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Marketwire – India Globalization Capital Announces the Exchange of Outstanding Promissory Note for New Note

Marketwire

March 25, 2011

http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/India-Globalization-Capital-Announces-Exchange-Outstanding-Promissory-Note-New-Note-NYSE-Amex-IGC-1417883.htm

BETHESDA, MD–(Marketwire – March 25, 2011) – India Globalization Capital, Inc. (NYSE Amex: IGC), a company competing in the rapidly growing materials and infrastructure industry in India, today announced that it consummated the exchange of an outstanding promissory note for a new note and shares of the Company’s common stock.

 

Steven F. Hayward – Weekly Standard: Against A Fossil Fuel Renaissance

March 24, 2011

http://www.npr.org/2011/03/24/134818457/weekly-standard-a-fossil-fuel-renaissance

Steven F. Hayward is the F. K. Weyerhaeuser fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and author of the Almanac of Environmental Trends.

The catastrophe at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is being regarded as the atomic power equivalent of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, which set back offshore oil drilling just as it appeared on the brink of a substantial expansion. This means we’ve now come full circle, as critics of offshore drilling compared the Gulf oil spill to Chernobyl. At the very least the events in Japan are going to reinforce the reluctance of Wall Street to invest in new nuclear power in the United States, deter insurance companies from covering nuclear plants, and increase resistance on Capitol Hill to extending the loan guarantees the nuclear industry says are essential to kick-starting more nuclear installations.

Yoweri Museveni – Foreign Policy: The Gadhafi I Know

March 25, 2011

http://www.npr.org/2011/03/25/134857870/foreign-policy-the-gadhafi-i-know

Yoweri Museveni is president of Uganda.

By the time Col. Moammar Gadhafi came to power in 1969, I was a third-year university student at Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania. We welcomed his rise because he was a leader in the tradition of Col. Gamal Abdul Nasser of Egypt who had a nationalist and pan-Arabist position.

Soon, however, problems cropped up with Gadhafi as far as Uganda and black Africa were concerned:

Backing Idi Amin: Idi Amin came to power in 1971 with the support of Britain and Israel because they thought he was uneducated enough to be used by them. Amin, however, turned against his sponsors when they refused to sell him guns to fight Tanzania. Unfortunately, Gadhafi, without first getting enough information about Uganda, jumped in to support Idi Amin. He did this because Amin was a “Muslim” and Uganda was a “Muslim country,” where Muslims were being “oppressed” by Christians. Amin killed a lot of people extrajudicially, and Gadhafi was identified with these mistakes.

Connect The Dots – 03/26/11

Podcast Powered By Podbean Download this episode (right click and save) On today’s show, Alison speaks with Susan Griffin, the co-editor of a wonderful new anthology called Transforming Terror. It’s a collective of essays by wise people about our contemporary journey through terror and terrorism, a true and timely issue …

Joshua Zumbrum – Duke Says Recovery May Be Slower on Households

Joshua Zumbrun

March 24, 2011

 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-24/fed-s-duke-says-recovery-may-be-slower-on-households-caution.html

Federal Reserve Governor Elizabeth Duke said that baby boomers, the generation nearing retirement, are less likely to spend any gains in wealth than in 2007, potentially holding back the recovery in consumer spending.

“Some of the effects of recent economic turmoil may result in a longer period of economic adjustment than has been the case in past recessions, as fundamental attitudes appear to have shifted,” Duke said today in a speech in Richmond, Virginia, citing data from the Fed’s Survey of Consumer Finances released today.

 

Joshua Zumbrum – Duke Says Recovery May Be Slower on Households

Joshua Zumbrun

March 24, 2011

 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-24/fed-s-duke-says-recovery-may-be-slower-on-households-caution.html

Federal Reserve Governor Elizabeth Duke said that baby boomers, the generation nearing retirement, are less likely to spend any gains in wealth than in 2007, potentially holding back the recovery in consumer spending.

“Some of the effects of recent economic turmoil may result in a longer period of economic adjustment than has been the case in past recessions, as fundamental attitudes appear to have shifted,” Duke said today in a speech in Richmond, Virginia, citing data from the Fed’s Survey of Consumer Finances released today.

 

Associated Press – House approves $34B budget that restores some education funds; Senate panel OKs alcohol tax

Associated Press

March 24, 2011

http://www.washingtonpost.com/house-approves-34b-budget-that-restores-some-education-funds-senate-panel-oks-alcohol-tax/2011/03/24/ABAUhlRB_story.html

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — The Maryland House of Delegates voted Thursday to adopt a $34 billion state budget, as a Senate panel approved a new 3 percent tax on alcohol sales that would raise $90 million over three years for the state.

The 97-42 vote was almost completely along party lines. During a budget debate in the House, Democrats praised the restoration of $58 million of $94 million in education funds that had been cut by Gov. Martin O’Malley’s budget plan.

