“Electric Utilities Face at Least $800 Billion Capital ... - Newsblaze.com” plus 3 more |
- Electric Utilities Face at Least $800 Billion Capital ... - Newsblaze.com
- Continued: GOP Senate nominee Rand Paul questions Civil ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune
- Race for US Senate seat in Pa. will focus on jobs ... - Daily Press
- For frustrated workers, it's time to speak up, branch out - Honolulu Advertiser
| Electric Utilities Face at Least $800 Billion Capital ... - Newsblaze.com Posted: 20 May 2010 12:42 AM PDT For details, view the entire article by subscribing to Industrial Info's Premium Industry News at http://www.industrialinfo.com/showNews.jsp?newsitemID=160597, or browse other breaking industrial news stories at www.industrialinfo.com. Industrial Info Resources (IIR) is the leading provider of global market intelligence specializing in the industrial process, heavy manufacturing and energy markets. IIR's quality-assurance philosophy, the Living Forward Reporting Principle, provides up-to-the-minute intelligence on what's happening now, while constantly keeping track of future opportunities. For more information send inquiries to powergroup@industrialinfo.com or visit us online at www.industrialinfo.com. Follow us on: Facebook - Twitter - LinkedIn - Vimeo
Tags: ,Energy and Utilities:AlternativeEnergy, EnergyandUtilities:Equipment, EnergyandUtilities:Utilities, ProfessionalServices:Consulting, ProfessionalServices:Engineering, RealEstateandConstruction:Construction, ,MD,BALTIMORE, MD Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Continued: GOP Senate nominee Rand Paul questions Civil ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune Posted: 20 May 2010 10:36 AM PDT The younger Paul trounced the GOP establishment candidate, Secretary of State Trey Grayson, in Tuesday's primary thanks in part to strong backing from the tea party movement and leading conservatives such as former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C. Hours after the NPR interview, Maddow pressed Paul about whether lunch counters should have been desegregated, as activists campaigned for in the 1960s in the South. Paul declined to give a yes or no answer. Instead, he said he doesn't believe in discrimination, suggested the issue was abstract and raised the idea of who decides whether customers can bring weapons into restaurants. Asked whether he opposes part of the Civil Rights Act, Paul said if "you decide that restaurants are publicly owned and not privately owned, then do you say that you should have the right to bring your gun into a restaurant even though the owner of the restaurant says, 'Well no, we don't want to have guns in here.' The bar says, `We don't want to have guns in here because people might drink and start fighting and shoot each other.' Does the owner of the restaurant own his restaurant? Or does the government own his restaurant?" Paul's Democratic opponent, Jack Conway, said in a statement that Paul has a "narrow political philosophy that has dangerous consequences for working families, veterans, students, the disabled and those without a voice in the halls of power." Rep. John Yarmuth, D-Ky., called Paul's comments appalling and said "he has no place holding public office in Kentucky in the 21st century." ____ Associated Press writers Janet Blake and Bruce Schreiner in Louisville, Ky., contributed to this report. ___ Online: NPR: http://tinyurl.com/2fm46sr Rachel Maddow: http://tinyurl.com/2wtta7r Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Race for US Senate seat in Pa. will focus on jobs ... - Daily Press Posted: 19 May 2010 06:20 AM PDT HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Democratic Party leaders and labor unions began lining up Wednesday behind the party nominee whom they had fought to defeat in Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate primary as the Republican opponent attacked him as too liberal for the state's voters. President Barack Obama called U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak after the victory to pledge his support, Gov. Ed Rendell said he would do whatever Sestak asked of him in the campaign and the AFL-CIO targeted Republican Pat Toomey. "If (voters) want Wall Street, they can elect Toomey," Bill George, the outgoing president of the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO, said Wednesday. "If they want someone who stands up for working families, they can elect Sestak." Sestak on Tuesday beat five-term U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, 54 percent to 46 percent, with nearly all precincts reporting. A tireless campaigner and former Navy admiral respected for his strategic analysis, Sestak won with nimble attacks, an effective message and some missteps by the better-funded Specter. Sestak had trailed badly in polls into April, but closed the gap quickly when he began advertising on TV, taking special aim at Specter's party switch last year. Specter, a moderate and a fixture in American politics for three decades, secured the party's support last year when he switched his registration from Republican to Democrat. While many Democratic voters simply refused to support Specter, Sestak also tried to tap into unrest over the recession and partisan gridlock by painting Washington as a ship run aground by politicians who care more about saving their jobs than helping people. As late as Tuesday while the