Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Why promising minority students aren't signing up for AP exams

Minority students sign up for AP exams at a lower rate than white peers, even if they are likely to pass. Cultivating early interest in math and science is key to fulfilling potential.

By Ryan Lenora Brown,?Contributor / February 20, 2013

Maia Luick marks an answer during a 30-minute science test at the GCI Alaska Academic Decathlon in Anchorage, Alaska, this month. Overall, more high school students are passing Advanced Placement exams, but minority students, even those likely to pass, aren't signing up for tests.

Erik Hill/The Anchorage Daily/AP

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The number of high school students passing at least one Advanced Placement (AP) exam is up overall this year, but students from minority groups still lag behind their white peers, particularly in math and science.

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Among members of the class of 2012, more than 32.4 percent (950,000 students) took at least one AP exam, up from 30.2 percent in 2011. A decade ago, the number was 18 percent, according to an annual report released Wednesday by the College Board, which administers the tests.

But the College Board also finds that many minority and low-income students, even those with a high likelihood of succeeding on AP exams, aren?t taking them. For students?deemed likely to pass an AP mathematics exam, only 30 percent of African-American and Hispanic students and 20 percent of American-Indian students signed up for the test, compared with 40 percent of white students and 60 percent Asian and Pacific Islander students.

?It?s really unconscionable that we?re not better as a nation at helping students from underserved backgrounds prepare for and enroll in AP courses,? says Trevor Packer, College Board senior vice president for AP.

Since its inception in the 1950s, the AP program has grown into a staple of the college preparatory curriculum in American high schools. The AP curriculum teaches college-level material to high school students in 31 subjects across a wide range of disciplines, including both traditional courses like physics and US history and atypical specialties like human geography and Japanese language and culture.

Passing an AP exam in high school is correlated to a higher college grade point average and an increased likelihood of graduating from a four-year college, the College Board reports. It can also bring down tuition costs for students who enter college with credits earned through AP scores. Exams are scored on a five-point scale ? three points or higher counts as passing and can be used for college credit or placement at many universities.

Enrollment in AP courses has recently become more diverse. In 2002, less than 18 percent of AP exam takers were so-called ?underserved minorities.? Now the figure is 26 percent. And the number of low-income students in the AP program has grown from 11 percent to nearly 27 percent in the same time period. This is due in part to widespread subsidies to help offset the test's nearly $100 price tag. ?

Mr. Packer says that low-enrollment in AP courses and exams among minority students is often a function of availability.?But other education experts argue that the problem is more systemic. ?

When it comes to math and science, minority students are ?often not recognized as the smart kids in the class,? says Mary Walker, an education professor at the University of Texas in Austin who focuses on math and science education.

If you don?t cultivate students? interest and aptitude for a subject early in their educational careers, she says, increasing their access to AP exams may simply be too little too late.

?If you don?t get them interested at middle school level they won?t be on track to take advanced courses in high school because they won?t have taken the necessary prerequisites,? she says.

The ?high likelihood? that a student will pass an AP exam is determined by looking at a student?s score on the Preliminary Scholastic Assessment Test (PSAT) ? an SAT-style test the College Board offers to high school sophomores and juniors. Students with certain qualifying scores on one or more sections of that exam have at least a 60 percent chance of passing an AP exam, the College Board reports.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/bOzRVc9IEk8/Why-promising-minority-students-aren-t-signing-up-for-AP-exams

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Another More Comforting, Less Scary Way to Look at the National Debt

Summary:?? Today we have one example from the flow of comforting words about the government?s deficits. While pleasant reading, written by a knowledgeable expert, it does not withstand close scrutiny.

One of the great oddities of history is why nations adopt policies that were so obviously doomed to failure, or even disaster. It?s a long list, from 17th C economist John Law?s managing the debt of France with the Mississippi Company (latter known as the Mississippi Bubble), to Japan declaring war on almost everybody.? For good reason Barbara Tuchman named her greatest history book?The March of Folly.

There are two constant elements of these stories.? First, warnings from experts. Second, assurances that these obviously crazy policies?this time?would end well.

