Sunday, April 20, 2008

As economy slows, some locals hope for the best

Raymond Porco said he's thankful he has a paycheck.

His wife just lost her job in the financial services industry. The dollar's low value alarmed him greatly on a recent trip to Mexico.

And he's worried about his ability to fund his 9-year-old twin daughters' college education.

.


Read More

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Your Office Coach: Reprimand calls for intense focus on goal

Q. On her recent performance review, my sister was rated "below expectations." Her boss said she took too long to complete a major project. However, this really wasn't her fault.

During that time, she had a lot of computer problems. Also, management changes created some confusion, and her co-workers weren't very cooperative. But she still got a bad review.

Now she's on three months' probation with a warning that her current project must be completed on time. It's not clear what will happen if she doesn't meet the deadline.

I don't think this is fair, because many things are out of her control. And the rules seem to be different for her. My sister tries hard, despite getting little cooperation from others. I feel that "below expectations" should be for people who goof off all day.



Read More

Friday, April 18, 2008

Email this to a friend Print this story

Eighth-grade girls from St. Gregory�s and Maryville Middle school participated in a job shadowing experience March 19.

This is the 16th year the event has been sponsored by the Maryville branch of the American Association of University Women. Job Shadow Day started as a response to an AAUW-sponsored study and report titled �Shortchanging Girls, Shortchanging America.� One of the missions of AAUW is to promote lifetime education and self-improvement for girls and women. �Job shadowing is an opportunity to encourage young women in our area to pursue as much education and training as possible,� said Bridget Brown, the event�s co-chairwoman. �It also influences young women to think about their futures and to take steps to accomplish their career goals.� The 54 eighth-graders were matched with a professional woman in the community based on student essays about careers they would like to learn more about.


Read More

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Coach's Speech Impediment No Obstacle

This is the life Jeff Walz has chosen.

First impressions mean everything. Opinions are sometimes shaped by slick sound bites.

This is his world, where players seek affirmation, where media members demand explanation, where fans want sideline entertainment.

Walz is the University of Louisville's women's basketball coach.

And he stutters.

Sometimes, painfully so.

"I know the words I want," said Walz, in his first season after serving as Maryland's chief assistant for five years. "Sometimes, it just takes me a little longer to get them out."

The spotlight has grown larger - No. 4-seeded Louisville, reaching the first Sweet 16 in program history, faces No. 1 North Carolina today in the NCAA Tournament South Region semifinals - creating a potentially uncomfortable situation, one filled with microphones and flood lights.


Read More

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Facing a travail with panache

Today is a good day for Tracy Ayers.

But then, every day is a good day for the Manhattan Middle School theater and dance teacher.

It's not that she's always happy or feeling well; she has metastatic malignant melanoma -- an advanced form of cancer with a low survival rate -- and she recently endured the hardest week of an aggressive four-week biochemotherapy program that left her sick, tired and weak.

But she's alive, and she's learned her tumor is shrinking.

"I have this overwhelming gratitude for people and life and family and sunshine," she said.

And the 39-year-old mother of two said she's never been panged by the question, "Why me?"

"Why anyone?" she said. "I try not to let my mind go negative."

That philosophy -- along with Ayers' energy, openness and grace as she struggles for her life -- have carried into Manhattan, although she's had to take medical leave.


Read More

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

LWR: Florida's largest green community

In 2003, the idea of green building confused consumers who often pictured a land of futuristic homes.

"People didn't understand. They were thinking it would be dome houses or grass roofs," said Bob Sisum, director of builder programs for LWR Communities.

Risking the chance of confusion and countering it with education, Sisum introduced the idea of green building to attract a niche market and raise the bar in quality building at Lakewood Ranch. The Ranch is now the largest green community in Florida.

The Green Gallery at the Lakewood Ranch Information Center offers an educational and interactive self-guided tour of a green home's features that save money and also look attractive.

The display offers comparisons of different kinds of insulation, flooring and tile made of recycled materials and energy efficient appliances.


Read More

Monday, April 14, 2008

Moro women, second to none

(This was originally published in the March 28, 2008 issue of the Moro Times, a monthly supplement of The Manila Times. MindaNews was given permission by Moro Times editor in chief Amina Rasul to disseminate this).As we celebrate Women’s Month, we honor the struggle of Moro women to right wrongs, fight poverty, injustice and discrimination, and find peace and development for their homeland. Here are the stories of outstanding Moro women who have broken the glass ceiling in their respective fields. Second to none, veiled or not, these Muslim women have gained the respect and following of their people proving that In Islam, men and women are equal not only in rights but also in shouldering responsibility to the ummah. They are mothers and daughters, peace advocate and mujahideen, educator and politician, aleema and labor leader, journalist and community worker. Above and beyond, they are exemplars of the Muslimah, proof that Islam supports the leadership of women, not subjugate them.


Read More