polls were still open, Specter said Sestak could not beat Toomey in the fall. Rendell maintained Wednesday that Specter would have been a better fall candidate because of his appeal to moderate Republicans, but George conceded that Sestak might be just as strong. "Up until three weeks ago, we thought he was weak," George said. "But we don't know that he's weaker now. Polls show that he's just as good." With the party united behind him, Toomey easily won the nomination Tuesday over a weak opponent and is expected to be well-funded in the fall. On Wednesday, Toomey held a brief rally at the Allegheny County Airport near Pittsburgh and called Sestak far to the left of the Democratic Party's mainstream. "Joe Sestak has a great faith in ever-larger government," Toomey said. Sestak has said he has no fear of Toomey, a former congressman and one-time investment banker. "I'll put my time in the military and time in Congress fighting for working families up against his advancement of the Bush agenda and Wall Street," Sestak told a coffeehouse gathering in Harrisburg last week. Toomey on Wednesday shot back at Democrats' attempts to tie him to his days on Wall Street, citing Sestak's vote for a 2008 bill to bail out the investment banks. "I think it's pretty clear who's on the side of Wall Street bailouts and it's not Pat Toomey," Toomey said. Toomey headed the anti-tax group Club for Growth from 2005 until last year and has strong ties to the business community. While in Congress, Toomey received high marks from conservative groups. Sestak has received similarly high marks from liberal groups since he began serving a suburban Philadelphia district in 2007. Toomey's star has risen since the 2004 Senate GOP primary, which he lost by less than 2 percent of the vote to Specter. It was the prospect of another primary contest with Toomey that drove Specter out of the Republican Party and into a Democratic primary with Sestak that turned out to be far tougher for Specter than anyone expected. Sestak voted for the Wall Street bailout, the health care overhaul and the economic stimulus, all bills Toomey said he would have opposed. Toomey represented the Allentown area in the U.S. House from 1999 to 2005 and has a voting record that Sestak will attack. For instance, Toomey supported the 2002 Iraq war authorization, then-President George W. Bush's 2001 tax cuts that Democrats derided as a giveaway to the rich and a 1999 banking deregulation bill. Sestak said in his campaign against Specter that those measures contributed to the national recession and deficit. ____ Associated Press writer Joe Mandak in Pittsburgh contributed to this report. Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Currently there are no comments. Be the first to comment! Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| For frustrated workers, it's time to speak up, branch out - Honolulu Advertiser Posted: 17 May 2010 02:14 PM PDT Unemployment, underemployment and general frustration about one's job don't usually bring out the best in people — unless, of course, you subscribe to the "don't wait for your ship to come in, swim out to it" philosophy. This mighty line of reasoning can turn less-than-ideal work situations into rewarding careers. I discovered dozens of examples, from workers who had spoken up about injustices to those who didn't wait around for others to make things happen. Sonia Pressman Fuentes was a lawyer at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in the mid-1960s. "I found myself increasingly frustrated by the unwillingness of the commission to enforce the prohibitions against sex discrimination in employment contained in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the act the commission was charged with administering," the commission's first woman lawyer says. "But I didn't think there was anything I could do about it." One day writer Betty Friedan walked in. Known for her 1963 book, "The Feminine Mystique," she was there to interview Fuentes' boss for a new book. "When she saw me, a woman, she asked me to reveal problems and conflicts at the commission," Fuentes says. But Fuentes didn't feel she could speak out publicly. When Friedan came back a second time, "I was feeling particularly frustrated at the commission's failure to implement the law for women, and I invited her into my office. I told her, with tears in my eyes, that the country needed an organization to fight for women." Within a year, Fuentes, Friedan and 49 other men and women formed the National Organization for Women. Lynn Maria Thompson also was not going to wait for good things to happen. She started out selling yellow pages ads over the phone, a job at which she says, "I was awful." She asked for a demotion to a clerical job "just to get out of sales and keep from being fired." She wrote how-to manuals for every job she did. She created newsletters, ways to track sales, a training program and more. When her company "didn't give me leadership opportunities, I got involved in volunteering and quickly became VP of publicity" for nonprofit groups. When finally promoted to management, she says, those experiences she initiated helped her learn "how pretty much everything was done in the company" from the ground up, and she then moved up quickly. Reach Andrea Kay at andrea@andreakay.com. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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