• France midfielder to undergo medical in Manchester • Pressure mounts on Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger Samir Nasri is on the brink of finally completing his move to Manchester City after Arsenal confirmed they had agreed terms for the transfer. Nasri, who has been linked with City all summer, trained with Arsenal on Tuesday morning despite having told the manager Arsène Wenger that he did not want to be included in the squad to play Udinese on Wednesday. The midfielder has since been given permission to travel to Manchester to undergo a medical and agree personal terms. The move, believed to involve a fee of £22m, will mean a significant pay rise for the 24-year-old, who had previously rejected a new £90,000-a-week contract to stay at Arsenal. The departure is another blow for Wenger, who signed Nasri in 2008 from Marseille for a fee of £15.8m. In July Wenger had insisted that he would not have to sell either Nasri or the captain Cesc Fàbregas , both of whom have now gone. Wenger said: “Samir’s situation is clear for me. He stays. We are in a [financial] position where we can say ‘No’, and we will … Imagine the worst situation, that we lose Fábregas and Nasri; you cannot convince people that you are ambitious after that.” Nasri’s move will put more pressure on Wenger to add new signings to his squad, though one of his primary targets, Eden Hazard, is not for sale, according to his club Lille. The Lille general manager Frederic Paquet told the BBC: “Eden will not be leaving this season. We are aware of interest from some of the biggest clubs in Europe but we are not prepared to sell. He is very happy here, he understands our project and wants to stay for at least another year.” Samir Nasri Manchester City Arsenal Transfer window guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• France midfielder to undergo medical in Manchester • Pressure mounts on Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger Samir Nasri is on the brink of finally completing his move to Manchester City after Arsenal confirmed they had agreed terms for the transfer. Nasri, who has been linked with City all summer, trained with Arsenal on Tuesday morning despite having told the manager Arsène Wenger that he did not want to be included in the squad to play Udinese on Wednesday. The midfielder has since been given permission to travel to Manchester to undergo a medical and agree personal terms. The move, believed to involve a fee of £22m, will mean a significant pay rise for the 24-year-old, who had previously rejected a new £90,000-a-week contract to stay at Arsenal. The departure is another blow for Wenger, who signed Nasri in 2008 from Marseille for a fee of £15.8m. In July Wenger had insisted that he would not have to sell either Nasri or the captain Cesc Fàbregas , both of whom have now gone. Wenger said: “Samir’s situation is clear for me. He stays. We are in a [financial] position where we can say ‘No’, and we will … Imagine the worst situation, that we lose Fábregas and Nasri; you cannot convince people that you are ambitious after that.” Nasri’s move will put more pressure on Wenger to add new signings to his squad, though one of his primary targets, Eden Hazard, is not for sale, according to his club Lille. The Lille general manager Frederic Paquet told the BBC: “Eden will not be leaving this season. We are aware of interest from some of the biggest clubs in Europe but we are not prepared to sell. He is very happy here, he understands our project and wants to stay for at least another year.” Samir Nasri Manchester City Arsenal Transfer window guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Unemployment in 16-24 age group set to rise further as demand for skilled workers from abroad at record levels, says CIPD School leavers are being pushed to the back of the jobs queue as Britain’s employers increasingly turn to migrant labour to fill vacancies. The Chartered Institute for Personnel and Development said demand for workers from overseas had reached record levels because companies felt young people in the UK lacked the skills to make them employable. With unemployment in the 16-24 age group already standing just below the 1m-level, the CIPD warned that the jobless rate for the young was likely to increase further over the coming months as school leavers struggled to find work. Its quarterly survey of the labour market found that the government’s cap on non-EU workers had been ineffective since firms had switched to employing staff from within the European Union, where there are no barriers to labour mobility. The CIPD said companies wanted action from the government to improve the work prospects of UK school leavers. When