Archive for marzo 2011

Amid Tweeted Frustration, Japan May Take Control of TEPCO

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Civic group members protest against Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) over the nuclear leakage at the company's Fukushima nuclear power plant, outside the TEPCO headquarters in Tokyo on March 30, 2011.

The prospective decision by Japan's government to take control of the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) may seem belated to the rest of the world, given the confusing way the firm has managed the Fukishima nuclear reactor crisis. But it seems to reflect official recognition of the relatively quiet but deep public frustration with TEPCO. Indeed, while a large part of the rationale for potentially taking up to 50% of TEPCO may be to prevent Asia's largest utility from being completely overwhelmed by liability claims, an important reason may be to help manage an ongoing calamity that the company has shown little aptitude for.

The Japanese are known for their respect towards authority and enduring tolerance. The country's heated student demonstrations of the 1960s and 70s are long gone. But the magnitude of the Fukushima debacle has led to expressions of discontent — even if not really through public confrontation.

If the hundred-or-so peaceful demonstrators in front of Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) headquarters in Tokyo on Thursday were an indication of citizen alarm over the Fukushima nuclear power plant crisis, then the mood was decidedly docile. The march lasted just about two hours with the participants ranging from their 20s to the 70s. They chanted a bit and a few placards were waved. The police even took three students into custody for unknown reasons. Undercover cops had been videotaping and photographing the proceedings even as Japanese TV broadcast trucks were parked nearby. Media coverage was conspicuously sparse. "The Japanese media voluntarily refrained from covering the event," says Yasuhiro Tanaka, chairman of Doro Chiba, a labor union assisting the All Japan Federation of Student Unions, which organized the event. "We were trying to demonstrate against nuclear plants but there was little we could accomplish because of the police."

Instead of marching in the streets, the Japanese have taken to social media. Twitter has become the safe medium of critical opinion, as well as a resource for relief efforts. "If you can follow the twitter stream in Japanese, there is probably 60 or 70% [with comments] saying 'we can't believe the government or TEPCO anymore'," says Kevin Carroll, a partner with EA International, a Tokyo-based environmental engineering company. Carroll is volunteering with the Twitter-sourced "#quakebook" book project, a growing collection of personal accounts of the earthquake/tsunami. (All proceeds will go to the Japanese Red Cross.)

On Twitter, the potential combination of TEPCO and the government was not exactly met with applause. Several Tweeps were appalled that public funds would go to TEPCO officers; some called it an April Fool's Day joke. "When the International Atomic Energy Agency comes in and says you should extend your evacuation zone and the government says, 'No, we don't have to,' people start to get very concerned," says Carroll. The Japanese government made the announcement on Thursday that it would not extend the evacuation zone despite the IAEA's findings that radiation from Cesium-137 in the town of Iitate, 40 kilometers northwest of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, is double their recommended limit.

Among the growing complaints, TEPCO was accused of ignoring warnings that the Fukushima plant was in a precarious location. "TEPCO has said the accident was beyond what they could have expected, but that's what crisis management is for," said Tomohiro Takanashi, chairman of the Crisis and Risk Management Society of Japan. "They are supposed to be prepared for the unpredictable."

TEPCO is one of the world's biggest power companies with over 44 million customers. The Japanese have found it strange that president Masataka Shimizu, 66, has not appeared in public since March 13. On Wednesday the company announced that he had been hospitalized the day before due to high blood pressure and dizziness. Meanwhile, other company officials instead have been bowing apologetically to the public. TEPCO has also come under criticism by other corporations. "It is very unfortunate that ego and complacency plagued the organization, which had lost strength to deal with its biggest-ever crisis in an urgent manner," said Kazuo Inamori, chairman of national carrier Japan Airlines and one of the country's most respected business leaders.

The government had to get into the act — if only to stanch TEPCO's financial wounds. On Wednesday, the company said that even $24 billion in emergency loans from Japan's biggest banks would not be sufficient to cover the costs it was racking up. An analyst at Merrill Lynch said that if the nuclear crisis drags on for two more years, liabilities for compensation claims alone could mount to $133 billion — nearly four times TEPCO's equity. The company is boxed in by societal norms as well. It could very well claim immunity from legal claims because the earthquake and tsunami that caused the crisis were, so to speak, "acts of God." But the likely public reaction to such a claim makes it shameful and thus untenable.

One burning question has been whether TEPCO has the capacity to deliver power reliably to its customers in the near future. Before news broke of a potential government takeover, people were wondering what the company would do if Tokyo was faced with another record-breaking heat wave this summer and air conditioning needs go full blast.

"I think the main concern will be the stability and level of the power supply over the summer," says Edward Brogan, Managing Director of Japan Advisory. "Right now we're in a period of very low power demand. In the summer as people move to air conditioning, power demand usually goes up 30 to 35%. The government will need to have a strategy of dealing with that potential issue." Kathy Matsui, Chief Strategist of Goldman Sachs in Tokyo says, "The power shortage is resulting in supply chain disruption which is very disruptive for business growth, and for consumers as well. Trains have to stop. Stores have to close early. It's all connected. The negative impact will be bigger than the Hanshin [Kobe] earthquake 16 years ago."

