четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Stocks bounce after Lowe's posts a profit surprise

A surprisingly strong profit report from home improvement chain Lowe's is giving investors a reason to put money back into stocks.

The Dow Jones industrial average is up more than 150 points, wiping out half of the losses it suffered last week.

Investors are again looking to the housing market for clues about how the economy is doing. Lowe's posted a 22 percent drop in its first-quarter earnings, but the results easily beat Wall Street's forecasts and the company raised its full-year profit forecast.

At midday, the Dow is up 157 to 8,425. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up 16 to 899, and the Nasdaq composite index is up 24 to 1,704.

Randall Oaks

BASICS: 37 W. 361 Binnie Road (at the corner of Randall and Binnie),Dundee. Phone: (708) 428-5661. BY THE NUMBERS: 5,379 yards from the front tees; 6,146 from theback. Par for both is 71. Course rating is 70.3 from the front(women's) tees; 67.7 from the back. Slope is 113. OWNER: Dundee Township Park District. HISTORY: This week marks its 25th anniversary. The course wasdedicated Aug. 21, 1966. Architect was William Spears of St.Charles, who also did Marengo Ridge. STAFF: Director Rick Bemm, head professional Phil Simonsen andsuperintendent Mike Sprouse. RATES: Weekdays: $17 for 18 holes, $11 for nine. Weekends: $21 for18, $11.50 for twilight (after 4 p.m.). Seniors $11.50 …

US candidate Gingrich admits $1.5 million payments

URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) — U.S. presidential candidate Newt Gingrich, who has been surging in the latest polls, found himself on the defensive Wednesday over huge payments he received over the past decade from the federally backed housing agency unpopular among his fellow Republicans.

Gingrich is the latest candidate to challenge Mitt Romney, the favorite of the Republican establishment, only to face revelations from his past.

Gingrich said he doesn't remember exactly how much he was paid by the agency, Freddie Mac, a federally backed mortgage lender that has become a target of anti-government sentiment because of the U.S. housing crisis.

But a former Freddie Mac official …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Family mourns as 7 die in suburban Chicago blaze

A grandfather who had been planning to spend his weekend with his family celebrating his birthday and the arrival of a new grandson instead mourned the loss of three children, two grandchildren and two friends in a suburban Chicago fire.

Elijah Grays lost his 18-year-old daughter Sally Gist, 16-year-old twins Elicia and Elijah Gist, and Sally's sons Rayshawn Gist, 3, and 3-day-old Byron Reed in the blaze that engulfed a three-story building where the family lived in Cicero early Sunday.

Lieber might be finished with Cubs

SAN FRANCISCO--Cubs general manager Jim Hendry said Tuesday thatstarter Jon Lieber may not pitch again this season because of right-elbow problems.

"There's a possibility that he won't," Hendry said.

The bigger question, of course, is whether Lieber has pitched hisfinal game as a Cub. The team has to decide later this year whetherhe is such a health risk that it wouldn't make business sense toexercise a $6.5 million contract option the organization has onLieber for 2003.

Hendry is nowhere near being ready to answer that question. Butmore definitive news on Lieber could come as soon as today. AfterLieber visited Dr. James Andrews in Birmingham, Ala., on …

Surprise Black Task Force endorsements raise tempers

Surprise Black Task Force endorsements raise tempers

When the Black Political Task Force began holding press conferences and announcing candidate endorsements in statewide elections last month, some eyebrows in the black community were raised. And some were furrowed.

The sudden invigoration of an organization that had seemingly laid dormant for years - the Task Force sat out last fall's elections altogether - surprised and angered some of the group's founding members, who say they were not invited to participate in the group's endorsing procedures.

"I'm really concerned about the whole process of how things are happening right now," said Robert Marshall, a …

Walcott looking good ahead of crucial season

He wore an Arsenal shirt with No. 14 on the back, switched positions constantly and terrorized the opposition defense with his blistering pace. Theo Walcott looked a lot like Thierry Henry on Sunday.

A day after a half-hour cameo at the end of a lackluster loss to Juventus, Walcott started Arsenal's latest preseason friendly against Spanish champions Real Madrid and showed the sort of form his manager Arsene Wenger has long hoped for.

Racing down the right wing, rather than the left that Henry regularly drifted toward during his record-breaking spell with the Gunners, Walcott found it easy to beat a defense marshaled by Argentina international Gabriel …

Recall

TIRES

Bridgestone/Firestone said it is recalling about 8,000 trucktires, many of which may have been installed on 4,700 General Motorssport utility vehicles. The tire maker said Tuesday the recall isunrelated to problems that led to the recall of 6.5 millionFirestone tires in August.

Bridgestone/Firestone and GM said they had received no claims ofdamage or injury relating to the tires.

The new recall involves P265/70R16-size Wilderness LE tires builtat its plant in Cuernavaca, …

Collaboration is the key to the future

First, the buzz was around e-procurement strategies, then it was supply-chain management - now, the next trend towards gaining a competitive edge is collaborative development. At the annual EyeforChem USA conference and exposition (Oct. 2-4; Philadelphia, PA), Kevin Cronin, global ebusiness director at Ticona, the technical polymers business of Celanese AG, offered some insights on the future. In his keynote address, he proclaimed that "web-based collaborative development that meets everexpanding customer needs is rapidly becoming the next wave in the use of the Internet in industrial business, and will increase significantly in the years to come."

"Collaborative-development tools …

Lee leads Womens' Astralian Open

South Korea's Lee Chang-hee held a one-stroke lead after three rounds of the Womens' Australian Open on Saturday, closely pursued by two Americans and a group that included four-time champion Karrie Webb.

Lee shot a 2-over 75 Saturday at the Metropolitan Golf Club, her second-round lead shrinking by one stroke. Her 5-under total of 214 was one better than the American pair of Alison Walshe (69) and Beth Allen (73), who were tied for second.

Webb, who is attempting to win a third straight Open and her fifth overall, shot 75 and is in a four-way tie for fourth with Choi He-young of South Korea (71), Australian Emma Bennett (73) and Tania Elosegui of Spain …

Taylor bid for trade a mystery to Giants

If Lawrence Taylor is demanding that the New York Giants tradehim after this season, the man who would have to make the deal sayshe doesn't know about it. And it might not be that easy to do,anyway.

"It's never been brought up to me," Giants general managerGeorge Young said when asked about a Newsday report. The Long Islandnewspaper quoted a pro football source as saying Taylor is fed upwith the mental and physical demands of playing with the Giants, andwants to get away from media glare in New York.

Taylor, who would not comment on the report Thursday, spoke aday earlier about having made a deal with coach Bill Parcells, butnever said what the deal …

Doctors urge more production of scarce cancer drug

TRENTON, New Jersey (AP) — Four pharmaceutical companies that make a crucial cancer drug for children that's suddenly in short supply are being urged to try to quickly step up production to prevent unnecessary deaths.

A senator and three doctor groups late Monday sent the pleas to the companies, saying that hospitals will run out of the drug in days to weeks, increasing chances that young patients who might otherwise survive will die.

The critical shortage of methotrexate has doctors and hospitals around the country panicking because it's the key treatment for a common childhood cancer called acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or ALL.

With the drug, doctors say they can cure …

Potentially historic storm bears down on Chicago

As a blizzard moved Tuesday into Illinois, commuters, corporate executives and government officials braced for a storm of proportions that haven't been seen in decades - one that could dump as much as 2 feet of snow and whip up 25-foot waves along Lake Michigan before moving on.

Chicago Public Schools, the nation's thirdlargest school district, canceled classes for Wednesday in the face of the storm. It is the first time CPS has closed schools for weather since 1999.

Schools up and down the state closed, airlines canceled flights by the hundreds and road crews scurried to equip garbage trucks with snow plows to join an armada of snowremoval vehicles already salting the streets. In some places, snowmobiles were being delivered to firefighters to help them respond to emergencies, including 50 in Chicago.

Officials pleaded with people to stay home and not drive anywhere unless absolutely necessary. Workers heading to their jobs in downtown Chicago said their bosses already had ordered them to leave early to make it home before the brunt of the storm, which was expected to hit later in the day. Many said they expected their offices to be closed on Wednesday.