asked, respondents identified literacy (53%) and numeracy (42%), as well as good customer service skills (40%) and good communication skills (40%). Gerwyn Davies, public policy adviser, CIPD, said: “Youth unemployment looks set to rise further amid employer concerns about the employability of young people. The migration cap is stemming the flow of skilled non-EU migrant workers on the one hand, but increasing the supply of EU workers with the other, which highlights the relative ineffectiveness of the cap in bringing net migration levels down. “Employers seem eager to take full advantage of this, to make use of their positive attitude and their skills. The perception among many of our members is that too many young people in the UK do not have these qualities, which may explain why fewer young people are being hired. At a time when many school leavers will be looking for work and the number of job opportunities is falling, youth unemployment could increase more sharply in the coming months. The government therefore needs to redouble efforts to ensure the education and skills system is fit for purpose to ensure young people can find a foothold in an increasingly competitive jobs market.” A quarter of the sample of more than 1,000 companies said they planned to hire migrant workers over the coming months. By contrast, hiring intentions for workers born in the UK was down since employers were last asked about their hiring intentions for young people in the spring of 2010. At that time, the proportion planning to hire 16-year-old school leavers stood at 14%, but the CIPD said it had now fallen to 12%. The number of employers planning to recruit school leavers aged 17-18 and above has fallen to a quarter (25%) from almost a third (31%) in the same period, with the outlook for graduates also poor. The number of employers planning to take on higher education leavers under the age of 24 is 38%, compared to 47% last year. The CIPD said that the government’s efforts to boost the employment of apprentices appeared to be working, with 37% of respondents planning to recruit apprentices compared with 24% last year. Unemployment and employment statistics Economics Unemployment Young people Apprenticeships Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Unemployment in 16-24 age group set to rise further as demand for skilled workers from abroad at record levels, says CIPD School leavers are being pushed to the back of the jobs queue as Britain’s employers increasingly turn to migrant labour to fill vacancies. The Chartered Institute for Personnel and Development said demand for workers from overseas had reached record levels because companies felt young people in the UK lacked the skills to make them employable. With unemployment in the 16-24 age group already standing just below the 1m-level, the CIPD warned that the jobless rate for the young was likely to increase further over the coming months as school leavers struggled to find work. Its quarterly survey of the labour market found that the government’s cap on non-EU workers had been ineffective since firms had switched to employing staff from within the European Union, where there are no barriers to labour mobility. The CIPD said companies wanted action from the government to improve the work prospects of UK school leavers. When asked, respondents identified literacy (53%) and numeracy (42%), as well as good customer service skills (40%) and good communication skills (40%). Gerwyn Davies, public policy adviser, CIPD, said: “Youth unemployment looks set to rise further amid employer concerns about the employability of young people. The migration cap is stemming the flow of skilled non-EU migrant workers on the one hand, but increasing the supply of EU workers with the other, which highlights the relative ineffectiveness of the cap in bringing net migration levels down. “Employers seem eager to take full advantage of this, to make use of their positive attitude and their skills. The perception among many of our members is that too many young people in the UK do not have these qualities, which may explain why fewer young people are being hired. At a time when many school leavers will be looking for work and the number of job opportunities is falling, youth unemployment could increase more sharply in the coming months. The government therefore needs to redouble efforts to ensure the education and skills system is fit for purpose to ensure young people can find a foothold in an increasingly competitive jobs market.” A quarter of the sample of more than 1,000 companies said they planned to hire migrant workers over the coming months. By contrast, hiring intentions for workers born in the UK was down since employers