So it is with the US government debt. We have all heard the warnings. As the debt grows, so do the volume of those saying not to worry. The economists of the Keynesian mainstream provide one form of comfort (fix the deficit later).? The economists of the Modern Monetary Theory school provide another form (debts don?t matter, until they cause inflation or a currency collapse).? A third group provides a vague form of comfort. An example of this is ?Another way to look at the national debt? by Zachary Karabell (President of?River Twice Research), special to the?Washington Post, 8 February 2013 ? Opening:

Welcome to the next chapter of the endless debt debate. The release of a Congressional Budget Office report on the next 10 years of the U.S. economy ends a brief lull in Washington. As we return once again to our regularly scheduled program of ?Crisis and Impasse,? let?s take a moment to consider the following heretical idea: We have no debt problem.

We have spent years demonizing debt, and now have an entire political movement dedicated to the proposition that government debt will destroy America as we know it unless something is done now!

Stand by for a debunking of fears about the debt! I feel better already. The next line starts the analysis:

Yet debt is simply a new form of currency that is issued, bought, priced and sold like any other currency ?

This is false. First, government debt (eg, 30 year Treasury bonds) are not currency in any meaningful form. They vary in price (currency?is the standard of measurement for asset prices, like bonds).? More important, although the government can convert debt into currency by printing money (ie, monetization) the process is not automatic.? It is a?political?decision to inflate away the value of the nation?s loans.

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Which brings us to the key issue: we do?not?owe the debt to ourselves. We owe? it to specific people and institutions, many whom wield great political power ? and will exert it to see that they?re paid in real money.? The memory of the great post-WWII inflation burns in their memories; hence the obsession about inflation by their minions.

? and the fear that it will fatally undermine the nation is much like the belief in the 19th century that paper dollars would destroy value and rob the middle class, or the fear that silver would do the same, or the concern in the 20th century (and now) that unless all value is tethered to gold, economies will collapse. The debt freakout is the latest installment, the only difference being that those who believe debt will destroy us have more political power.

Correct, although Karabell ignores the importance of this in the history lesson that follows this paragraph. The 1% are the creditors of the nation, of both public and private debt. The late 19th deflation served their interests well, crushing the economic and political strength of the small farmer, craftsman, and merchant classes ? debtors who were broken by the increased value in real terms of their loans. The rise and bursting of the housing bubble and the great recession had a similarly beneficial effect for the 1%, further concentrating wealth and power.

Economics were, are, and probably always will be tools of the 1%. Economists are their handmaidens.

Now Karabell reviews some unpleasant historical facts.

The establishment consensus is that there is too little growth and too much government spending everywhere in the developed world. Germany still hasn?t psychologically recovered from the debt and currency traumas of the 1920s. Brazil and much of the rest of Latin America are scarred by the memories of the 1970s and East Asia by the 1990s, when debt debacles nearly sank those economies.

Now for the climax.

Yet an amen chorus is not the truth, and consensus is not fact. Debt can be a fatal liability if used unwisely, but used well it can be a powerful tool. It allows governments, businesses and individuals to expand what they can do in the present in the belief that future gains will ensue. It can fund education, underwrite infrastructure and fuel research and innovation. The fact that debt is so often used poorly, to paper over problems or fund ephemeral spending, represents a serious and potentially crippling problem. But that is not an indictment of debt; it is an indictment of what is done with it.

He sets us up for a sound rebuttal to the fear of debt, showing that we have wisely spent the $6.4 trillion in new Federal public debt since the recession started in December 2007 (a 125% increase).? That would deserve attention, and justify the deficits ? immediate economic stimulus on investments than generate future growth. Instead we get a change of subject.

The current assumption is that debt is out of control and has been for many years. Consumer debt in the early 2000s gave way to sovereign debt today, and Greece and its Mediterranean brethren are held up as Exhibit A in the prosecution?s case. Yet this animus harkens back to moments when shifts in the financial system have triggered anger and panic. Our debt fixation, then, may be less a product of debt itself than one of adjusting to a new currency.

