Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Automakers ask for more federal help
General Motors and Chrysler LLC said Tuesday they could need an additional $21.6 billion in federal loans between them because of worsening demand for their cars and trucks. GM said that by 2011 it could need a total of $30 billion, which includes the $13.4 billion in Treasury loans it has already received. GM will for sure need $9.1 billion in additional loans and could require another $7.5 billion in the next two years if auto sales don't improve. Chrysler said it now needs a total of $9 billion, up from the $4 billion Treasury loan it received in December. GM also said that it would eliminate 47,000 jobs over the course of 2009. The company said it would cut about 20,000 jobs in the United States, or nearly 22% of its left over U.S. staff. The company said it plans to close another five additional U.S. plants by 2012, in addition to the 12 planned closings announced in December. The plants that will be closed have not yet been identified. Experts have said that the request for additional money is not a surprise, given how bad auto sales have been since the December plea for help.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Gender Roles/Issues
Around 300 women held at immigration detention centers in Arizona face dangerous delays in health care and widespread mistreatment, according to a new study by the University of Arizona, the latest report to criticize conditions at such centers throughout the United States.
Researchers examined the conditions facing women while in the process of deporting them at three federal immigration centers in Arizona. An estimated 3,000 women are being held nationwide.The study concluded that immigration authorities were too aggressive in detaining the women, and as a result, they experienced severe hardships, including a lack of prenatal care, treatment for cancer, ovarian cysts and other serious medical conditions.
Researchers examined the conditions facing women while in the process of deporting them at three federal immigration centers in Arizona. An estimated 3,000 women are being held nationwide.The study concluded that immigration authorities were too aggressive in detaining the women, and as a result, they experienced severe hardships, including a lack of prenatal care, treatment for cancer, ovarian cysts and other serious medical conditions.
Monday, February 9, 2009
Pilot and five passengers missing after plane crash
The airplane took off from Casa de Campo International Airport in the Dominican Republic and was supposed to land at the Luis Muñoz Marin International Airport in Carolina to clear U.S. Customs before going on to the Isla Grande Airport in San Juan crashed on Sunday night.
A 911 emergency operator notified the Coast Guard at 6:51 p.m. Sunday that it had crashed into the waters off Quebradillas. Three male and two female passengers were returning to Puerto Rico after spending the weekend in the Dominican Republic, said Noemi Corporan, service manager for Tropical Aviation Corp. All five passengers and the pilot of the small, single-engine plane are still missing as of today. Rescue teams are still searching for the missing passengers and the missing pilot.
A 911 emergency operator notified the Coast Guard at 6:51 p.m. Sunday that it had crashed into the waters off Quebradillas. Three male and two female passengers were returning to Puerto Rico after spending the weekend in the Dominican Republic, said Noemi Corporan, service manager for Tropical Aviation Corp. All five passengers and the pilot of the small, single-engine plane are still missing as of today. Rescue teams are still searching for the missing passengers and the missing pilot.
Monday, February 2, 2009
Arrested for Starting Rumors
Rumors regarding Monday's destructive earthquake in China's mountainous Sichuan Province have been started by chinese bloggers in online chat rooms. According to some of them, there were many signs that nature gave that could have saved thousands of people if the government had taken serious consideration to them. Ponds inexplicably drained, cows flung themselves against their enclosures and swarms of toads invaded the streets of a town that was later decimated by the quake. One online writer asked “Why did the government ignore the signs? Did they not care?” The Chinese government has been arresting people who started such "rumors" and said they would punish them. However, the government did not say what the punishments would be.
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