August 2009

New jobless claims fall in latest week (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for jobless benefits fell last week to 570,000, and those collecting long-term unemployment benefits dropped to the lowest level since April, government data showed on Thursday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast new claims slipping to 565,000 in the week ending August 22 from 580,000 the prior week, which had been previously reported as 576,000.

Continued claims fell to 6.133 million in the week ended August 15 from 6.252 million the prior week. That was the lowest since the week ending April 4 when they were 6.045 million.

In another sign that the recession-battered labor market may be healing, the four-week moving average of people filing claims declined to 566,250 from 571,000.

But the federal "cash for clunkers" program, designed to aid the struggling U.S. automobile industry, did little to help workers in Michigan during the middle of the month. In the week ended August 15, the number of people making initial filings for jobless benefits rose 4,068 in the state, all from the automobile industry, which is based in Michigan.

(Reporting by Lisa Lambert, Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Judge: Ky. can't legislate dependence on God (AP)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – It is one thing to trust in God, but quite another to be ordered to rely on protection from above during national emergencies, a judge has ruled.
Franklin Circuit Judge Thomas Wingate said in Wednesday's decision that references to a dependence on "Almighty God" in the law that created the Kentucky Office of Homeland Security is akin to establishing a religion, which the government is prohibited from doing in the U.S. and Kentucky constitutions. Ten Kentucky residents and a national atheist group sued to have the reference stricken.
"It is breathtakingly unconstitutional," said Edwin Kagin, national legal director for American Atheists Inc. in Union, "and Judge Wingate goes to great detail as to why it is."
The judge wrote in the 18-page ruling: "The statute pronounces very plainly that current citizens of the Commonwealth cannot be safe, neither now, nor in the future, without the aid of Almighty God. Even assuming that most of this nation's citizens have historically depended upon God, by choice, for their protection, this does not give the General Assembly the right to force citizens to do so now."
The language in the 2006 legislation had been inserted by state Rep. Tom Riner, D-Louisville, a pastor of Christ is King Baptist Church in Louisville.
Riner said he planned to ask Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway to seek a reconsideration of the order. Conway has 10 days to do that, and 30 days to appeal.
"They make the argument ... that it has to do with a religion," Riner said, "and promoting a religion. God is not a religion. God is God."
A spokeswoman for Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway says he has not yet decided whether to appeal.
The state Office of Homeland Security was created in response to the Sept. 11 attacks, Wingate said in the order, and two amendments added to the statute creating the office were at issue.
One required that training materials include information that the General Assembly stressed a "dependence on Almighty God as being vital to the security of the Commonwealth." The other required a plaque to be placed at the entrance to the state's Emergency Operations Center in Frankfort that said, in part, "the safety and security of the Commonwealth cannot be achieved apart from reliance upon Almighty God."
Wingate noted in the order that there are 32 references to God or Almighty God in state statutes and the state constitution.
But the reference in the homeland security law "places an affirmative duty to rely on Almighty God for the protection of the Commonwealth," Wingate wrote. "This makes the statute exceptional among thousands of others, and therefore, unconstitutional."
Riner said he was not willing to consider rewording the phrases to make them pass muster.
"This is no small matter, the understanding that God is real," he said. "There are real benefits to acknowledging Him. There was not a single founder or framer of the Constitution who didn't believe that."
(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling of Riner's name in penultimate graf.)

Samaraweera crosses 1,000-run mark this year (AFP)

COLOMBO (AFP) –
Sri Lankan batsman Thilan Samaraweera took a second hundred off New Zealand in as many matches to surpass 1,000 runs this year during the second Test here on Thursday.

Samaraweera was unbeaten on 134 as Sri Lanka moved their first innings from the overnight score of 262-3 to 372-5 by lunch on the second day at the Sinhalese sports club.

Samaraweera joined Andrew Strauss in completing 1,000 runs in 2009, but the Sri Lankan is playing only his eighth Test this year as compared to the England captain's 1,071 runs in 12 matches.

Samaraweera's tally in 2009 stands at 1,050 runs.

He has so far hit 17 boundaries and celebrated his 11th Test century in 54 matches by smashing the next ball from seamer Iain O'Brien over the square-leg boundary for six.

Samaraweera hit two double-centuries in a row against Pakistan in February-March and made 159 in the first Test against the Kiwis at Galle last week.

The right-hander, who turns 33 next month, was hospitalised for two weeks in March when he suffered a bullet injury in the thigh during the militant attack on the Sri Lankan cricketers in Pakistan.

He was one of the seven players hurt when gunmen opened fire on the Sri Lankan team bus while they were on their way to the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore to resume a Test match on March 3.

Sri Lanka's assistant coach Paul Farbrace was also injured in the attack while eight Pakistani securitymen and bystanders were killed.