In fact the money we borrowed has been largely squandered. Foreign wars, building a vast domestic security system to defend against non-existent threats, and gifts to the 1% and their corporations. Easy credit often leads to poor spending. Now that $6 trillion of spending is gone along with the winter?s snow, and only the debt remains.

It looks like the deficits will continue, perhaps shrinking as the economy slowly grows, the small tax increase passed in January, and (perhaps) spending cuts take place.? Or the economy might slow more than expected, boosting the deficit. The worst case is that we?ve become Japan, where only massive deficits and zero interest rates have maintained a stable economy for two decades ? with no end in sight.

Either way we can count on a steady flow of assurances that the economy is healthy and the deficits are no problem.? Fiscal deficits are the opiate of the masses.

Oddly enough, Karabell said something different in 2009

Back in 2009, when deficits were desperately needed to stabilize the economy, Karabell worried about deficits:? ?Deficits and the Chinese Challenge?, Wall Street Journal, 12 October 2009 ? ?Debt can become a real liability for a superpower. Recall what happened to postwar Britain.?

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For More Information about government debt

  1. A certain casualty of the recession: the US Government?s solvency, 25 November 2008
  2. Everything you need to know about government stimulus programs (read this ? it?s about?your?money), 30 January 2009
  3. Government economic stimulus is financial heroin, 28 December 2009
  4. The limit to America?s power is our ability to pay for it, 18 April 2011
  5. About America?s economic recovery: the good news and the bad, 1 May 2012
  6. America is rich and powerful because we can borrow. Will this debt build a stronger America?, 5 June 2012
  7. US economic update. Everything that follows is a result of what you see here., 8 June 2012
  8. America?s strength is an illusion created by foolish borrowing, 10 October 2012
  9. Ed Dolan Asks: What Does it Mean for Fiscal Policy to be ?Sustainable?? MMT and Other Perspectives, 30 November 2012
  10. Let?s watch a great nation?s wealth burn?away, 4 January 2013

This piece is cross-posted from Fabius Maximus with permission.

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Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPA

Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPAPutting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPA This week on the podcast we're talking about the return of CISPA, re-installing Windows , and working an on-call job without losing your mind. We're also answering your questions about why we give Google so much information, how to use unlimited data effectively, and syncing your files over your local network without the aid of a cloud storage service.

How to Listen to This Week's Episode

Here's how you can listen to our episode:

News and Top Stories

Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPA

  • CISPA's Back!: The privacy-eroding bill is back! Learn all about it, and call your representatives if you oppose it.
  • iOS 6 Bug Lets Anyone Unlock Your Phone Without a Passcode: A recently-discovered bug in iOS 6.0.1 and above lets you unlock an iPhone without needing to know the password, meaning anyone with access to your phone can make calls, edit contacts, and more.
  • How to Have a Stress-Free Valentine's Day (Whether You're Single or Not): Valentine's Day is a divisive holiday. Some people love it, others hate it, and many couldn't care less. Regardless of where you stand, navigating the holiday stress-free is pretty difficult. Whether you want to do something special while avoiding the circus or you're flying solo, here's how to make it through today without stressing yourself out.
  • How We Work: Every week, we share the shortcuts, workspaces, and productivity tips of our favorite experts and internet personalities. This week, however, we're giving you guys a glimpse into how we work, and all the tips and tricks that keep our blogging wheels spinning.
  • How to Work an On Call Job and Keep Your Sanity: Being connected or on call doesn't mean your friends and family have to suffer along with you. The key is to draw bright lines between your "on" and "off" times, and manage your coworkers expectations for when you're supposed to be available. Here's how to turn that struggle for balance into an easily managed routine.
  • How to Do a Clean Install of Windows Without Losing Your Files, Settings, and Tweaks: There's nothing like a fresh install of Windows to clear your mind, but it comes at a cost: you have to set everything up again, just the way you like it. Here's how to reinstall Windows, migrate your important settings, and leave the clutter behind.

Questions and Answers

Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPAEach week we answer five questions from readers and listeners. Here's what we tackled this week.

