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Canadian Dollar at Parity with Greenback By JACKIE FARWELL,

  

AP
Posted: 2007-09-20 17:29:49
NEW YORK (AP) – For the first time since Gerald Ford  was president, the loonie can buy as much as the greenback.     

The U.S. dollar’s recent decline against the Canadian dollar, the euro, and even the Indian rupee, means Americans will pay more for imports and trips to Paris, Rome, Bangalore and Toronto. It also may drive overseas demand for U.S. goods and help raise profits at U.S. multinational corporations.

The U.S. dollar reached 1-to-1 parity against the Canadian dollar Thursday for the first time since November 1976. That means one Canadian dollar now buys one U.S. dollar, so a bottle of maple syrup could cost an American as much in Toronto as it does in New York.

Today’s numbers, however, do not mean that the dollar is facing a meltdown.

Thursday’s drop is of greater concern to currency markets than U.S. households, except “if you’re a connoisseur of French wines or Canadian maple syrup,” said David Gilmore, a partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics in Essex, Conn.

A lower dollar makes U.S. exports more competitive, which is good news for American manufacturers but spells rising prices for imports to the U.S. The dollar’s decline also diminished the spending power of American tourists while attracting to the U.S. foreign visitors who seek cheaper accommodations and shopping.

Daina Jefferies exited Macy’s at the Walden Galleria Mall in the Buffalo suburb of Cheektowaga, about 10 miles from the Canadian border, and added a couple of bags to a collection already in the back of her car.

“I just bought the same things I bought last week in Toronto for half the price,” she said. “I’m going to go home and return them. I knew I was coming so I thought I wouldn’t take the tags off. Now there’s no way I’m keeping it because it’s twice as expensive.”

Krys Esteves of Caledon, near Toronto, headed into the mall with her mother, Maria Swica of Mississauga, Ontario, planning to take advantage of weaker American dollar.

“My son wants a soft-serve ice cream maker for Christmas so I’m looking for that,” Esteves said. “It’s just to compare. Right now, I know it’s definitely to our advantage.”

The Canadian dollar hovered near parity in late New York trading Thursday, buying 99.93 U.S. cents.

Known as the loonie because of the bird pictured on the one-dollar coin, Canada’s currency rose sharply against the U.S. dollar after the Federal Reserve on Tuesday announced a dramatic half-point cut in its benchmark interest rates. While aimed at shoring up U.S. credit markets, the cut further weakened the dollar against other currencies by reducing returns on dollar-denominated investments.

Even before the rate cut, the Canadian dollar experienced a summer of record highs. Canada, a major oil exporter, has benefited from soaring crude prices and a strong economy.

Oil prices surged into record territory Thursday as the weakening U.S. dollar fueled buying by making futures cheaper for foreign investors.

“The Canadian economy that once used to be the sleepy little resource backwater of the North American economy is certainly turning the tables on its big brother in a hurry,” said Jeff Rubin, chief economist and strategist at CIBC World Markets.

The United States, meanwhile, has suffered a collapse of much of its housing market and a worsening credit crunch, prompting the Fed’s dramatic action this week. The central bank is far less concerned about the value of the nation’s currency, however, said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at the Bank of New York .

“There’s a conspicuous silence coming from the Fed with respect to the value of the dollar,” he said.

A lower currency typically fosters worries about inflation, but the U.S. dollar’s decline over the last year has been too gradual for the Fed to consider intervening by raising interest rates, Woolfolk said.

The U.S. currency also plummeted to a new low Thursday against the 13-nation euro, which traded above $1.40 for the first time since it was introduced in 1999. The euro rose as high as $1.4098 Thursday before falling back to $1.4076, up from $1.3964 late Wednesday.

The $1.40 level has long been viewed as a key benchmark in terms of driving the euro toward becoming a reserve currency of choice – a position long held by the now-weakening dollar.

The dollar was down across the board Thursday, dropping to a nine-year low against the Indian rupee amid strong demand from foreign funds investing in India’s booming economy. The rupee rose to 39.92 per dollar in intraday trading, breaching the 40 rupees-per-dollar mark for the first time since May 1998.

The dollar also dipped against the British pound, falling to $2.0099 from $2.0025 late Wednesday, after U.K. retail sales in August rose by 0.6 percent from July. The U.S. currency fell against the Japanese yen to 114.44 from 116.09 late Wednesday.

The falling dollar could be good news for multinational corporations because it makes American-made goods more affordable in international markets while making it harder for foreign manufacturers to undercut domestic competition.

On the other hand, it worries the U.S. government by scaring away foreign investors who help to finance the country’s debt. As investment in U.S. Treasury securities dwindles, the government will have to pay higher rates at weekly auctions to find buyers for its bills, notes and bonds.

That eventually could push up borrowing costs for all Americans.