Former captain Mahela Jayawardene missed a second successive ton against the Kiwis when he edged a ball from seamer O'Brien to wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum after making 92.

Jayawardene, who hit 114 in the first Test, put on 180 runs for the fourth wicket with Samaraweera after Sri Lanka were struggling at 115-3 before tea on the first day.

Chamara Kapugedera made 35 during a fifth-wicket stand of 72 with Samaraweera before he holed out in the deep off Jeetan Patel.

Prasanna Jayawardene kept Samaraweera company at lunch on five.

Sri Lanka lead the two-match series after winning the Galle Test by 202 runs.

MTV takes a stab at horror movie (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) –
MTV is doing a slasher movie.

With the network increasing its scripted shows and teen horror continuing to perform well at the box office, MTV has commissioned its first stab at the popular genre.

In "My Super Psycho Sweet 16," a privileged teen's birthday bash at a roller rink is interrupted by a serial killer. The title and concept plays off the network's reality hit "My Super Sweet 16," which chronicles the lavish birthday parties of pampered kids.

The movie already has been shot and is "pretty graphic," according to MTV senior vp production Chris Linn. The network plans to release an uncut, download-to-own version in addition to the edited telecast.

"Psycho Sweet 16" is among a trio of films the network is working on that have ties to current series. Also green-lighted is the musical "Turn the Beat Around," which centers on a young dancer and ties into the reality show "America's Best Dance Crew." The network also is developing a movie version of its reality series "Made," about a band nerd who makes the cheerleading squad.

(Editing by SheriLinden at Reuters)

U.S. stars pushing America to dance to Europe's beat (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) –
Electronic dance music with heavy bass, unknown vocalists and mixed by club disc jockeys regularly tops pop charts in Europe but in America such music has been an underground genre with little mainstream success.

While disc jockeys such as Moby, Fatboy Slim and Paul Oakenfold have had a string of mainstream hits in Britain, their success as artists in the United States has been limited to the dance chart, with rare appearances in the Billboard Hot 100 chart which ranks the most popular songs of all genres.

But French DJ David Guetta predicts that will change, saying U.S. hip-hop and pop stars featured on his new album "One Love", which was released this week, so embraced the genre that they could boost its mainstream appeal in the United States.

"It's my fourth album so I was looking for a new sound and a lot of people here in the hip-hop industry and in R&B are feeling a bit like they are going in circles and using the same recipe," Guetta told Reuters in an interview.

"If all those big American acts are interested in this kind of sound I think it means it's going to be really big in America in the next year," said Guetta, who also helped produce the Black Eyed Peas current No. 1 U.S. hit "I Gotta Feeling."

"There is a real American brand embracing it," he said.

Guetta's new album features stars such as Kelly Rowland, will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas, Akon and Ne-Yo and has already produced No. 1 hit singles in Britain, Australia, France and other European countries, and two singles that made it into the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 76.

"Guetta knows what he's doing here. Bring America to the club? Nah. He'll bring the club to America," wrote Los Angeles music critic Mikael Wood.

Experts are split on why such dance music has failed to set the charts alight in the United States. Some say club music has been unable to compete with live music in the United States and others note American audiences find it hard to identify with an artist who mixes music but doesn't sing.

'DISGUISING' DANCE MUSIC

In the United States dance music is classified as electronic and accounts for 1 percent of sales, according to The NPD Group, while in Britain dance music makes up 8 percent of sales, according to British music industry group BPI.

"In America it's always difficult for 'dance' music to be popular in the mainstream," said Keith Caulfield, a music analyst with Billboard. "Songs that are dance orientated have always been popular, it's just that dance often has to be disguised in different kinds of ways for it to break through."

"When I look at our current Hot 100 chart there's a lot of songs that strike me as a dance song, but dance has taken different forms in order to reach the masses," he said. U.S. singer "Lady Gaga has been so successful and to American ears she is pop dance music."

He said DJs are more likely to have mainstream U.S. success teaming with well-known artists from other genres, which essentially "disguises" the dance music.

Music expert and author John Swenson said dance music has always been popular in various forms in the United States for the past few decades "when technology first enabled DJs to be the real stars of popular music."

"At a time when live music is becoming less and less relevant in New York City clubs I guess you can say it's more popular than ever," he said. "The real reason club music took over outside of the United States is that the live musicians weren't good enough to match it."

Organizers of what claims to be New York's first electronic music festival, to be held on Randall's Island in the East River off Manhattan on September 5 and 6, said they had seen a growth in the popularity of dance music in the past few years.

"We have been inspired over the years by what happens in Europe each summer," said Mike Bindra and Laura De Palma, organizers of the Electric Zoo festival. "The realization of this goal is another step forward for electronic music here."

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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