The Economist – Turmoil in the Middle East and disaster in Japan arouse economic angst. Central banks must not make it worse

The Economist

Mar 24th 2011

http://www.economist.com/node/18440781

THIS was supposed to be a stress-free year for the global economy. By January the financial crisis had faded and Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis seemed less acute. America’s economy was resurgent. Investors piled into equities and sold some of the government bonds they’d bought for troubled times. If there was a worry, it was that emerging economies would grow too quickly, inflating commodity prices.

The year without crisis is not to be. First, Arabian upheaval put oil markets on edge. Then earthquake, tsunami and a nuclear accident clobbered the world’s third-largest economy. How much of a setback to growth do these twin crises represent? And how should economic policymakers react to them?

“AP” – Leaders OK bailout funds, coordination

Associated Press

March 24, 2011

http://chronicle.augusta.com/news/business/2011-03-24/european-leaders-approve-plan-debt-crisis

BRUSSELS — European Union leaders gave final approval early today to a raft of new measures they hope will contain the debt crisis that has rocked the continent for more than a year.

 ”I think today we reached a real breakthrough,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said just after midnight.

Leaders signed off the size and powers of its current and future bailout funds and closer economic coordination. They had already nailed down the cornerstones of their “comprehensive solution” to the crisis over the last weeks. But they left some details, including how to ensure their existing bailout fund can actually lend out the promised 440 billion euros, for later meetings.

The Guardian – EU economy: Cuts, growth, debt and democracy

Never before has the EU’s political elite been so far apart from its citizens, or so fragmented

The Guardian

March 25, 2011

They thought it was all over. It isn’t now. Europe‘s debt crisis remains toxic and unresolved, even as EU leaders meet in Brussels to back action that is supposed to restore the continent to good financial health.

Yesterday Moody’s, a credit ratings agency, exercised irresponsible omniscience to downgrade 30 Spanish banks and warn Britain that cuts in George Osborne’s budget may not be severe enough to sustain Britain’s AAA rating, while Ireland reported that last year its economy had shrunk for a third year in a row. Yields on Irish government 10-year bonds peaked at 10.21% – which is market code for the rising risk of a default. To put this in context, Ireland, an independent nation still with a big economy, is now trusted less by investors than John Lewis, the British retailer, whose bond offer, at a much lower rate, was oversubscribed this month.

Donnelle Eller – Des Moines metro snags consumer interest

Donnelle Eller March 24, 2011 http://blogs.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/index.php/2011/03/24/des-moines-metro-snags-consumer-interest/ The Des Moines metro area housing market ranked 106th among Realtor.com’s “most searched” cities, based on consumer interest. Iowa City ranked 131st among 146 metro, according to Realtor.com, the National Association of Realtors’ home sales Web site. Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, Phoenix and Las …

Carin Zissis – Assessing Obama’s Latin American Tour

Carin Zissis

March 24, 2011

http://www.as-coa.org/articles/3153/Assessing_Obamas_Latin_American_Tour/

U.S. President Barack Obama used the tour to hold up Latin America as an example of successful democratic transition, even if the Libyan crisis cast a long shadow over his trip to Central and South America. “It is a lesson and a hope worth bearing in mind in the context of recent uprisings—some accompanied by regime change, others by violent military standoff—in the Middle East and North Africa,” writes Nina Agrawal for the AQ blog in coverage of Obama’s Santiago speech about U.S.-Latin American ties. The president’s address in Chile, as well his trip overall, also sought to set a new tone in terms of how Washington relates to the region. Maximiliano Raide and Pablo González, co-founders of Jóvenes Líderes Latinoaméricana, note that Obama’s visit marked 50 years since John F. Kennedy announced the Alliance for Progress accompanied with pledges of development aid. “But these times are very different,” writes Raide and González. “The strained fiscal situation of the United States does not leave much room for generosity, at the same time that the share of trade with Latin America is declining in favor of Asia.”

Anne Traftonh – Systems biologists predict complicated behavior of cells in living animals

Anne Traftonh

March 23, 2011

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-03-biologists-complicated-behavior-cells-animals.html

To understand this great complexity, a growing number of biologists and bioengineers are turning to computational models. This approach, known as systems biology, has been used successfully to model the behavior of cells grown in laboratory dishes. However, until now, no one has used it to model the behavior of cells inside a living animal.

In the March 22 online edition of the journal Science Signaling, researchers from MIT and Massachusetts General Hospital report that they have created a new computational model that describes how intestinal cells in mice respond to a natural chemical called tumor necrosis factor (TNF).

Nina Totenberg – Supreme Court Rebuffs Big Pharma In Zicam Suit

March 22, 2011

http://www.npr.org/2011/03/22/134771092/Supreme-Court-Rules-Against-Drug-Company

In a unanimous ruling with particular significance for the pharmaceutical industry, the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed investors to sue the maker of Zicam cold remedies.

The decision firmly rebuffs an effort by corporations seeking to make it more difficult to bring investor lawsuits.

Usually, lawsuits against a drug manufacturer are brought by consumers who allege they were harmed by the product. But Tuesday’s case involved a class action brought by investors against Matrixx Initiatives Inc., the maker of Zicam products.