were last asked about their hiring intentions for young people in the spring of 2010. At that time, the proportion planning to hire 16-year-old school leavers stood at 14%, but the CIPD said it had now fallen to 12%. The number of employers planning to recruit school leavers aged 17-18 and above has fallen to a quarter (25%) from almost a third (31%) in the same period, with the outlook for graduates also poor. The number of employers planning to take on higher education leavers under the age of 24 is 38%, compared to 47% last year. The CIPD said that the government’s efforts to boost the employment of apprentices appeared to be working, with 37% of respondents planning to recruit apprentices compared with 24% last year. Unemployment and employment statistics Economics Unemployment Young people Apprenticeships Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …More people were arrested Monday in the continuing protests against the tar sands pipeline: WASHINGTON — Retired teacher Nancy Packard doesn’t seem the type to get hauled off to jail, yet the Lincoln grandmother was being handcuffed and patted down by police officers Monday outside the White House. Packard, 67, and five other Nebraskans were arrested as part of two weeks of daily demonstrations to highlight opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline. Before her arrest, Packard told The World-Herald that she wanted to send a message to President Barack Obama that a broad spectrum of the public objects to the pipeline — not just a bunch of college kids. “We have to stop using oil and coal and start using renewable energy. We’ll do it eventually — why not do it now?” Packard said. Jane Kleeb of Bold Nebraska and other organizers talked about the need to push the Obama administration to reject a permit for the pipeline, which would carry tar sands oil from Canada to Texas, crossing Nebraska’s Sand Hills and the Ogallala Aquifer along the way. A final environmental impact statement on the pipeline is expected soon, to be followed by additional public hearings. The State Department has said a decision on the pipeline will come by the end of the year. Pipeline supporters say the project would boost the country’s energy supplies, bring down gas prices and foster economic development and jobs. Opponents say that it would lead to a significant increase in greenhouse gas emissions and that potential oil spills from the pipeline would pose a danger to the aquifer. Kleeb said Monday that whatever jobs are created by the pipeline won’t be worth anything if the aquifer is contaminated. She also said Obama has a choice. “We can either go down a path of energy independence or we can continue to rely on foreign oil, and this pipeline puts us clearly on the path of depending on foreign oil.”
Continue reading …More people were arrested Monday in the continuing protests against the tar sands pipeline: WASHINGTON — Retired teacher Nancy Packard doesn’t seem the type to get hauled off to jail, yet the Lincoln grandmother was being handcuffed and patted down by police officers Monday outside the White House. Packard, 67, and five other Nebraskans were arrested as part of two weeks of daily demonstrations to highlight opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline. Before her arrest, Packard told The World-Herald that she wanted to send a message to President Barack Obama that a broad spectrum of the public objects to the pipeline — not just a bunch of college kids. “We have to stop using oil and coal and start using renewable energy. We’ll do it eventually — why not do it now?” Packard said. Jane Kleeb of Bold Nebraska and other organizers talked about the need to push the Obama administration to reject a permit for the pipeline, which would carry tar sands oil from Canada to Texas, crossing Nebraska’s Sand Hills and the Ogallala Aquifer along the way. A final environmental impact statement on the pipeline is expected soon, to be followed by additional public hearings. The State Department has said a decision on the pipeline will come by the end of the year. Pipeline supporters say the project would boost the country’s energy supplies, bring down gas prices and foster economic development and jobs. Opponents say that it would lead to a significant increase in greenhouse gas emissions and that potential oil spills from the pipeline would pose a danger to the aquifer. Kleeb said Monday that whatever jobs are created by the pipeline won’t be worth anything if the aquifer is contaminated. She also said Obama has a choice. “We can either go down a path of energy independence or we can continue to rely on foreign oil, and this pipeline puts us clearly on the path of depending on foreign oil.”