Posted 5 years, 9 months ago at 1:57 pm. Add a comment

Economically Speaking: Making A Point In Jena

Greetings to the good people traveling to Jena,
Please be aware of the many points that we are attempting to make in Jena Louisiana at this upcoming Thursday’s peaceful rally & march in support of the Jena 6.  One of the points we should make is the deliberate act of NOT spending a single penny in Jena.   That’s right, not financially supporting any of the established businesses for that day.  History tells us that the smart demonstrators & Civil Rights activists of the 1950′s & 1960′s did not drop any money in the towns, cities, or communities of protest.  It would be pure hypocrisy to pump any $$$ into the local established economy when we arrive.  The early unofficial estimates have indicated that our numbers will be between 30,000 -40,000 marchers as this would be some serious cash if we did collectively spend our money.  If we can be disciplined enough NOT to spend any funds for a day in Jena, would in itself be a moral victory for the identity of the event and would show the town officials, deep rooted businesses, & corrupt administration that we can make a point & that’s what we intend to do.  If you need to spend money during your trip, do make sure to load up before you arrive in Jena with food, snacks, + bottled water for the buses, cars, etc….  Just ask yourself could you really consume the cooked food or drink the water given to you in Jena or for that matter the surrounding respective Parrish when your arrive?   These are some issues that need to be addressed ASAP if you have not already done so.  Enjoy this ride into history.  
P.S.  We must realize that all of the townspeople are not our intended target, and there are some decent residents in Jena, however we must not let this incident go unchallenged. 
“A small injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” 
Edmond Prodigy Davis

Posted 5 years, 9 months ago at 9:52 am. 1 comment

A Family Friend Remembers Joann Black

Play

JoAnn Deloris McAdoo Black


It was early evening on Thursday and I had just concluded a conference call when my cell phone rang.  It was a call from Greensboro.  Any call from Greensboro coming over my cell phone is always a priority, so I answered it.  On the other end was a childhood friend.  After hello, she asked had I seen Pluto’s sister’s obituary in the Greensboro Record.  I stopped dead in my tracks as I asked which sister.  JoAnn’s name was on my mind, but when I heard her name I fell in my chair in disbelief.  I had seen JoAnn at Rolaines some fifteen years ago.  We hadn’t recognized each other, and as far as she was concern I was a complete stranger.  That did not prevent her from starting a conversation with me as we searched the racks for a bargain.  My mother’s best friend was also present.  As the conversation continued, it became evident that the two knew each other.  After JoAnn confirmed that she was Martin McAdoo’s sister, I realized that I knew her too.

 I met Joann in 1969 through her younger sister Pluto who was my classmate at Gillespie Park Junior High School. The McAdoo family was special. This was so true of the mother Josephine who was as patient as Job. 

I concluded the phone call, and went directly to my computer and pulled up the obituary.  After reading the nice obituary, I began to read the heart felt condolences written by numerous friends, and she had plenty.  As I read them, I begin to reminisces about those good old days. I also remembered that I had thought of her a few months back when I was listening to some of Aretha Franklin old hits in preparation for a project.  Aretha’s song “Call Me” always reminded me of JoAnn.  I did not know why until the moment I started writing this Blog.  It was a wet winter’s day in 1970 when I joined Pluto, and her side kick Kathy Greenlee on a drive to downtown Greensboro.  Joann was driving the family’s green 1965 Chevrolet four door Impala. Joann was on route to pick up her boyfriend, Donald Black from work.  Don drove a 1955, 56 or 57 Chevy standard shift. He had broken his collar bone so was unable to change gears.  As Joann dropped Don off at his destination she gently said to him call me.  Just as we pulled off, the DJ on the radio (WEAL) played Aretha Franklin’s “Call Me”.  JoAnn sang that song along with the recording.  I remember her face was a picture of an innocent high school senior who was so much in love!

Now some thirty-eight years later she is no longer with us.  During those years she married her true love, Donald Black and together they produced Crystal, Donald Jr. and Preston.  JoAnn had also earned a bachelor degree in psychology from Greensboro College.  Bellsouth was fortunate to have her in their employment for 35 years, where she had served as the district manager for Greensboro. 

As I sat down to write this Blog, I placed Aretha’s CD in the player and selected “Call Me”.  The lyrics rang out loud and clear and just as they were appropriate and timely on that day in 1970, they are appropriately and timely today as a way to immortalize her final farewell to all she left behind.  Please click the player above and see if you agree with me. 

Posted 5 years, 9 months ago at 1:54 pm. Add a comment

Black Enough Or Not Black Enough: That Is The Question

What Exactly Is “Black Enough”?

NEW YORK, March 4, 2007

(CBS) Sunday Morning commentator Nancy Giles wonders what it means to be “black enough.” Is blackness defined by how you talk or by where you grew up? Or by other people’s stereotypes?


Is presidential candidate Barack Obama “black enough?” And does he appeal to white voters because he’s only half “black?” And does his B.A. from Columbia and his Harvard law degree somehow make him “too white?” 

And since his father was African and Barack Obama grew up with his white mother in Hawaii and Indonesia before moving back to the States, does that mean that he can’t relate to the authentic African-American experience, and that black Americans would do better to vote for someone who truly relates to our unique history, like Hillary Clinton or Rudy Giuliani?

What does “not black enough” mean, anyway? Are you more black if you grew up in an all-black neighborhood, and less black if you grew up around a mix of cultures? Is hair part of the equation? If it’s natural, does that make you more black? Then where does that leave Al Sharpton, or most of the black girl singers on the planet?