"Every Chicago resident should brace for a storm that will be remembered for a long time," said Jose Santiago, executive director of the Office of Emergency Management and Communications.

Such ominous warnings were accompanied by other signals that the storm bearing down on the state was huge, and possibly historic. More than 1,100 flights at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport were canceled, along with 100 more at Midway International Airport. And Gov. Pat Quinn activated more than 500 Illinois National Guard troops, who will be stationed at rest areas along highways.

"Everybody's taking this one seriously," said Dave Barber, the public works director in Peoria. AU public employees except emergency personnel were told lo stay home Wednesday and dozens of businesses and schools shut down.

With the accompanying high winds, officials were contemplating steps they haven't taken in years - starting with closing down Chicago's busy and iconic Lake Shore Drive because of the prospect of 25-foot waves caused by 60 mph winds washing over it from nearby Lake Michigan.

"We're prepared as best we can for anything that can happen along Lake Shore Drive, which is a main artery for us," said Thomas Byrne, Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation. "We're in constant contact with police to get it shut down, if need be."

in Bloomington-Normal, State Farm Insurance shut down its headquarters and sent 15,000 employees home Tuesday afternoon. It was expected to remain closed on Wednesday.

At the Naval Station Great Lakes, workers were being advised that on Wednesday they may tell everyone but the most essential workers to stay home - something that hasn't happened in a dozen years, said base spokesman John Sheppard.

In Chicago, everything from Cook County health clinics to the federal courthouse to the Shedd Aquarium were sending notices that they will be closed Wednesday, with some closing early Tuesday.

Meanwhile, some of the state's major colleges, including Eastern Illinois University and Bradley University told students there would be no classes Wednesday. Northwestern University told its students that evening classes were canceled Tuesday night and holding out the possibility that classes would be canceled Wednesday. The University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign canceled classes that began after 5 pm on Tuesday.

The seriousness of what the state was facing was underscored in advisories from the National Weather Service, which seemed to eschew its typically bland language with a warning of "blizzard conditions" that will make traveling "treacherous" as "winds increase, resulting in white out conditions."

And while the weather service warned that snow was expected to fall - 1 -3 inches an hour in many areas - it also said that in some spots there could be "snow-producing thunderstorms" that could drive the snowfall rate up to 4 inches per hour. And that, the weather service said, makes "travel nearly impossible."

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Typhoon leaves 7 dead or missing in South Korea

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Strong wind and rain from a typhoon left at least seven people dead or missing, knocked out power and disrupted domestic flights in South Korea, officials said.

Local and national officials said the dead included a rescue official in eastern South Korea who perished during a search-and-rescue operation and a student who was washed away in the southeast, Yonhap news agency reported Sunday night.

Wind from Typhoon Meari briefly knocked out power for hundreds in the southern resort island of Jeju and caused flight cancellations at several airports.

Officials reported no changes in international flights.

The typhoon reached North Korean waters later Sunday, dumping more than 4 inches (10 centimeters) of rain in some areas, the North's official Korean Central News Agency reported.

Our views: ; Cable bills can be lowered; Consumers do not have to pay higher rates if they read more

FOR the second consecutive year, Suddenlink has raised cablerates in Charleston by between $12 and $60 a year - $1 to $5 a month- depending on what package a person buys.

Complaints are expected. Nobody likes higher prices.

Suddenlink says the increase is needed because of the increasedcost of programming, including sports programming, and because ofincreased energy costs.

But companies are not alone in facing higher costs. The sameincreases in fuel and utility bills the company cites in raising itsprices are also felt by its customers.

Rather than complain to Charleston City Council, which can't doanything anyway, there are alternatives cable television customerscan explore.

People can always cut back on cable service. Downsizing from aBiggest Value package to a Bigger Value package would keep costs thesame. Dropping to a Big Value package would actually save somemoney.

And dropping to the 23-channel basic package would cut customers'costs to a mere $19.99 a month - a far cry from the $80.99 thatBiggest Value customers will pay.

Of course, that means fewer channels.

What's wrong with that? The world would be a better place ifpeople shut off their TVs and engaged their minds anyway.

There are other activities in life: Card games. Reading. Actuallytalking to family members.

Cutting back on TV time might not only save a few bucks butactually improve the quality of life.

Local boy was quite a basketball player, too

Many would agree Lou Boudreau was a household name nationwide, buthe never forgot his roots.

"Harvey was my home," Boudreau said in an recent interview."That's where I learned everything."

Known mainly for his baseball accomplishments, Boudreau competedsolely in basketball for Thornton High School. He was a three-timeall-state selection (1933-35) and was a member of Thornton's "FlyingClouds," a nickname given to the Wildcats' 1933 state championshipteam. At the time, Thornton was one of the few high school teams touse a fast-break offense.

"I just tried my best," said Boudreau, who was the first highschool athlete to compete in three state basketball finals. "I hadgood teammates, and that's why we were a good team. A sportswriterdownstate gave us the nickname after a game, and it stuck with us forthe rest of our lives."

Boudreau went on to star at the University of Illinois, leadingthe Illini to Big Ten titles in baseball and basketball in 1937. Heis one of three former Illinois athletes to have his number retired.The university retired his No. 5 between games of a doubleheader onApril28, 1992, putting him in elite company with football greats RedGrange and Dick Butkus.

"Lou Boudreau was a true Illini legend and one of the all-timebaseball greats," Illinois athletic director Ron Guenther said. "Hewas a great Illini supporter."

Despite missing the last third of the 1938 basketball season,Boudreau was named an All-American by the Associated Press. He wasthe top vote-getter on the all-time Illinois basketball all-star teamnamed in 1981.

Boudreau signed a professional baseball contract with theCleveland Indians in 1938 but took the time to earn a bachelor'sdegree in education from Illinois in 1940.

WASTED FOOD, WASTED ENERGY ACROSS THE PLANET

UK, Australiu & US

According to a recent report published by the Sustainable Restaurant Association (SRA�, more than a pound of food is thrown away every time someone eats out in the United Kingdom. This amounts to more than 600,000 tons of food waste annually or 22 tons, on average, per eating establishment. The report points to two major culprits: overly sized portions reminiscent of U.S. fare and waste in the kitchen that gets tossed out during food preparation. The report also reveals that British households throw away 12 million tons of food every year at a cost to the economy of more than $19 billion. Manufacturers waste another 5 million tons, with the entire catering industry - including pubs and catering facilities in offices and sports venues - throwing away another 3 million tons. Retailers are responsible for another 1.4 tons of food waste annually.

Down Under in Australia, the Willoughby City Council has joined forces with the Government of New South Wales' (NSW) Love Food Hate Waste Program to tackle the issue. NSW residents produce 800,000 tons of food waste annually, equal to about $2.5 billion or $l,000/household. Workshops to curb food waste will focus on better meal planning, shopping with a lisi in hand (versus compulsive shopping) and how to utilize leftovers. "Throwing away food wastes the energy, water and natural resources used to grow, package, transport and market that food," says Lisa Corbyn, Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water NSW Director General.

And across the pond in the U.S., the same connection between wasted food and wasted energy is being made as analysts point out that the U.S. consumes more energy in food it throws away than some countries consume in total all year. A study first published on the web July 21 in Environmental Science & Technology calculated the imbedded energy in food production from agriculture, transportation, processing, food sales, storage and preparation for 2007 at 8080 � 760 trillion BTU. With the U.S. throwing away approximately 25 percent of its food, the wasted energy is about 2 percent of total annual national energy consumption, according to the study.

OPEC sees oil demand growing in 2012

VIENNA (AP) — OPEC says its estimates that world demand for crude will grow next year remain on track, despite the eurozone crisis and other economic problems.

The 12-nation group's latest forecast is contained in its monthly report. In it, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries says world demand for 2012 is forecast to grow 1.1 million barrels a day next year.

That's up from the 0.9 percent increase recorded last year.

The report says Monday that demand will likely drop in the major industrialized nations but grow by more than a daily 1 million barrels elsewhere.

