How Much Butter Can Be in a Croissant?
11 hours ago
Overall import prices climbed an unexpectedly steep 1.8 percent last month, more than double the revised 0.8 percent gain in September for the steepest monthly increase since a matching 1.8 percent rise in May 2006.Read More......
Costs for imported petroleum jumped 6.9 percent in October after rising a revised 4.6 percent in September. That was the largest monthly rise in imported oil prices since an 8.5 percent surge in March.
"Petroleum prices continued an upward trend over the past year, rising 41.4 percent for the 12 months ended in October," the department said.
One of the state's largest health insurers set goals and paid bonuses based in part on how many individual policyholders were dropped and how much money was saved.Read More......
Woodland Hills-based Health Net Inc. avoided paying $35.5 million in medical expenses by rescinding about 1,600 policies between 2000 and 2006. During that period, it paid its senior analyst in charge of cancellations more than $20,000 in bonuses based in part on her meeting or exceeding annual targets for revoking policies, documents disclosed Thursday showed.
The revelation that the health plan had cancellation goals and bonuses comes amid a storm of controversy over the industry-wide but long-hidden practice of rescinding coverage after expensive medical treatments have been authorized.
Winning a majority in the House required a painful decision by the bill’s sponsors to jettison language extending the prohibition against employment discrimination to transgender individuals. As a result, some gay rights groups opposed the final bill.Read More......
We sympathize with the groups’ sense of injustice, but disagree heartily as to strategy. Transgender people should be protected from discrimination, and we hope they soon will be. It would have been regrettable, however, had the sponsors refused to compromise, and as a result, lost the chance to extend basic civil rights to the millions of Americans who would be covered by the current bill....
Throughout American history, civil rights have been achieved in incremental steps. The landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, for example, barred race discrimination in public accommodations, an enormous step forward at the time. It wasn’t until the next year that Congress protected voting rights in a separate bill....
The reasons the White House has given for opposing the bill — that it would be too burdensome on businesses and that it would lead to too much litigation — echo the ones given by opponents of every previous civil rights bill to pass Congress in the past 50 years or so. That parallel should make Mr. Bush and other opponents reconsider whether they want to be on the side of bigotry, and on the wrong side of history.
About 175,000 Curious George Plush Dolls were recalled Thursday, becoming the latest popular toy made in China found to be contaminated with dangerous levels of lead.So is corporate America ever going to bother testing the rubbish they sell or do they prefer letting little Billy and Susie be guinea pigs while they cut costs and make an extra two cents? Corporate responsibility, anyone? Read More......
Manufactured by Marvel Toys, of New York, N.Y., the Curious George dolls contain excessive levels of lead in their surface paint, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Embattled investment bank Merrill Lynch & Co. acknowledged Wednesday that federal regulators are investigating matters related to its holdings of high-risk mortgage debt and said it is cooperating fully with the inquiry.As much as I applaud the SEC for taking action, why are we only seeing this now? Where was the oversight when we needed it? I can accept that losses happen and that "greed is good" keeps Wall Street moving, but considering the record-breaking numbers and industry wide involvement, shouldn't someone have stepped in a few years ago? How many more lessons do we need to see that regulation and oversight is needed. This is what we should expect from our leaders.
The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission began the investigation on Oct. 24, the world's largest brokerage firm said in a regulatory filing. It did not provide details. Recent news reports have said the SEC inquiry includes deals that Merrill struck with hedge funds to allegedly cloak its vulnerability to so-called subprime mortgage debt. The SEC has not publicly commented.
The opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was placed under house arrest this morning, her political party said. Streets were filled with police officers carrying batons and shields, and trucks blocked roads, trying to prevent access to a protest rally that Ms. Bhutto had helped organize in Rawalpindi, the garrison city adjacent to the capital of Islamabad.Read More......
Gen. Pervez Musharraf said Thursday, a day after President Bush called, that Pakistan’s parliamentary elections would be held before Feb. 15. But his security forces continued to widen their crackdown and jailed thousands of opposition party members before the rally, which is scheduled to start in the early afternoon today.
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