiatives were designed to create jobs, support the city’s workforce, small businesses and homeowners, and provide targeted relief to the city’s most vulnerable populations.

Jackson postpones two concerts after hospital stay

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

New York, Oct 01: Janet Jackson on Tuesday postponed two concert tour dates this week after the singer was rushed to a hospital with an unexplained illness minutes before a performance in Montreal.

Jackson’s representatives said in a statement the singer on Monday night “got suddenly ill during her sound check … and had to be rushed to the hospital just before showtime.

Jackson checked into Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal and was discharged two hours later, said Rebecca Burns, a spokeswoman for the hospital.

Burns and Jackson’s representatives declined to give further information about the singer’s illness.

Jackson, 42, currently on her Rock Witchu tour, was making her first appearance in Montreal in seven years.

The singer postponed her shows in Boston on Wednesday and in Philadelphia on Thursday due to her illness, her representatives said.

Jackson is recuperating and will resume the tour on Saturday in Greensboro, North Carolina, her representatives said.

Last week, Jackson called off a concert in Detroit due to “production restraints,” local media said.

Jackson was one of the best-selling female recording artists of the late 1980s and 1990s with hit albums that included “Control” and “Rhythm Nation 1814.

She is the youngest of nine siblings in the Jackson family of singers that produced the 1970s pop group the Jackson 5 and Michael Jackson.

General Motors unveils electric Volt

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Turning 100, General Motors (GM) Tuesday unveiled the Chevrolet Volt, an extended-range electric vehicle that will go on sale in 2010, with which it hopes to turn around its fortunes.

‘The Volt is symbolic of what General Motors stands for today. Certainly that means cutting-edge technology, exciting design, fast and efficient product development,’ said GM chairman Rick Wagoner at the event in Detroit.

‘The Volt symbolises General Motors’ commitment to the future,’ Detroit Free Press quoted Wagoner as saying.

The four-seater Volt, equipped with potentially industry-changing technology, is expected to drive 40 miles on an electric charge alone and about 400 miles using an onboard gas-burning generator to recharge its lithium-ion battery. The electric motor alone drives the wheels.

An overnight charge is expected to cost less than ‘your favourite’ cup of coffee, and annually use less energy than a typical home refrigerator, the company said in a statement.

GM did not announce pricing for the car, which will have about 150 horsepower and a top speed of 100 miles per hour.

In 2007, GM unveiled a design for the concept Volt at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, with promises of unprecedented fuel efficiency. The biggest US automaker (which has ceded the No. 1 world spot to Japan’s Toyota) regularly uses the Volt concept car in its advertising, identifying it as ‘future product.

If GM and its partners can develop strong enough lithium-ion batteries – like giant cell-phone batteries – the car will go into production in 2010.

Standard features in the Volt will include a touch screen to display vehicle information, and Bluetooth capability for cell phones and music streaming. Drivers will be able to configure the instrument display, which will be shown on a LCD screen, GM said in a statement.

Based on photos of Volt released inadvertently last week, many people posting comments on car blogs have expressed disappointment that the production car does not look as angular and aggressive as the original concept vehicle.

Low birth weight, psychiatric problems in children, linked

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

(IANS)

Low birth-weight children appear to be at higher risk for psychiatric disturbances from childhood through high school than normal birth-weight children, says a study.

Besides, low birth-weight children from urban communities may be more likely to have attention problems than suburban low birth-weight children.

‘Advances in neonatal medicine have raised the survivorship of low birth-weight infants (2.5 kg or less), especially very low birth-weight infants (1.5 kg or less) and extremely low birth-weight infants (1 kg or less),’ according to the report.

Previous studies have reported that low birth-weight children appear to have an increased risk of internalising, externalising and attention problems.

Kipling M. Bohnert and Naomi Breslau of Michigan State University, East Lansing, examined the long-term association between low birth-weight and psychiatric problems among 413 children from a socially disadvantaged community in Detroit and 410 children from a middle-class Detroit suburb.

Children’s psychiatric disturbances were rated by mothers and teachers at ages 6, 11 and 17. Psychiatric disturbances were separated into three categories.

They are externalising, including delinquent and aggressive behavior; internalising, including withdrawn behaviour and anxiety/depression and attention, including characteristic symptoms of ADHD such as not being able to pay attention for long or difficulty following directions.