OPEC says 2012 demand for its mebers' oil is expected to reach 31 million barrels a day, unchanged from last year. That is an upward revision of 100,000 barrels a day from last month's report.

Day-by-day account of night lights battle // `No plans' to big plans for Cub after dark

In the beginning: God creates day and night, setting the stagefor night baseball.

June 16, 1981: Tribune Co. acquires the Chicago Cubs, settingthe stage for night baseball at Wrigley Field.

Sept. 1, 1981: Tribune Co. says there are no plans "at thistime" to install lights at Wrigley.

Dec. 13, 1981: The Chicago Sun-Times discloses the Cubs havetaken the first step toward lights, ordering a feasibility study. Asource reports general manager Dallas Green is convinced lights are anecessity and Green "is prepared to weather the storm of negativeresponse."

Aug. 23, 1982: Gov. Thompson signs legislation passed by theIllinois General Assembly that imposes noise pollution standards onany pro sport played in a city with more than 1 million inhabitantsin a facility in which night sports were not played before July 1,1982. The only such facility in Illinois is Wrigley Field.

Sept. 27, 1983: The Chicago City Council enacts an ordinancethat bars night athletic contests in any playing field that is nottotally enclosed, has more than 15,000 seats and is within 500 feetof 100 dwelling units. The only such field in Chicago is Wrigley.

Oct. 2, 1984: Having won their division, the Cubs open theNational League playoffs against the San Diego Padres in the first oftwo home day games at Wrigley Field. They win both games, then flyto San Diego - where they lose three games and the playoffs. If theyhad had lights, they could have played three home games instead oftwo.

Dec. 18, 1984: Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth tells theCubs to install lights or face the threat of having home playoffgames played elsewhere if they make the playoffs or World Series.

Dec. 19, 1984: The Cubs file suit asking the Cook County CircuitCourt to enjoin the City of Chicago and Gov. Thompson from enforcingthe city and state laws that ban night baseball at Wrigley.

March 25, 1985: Circuit Judge Richard L. Curry rejects the Cubssuit in a whimsical 64-page opinion that scolds the team's managementfor placing their business interests above community interest. Currysays the previous ownership had "worked relentlessly to shape publicopinion and to inculcate unwavering support among their fans in favorof the `no lights' theory of baseball." He says one "Homer in theGloamin' " is worth a hundred hit into the blackness of night, and"future generations should not be deprived of seeing the shadowscreep across the infield." He says lights would trash a residentialcommunity to enrich sports moguls and would be "repugnant to commondecency." The Cubs appeal the ruling.

April 11, 1985: The Illinois Supreme Court announces it willhear the Cubs' appeal.

May 30, 1985: Baseball commissioner Peter V. Ueberroth announcesthat all 1985 World Series games must be played at night to satisfynetwork television commitments.

May 31, 1985: Cubs attorney Don H. Reuben asks the IllinoisSupreme Court to toss out the lights ban.

June 7, 1985: The Sun-Times discloses Tribune Co. has launched alobbying campaign in the Legislature to repeal the anti-lights law.

June 20, 1985: Both the Illinois Senate and House rejectproposals to repeal the laws against Wrigley lights.

June 26, 1985: A Tribune Co. lobbyist, Lawrence Gunnels, warnsthe Cubs are "seriously considering" abandoning Wrigley Field for asuburban home if the Legislature won't permit night games. "To stay,we have to be able to play," he says. "It's as simple as that.Anything else is unacceptable."

June 27, 1985: Mayor Harold Washington says he will guardChicago's border "like Horatio at the bridge" to prevent the Cubsfrom moving to the suburbs.

June 30, 1985: The House refuses to allow limited night baseballat Wrigley after the Senate also rejects limited play.

Oct. 3, 1985: The Illinois Supreme Court, without dissent,upholds state and city laws prohibiting Wrigley lights. "Simply, theCubs have failed to meet the burden of showing theunconstitutionality of the legislative actions," writes JusticeDaniel C. Ward. "One more nail in the coffin," says general managerDallas Green. "When we keep getting banged around by the courts, theLegislature and the neighborhoods, we have to look at alternatives."

May 9, 1986: The National League announces if the Cubs win theirdivision, they must play their home playoff games at Busch Stadium inSt. Louis. The situation does not arise.

March 23, 1987: Cubs executive Don Grenesko tells an IllinoisSenate committee the Cubs are willing to make a long-term agreementto limit night games to post-season play and to 18 regular seasongames.

June 29, 1987: After an earlier 106-0 vote in the House, theIllinois Senate votes 55-1 to exempt playoff and World Series gamesfrom the state's noise pollution law. Cubs officials say it wouldnot be economically feasible to install lights only for postseasongames, and they oppose temporary lights as unsuitable for majorleague play. Gov. Thompson signs the measure Sept. 24.

July 2, 1987: Mayor Washington says the proposed 18-game limiton regular season night baseball at Wrigley seems "a reasonableadjustment." The mayor had set up a task force to work out acompromise between the Cubs and Wrigleyville residents.

Oct. 16, 1987: A city-sponsored survey indicates a majority ofWrigleyville residents and 83 percent of all Chicagoans favor Wrigleylights if regular season night play is limited to 18 games.

Nov. 13, 1987: Mayor Washington endorses installation of lightswith an 18-game regular season limit on night baseball. He says hewill ask the City Council to repeal the city ordinance banning nightgames at Wrigley. A Sun-Times survey of aldermen indicates more thanenough votes to win passage.

Nov. 25, 1987: Mayor Washington dies unexpectedly of a heartattack.

Dec. 3, 1987: Newly installed Mayor Sawyer endorses limitednight baseball at Wrigley. But hearings on the 18-night gameproposal bog down in the Council.

Jan. 25, 1988: Cubs officials again threaten a move to "anothermunicipality."

Feb. 10, 1988: A Chicago Tribune editorial lashes out atpolitical "boneheads" and "political bums" who are blockinginstallation of Wrigley lights. The editorial accuses politicians oftrying to use the lights issue to soften Tribune criticism of them.And it says some old Washington supporters who were for lights arenow against them because they don't want to make Mayor Sawyer lookgood. The editorial concludes: "If the Tribune editorial board hadany say in Cub policy, the team would long since have had enough ofpolitical rebuffs and runarounds, and be ready to move into a newWrigley Field replica in the suburbs. And the opponents of lightswould be trying to figure out whether to pave over the hole in theground left at Clark and Addison." Angry aldermen accuse the Tribuneof "putting a gun to their heads" and threaten to kill the lightsproposal.

Feb. 25, 1988: Aldermen vote 29-19 to approve a 14-yearagreement that will let the Cubs install lights and play eight nightgames in 1988 and 18 starting in 1989.

Feb. 26, 1988: Officials say the Cubs have agreed to sign acontract promising to stay at Wrigley Field until 2002, with anescape clause in case the precinct that includes the field is voteddry.

March 15, 1988: Wrigleyville residents, in an advisoryreferendum, vote 3-1 against night baseball.

April 7, 1988: With the help of a helicopter, workers attachsteel girders that will hold lights on the roof of Wrigley Field.

April 29, 1988: The Sun-Times discloses the Cubs have hiredformer Illinois House Majority Leader Gerald W. Shea to lobby for anexemption in the state law that permits neighborhood residents tovote dry their local precincts. Such a vote could ban beer sales atWrigley.

July 7, 1988: Wrigley lights are turned on for the first time at9:10 p.m.

July 25, 1988: Wrigley lights illuminate a dress rehearsal teampractice attended by 3,000 spectators who each paid $100 to charity.Andre Dawson hits the first homer under the lights - a drive into theleft field bleachers off coach Larry Cox. The ball will be sent tothe Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.

Aug. 8, 1988: The Cubs play their first Wrigley Field nightgame, against the Philadelphia Phillies.

Oct. 17, 2045: Wrigley Field hosts its first night World Seriesgame. The St. Petersburg Yankees take the opener and go on to sweepthe next three. Cubs fans declare: "Wait'll the next millenium!"