Is blackness measured in percentages, so that any white person in one’s gene pool dilutes one’s purity? So if you’re half-black, you’re mulatto; one-quarter black: a quadroon, one-eighth black: an octoroon? Do we really want to go back to that time in our history? And what about our natural talents at music, rhythm and athletics? I’m tall, but I’ve never been good at basketball. Where do I fit in?

Who knows? I’ve been told for years I don’t sound black. Kids in school said I talked white. I’ve always been black and I’ve always talked like this. What they really meant was that I didn’t sound like the stereotype that they were used to. But if sounding black means speaking one specific way, would Martin Luther King have been accused of sounding white? Would his speech have been more authentic if he “axed” us to march on Washington in 1963 to hear his famous “I Be Havin’ A Dream” speech?

In his keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama spoke about the struggles of family life in the inner-city. “Children can’t achieve unless we raise their expectations and turn off the television sets and eradicate the slander that says a black youth with a book is acting white,” he said.

“Acting white”? It’s time to stop the “divide and conquer” speak and acknowledge that we can come from different places and still share something unique. “Black enough?” Black enough for what?

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Posted 5 years, 9 months ago at 8:56 am. Add a comment

Another Hate Crime Kept On The Down Low

6 in W.Va. charged in weeklong attack on woman 

By Tom Breen
Associated Press

CHARLESTON— Authorities are investigating whether a woman who was tortured in a southern West Virginia home for more than a week may have been lured there by a man she met on the Internet.
Police were still looking for two people they suspect drove the 23-year-old Charleston woman about 50 miles to the Big Creek home where she was abused, said Logan County Chief Deputy V.K. Dingess.
There, according to police, she was beaten, sexually assaulted and humiliated.
Logan County Prosecutor Brian Abraham said police are investigating the possible Internet connection into what some are calling one of the most shocking crimes in the county’s recent history.
In 30 years of law enforcement, Logan County Sheriff W.E. Hunter said he’s never seen anything like this.
It’s “something that would have come out of a horror movie,” he said Tuesday.
Deputies were interviewing the victim Tuesday morning and are scheduled to meet later in the day to discuss the case with Abraham, the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office. The officials may decide then whether to file hate crimes charges.
Bill Crowley, spokesman for the FBI in Pittsburgh, confirmed that the agency is looking into possible civil rights violations.
Six Logan County residents, including a mother and son and a mother and daughter, remained in custody Tuesday on $100,000 bonds each. They are charged in the weeklong kidnapping and abuse of the woman.
All six are white. The victim, who was being treated Tuesday at the Charleston Area Medical Center General Hospital, is black.
“Every one of these people who were arrested are no strangers to law enforcement,” Hunter said.
Deputies found the woman Saturday after going to the home in Big Creek to investigate an anonymous tip from someone who had witnessed the abuse, Sgt. Sonya Porter said Tuesday.
One of the suspects, Frankie Brewster, was sitting on the front porch and told deputies she was alone, but moments later the victim limped toward the door, her arms outstretched, saying, “Help me,” the sheriff’s department said in a news release.
Besides being sexually assaulted, the victim had been stabbed four times in the left leg and beaten, Porter said. Both of her eyes were black and blue. The woman’s wounds were inflicted at least a week ago, deputies said.
During her capture, the victim was forced to eat rat and dog feces and drink from the toilet, according to the criminal complaint filed in magistrate court. The woman also had been choked with a cable cord and her hair cut, it alleges.
One of those arrested, Karen Burton, is accused of cutting the woman’s ankle with a knife. She used the N-word in telling the woman she was victimized because she is black, according to the criminal complaint.
Deputies say the woman was also doused with hot water while being sexually assaulted.
“We have all been praying and asking the Lord to take us through this,” the victim’s mother told The Charleston Gazette on Monday. “It’s hard to deal with it. We are very angry. … She will be scarred for a long time.
“She wakes up in the middle of the night screaming, ’Mommy,”’ the mother said. “What’s really bad is that we don’t know everything they did to her. She is crying all the time.”
Attempts to reach the family were unsuccessful Tuesday morning.
The Associated Press generally does not identify suspected victims of sexual assault and is not identifying the mother to protect the identity of her daughter.
Brewster, 49, is charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, malicious wounding and giving false information during a felony investigation.
Her son, Bobby R. Brewster, 24, also of Big Creek, is charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, malicious wounding and assault during the commission of a felony.
Burton, 46, of Chapmanville, is charged with malicious wounding, battery and assault during the commission of a felony.
Her daughter, Alisha Burton, 23, of Chapmanville, and George A. Messer, 27, of Chapmanville, are charged with assault during the commission of a felony and battery.
Danny J. Combs, 20, of Harts, is charged with sexual assault and malicious wounding.
The state and local chapters of the NAACP plan to meet Saturday to discuss the case, said the Rev. Audie Murphy Sr., president of the Logan County branch. Until then, both he and state president Kenneth Hale declined to comment.
 

Posted 5 years, 9 months ago at 6:29 am. Add a comment