  • Aren't we worried that Google will start charging us for their services some day and that we will all be too locked in to say ?no'? Not really. It's not that hard to leave a service, and Google makes their money off of information so we're more concerned about what they may do with that information. If you want out now, check out these alternatives.
  • How do I sync files across the local network without paying for online storage? Crashplan offers free local backups, but rolling your own Dropbox-like service is probably the best way to go.
  • I'm still grandfathered in to Verizon's unlimited data switchover but I don't really use that much data. How can I make better use of my unlimited data plan? A lot of people are clinging to their unlimited data plans but we don't really understand because there's not much of a reason to have it and it costs so much less to get lesser plans (in most cases). If you really want to keep using it, however, just tether your phone as much as possible and stream music whenever you can.
  • Why don't you have an official Lifehacker IRC channel? Why do you want an official Lifehacker IRC channel? We actually don't know, so please tell us and maybe we can make it happen if it makes sense.

Tips of the Week

Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPA

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How Do I Submit a Question?

Putting Unlimited Data to Good Use, Why We Give Google So Much Information, and the Return of CISPAThere are two ways to send in your question:

Please keep your questions as brief as possible. This means about 3-5 sentences for emails and 30-60 seconds for calls and videos. Your questions can be specific, but broader questions are generally better because they'll apply to more people. For example, "how can I breathe new life into my old PDA?" is much better than "what can I do with an old HP iPAQ 210?" Either way, we look forward to hearing from you!

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Joseph Gordon-Levitt stops by "Sesame Street" for vocabulary lesson

Finola Hughes has called the upcoming 50th anniversary of "General Hospital" a "really sweet" moment."I think the fact that we, at 'GH,' are doing so well right now, and to enter into our 50th anniversary on such a high, it feels really sweet," the actress, who plays Port Charles Police Chief Anna Devane, told Access Hollywood, when asked about the daytime drama's impending anniversary.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/joseph-gordon-levitt-stops-sesame-street-vocabulary-lesson-205655153.html

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Mayor wants Bryant to ?fix things'

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Source: http://thenewsstar.com/article/20130213/NEWS01/130213011/-1/rss

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Beyonce joined by Oprah at documentary premiere

NEW YORK (AP) ? Oprah Winfrey made a surprise appearance Tuesday night at the premiere of Beyonce's HBO documentary, 'Life is But a Dream,' posing with the star and speaking of the candor she showed in making it.

The film takes a no-holds-barred look at moments in the 31-year old singer's life, including her miscarriage, reports of faking her pregnancy, and firing her father as her manager.

While the revelations Beyonce makes about herself in the film are comparable to the results Winfrey usually gets from her tough style of interviewing, the talk show host gave kudos to the singer.

Winfrey said Beyonce did a "much better job" of telling her own story. "I wouldn't have been in the bedroom and in the closet and in the car and on vacation," she said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beyonce-joined-oprah-documentary-premiere-054454697.html

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Kickstarter acknowledges that you shop from your phone with an iOS app of its own

Kickstarter acknowledges that you shop from your phone with an iOS app of its own

With 40 billion App Store downloads and counting, if you haven't already carved out your own little piece of mobile magic, it's time to get crackin'. Kickstarter, the biggest name in crowdfunding, might be a bit late to the game, but its lack of presence in Apple's mobile shop ends today, with Kickstarter for iPhone. As you might expect, the smartphone-native version of the popular site's online store lets you browse through projects, watch pitch videos and submit a pledge just like you do on the web, but with a much less cumbersome interface. Project creators can also use it to track their own progress, or to post updates on the go. Kickstarter is compatible with iPhone 3GS and later, third-gen iPod touch devices and iPad, though it's optimized for iPhone 5, so tablet users may want to stick with the website for now. The rest of you can hit up our source link to get started -- the app just hit today.

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Mavs? Bernard James will be honored during All-Star weekend for his military service

The Mavericks don?t have any All-Stars, nor will any Maverick take part in the various undercard skill competitions this weekend in Houston.

Mavericks 28-year-old rookie center Bernard James, however, will be honored Saturday night at the Toyota Center for his six years of military service, including tours in Iraq, Kuwait and Qatar.