UK producer price data points up continuing inflationary pressure

Prices for materials and fuels purchased by manufacturers rose 2.9 percent in January, the government said Monday in a report which highlighted continuing inflationary pressures.

The input price index rose 19.1 percent in the most recent 12 months, mainly because of rising prices of crude oil and UK-produced food, the Office for National Statistics said.

The input price index for manufacturing industry excluding the food, beverages, tobacco and petroleum industries rose 2.3 percent in January and 7.3 percent in the year to January, the agency said.

In a separate report, the statistics agency said the U.K. trade deficit narrowed slightly in December to 4.7 billion pounds (euro6.3 billion; US$9.15 billion), compared with 4.8 million pounds in November, the government said Monday.

The deficit on goods and services for all of 2007 was provisionally estimated to be 51 billion pounds (euro68.5 billion; US$99.3 billion), up from 46.4 billion pounds in 2006, the Office for National Statistics said.

___

On the Net: http://www.statistics.gov.uk

Market Forces: Increasingly, agencies must be able to hit a smaller bull's-eye

Jim Fitzgerald, director of marketing strategy and new business development at Ishd Advertising in Chicopee, said people in marketing are, by trade, problem solvers.

"We are constantly working toward new ideas, creating messages, and figuring out where to put that message," he said, adding that the process repeats itself over and over, whether the answer to the problem is a coaster on a bar or a banner on the Golden Gate bridge.

His example illustrates the expanding breadth of the marketing industry, as well as its fast-changing nature.

In response to the shifting demands on the marketing sector, imposed by changes in technology, culture shifts among clients, and the needs and wants of those clients, marketing firms everywhere are employing initiatives large and small to help them stay viable in today's marketplace.

That can mean targeted changes to design style, copy writing, or the media used to communicate a message, or more broad changes to the services a given firm can offer.

And as executives with area marketing companies confirm, the ability to adapt to the changes in the industry is necessary not only for success, but for survival.

Bob Demetrius, senior creative director for Ishd, said the current decade has probably seen more changes to the marketing industry than any other time period - certainly during his career in the trade.

"This business has seen a huge culture change in a short period of time," he said. "No one can get away with being less than entirely effective. Companies must first know marketing intuitively, but then be able to learn and adjust to foreign concepts. The folks who understand that are the people who are surviving."

Design on a Dime

More specifically, Demetrius said marketing has become much more idea-based in the past five years, in response to tough economic times and what he calls an increasingly "myopic" public.

"After 9/11, the marketing industry suffered its worst recession since the Great Depression," he said. "The economy tanked, and the money companies were spending on marketing dissipated. Even after the economy began to improve, companies handling their own marketing inhouse had already become much more commonplace, and that fractured a lot of agencies."

Stephen van Schouwen, a partner at van Schouwen Associates in Longmeadow, added that not only did the economic strife brought on by 9/11 create an initial adverse effect on the marketing industry, it also created a new attitude within the business community toward marketing, which has persisted.

"Immediately after 9/11, companies stopped doing everything, not just marketing," he said. "And as they started to move forward, the adverse economic effects came in waves for months. It made people very averse to risk, and companies are still averse to risk. There's not as much bravado out there anymore.

"Marketing budgets are decent, but no one is asking for extravaganzas," he continued. "Overall, marketing efforts are being approached much more carefully, and are much more business oriented."

That's a big change from the '90s, according to Fitzgerald. The marketing firms that have weathered the financial storm created by 9/11, he said, are those that have recognized their client's need to be more conservative, and have become more focused on careful, strategic planning of marketing initiatives and a healthy balance of business savvy and creativity.

"It's much different now than in the '90s, when people needed us," he said. "When the economy took off in the '90s, the industry saw a switch to digital, and that drove people to us. Design at a highlevel was ultra-important; it drove the business."

But the luxury of "design for the sake of design," Fitzgerald explained, disappeared as marketing budgets shrank nationwide.

"Now, we have to have focus. The bull's-eye we need to hit gets smaller and smaller."

But staying on target doesn't mean just streamlining operations and buckling down, said Demetrius. Ingenuity and originality can never be sacrificed, nor can the maintenance of a strong understanding of the public and how they absorb advertising and marketing efforts.

"Consumers shut off much quicker than they did five years ago," he said. "It has never been more important to get the point across in copy clearly, succinctly, and fast."

Nancy Urbschat, owner of TSM Design in Springfield, agreed.

"People don't read a lot and they haven't for a long time," she said. "People are bombarded by information, and the more dynamic a product you put in front of someone, the better.

"Design is always there," she continued. "It all starts with an idea, then we must discern what channel of communication will be most effective."

Maximizing the effectiveness of a well-designed product, Urbschat explained, is contingent upon attention to those lines of communication, and the strategic planning of a campaign that will, in her words, deliver "the biggest bang for a client's buck."

"Cutting through the clutter is what it's all about, whether that means cutting a television or radio spot differently, using different shapes for materials ... we do whatever we can to get the client's message across clearly."

Moreover, effectively translating a client's message becomes an added challenge as marketing firms attempt to reach clients. Often, that means greater attention to changing technology and the use of a wider spectrum of media. And sometimes, the notion of 'translating a message' becomes quite literal.

"More and more, we realize that we are marketing to a global community," said Fitzgerald. "We've done more translation of materials in the last two years than we've ever done."

While Spanish translations dominate the market, Fitzgerald said, marketing agencies are now commonly translating materials in a myriad of languages. He added that translation services and other strategies aimed at targeting various populations are an apt example of just how diverse the business of marketing has become.

"We may translate an ad or a brochure into seven different languages, or I may be an E-mail campaign that is going to several different countries," he said. "We have even used multi-lingual greeters at trade shows, to make sure we are accessible to all types of people. Our job begins to take on a whole new meaning."

Who's Bobby?

Inclusiveness in marketing is key, added Michelle van Schouwen, partner at van Schouwen Associates. "And in recent years, we have been marketing more and more to the people who, in the past, have been overlooked."

Those groups include audiences of various cultures, lifestyles, and backgrounds, as well as those with disabilities, she said.

The firm has recently taken on a project in tandem with the Regional Employment Board (REB), for example, addressing 'Bobby compliance' of the REB's Web site. The term refers to a site's ability to provide access to Web content for differently abled Web users, and uses a set of guidelines set forth by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to gauge the level of compliance. Bobby is the name given to the software that diagnoses a site.

Rebecca Leutert, software engineer for van Schouwen, explained that compliance checks and fixes like those underway on the REB site are a growing aspect of the marketing industry, as more clients request online products and services and access to larger audiences.

"If someone can't use a mouse, for example or is blind, most Web sites don't accommodate them very well," said Leutert. "The W3C guidelines direct people on how to make their sites easier to use for everyone; they suggest things like simpler text, or alternative text for links only reached by clicking on photos. When you think about it, it just makes sense to prepare a site to reach a wider audience."

The compliance project, van Shouwen added, is proof of the increased attention being paid by marketers to diversity, but also to technology, as agencies, not unlike offices around the globe in every industry, scramble to stay on top of the rapidlychanging digital age.

In fact, of all the changes she has seen in the marketing industry over the past five years, van Schouwen said technology has been one of the most prevalent hurdles her firm has had to clear.

"We are truly still at the very beginning of a digital revolution," she said. "And the increasing need to be tech-savvy requires changes in staff, changes in focus, and a greater need to stay abreast of changes that are happening very quickly."

van Schouwen said the firm's first Web site project for a client was in 1994, and the project was relatively basic, especially compared to today's standards.

"When you look back and see what was considered groundbreaking then, it's amazing," she said. "A Web site like the one we were so proud of in 1994 wouldn't even be considered acceptable now."

The increasing importance of technology to marketing has also changed how firms measure their success, said Fitzgerald.

"In this business, marketing firms must get results or else," he said. "But those results always used to be sales. Now, there is so much information available, sometimes the result is not sales. It could be the number of hits on a Web site, or how much traffic that site is seeing. We have a whole new challenge in learning how to measure things, and more importantly, what to measure."