Continue reading …On Monday night's All Things Considered On National Public Radio, anchor Robert Siegel followed up a story on the new Martin Luther King Jr. memorial in Washington D.C. with an interview with a “longtime civil rights activist,” recent NAACP chairman Julian Bond. Siegel omitted any reference to any of Bond's splenetic rages against conservatives (see below), but instead invited him to denounce the Tea Party as racist for its opposition to liberal uplift: SIEGEL: Some people read into the Tea Party's almost neuralgic reaction to government spending, a sense that white people figure black people benefit disproportionately from federal programs. Do you suspect a racial subtext to that whole argument? BOND: Absolutely. And I'm not saying that all of the Tea Party members are racist. Not at all. I don't think anybody says that. But I think there's an element of racial animus there and the feeling that some white people have that these black people are now getting something that I'm not getting and I should be getting it, too. “Neuralgic” is defined by one dictionary as ” intense pain along the course of a nerve, especially in the head or face.” In that case, conservatives should have an “almost neuralgic reaction” to having to pay for the liberal sneers of Robert Siegel and his “objective” colleagues at NPR. Despite the calm tones and kid gloves on NPR, Bond embraces the Tea Party-as-terrorist hardline on the left. From January 20, 2010, just days before he stepped down from the NAACP he proclaimed: We saw hate on display this summer in town halls and tea parties, subsidized by corporations and their well-funded fear machines across the country. Our politics have been poisoned by armed and paranoid self-described patriots, drawn from the Taliban wing of American politics, a true fright wing , once called Birchers, now birthers, spreading lies and spreading myths. (See more: Julian Bond's Viciousness Never Upbraided by Liberal Media .) Siegel went on to ask Bond if America needs more “explicitly black” leadership, meaning “explicitly racial.” Siegel suggested being “explicitly black” would hurt Obama politically, with you know, the country being so white and backward: SIEGEL: Today, with a black president in office, is there still a need for explicitly black leadership? And if so, what kinds of leaders are needed? BOND: Well, I think the kinds of leaders that we have, as well as others, of course there's a need for them, just as Hispanics, women and other groups that find themselves marginalized in today's society need effective spokespersons. And black America is fortunate enough to have had and to have today an effective group of such people… SIEGEL: The Congressional Black Caucus, which has been conducting a jobs tour, highlighting black unemployment, the need for more jobs for all Americans, has been pretty rough on President Obama for his more recent focus on balancing the budget. What do you make of that conflict? BOND: Well, it's this great tension between President Obama's race and the expectation by many black people that he is our president and the expectation by others, who are both black and not black, that he's the president of everyone. And the difficulty he's had balancing that in the public perception. Is he the black president? Is he the president of black people? Is he president of everybody? I think he wants badly to be the president of everyone, so I think it's a terrible tension for him. SIEGEL: Do you think he is actually less vocal in support of an explicitly black political agenda because he is black than, say, had Hillary Clinton been elected president instead might have been? BOND: I do think that's true. I think he's taken care to not be perceived as the president of black people. I think he thinks it would be harmful to his presidency. It would hurt him in other ways. He would be thought of as a single issue president and he badly does not want that to happen. SIEGEL: Do you think he's right about that? BOND: I think he probably is right about that. I want to hear him say more about this black/white gap, this divide, this economic divide. I want to see him act more, but I understand why he doesn't. I just want him to do it. Speaking of black/white divides, Siegel helpfully introduced Bond with a set of data arguing that blacks have been much harder hit by recession: The opening of the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial comes at a moment when it's hard to appraise progress toward Dr. King's dream. On the one hand, a black man is president of the United States, something that seemed impossible in the 1950s or '60s. On the other hand, black unemployment today is about twice white unemployment and the financial crisis and recession have devastated the household net worth of minority groups. White net worth has dropped by 16 percent over the past four years, according to the Pew Research Group. For blacks, the decline is over 50 percent. White households today are 20 times wealthier than black households. Siegel was so busy painting Julian Bond's picture for him that he excluded what the liberals at Pew acknowledged in the fine print of its study about measuring recent demographic trends: “This report measures the changing wealth gaps between whites, Hispanics, and blacks using ratios. An alternative approach would have been to measure the changes in absolute levels rather than ratios. By that yardstick, the median wealth gaps between these groups would have decreased from 2005 to 2009.” (Italics theirs.) NPR's website headlined this conversation: “How Close Are We to Realizing King's 'Dream'?” As usual, liberal media outlets only go to “civil rights” leaders on the left for the answer. There is often no debate — and especially no black conservatives — allowed on these “open-minded” airwaves.