Low birth-weight children were more likely to exhibit externalising and internalising problems than normal birth-weight children in their community.

‘An increased risk of attention problems was associated with low birth-weight only in the urban community and was greater among very low birth-weight children (weighing 1.5 kg or less) than heavier low birth-weight children (weighing 1.5 kg to 2.5 kg),’ the authors wrote.

‘In the suburban community, there was no increased risk for attention problems associated with low birth-weight. Psychiatric outcomes of low birth-weight did not vary across ages of assessments.

‘Early interventions to improve attention skills in urban low birth-weight children might yield better outcomes later,’ the authors wrote.

The report has appeared in the September issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

Chennai celebrates 369th birthday

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Chennai, Aug 22: Fast turning out to be the Detroit of India, for its rapid expansion of automobile manufacturing units and growing reputation of being the cultural capital of the south, Chennai, the erstwhile Madras, turned 369 on Friday.

Befitting the historic occasion, Chennaities have drawn up a week-long birthday bash to celebrate the event.

On this day in 1639, British Administrator Francis Day is believed to have received the grant for construction of Madraspatam as it was referred then by the British. The deal was struck by Francis Day, his ‘dubash’ Beri Thimmappa and their superior Andrew Cogan, with the local Nayak rulers.

The original document relating to the grant of Fort ST George, a historic fort which acted for a while as the seat of power of the East India Company, was said to have been signed at Chandragiri fort in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh.

Though several city historians brought out books on the history of the Southern metropolis, there was no unanimity about how the city was named Madras.

A Portuguese map of South India dated back to 1569, which was displayed at Clive Hall in Fort St George, did not mention Madras by name though it mentioned Milapur, present day Mylapore, famous for its temples

The Nayaks, who sold the land to British apparently wanted the city named after their father, Chennappanaikan from which the later version of Chennapattinam and the present version of Chennai is believed to have come about.

Out of the Fort, grew settlements around which villages came about and as time went by, they merged to form a single entity. The city which became prominent carrying the name of Madras was renamed as Chennai by the Karunanidhi government in 1997.

Backstreet Boys at work on new album, solo disc

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Detroit, July 26: Backstreet Boys Howie Dorough and AJ McLean are continuing to work on their first solo projects even as the group has started work on its sixth studio album.Dorough tells Billboard.com that "AJ's about done" with his album, while Dorough is "probably close to halfway there." He's been working with Jon Secada and George Noriega (who has produced records by Ricky Martin, Shakira and Jennifer Lopez) on an album that Dorough says will explore the Latin roots of his mother's family, which hails from Puerto Rico."I've always embraced the Latin rhythms, the Latin sounds, just the music itself," says Dorough, who even considered joining Menudo when he was younger. "It's just such a feel-good music, and I've always looked up to people like Jon Secada, Ricky Martin, Enrique (Iglesias), who have done a good crossover.Dorough describes his album as "kind of Latin-ish, English, Spanglish. It's just a mixture of my American roots in pop music meets my Latin roots. It's gonna be a good, kind of eclectic mixture.Release dates for both his and McLean's albums are up in the air, however. "Obviously Backstreet's always gonna be No. 1," Dorough says. "It's a matter of timing, when we feel each of us wants our record to come out so that we're not competing with each other or taking time away that we could be working … as a group.The group, in fact, has already started working on its follow-up to last year's "Unbreakable," recording new material while on tour in Europe. Dorough says they plan to hit the studio after their tour of North America, which starts Tuesday in St John's, Newfoundland, and wraps September 6 in Seattle."We're looking at getting back into the studio quite quickly," says Dorough. "We want to hopefully have something ready to go or at least be heavily into it by the end of the year and have something out towards the beginning of next year.