The New Market

Despite the whirlwind of change marketers find themselves within, however, those who spoke with BusinessWest said the industry is competitive, but overall, business is good.

"Largely, the changes have been positive," van Schouwen said. "Competition is ferocious, and the economy makes it hard. But what that teaches us is that people in our line of work need versatility over all else. For some, that need is too great, and it drives them out of business. For others, it can be quite energizing.

"More than ever," she continued, "this is becoming a business for people who think fast and work hard."

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Art to benefit in Hyde Park

An auction featuring new works by more than 70 Chicago areaartists Sunday will benefit the Hyde Park Art Center.

The auction and opening party for the center's new exhibit willextend from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at the center, 1701 E. 53rd. Tickets are$20 and include Champagne and hors d'oeuvres (324-5520).

TWO-DAY SALE: Chase Gilmore Art Galleries, 724 W. Washington,will hold a two-day auction at 1 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 p.m. Monday.

Sunday's sale will include art, antique furniture and a 1974 BMW3.0 CSI with leather interior. Monday's sale will feature Orientalart, pottery, bronzes and rugs. Viewing will be today and tomorrowfrom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (648-1690).

Obusuntreis. Ique porecervium inum tem sa reis, num nonsu cae vista ...

Obusuntreis. Ique porecervium inum tem sa reis, num nonsu cae vista defactum et

Cardinal Francis George blesses the palms before the Palm Sunday procession into Holy Name Cathedral at State and Superior. Deacon Michael McCloskey is on the right. | Al Podgorski~Sun-TimesAl Podgorski

Sri Lanka 47-1 at close vs. Pakistan

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Sri Lanka, trailing Pakistan by 314 on first innings, reached 47-1 Thursday at close on day three of the opening cricket test at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium.

____

Scores:

Sri Lanka 197 all out off 74.1 overs (Angelo Mathews 52 not out, Tharanga Paranavitana 37, Mahela Jayawardene 28, Lahiru Thirimanne 20, Tillakaratne Dilshan 19, Suranga Lakmal 18; Junaid Khan 5-37, Umar Gul 2-37, Saeed Ajmal 2-56) and 47-1 (Kumar Sangakkara 27 not out, Lahiru Thirimanne 20 not out).

Pakistan 511-6 declared off 174.4 overs (Taufeeq Umar 236, Mohammad Hafeez 75, Azhar Ali 70, Misbah-ul-Haq 46, Younus Khan 33, Asad Shafiq 26 not out; Rangana Herath 3-126, Chanaka Welegedara 2-80).

Sarah Harmer saves the day

Two young adults attend Assembly for the concert and stayed for the discussion

If it wasn't for Sarah Harmer, Serena Smith and Amanda Schmidt probably wouldn't have gone to Assembly. The two young adults from Jubilee Mennonite Church in Winnipeg had never thought about attending the annual meetings until they saw an announcement in the bulletin advertising the free concert for young adults. They thought the Assembly sounded interesting too, and next thing they knew flights were booked and they were heading to Waterloo with little idea of what they were getting into.

"I think we didn't fully understand some of the responsibilities of it," said Schmidt, 28, who had expected Assembly to be more about learning; she didn't realize until the week before leaving that they would be expected to vote. The two spent hours at Perkins choosing which seminars to attend only to find out "the seminars were tiny tiny parts of the overall conference," said Smith, 20.

That's not to say they didn't enjoy the experience. "It was awesome to see the bigger church, you know. How things are run, how so much thought is put into certain things and so much prayer is put into certain things," Smith said over the phone. Schmidt felt the same way, "our minds were stimulated all the time," she said, "we had interesting discussions."

For Schmidt, however, the experience also raised some questions about the purpose of the business meetings instead of using Assembly as chance for churches across the country to learn about each other. "The whole connection to money and running like a business that was a little bit unappealing to me," she said. But made sure to add, "even though some questions or thoughts that have come out of it I'm glad that I went."

While they are happy they made the trek from Winnipeg to Waterloo, both noticed that they were two of very few young adults present. Money may be one contributing factor, "how many people can afford to take a week of time?" asked Schmidt. Different advertising might also help. Young people "need to see pictures, and they need to see like exciting information to get them interested in it," said Smith, adding that Assembly, was "something that the old people go to always and that we don't think about."

[Sidebar]

Serena Smithy left, and Amanda Schmidt, right, signed up for Assembly because of the Sarah Harmer concert but found they enjoyed learning and meeting new people like Art Harms, centre.

[Author Affiliation]

EMILY LOEWEN

Young Voices editor

Miller avoids crash, impresses Klammer in Austria

KITZBUEHEL, Austria (AP) — Bode Miller got a slap on the back from Austrian great Franz Klammer after narrowly escaping a crash on the famed Streif course.

Miller didn't get his first victory at the classic World Cup downhill on Saturday, but he got style points for a save at 80 mph.

The 34-year-old Miller caught an icy bump at the Hausbergkante, one of the most challenging parts of the course. It hit one of his skis so badly that it almost came off.

"Going across the Hausberg and your ski goes like that," Miller told The Associated Press, "it feels a lot worse than it looked" on the TV screen for a crowd of about 25,000.

"Those are life-savers," he said. "One hundred points is great, but I always try to be at the finish with all my parts intact. That was obviously, in some ways, better than a win, so I am happy."

Miller quickly reacted and found his balance, but lost speed. He finished 29th, 1.35 seconds behind Didier Cuche of Switzerland, who won a record fifth time on the course. Cuche overtook Klammer, who won the Hahnenkamm downhill four times in the 1970s and 80s.

The Austrian great congratulated Cuche and met Miller after he safely made it through the finish.

"People like to see this as much as they want to see a victory," Klammer told the American.

Miller said it was a close call.

"My ski almost came all the way off," he said. "You can feel it when it comes out of your binding like that. It almost came off all the way, then kicked back in."

Miller's had other spectacular escapes on the Streif.

Four years ago, he was thrown wide in a long right turn and avoided a crash by riding the fence with both skis before getting back on the course — and finishing in second place.

This time, Miller was fighting the conditions, which worsened during the race with increased snowfall. The starting point on the course had already be significantly lowered, shortening it from 3.3 kilometers to 2.

"These were less-than-ideal conditions. I was pushing pretty hard, I knew I had to take some risks," Miller said.

He agreed with the decision to stage the race after the super-G was canceled Friday to avoid damage to the course.

"It's not dangerous, it's just dangerous the way downhill is," Miller said. "The visibility is OK, considering the light. They took all the teeth out of the course. And people want to see a race. It's worth it."

The value of restraint

Tom Finneran was once arguably the most powerful politician in all of Massachusetts. Now, after deciding to plead guilty to a federal obstruction of justice charge in order to avoid imprisonment, his reputation has fallen precipitously. Today, the former Speaker of the state House of Representatives is a convicted felon.

At first, Finneran was dismissive of the 2002 lawsuit brought by the Black Political Task Force, Boston VOTE and the statewide Latino organization �O�ste?, among others. The suit charged that Finneran had unconstitutionally gerrymandered the redistricting process to diminish the political clout of black voters. According to his lawyer, Richard Egbert, the former Speaker felt importuned by the lawsuit, and lied under oath out of pique.

For this one indiscretion, Finneran is paying dearly. He was fined $25,000 by the court. He was forced to resign from his $416,000-a-year job as president of the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council. The state Retirement Board is considering whether he should forfeit his $31,000 annual state pension. And as a felon, he might lose his license to practice law.

Finneran is fortunate not to be a resident of Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Virginia or Wyoming - in those 11 states, felons are not allowed to vote.

This is a heavy price to pay for an unguarded moment of anger. Young black males should learn from this - there are high costs for losing control of one's anger.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Pass the Pasta, Please, and Hold the Stress; Some Companies Boost Their Bottom Line by Putting Workers at the Top of the Priority List

Create a happy, healthy work environment for your employees, andthey will be happier, healthier -- and more productive.

That's the economic calculation underpinning the surge ofwellness and other employee programs in companies around the UnitedStates.