He will be recognized as part of an NBA Cares moment. James said he also is scheduled to make a few public appearances, but he plans to make his visit short, returning to Dallas by Saturday night.

?I?m very appreciative that they?re recognizing me for my military service,? said James, who made his seventh start of the season Wednesday night. ?That is going to be special.?

This entry was posted in Uncategorized by Brad Townsend / Reporter. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://mavsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/02/mavs-bernard-james-will-be-honored-during-all-star-weekend-for-his-military-service.html/

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Higher Mileage Service Intervals For Maple Lake | Maple Lake ...

The government mandates a lot of equipment on cars for the Maple Lake Minnesota area: emission devices and control computers; safety equipment like airbags; and crash worthiness requirements. All of this is great for the motoring public in Maple Lake Minnesota, but it does add quite a bit to the price of a new car.

Because new cars are more expensive, people are driving their old cars longer. The average car is now over nine years old. 68% of vehicles on the road have more than 75,000 miles/120,000 kilometers. As cars age, their performance drops, they have difficulty idling for long periods and are more sensitive to weather extremes. Fortunately today?s cars are up to the challenge ? but they need a little help to keep on going.

Some owner?s manuals don?t specify service requirements at higher mileage. That doesn?t mean it doesn?t have to be done. In fact, it?s more important than ever to stay on top of routine maintenance for cars with more than 120,000 miles/190,000 kilometers. Just extend regular service intervals out: for instance a service that?s recommended every 24,000 miles/38,000 kilometers should be performed at 24,000 mi/38,000 km; 48,000 mi/77,000 km; 72,000mi/116,000 km, 96,000 mi/154,000 km; and on and on.

Because of the additional stress older engines experience, the severe service maintenance schedule may be more appropriate than the regular schedule. Watch for leaks ? seals and gaskets dry out over time and do not hold the fluids as well as they used to. It is also time to make sure you have a good technician. There are some services and replacements that are scheduled after you put some clicks on the odometer, like timing belts, valve train adjustments, suspension, anti-lock brake service, air bags, etc. And unexpected repairs down the road are just par for the course.

Check for unusual sounds, smells or the way your car feels. These could be hints that trouble is brewing. Better to catch it early before it turns into a costly repair. Regular wash and wax will help maintain your car?s appearance. One of the things you can do to really help your high mileage vehicle is to begin using high mileage formulation fluids. There are special engine oils, coolants, and transmission and power steering fluids that are formulated for cars that have a higher mileage.

High mileage oil is designed to condition seals and gaskets, reduce wear and avoid premature burn off. Older engines are dirtier inside ? and dirty engines contaminate their oil faster. High mileage oil has special additives that clean the engine, removing sludge deposits over time. The result is less stress on the engine, better fuel economy and excellent wear protection. Come into Maple Lake Automotive Repair for a checkup.

Studies have even shown that using high mileage fluids early will actually prevent some of the problems of high kilometer vehicles. So once you hit around 50,000 mi/80,000 km, consider stepping up to high mileage formulations. The fluids cost a bit more than standard fluids because of the additional additives, but they can be worth their weight in gold in terms of preventing repair costs down the road.

It does cost more to properly maintain a higher mileage vehicle ? but it?s much cheaper than a new car payment!

Source: http://www.maplelakeautomotiverepair.com/maplelake/higher-mileage-service-intervals-for-maple-lake

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HTC?s Flagship M7 Smartphone May Just Be Called The HTC One

m7Let?s face it: HTC may have its hopes pinned on its not-so-secretive M7 smartphone, but that sooner or later the company is going to have to drop the codename and let it fly under another banner. As it turns out, that new name may be more familiar than expected ? prolific leaker EvLeaks noted on Twitter just a little while ago that it would debut simply as the HTC One later this month.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/WdcM1K9Mtok/

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Movie Review: Why Identity Thief Is More Than Just a Hilarious ...

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Wide Release

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Opens Feb 8

I won?t lie. I walked into the pre-screening of Identity Thief expecting to laugh, but more for the one-note, raunchy, slapstick comedy we?ve been seeing lately in films like this, that is, of the Seth Gordon, Judd Apatow breed. I couldn?t have been more wrong.