Japan firms to work out next-gen car battery norms

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

TOKYO (Reuters) – Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T: , , , ), Nissan Motor Co (7201.T: , , , ), Matsushita Electric Industrial Co (6752.T: , , , ) and other Japanese companies will work together to set up common standards for lithium-ion batteries being developed to power next-generation cars, the Nikkei business daily said on Saturday.Under the lead of an organization affiliated with the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, nine car and motorcycle makers, six battery makers and utility Tokyo Electric Power Co (9501.T: , , , ) will come up with a draft of the standards covering testing and charging methods, vehicle safety and other areas.The group aims to pitch its specifications to the International Organization for Standardization with the goal of creating a global standard for lithium-ion batteries, the paper said.Lithium-ion batteries, commonly used in laptop computers and mobile phones today, are seen as a key component to improve the performance of pure electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid cars.Creating a common standard would help the companies cut development costs and gain an edge over overseas rivals.Carmakers Toyota, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors Corp (7211.T: , , , ) each have a joint venture to develop and produce lithium-ion batteries for car use with Matsushita Electric, the NEC Corp (6701.T: , , , ) group and GS Yuasa Corp (6674.T: , , , ), respectively.Major automakers, including Detroit's General Motors Corp (GM.

90-year-old accepts high school diploma in Mich.

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

DETROIT – John Lawrence Locher has accomplished many things in his 90 years, including living through the Great Depression, fighting in the Pacific during World War II and a long career with General Motors.But missing was the diploma whose pursuit he abandoned in the early 1930s to help feed his family in Detroit.Locher checked it off his list, wearing his cap and gown in Detroit Southwestern High School’s 2008 commencement ceremonies Monday night – more than 70 years after he dropped out."I feel 100 percent lighter," he said. "I appreciate this moment very much. It really was overwhelming.The school sent the General Motors Corp. retiree an honorary diploma for "life credits" this past winter to his home in Cape Coral, Fla. Southwestern Principal Garnet R. Green later said Locher’s family had contacted the school about the diploma and allowing him to participate in commencement."When I opened it up, I almost fainted," Locher said a few hours before the ceremony from his daughter’s home outside Lansing. "I thought someone was playing a real cruel joke on me.Locher left school after 10th grade, with the city and rest of the country mired in the Depression and his father suffering from tuberculosis."My family was starving, literally," he said. "I had to make some provision to make money. I was the oldest. I had a paper route. I did all kinds of work. I worked one place for 33 cents an hour, and I worked my fanny off.He latched onto GM in 1936."I worked 38 years with GM," he said proudly. "I was a senior design engineer at the time, and I didn’t have a high school diploma. God has been really good to me.Five of Locher’s eight children and his 80-year-old wife, Mary, were among relatives attending the ceremony.

Obama apologizes to reporter he called 'sweetie'

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Barack Obama in a bit of a spot after he called a Michigan journalist sweetie during campaign. He’s apologized for his bad habit. Here’s Peggy Agar with her exchange with the senator.

WXYZ-TV’s Peggy Agar shouted a question to the Democratic presidential candidate during his appearance at a Chrysler LLC plant in this auto-making suburb of Detroit.

Agar asked Obama what is he "going to do to help American autoworkers."

"Hold on one second, sweetie," Obama replied. "We’ll do a press (availability), thanks." He did not reply to Agar’s question.

On the air later Wednesday, the station played a voice mail message Obama left for Agar. In it, Obama apologized for not getting back to her. He also told her he has a bad habit of calling people "sweetie."

Obama then said: "I mean no disrespect, so I am duly chastened on that front."

Six Indians killed in crash on way to Niagara Falls

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

West Springfield (Pennsylvania): Six Indian nationals who were on their way to visit Niagara Falls were killed when their minivan spun out of control and was hit by an oncoming car on a Pennsylvania highway, police said on Sunday.

Four of those killed worked at the Troy, Michigan-based Syntel Inc, an information technology company, and two were spouses of employees, company spokesman Jonathan James said on Sunday.

The minivan had just crossed the Pennsylvania-Ohio border on Saturday afternoon when it crossed the highway median and began flipping and rolling, coming to rest on its roof, authorities said.

It was then struck by an oncoming westbound car, whose driver was treated at a hospital and released on Saturday night, said state police Cpl Kevin Havern.

The minivan driver Kaushik Deb, 26, of Troy, Michigan, in suburban Detroit died on impact. The passengers killed were Manoj Jharia, 35; Mili Jharia, 28; Nitin Agarwal, 29; Swati Agarwal, 25; and Shubham Choudory, 24. The Jharias and Agarwals were married, police said.

The sole survivor in the minivan, Nitin Gupta, 28, was sitting in the front passenger seat, Havern said. He was also treated and released from a hospital on Saturday. State police said they had not determined what caused the accident.

Syntel has 27 offices and 12,000 employees worldwide and 2007 revenues of $337.7 million, according to its Web site.