"Organizations are communities of people," said Robert Rosen,chief executive of Healthy Companies International, an Arlington-based management consulting firm, "and if these people are healthypsychologically and physically, if they're committed and engaged inthe organization, if they believe in the mission of the company, ifthey work in an environment where they're challenged and inspiredand where the people are valued, the business will be reasonablyhealthy."

The happy-worker-equals-healthy-company model seems to be payingoff. A 15-year review of literature from the fields of psychology,business, medicine, public health, sociology and economics suggestsa link between job satisfaction and lower absenteeism, lowerturnover and higher performance. Workplaces with employeeinvolvement programs, such as self-managed work teams, demonstrate a2 to 5 percent increase in productivity. Those with health-promotion programs showed an average of $3.50 savings for everydollar spent, as measured by reduced absenteeism and health-carecosts. Others with healthy workplace practices report significantreductions in on-the-job injuries and in work-related stress levels.

And employees appreciate that. "They let you know you'reimportant, and they value your commitment," said Sonja Roberts ofher employers, Carl M. Freeman Cos., a developer based in Olney."They're very open to changes in life and work. They care about yougetting your work done, but they also care about you as a person --and that's real important."

Google -- ranked number one by Fortune magazine in 2007 as thebest place to work in the United States, based on a survey of105,000 employees at 446 companies -- has a team-based culturethat fosters creativity and commitment. Not to mention such perks asfree gourmet meals, on-site doctors, lap pools and massage chair foremployees at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. But a businessdoesn't have to be as wealthy as Google to promote employee well-being. The most important thing, experts say, is a culture thattruly values employees as individuals.

Much of our understanding about psychological health in theworkplace stems from research on stress. According to studies citedby the American Institute of Stress, a nonprofit organization basedin Yonkers, N.Y., 80 percent of U.S. workers feel stress on the job,and 1 million workers a day fail to show up because of work-relatedstress. Workplace stress contributes to ailments including neck andhand pain, insomnia and aching eyes.

"When we do public opinion survey research, the most frequentlycited source of stress is workplace stress," said Russ Newman,executive director for professional practice for the AmericanPsychological Association.

But reducing stress is just one piece of a workplace environmentthat is psychologically healthy. "People overall are trying tointegrate career success with personal life goals and values," saidDouglas LaBier, a business psychologist in Washington. "They want amanagement culture that promotes teamwork, that's transparent andopen, that has a positive workplace culture that is supportive andthat provides opportunities for ongoing learning, growth andcreative challenge."

Matthew Grawitch, interim director of the Organizational StudiesProgram at Saint Louis University who conducted the review intoworkplace satisfaction, identified five categories of practices thatcontribute to a psychologically healthy workplace:

Work-life balance. When they are encouraged to turn off theirlaptops and cellphones on the weekend or offered flex-time to bewith their kids, employees have higher job satisfaction andcommitment.

Employee growth and development. When employees are givenopportunities for training, developing new skills and applying whatthey've learned, they have reduced levels of stress and increasedmotivation.

Health and safety. Wellness programs such as smoking cessation,weight loss or stress reduction not only have direct healthbenefits, but also demonstrate to employees that the organization isconcerned about their well-being.

Recognition. Compensation and benefits are the most obvious andimportant ways to recognize employees, but activities such asemployee-of-the-month awards also raise morale and motivation.

Involvement. Encouraging employee input into decision-making andbuilding strong workplace teams enhance both employee well-being andproductivity.

At Good Samaritan Hospital in Baltimore, which was recognized bythe APA for its psychologically healthy workplace practices,employees are surveyed regularly to get their ideas on leadership,teamwork, service and quality, and their input is translated intoaction plans. Progress is tracked and reported back to theemployees.

"They really are listening," said Kim Meadows, a three-yearemployee who helps with nurse staffing. Management takes problemsseriously, she said, and "they don't try to sweep it under the rug."For example, she and others in her office are pushing to upgradefrom paper files to a computerized system, and the hospital isresponding.

Meadows is also taking advantage of a tuition assistance planGood Samaritan offers and going back to college. "I feel successfulin what I do," she said. "I have been given great opportunitieshere. I feel I'm part of something -- not just a team, more likefamily."

Such attitudes are paying off for Good Samaritan: Staff turnoverhas dropped from nearly 30 percent to 18 percent over four years andthe vacancy rate for nurses has been cut by half, according to thehospital. Lawrence Beck, president of Good Samaritan, creditsenhanced health and safety programs for reducing the number ofworker compensation days by 20 percent.

Good communication -- top-down and bottom-up -- is anotherhallmark of a healthy workplace, Grawitch said. Freeman, where SonjaRoberts works, has also been recognized by the APA and hasinstituted a "Lunch Together" program. Four days a week, the chef atcorporate headquarters prepares a free lunch, family-style, for anyemployees (and even their guests) who want to eat together. Most ofthe 45 employees join in.

"We sit down and talk about work, but more times than not, aboutpersonal stuff, things we've read in the news or that are going onin our families," said Roberts, an executive assistant who hasworked at Freeman for six years. "It's a great way to bond with yourco-workers and experience them on a different level."

Roberts also appreciates that her employer honors a balancedlifestyle. "If I ever need to go on a school field trip for mydaughter, there's never any kind of push-back," she said. "You don'tfeel pressured or stressed." Other employees take time off duringthe workday to exercise, and they can adjust their time accordingly,she added.

More important than any particular practice, said LaBier, is theculture and philosophy of the organization and how it supports -- or undermines -- individual health, well-being and creativity. Heidentifies three obstacles to achieving a healthy workplace. "One isabusive management or a bullying culture, or, to a lesser extreme, anon-supportive, manipulative, game-playing management culture," hesaid. "The second one is boredom, which is rampant in many workplacecultures. This comes from a mismatch from what the person is doingand what they're able to do. The third big problem is relationshipconflicts and office politics."

When management doesn't address these problems, he said,recognition plaques and yoga classes aren't going to cut it.

Rosen, whose company has interviewed the chief executives of 300large corporations in 40 countries, said that creatingpsychologically healthy environments is a "major movement" inbusiness that has been building for 30 years.

"The smartest CEOs are the ones who understand that by creating apsychologically healthy environment, they come up with better ideas,they service their customers better and they make more money, plainand simple," he said.

For more information, visit the American PsychologicalAssociation's workplace health Web site, www.phwa.org, LaBier'sCenter for Adult Development, www.adultdev.org, and HealthyCompanies International, www.healthycompanies.com.

Beth Baker is a frequent contributor to the Health section andthe author of "Old Age in a New Age -- The Promise ofTransformative Nursing Homes" (Vanderbilt University Press).Comments: health@washpost.com.

Pass the Pasta, Please, and Hold the Stress; Some Companies Boost Their Bottom Line by Putting Workers at the Top of the Priority List

Create a happy, healthy work environment for your employees, andthey will be happier, healthier -- and more productive.

That's the economic calculation underpinning the surge ofwellness and other employee programs in companies around the UnitedStates.

"Organizations are communities of people," said Robert Rosen,chief executive of Healthy Companies International, an Arlington-based management consulting firm, "and if these people are healthypsychologically and physically, if they're committed and engaged inthe organization, if they believe in the mission of the company, ifthey work in an environment where they're challenged and inspiredand where the people are valued, the business will be reasonablyhealthy."

The happy-worker-equals-healthy-company model seems to be payingoff. A 15-year review of literature from the fields of psychology,business, medicine, public health, sociology and economics suggestsa link between job satisfaction and lower absenteeism, lowerturnover and higher performance. Workplaces with employeeinvolvement programs, such as self-managed work teams, demonstrate a2 to 5 percent increase in productivity. Those with health-promotion programs showed an average of $3.50 savings for everydollar spent, as measured by reduced absenteeism and health-carecosts. Others with healthy workplace practices report significantreductions in on-the-job injuries and in work-related stress levels.

And employees appreciate that. "They let you know you'reimportant, and they value your commitment," said Sonja Roberts ofher employers, Carl M. Freeman Cos., a developer based in Olney."They're very open to changes in life and work. They care about yougetting your work done, but they also care about you as a person --and that's real important."