Brogan points to the need for a clear government response to the challenges ahead. "The government should have a program that supports the move to energy saving technologies. Things like LED lighting that use a lot less power; subsidies to people that have energy efficient offices, etc. That kind of policy, if done correctly, will have enormous positive economic impact." He adds, "I think there will be considerable spending on new technology to make Japan more energy efficient." "There will definitely be a rebound but we'll first have to see the economy take a hit," says Matsui. "We're assuming further outages probably until February 2012."

For now, the streets of Tokyo seem quieter than normal, and certainly darker. "If you walk the streets at night everything seems closed," says Kevin Carroll. "The izakaya [Japanese pubs serving food] are empty, and in Roppongi no one seems to be shopping in the brand stores. Maybe it's the Japanese sense of self-sacrifice; that it's bad form to be seen buying luxury goods or going out to eat or drink." The true test will come next week when Tokyo's cherry blossoms are in full bloom and the annual hanami rite-of-partying normally ensues. It could be the catharsis everyone, and the economy needs, perhaps under moonlight, pondering the transience and unpredictability of life with a raised glass of sake.
(Source: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2062591,00.html)


Unlock Your Self Improvement Power

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When we look at a certain object, a painting for example – we won’t be able to appreciate what’s in it, what is painted and what else goes with it if the painting is just an inch away from our face. But if we try to take it a little further, we’ll have a clearer vision of the whole art work.

We reach a point in our life when we are ready for change and a whole bunch of information that will help us unlock our self improvement power. Until then, something can be staring us right under our nose but we don’t see it. The only time we think of unlocking our self improvement power is when everything got worst. Take the frog principle for example –

Try placing Frog A in a pot of boiling water. What happens? He twerps! He jumps off! Why? Because he is not able to tolerate sudden change in his environment – the water’s temperature. Then try Frog B: place him in a luke warm water, then turn the gas stove on. Wait til the water reaches a certain boiling point. Frog B then thinks “Ooh… it’s a bit warm in here”.

People are like Frog B in general. Today, Anna thinks Carl hates her. Tomorrow, Patrick walks up to her and told her he hates her. Anna stays the same and doesn’t mind her what her friends says. The next day, she learned that Kim and John also abhors her. Anna doesn’t realize at once the importance and the need for self improvement until the entire community hates her.

We learn our lessons when we experience pain. We finally see the warning signs and signals when things get rough and tough. When do we realize that we need to change diets? When none of our jeans and shirts would fit us. When do we stop eating candies and chocolates? When all of our teeth has fallen off. When do we realize that we need to stop smoking? When our lungs have gone bad. When do we pray and ask for help? When we realize that we’re gonna die tomorrow.

The only time most of us ever learn about unlocking our self improvement power is when the whole world is crashing and falling apart. We think and feel this way because it is not easy to change. But change becomes more painful when we ignore it.

Change will happen, like it or hate it. At one point or another, we are all going to experience different turning points in our life – and we are all going to eventually unlock our self improvement power not because the world says so, not because our friends are nagging us, but because we realized its for our own good.

Happy people don’t just accept change, they embrace it. Now, you don’t have to feel a tremendous heat before realizing the need for self improvement. Unlocking your self improvement power means unlocking yourself up in the cage of thought that “its just the way I am”. It is such a poor excuse for people who fear and resist change. Most of us program our minds like computers.

Jen repeatedly tells everyone that she doesn’t have the guts to be around groups of people. She heard her mom, her dad, her sister, her teacher tell the same things about her to other people. Over the years, that is what Jen believes. She believes its her story. And what happens? Every time a great crowd would troop over their house, in school, and in the community – she tends to step back, shy away and lock herself up in a room. Jen didn’t only believed in her story, she lived it.

Jen has to realize that she is not what she is in her story. Instead of having her story post around her face for everyone to remember, she has to have the spirit and show people “I am an important person and I should be treated accordingly!”

Self improvement may not be everybody’s favorite word, but if we look at things in a different point of view, we might have greater chances of enjoying the whole process instead of counting the days until we are fully improved. Three sessions in a week at the gym would result to a healthier life, reading books instead of looking at porns will shape up a more profound knowledge, going out with friends and peers will help you take a step back from work and unwind. And just when you are enjoying the whole process of unlocking your self improvement power, you’ll realize that you’re beginning to take things light and become happy. hopefully useful!


College Board

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College Board Online's college search engine finds colleges and universities just right for you. Quickly perform a college search by major, location, type of The College Board is a nonprofit membership association in the United States that was formed in 1900 as the College Entrance Examination Board (CEEB)
(Source: http://scorlibz.com/news/college-board.html)


Yankees Head Into Opener as Underdogs

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NEW YORK (AP)—Darth Vader’s theme music blared from the speakers at Yankee Stadium while the team worked out under sunny skies as if the Yankees needed a reminder that they are indeed still the “Evil Empire” and not the underdogs that they have been labeled.