Continue reading …Along with songwriting partner Mike Stoller, Leiber was responsible for some of rock’n’roll’s most enduring hits, including Hound Dog, Jailhouse Rock and Stand By Me Blog: Leave your tributes for Jerry Leiber Jerry Leiber, the lyricist behind hits such as Stand By Me and Hound Dog, has died at 78. Leiber worked alongside co-writer Mike Stoller to produce some of the most enduring hits of the rock’n’roll era – including tracks made famous by Elvis Presley. The songwriting duo also had their work performed by the Drifters, the Coasters and Ben E King, as well as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Stoller was one of the first to pay tribute to his songwriting partner: “He was my friend, my buddy, my writing partner for 61 years. He had a way with words. There was nobody better. I’m going to miss him.” The pair, who notched up 15 No 1 hits, were admitted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. Terry Stewart, president of the hall of fame, told the Associated Press: “The music world lost today one of its greatest poet laureates. Jerry not only wrote the words that everyone was singing, he led the way in how we verbalised our feelings about the societal changes we were living with after the second world war. Appropriately, his vehicles of choice were the emerging populist musical genres of rhythm and blues and then rock’n’roll.” Leiber was born in Baltimore in 1933 but met Stoller as a high-school student after moving to Los Angeles. Their working methods, Steiber hammering a piano while Leiber yelled out words, soon bore fruit and their first hit – Charles Brown’s Hard Times – arrived in 1952. This was also the year they wrote Hound Dog, which became a blues hit for Big Mama Thornton before Elvis Presley made it an even bigger hit with his rock’n’roll interpretation. According to legend, that song came together when Leiber started beating a rhythm on the roof of Stoller’s 1937 Plymouth with his right hand and tapped on the dashboard with his left. “I kinda liked the beat and it felt good,” Leiber later told Reuters. “I started yelling, ‘You ain’t nothing but a hound dog!’ Mike said, ‘I like that.’” In the 2009 memoir Hound Dog: The Leiber & Stoller Autobiography, Leiber jokingly described their songwriting partnership as “the longest-running argument in show business”. Leiber died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre in Los Angeles. He is survived by his sons Jed, Oliver and Jake. Pop and rock Blues Americana Tim Jonze guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It's enough to make you scream . . . On Morning Joe today, Howard Dean rapped Mitt Romney for calling on the Libyan rebels to turn Gaddafi over to the US for trial.
Continue reading …Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico lashed by winds and rain as storm strengthens and moves towards south-eastern states US authorities are gearing up for the first hurricane to make landfall since 2008 as Hurricane Irene strengthened across the Caribbean, wreaking havoc in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. The US National Hurricane Center said Irene, currently classified as a category 2 storm, could increase in intensity to category 3, with winds reaching more than 111mph (178km/h) before hitting the south-east US coast, including Florida, North and South Carolina, by the weekend. Around 800,000 people in the Dominican Republic were left without power by the storm, which felled trees, swelled rivers over their banks and flooded some roads. Earlier, Irene buffeted Puerto Rico with winds and heavy rain, knocking out power and downing trees. Governor Luis Fortuño said the worst hit area was the east coast, from Fajardo to Yabucoa, and he asked the US government to declare the island a disaster area so it can gain access to emergency funds. In Haiti there were fears that rain could trigger floods and mudslides. The country is still struggling to recover from the devastating earthquake of 2010. Irene, the first hurricane of this year’s Atlantic season, also looks set to be the first to hit the US since Ike landed on the Texas coast in 2008. Forecasters expect the storm to swing parallel to the Florida coast on Thursday and have warned it could hit North or South Carolina on Saturday. US authorities along the Atlantic seaboard from Miami to New York are monitoring its progress closely, with at least some computer forecast models showing the storm could sweep close to New York early next week. Barack Obama, currently on holiday in Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, has been briefed, White House officials said. Natural disasters and extreme weather United States Puerto Rico Dominican Republic guardian.co.uk
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