Google -- ranked number one by Fortune magazine in 2007 as thebest place to work in the United States, based on a survey of105,000 employees at 446 companies -- has a team-based culturethat fosters creativity and commitment. Not to mention such perks asfree gourmet meals, on-site doctors, lap pools and massage chair foremployees at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. But a businessdoesn't have to be as wealthy as Google to promote employee well-being. The most important thing, experts say, is a culture thattruly values employees as individuals.

Much of our understanding about psychological health in theworkplace stems from research on stress. According to studies citedby the American Institute of Stress, a nonprofit organization basedin Yonkers, N.Y., 80 percent of U.S. workers feel stress on the job,and 1 million workers a day fail to show up because of work-relatedstress. Workplace stress contributes to ailments including neck andhand pain, insomnia and aching eyes.

"When we do public opinion survey research, the most frequentlycited source of stress is workplace stress," said Russ Newman,executive director for professional practice for the AmericanPsychological Association.

But reducing stress is just one piece of a workplace environmentthat is psychologically healthy. "People overall are trying tointegrate career success with personal life goals and values," saidDouglas LaBier, a business psychologist in Washington. "They want amanagement culture that promotes teamwork, that's transparent andopen, that has a positive workplace culture that is supportive andthat provides opportunities for ongoing learning, growth andcreative challenge."

Matthew Grawitch, interim director of the Organizational StudiesProgram at Saint Louis University who conducted the review intoworkplace satisfaction, identified five categories of practices thatcontribute to a psychologically healthy workplace:

Work-life balance. When they are encouraged to turn off theirlaptops and cellphones on the weekend or offered flex-time to bewith their kids, employees have higher job satisfaction andcommitment.

Employee growth and development. When employees are givenopportunities for training, developing new skills and applying whatthey've learned, they have reduced levels of stress and increasedmotivation.

Health and safety. Wellness programs such as smoking cessation,weight loss or stress reduction not only have direct healthbenefits, but also demonstrate to employees that the organization isconcerned about their well-being.

Recognition. Compensation and benefits are the most obvious andimportant ways to recognize employees, but activities such asemployee-of-the-month awards also raise morale and motivation.

Involvement. Encouraging employee input into decision-making andbuilding strong workplace teams enhance both employee well-being andproductivity.

At Good Samaritan Hospital in Baltimore, which was recognized bythe APA for its psychologically healthy workplace practices,employees are surveyed regularly to get their ideas on leadership,teamwork, service and quality, and their input is translated intoaction plans. Progress is tracked and reported back to theemployees.

"They really are listening," said Kim Meadows, a three-yearemployee who helps with nurse staffing. Management takes problemsseriously, she said, and "they don't try to sweep it under the rug."For example, she and others in her office are pushing to upgradefrom paper files to a computerized system, and the hospital isresponding.

Meadows is also taking advantage of a tuition assistance planGood Samaritan offers and going back to college. "I feel successfulin what I do," she said. "I have been given great opportunitieshere. I feel I'm part of something -- not just a team, more likefamily."

Such attitudes are paying off for Good Samaritan: Staff turnoverhas dropped from nearly 30 percent to 18 percent over four years andthe vacancy rate for nurses has been cut by half, according to thehospital. Lawrence Beck, president of Good Samaritan, creditsenhanced health and safety programs for reducing the number ofworker compensation days by 20 percent.

Good communication -- top-down and bottom-up -- is anotherhallmark of a healthy workplace, Grawitch said. Freeman, where SonjaRoberts works, has also been recognized by the APA and hasinstituted a "Lunch Together" program. Four days a week, the chef atcorporate headquarters prepares a free lunch, family-style, for anyemployees (and even their guests) who want to eat together. Most ofthe 45 employees join in.

"We sit down and talk about work, but more times than not, aboutpersonal stuff, things we've read in the news or that are going onin our families," said Roberts, an executive assistant who hasworked at Freeman for six years. "It's a great way to bond with yourco-workers and experience them on a different level."

Roberts also appreciates that her employer honors a balancedlifestyle. "If I ever need to go on a school field trip for mydaughter, there's never any kind of push-back," she said. "You don'tfeel pressured or stressed." Other employees take time off duringthe workday to exercise, and they can adjust their time accordingly,she added.

More important than any particular practice, said LaBier, is theculture and philosophy of the organization and how it supports -- or undermines -- individual health, well-being and creativity. Heidentifies three obstacles to achieving a healthy workplace. "One isabusive management or a bullying culture, or, to a lesser extreme, anon-supportive, manipulative, game-playing management culture," hesaid. "The second one is boredom, which is rampant in many workplacecultures. This comes from a mismatch from what the person is doingand what they're able to do. The third big problem is relationshipconflicts and office politics."

When management doesn't address these problems, he said,recognition plaques and yoga classes aren't going to cut it.

Rosen, whose company has interviewed the chief executives of 300large corporations in 40 countries, said that creatingpsychologically healthy environments is a "major movement" inbusiness that has been building for 30 years.

"The smartest CEOs are the ones who understand that by creating apsychologically healthy environment, they come up with better ideas,they service their customers better and they make more money, plainand simple," he said.

For more information, visit the American PsychologicalAssociation's workplace health Web site, www.phwa.org, LaBier'sCenter for Adult Development, www.adultdev.org, and HealthyCompanies International, www.healthycompanies.com.

Beth Baker is a frequent contributor to the Health section andthe author of "Old Age in a New Age -- The Promise ofTransformative Nursing Homes" (Vanderbilt University Press).Comments: health@washpost.com.

Pass the Pasta, Please, and Hold the Stress; Some Companies Boost Their Bottom Line by Putting Workers at the Top of the Priority List

Create a happy, healthy work environment for your employees, andthey will be happier, healthier -- and more productive.

That's the economic calculation underpinning the surge ofwellness and other employee programs in companies around the UnitedStates.

"Organizations are communities of people," said Robert Rosen,chief executive of Healthy Companies International, an Arlington-based management consulting firm, "and if these people are healthypsychologically and physically, if they're committed and engaged inthe organization, if they believe in the mission of the company, ifthey work in an environment where they're challenged and inspiredand where the people are valued, the business will be reasonablyhealthy."

The happy-worker-equals-healthy-company model seems to be payingoff. A 15-year review of literature from the fields of psychology,business, medicine, public health, sociology and economics suggestsa link between job satisfaction and lower absenteeism, lowerturnover and higher performance. Workplaces with employeeinvolvement programs, such as self-managed work teams, demonstrate a2 to 5 percent increase in productivity. Those with health-promotion programs showed an average of $3.50 savings for everydollar spent, as measured by reduced absenteeism and health-carecosts. Others with healthy workplace practices report significantreductions in on-the-job injuries and in work-related stress levels.

And employees appreciate that. "They let you know you'reimportant, and they value your commitment," said Sonja Roberts ofher employers, Carl M. Freeman Cos., a developer based in Olney."They're very open to changes in life and work. They care about yougetting your work done, but they also care about you as a person --and that's real important."

Google -- ranked number one by Fortune magazine in 2007 as thebest place to work in the United States, based on a survey of105,000 employees at 446 companies -- has a team-based culturethat fosters creativity and commitment. Not to mention such perks asfree gourmet meals, on-site doctors, lap pools and massage chair foremployees at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. But a businessdoesn't have to be as wealthy as Google to promote employee well-being. The most important thing, experts say, is a culture thattruly values employees as individuals.

Much of our understanding about psychological health in theworkplace stems from research on stress. According to studies citedby the American Institute of Stress, a nonprofit organization basedin Yonkers, N.Y., 80 percent of U.S. workers feel stress on the job,and 1 million workers a day fail to show up because of work-relatedstress. Workplace stress contributes to ailments including neck andhand pain, insomnia and aching eyes.

"When we do public opinion survey research, the most frequentlycited source of stress is workplace stress," said Russ Newman,executive director for professional practice for the AmericanPsychological Association.

But reducing stress is just one piece of a workplace environmentthat is psychologically healthy. "People overall are trying tointegrate career success with personal life goals and values," saidDouglas LaBier, a business psychologist in Washington. "They want amanagement culture that promotes teamwork, that's transparent andopen, that has a positive workplace culture that is supportive andthat provides opportunities for ongoing learning, growth andcreative challenge."