“As crazy as that sounds, nobody seems to believe in us but us,” opening-day starter CC Sabathia(notes) said Wednesday.

Sabathia and New York will get an early chance to prove to the rest of baseball that even though they lost out on free agent Cliff Lee(notes) and have a suspect rotation, the 2011 version of the Yankees is up to the challenge of recapturing the AL East.

Baseball is coming to the Bronx for the first time in March—weather permitting—when the Yankees open the season Thursday against formidable foes Justin Verlander(notes), Miguel Cabrera(notes) and the Detroit Tigers, and New York is ready to prove its critics wrong.

“I think with the winter that we’ve had, we’re all looking forward to this day,” manager Joe Girardi said.

It’s hard to find anything much odder in the Bronx than hearing the Yankees defend their chances—OK, knowing that a cobra has escaped from the Bronx Zoo and could be slithering around the rugged borough is pretty shocking.

“I told the guys, our guys, be the best that we can be,” Girardi said.

On ESPN.com, 45 baseball pundits offered predictions for the season. All 45 picked the Boston Red Sox to win the AL East.

Rain and temperatures more typical of the postseason may put a damper on the festivities that will be a little more subdued this year after the Yankees failed to repeat as World Series champions last October, losing to Texas in the AL championship series.

“It’s going to be perfect weather, 40s and rain. A good day to pitch,” Tigers starting catcher Alex Avila(notes) said.

With Verlander on the mound for Detroit on a chilly day, Derek Jeter(notes) might have to wait until Game 2 Saturday to move closer to his 3,000th hit. He starts the season 74 from becoming the first player in pinstripes to reach the milestone.

“We’re facing one of the best pitchers in baseball Day 1,” Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira(notes) said. “We’ve got to be ready to go or it could be a long day for hitters.”

Verlander spent his March preparing as if it were April, hoping to avoid the same type of start he had last year. The hard throwing right-hander was 1-2 with a 5.29 ERA in opening month of the season. He finished the year 18-9 with a 3.37 ERA.

“He figured out some things, some flaws that he had and some other ways to go about doing things that might help him,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “His concentration level improved on days that he doesn’t have to pitch.”

The first batter Verlander faces will not be Jeter, who slumped to a .270 average last year and eliminated his stride from his much-scrutinized swing. Girardi tapped left-handed hitting Brett Gardner(notes) to lead off against righties.

“The job that he did against right-handed pitching last season, he was second in on-base percentage against right-handers … his ability to disrupt defenses, the pressure that he puts on pitching staffs, his ability to score runs we thought it was a good fit,” said Girardi, who will use Jeter in the top spot against lefties.

Jeter is hitting .314 from the second hole and .313 in the leadoff spot for his career.

“It doesn’t make a difference,” Jeter said. “I’ve hit second more than I hit first, so who cares.”

Curtis Granderson(notes) will return to the Yankees lineup Thursday. Out with a strained muscle since March 22, the center fielder had two doubles and an RBI in a minor league game in Tampa, Fla., and said he was hoping to fly to New York Wednesday night.

Leyland was set on his lineup, and wasn’t feeling particularly interested in discussing the different looks his team could have this season, especially with second baseman Carlos Guillen(notes) starting the season on the disabled list.

“I don’t know why everybody keeps making a big deal about lineups,” Leyland said. “We’ve got the big boys in the middle, we’ve got some speed up top, we got a little power at the bottom. That’s what it is.”

NOTES: A.J. Burnett(notes) had a bad head cold and it was uncertain if he’ll be able to make his start for New York on Saturday. … Leyland said he will not talk about his contract status this season. In the last year of his two-year extension, Leyland said his father once gave him some advice, “If you go to work worrying about your job you don’t have a job.” … Tigers RHP Joel Zumaya(notes) (right elbow) was placed on the 15-day DL along with Guillen (left knee) on Wednesday. They both remained in Florida for rehabilitation as planned. … Detroit non-roster invitee RHP Enrique Gonzalez’s(notes) contract was purchased from Triple-A Toledo and he was added to the Tigers roster. To make room on the 40-man roster the, Tigers outrighted INF Audy Ciriaco to Double-A Erie. … The Yankees signed RHP Luis Ayala(notes), RHP Bartolo Colon(notes), RHP Freddy Garcia(notes) and C Gustavo Molina(notes) to major league contracts and added them to the Yankees’ roster. Ayala is taking the place of LHP Pedro Feliciano(notes), who was put on the 15-day disabled list along with C Francisco Cervelli(notes). Both are retroactive to March 22.
(Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=Alpj2ZImXYmm41hWrwBo3TOpu7YF?slug=ap-yankees-homeopener)


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