Melissa McCarthy, who broke-out in last year?s Bridesmaids, is hilarious from beginning to end, and Jason Bateman, is the perfect foil to McCarthy?s crass, obnoxious character. But the film, in which McCarthy stars as a woman who adopts a variety of identities ? Diana/Sandy/Tanya (the list goes on) ? also manages to match that comedy with a believable and heart-warming poignancy.

The film opens with orange-haired, turquoise-loving Diana shopping (endlessly) for everything from hair spray to jet skis. Diana is a seasoned identity thief, and her latest victim, Bateman?s Sandy Patterson, has unwittingly forked over his personal information (social security number, date of birth). She creates fake ID?s and false credit cards, all under Sandy?s name.

When Sandy?s straight-edged, boring life begins to fall apart as a result of Diana?s crime (he?s arrested, has his credit cards cut up, and almost loses his job), he learns that a woman ?of hobbit height? in Florida is to blame. The police are unable to help him due to matters of jurisdiction, so Sandy is forced to take matters into his own hands, leaving his pregnant wife and two daughters at home to find and bring this woman 2,000 miles back to Denver to clear his name.

Sandy is not the only victim who is hunting down Diana, however. Sandy is joined by a bounty hunter and a couple working for their mob-like boss, who have all been spurned by Diana and are now seeking vengeance. Sandy gets her first, corralling the crook into his car and setting out on a long road trip back to Colorado. In between, cameo appearances from Ellie Kemper (Bridesmaids), as a diner waitress, and Eric Stonestreet (Modern Family), as a newly-widowed cowboy who sleeps with Diana, keep the laughs going.

The comedy, though, is not limited to the talent Gordon and company have assembled for the film. Special effects scenes, including a hilarious moment in the woods involving snakes, keep the film interesting and the humor varied. And stunts, like McCarthy being hit by a car or Bateman being punched ? repeatedly, in the throat ? are both realistic and hysterical.

As these things go, Patterson and Diana?s road trip ends up forming a special bond between the two characters. We learn that Diana was an orphan and doesn?t know her real name; she has no real friends or family. Her character, initially portrayed as ignorant, tasteless and oblivious to those around her, suddenly reveals itself as vulnerable and sensitive. A dramatic and (embarrassingly, for me) emotional makeover sheds light on Diana?s real character, and McCarthy?s talent shines through during a heart-wrenching scene when she explains her past to Patterson.

Identity Thief has it all: guns, laughs, romance, chase scenes, scandal. But unlike other comedies in the genre, it manages to break out of the same routine plot. And thanks to McCarthy and Bateman, who are both hilarious and marvelous, the film manages to delve into themes of appearance, friendship and belonging, albeit in hysterical fashion.

Source: http://frontrow.dmagazine.com/2013/02/movie-review-why-identity-thief-is-more-than-just-a-hilarious-comedy/

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The dirty half-dozen: Six Senate candidates who could foment GOP civil war (Washington Post)

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Daimler sees 200 million euro hit in 2013 from forex

STUTTGART, Germany (Reuters) - German carmaker Daimler expects the recent strength in the European single currency could result in an earnings hit of around 200 million euros ($270.8 million) this year, finance chief Bodo Uebber said on Thursday.

"Actually those headwinds are pretty manageable, thanks to the fact that we have already hedged over 70 percent of our dollar exposure for this year," he told reporters.

For next year the company has already built hedges equating to around a third of its dollar exposure.

Daimler booked a positive earnings contribution of 958 million euros in 2012, the lion's share of which stemmed from its Mercedes cars division, thanks to the euro trading as low as $1.20 in late July.

Uebber also said the "timepoint remained open" for an exit from the remaining 7.5 percent stake it holds in European aerospace group EADS .

He aims to achieve a positive free cash flow this year including all potential effects such as M&A investments or pension funding costs.

(Reporting By Christiaan Hetzner)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/daimler-sees-200-million-euro-hit-2013-forex-104826451--finance.html

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