Matthew Grawitch, interim director of the Organizational StudiesProgram at Saint Louis University who conducted the review intoworkplace satisfaction, identified five categories of practices thatcontribute to a psychologically healthy workplace:

Work-life balance. When they are encouraged to turn off theirlaptops and cellphones on the weekend or offered flex-time to bewith their kids, employees have higher job satisfaction andcommitment.

Employee growth and development. When employees are givenopportunities for training, developing new skills and applying whatthey've learned, they have reduced levels of stress and increasedmotivation.

Health and safety. Wellness programs such as smoking cessation,weight loss or stress reduction not only have direct healthbenefits, but also demonstrate to employees that the organization isconcerned about their well-being.

Recognition. Compensation and benefits are the most obvious andimportant ways to recognize employees, but activities such asemployee-of-the-month awards also raise morale and motivation.

Involvement. Encouraging employee input into decision-making andbuilding strong workplace teams enhance both employee well-being andproductivity.

At Good Samaritan Hospital in Baltimore, which was recognized bythe APA for its psychologically healthy workplace practices,employees are surveyed regularly to get their ideas on leadership,teamwork, service and quality, and their input is translated intoaction plans. Progress is tracked and reported back to theemployees.

"They really are listening," said Kim Meadows, a three-yearemployee who helps with nurse staffing. Management takes problemsseriously, she said, and "they don't try to sweep it under the rug."For example, she and others in her office are pushing to upgradefrom paper files to a computerized system, and the hospital isresponding.

Meadows is also taking advantage of a tuition assistance planGood Samaritan offers and going back to college. "I feel successfulin what I do," she said. "I have been given great opportunitieshere. I feel I'm part of something -- not just a team, more likefamily."

Such attitudes are paying off for Good Samaritan: Staff turnoverhas dropped from nearly 30 percent to 18 percent over four years andthe vacancy rate for nurses has been cut by half, according to thehospital. Lawrence Beck, president of Good Samaritan, creditsenhanced health and safety programs for reducing the number ofworker compensation days by 20 percent.

Good communication -- top-down and bottom-up -- is anotherhallmark of a healthy workplace, Grawitch said. Freeman, where SonjaRoberts works, has also been recognized by the APA and hasinstituted a "Lunch Together" program. Four days a week, the chef atcorporate headquarters prepares a free lunch, family-style, for anyemployees (and even their guests) who want to eat together. Most ofthe 45 employees join in.

"We sit down and talk about work, but more times than not, aboutpersonal stuff, things we've read in the news or that are going onin our families," said Roberts, an executive assistant who hasworked at Freeman for six years. "It's a great way to bond with yourco-workers and experience them on a different level."

Roberts also appreciates that her employer honors a balancedlifestyle. "If I ever need to go on a school field trip for mydaughter, there's never any kind of push-back," she said. "You don'tfeel pressured or stressed." Other employees take time off duringthe workday to exercise, and they can adjust their time accordingly,she added.

More important than any particular practice, said LaBier, is theculture and philosophy of the organization and how it supports -- or undermines -- individual health, well-being and creativity. Heidentifies three obstacles to achieving a healthy workplace. "One isabusive management or a bullying culture, or, to a lesser extreme, anon-supportive, manipulative, game-playing management culture," hesaid. "The second one is boredom, which is rampant in many workplacecultures. This comes from a mismatch from what the person is doingand what they're able to do. The third big problem is relationshipconflicts and office politics."

When management doesn't address these problems, he said,recognition plaques and yoga classes aren't going to cut it.

Rosen, whose company has interviewed the chief executives of 300large corporations in 40 countries, said that creatingpsychologically healthy environments is a "major movement" inbusiness that has been building for 30 years.

"The smartest CEOs are the ones who understand that by creating apsychologically healthy environment, they come up with better ideas,they service their customers better and they make more money, plainand simple," he said.

For more information, visit the American PsychologicalAssociation's workplace health Web site, www.phwa.org, LaBier'sCenter for Adult Development, www.adultdev.org, and HealthyCompanies International, www.healthycompanies.com.

Beth Baker is a frequent contributor to the Health section andthe author of "Old Age in a New Age -- The Promise ofTransformative Nursing Homes" (Vanderbilt University Press).Comments: health@washpost.com.

Pakistan suicide blast death toll rises to 18

Three more police officers have died from the suicide attack near Islamabad's Red Mosque, bringing the death toll to 18, an official said Monday.

Naeem Iqbal, a police spokesman, said two officers died late Sunday from their wounds, while the third died early Monday.

No one has claimed responsibility for the explosion, which also wounded dozens and appeared to be the capital's deadliest in about a year. Three of the dead were civilians while the rest were police, Iqbal said.

The blast unnerved the usually tranquil city the same day thousands of Islamists marked the one-year anniversary of a military siege on the nearby radical Red Mosque, an event …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

CELEB CIRCUIT: Party patrol - Hot spot of the week; Life is a roller coaster and celebs have just gotta ride it - those crazy cats...(Features)

Byline: Sarah Ivens

Vingt Quatre

One of the capital's few 24-hour hangouts, Vingt Quatre does top- class British cuisine for the sophisticated crowd, giant plates of soak-up food for the post-pub …

CELEB CIRCUIT: Party patrol - Hot spot of the week; Life is a roller coaster and celebs have just gotta ride it - those crazy cats...(Features)

Byline: Sarah Ivens

Vingt Quatre

One of the capital's few 24-hour hangouts, Vingt Quatre does top- class British cuisine for the sophisticated crowd, giant plates of soak-up food for the post-pub …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Vanessa R. Williams inspires on BAJADA label; Andre Ward 'Steps in the Name of Love'

Fresh on the heels of her increasing success of the self-titled album "Vanessa" which drew critical acclaim when it reached the #10 and peaked at #7 on the Billboard Gospel chart, expectations for Vanessa's new disk have been realized. The recently released "Here I Go again," on BAJADA Records is a fabulous production filled with inspiring spirituality.

Vanessa is an alumnae of Howard University who sang with the religious and sacred musical chorale. Eventually she was persuaded by friends and instructors to enter into gospel music as a solo attraction because of the beauty of her voice and the penetrating interpretations. Her success was phenomenal on the recording and as she …

Echostar Senior Debt Offered.

EchoStar Communications Corp. subsidiary EchoStar DBS Corp. priced its $2 billion senior debt offering and tender offers. The private-placement $2 billion offering, expected to close Jan. 25, encompasses $ 1.625 billion of 9.375% senior notes due 2009 and $375 million of 9.25% senior notes due 2006. EchoStar is using part of the new senior …

Rats, Sound Tigers go head-to-head; Teams battling for spot in playoffs meet tonight.(Sports)

Byline: PETE DOUGHERTY - Staff Writer

Former Buffalo Bills coach Marv Levy was asked if his team's fourth Super Bowl, which followed three consecutive losses, was a "must-win" game.

"No," Levy replied, "World War II was a must win."

So tonight's American Hockey League game between teams battling for a playoff spot falls into the "important" category but not life-or-death. The Albany River Rats play host to the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, who hold a one-point lead for fourth place in the East Division.

"(A victory) definitely puts us in a good position and puts some pressure on Bridgeport to keep on winning," Rats coach Tom Rowe said Tuesday. …

NATION DEEPER IN HOLE.(Business)

Byline: Martin Crutsinger Associated Press

The government said Tuesday that the deficit in the broadest measure of U.S. trade sank to a five-year low last year, but the $105.9 billion imbalance still pushed the country deeper into the hole as the world's largest debtor nation.

America's current account balance narrowed by 16 percent over a $126.6 billion deficit in 1989, reflecting growth in exports, higher overseas earnings of American businesses and increased spending by visiting foreign tourists, according to the Commerce Department.

The year ended on a positive note as the October-December trade deficit declined to $20.57 billion, down 10.2 percent from its third-quarter level. It was the smallest quarterly imbalance in …