It’s been a terrific month for mining new music. With the holidays around the corner, here are some early suggestions for music very much worth sharing with friends, lovers, bosses, and family.
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Tensions ran high for shoppers who abandoned their turkey dinners Thursday night to line up for Black Friday deals.
The evening was particularly intense for one shopper who allegedly pulled a gun on a man who punched him in the face while in line at a Sears store at the South Park Mall in San Antonio, TX, police told San Antonio Express-News.
Sgt. Rob Carey said that a man was trying to cut his way to the front of the line, which didn’t sit well with his fellow shoppers, according to San Antonio Express-News. Arguments escalated to name calling before the alleged line-cutter punched another shopper in the face.
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If you happen to own a Toyota Prius, you should be pretty excited to know that it’s the car that’s least likely to be stolen out of any other vehicle in its year range, according to a report from the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), despite the fact that the Prius is the top-selling hybrid electric vehicle in the US.
According to the report, as of April 2012, 1.2 million Toyota Prius cars were sold in the US, which accounted for half of the hybrids on the road at the time. However, despite its popularity, the Prius has low theft rates and a high recovery rate. The 2008-2010 Prius models reported only one in 606 vehicles stolen, while all other 2008-2010 cars averaged one in 78 vehicles reported stolen.
So why aren’t thieves particularly interested in stealing a Prius? It mostly has to do with the uniqueness of the vehicle, which has a one-of-a-kind hybrid engine that won’t power any other car. A stolen Prius’s engine can only be fitted in another Prius, otherwise it’s of no use to the thief. Also, those who own a Prius tend to keep it for many years, which means the market for stolen Prius parts is smaller than others.
This makes sense, especially when one of the main reasons of stealing vehicles is parting them out and selling the individual parts. Then again, this doesn’t mean that you’re completely theft-proof if you buy a Prius. The report says that the top five states for Prius thefts are California (with over 1,000 thefts reported), Florida, New York, Washington, and Texas with just under 90 thefts reported.
Toyota Prius named least likely car to be stolen is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.
By Terry Baynes
Nov 23 (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday will hear arguments in a case that could determine when a company is liable for harassment by its employees.
The case turns on the definition of a single word – “supervisor” – under a federal civil rights law that prohibits racial, religious or sexual harassment in the workplace.
Under previous Supreme Court rulings, an employer is automatically responsible if a supervisor harasses a subordinate. The employer is not liable if the harassment is between two equal coworkers, unless it was negligent in allowing the abuse.
Since those rulings, a rift has developed between federal appeals courts over exactly who is a supervisor. On one side, three circuits say supervisors are those with the power to hire, fire, demote, promote or discipline. Three other circuits have adopted a broader standard, one that also includes employees who direct and oversee a colleague’s daily work.
In the current case, Maetta Vance was the sole black catering worker at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. After filing numerous complaints with the university over racially charged incidents at work, she sued the university in federal court in 2006. She claimed that several white coworkers used racial epithets, references to the Ku Klux Klan and veiled physical threats against her.
In trying to hold Ball State liable, Vance’s lawyers argued that one coworker, Saundra Davis, was a supervisor because she had the power to direct her day-to-day activities. Davis did not have to record her time, like other hourly employees, Vance argued. But the district court dismissed the case before a trial, finding Davis lacked sufficient authority over Vance. It also found that Ball State had taken corrective action and had not acted negligently.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Chicago, reached the same conclusion, reasoning that Davis did not have the power to change Vance’s employment status, and therefore the university was not liable for Davis’s conduct.
Vance petitioned the Supreme Court.
Before deciding whether to hear the case, the Supreme Court asked the Justice Department for the government’s position, as it does in some cases. U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli agreed with Vance that the 7th Circuit’s narrow interpretation was wrong, but also argued that this wasn’t the best case to decide the issue, given what it saw as weak facts that Davis was Vance’s supervisor. Vance presented no evidence of tasks or instructions Davis gave her and even said she was uncertain whether Davis was her supervisor, the government’s brief said.
The Supreme Court accepted the case anyway.
Ball State has made the same argument as the government. Davis “would fail to qualify as Ms. Vance’s supervisor even under the broader interpretation of that term applied by certain courts of appeals,” university spokesman Tony Proudfoot said in an email, citing the Solicitor General’s brief.
But Daniel Ortiz, a lawyer for Vance, said that under the broader standard there is evidence Davis was a supervisor.
Davis, who Vance believed was her supervisor, “taunted her with racial epithets, slapped her at one point and made her life a living hell,” Ortiz said.
Business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business, have filed briefs supporting the narrow definition of supervisor used by the 7th, 1st and 8th Circuits.
Adopting the narrower definition allows employers to easily identify employees who would trigger automatic liability so they can be screened, trained and monitored, the business groups argue.
The open-ended definition, used by the 2nd, 4th and 9th Circuits, offers little guidance or incentive to undertake prevention efforts, the U.S. Chamber said in its brief.
Camille Olson, a lawyer at Seyfarth Shaw who represents companies, said if the Supreme Court adopts the more expansive definition, employers will be potentially liable for the conduct of a much larger pool of employees.
“The expanded definition of whose conduct binds the employer will significantly increase litigation for employers,” said Olson, who is not involved in the latest case. Employees may also have less incentive to report harassment promptly and to get any immediate issues fixed, opting instead for litigation, she said.
The broad definition of supervisor would also conflict with a narrower one used in the Fair Labor Standards Act and National Labor Relations Act, creating confusion, she added.
On the other side, plaintiffs’ lawyers say the stricter standard ignores the practical reality of the workplace and allows discrimination and harassment to go unpunished.
“The ones most likely to engage in harassment are the ones who deal with their coworkers day-to-day but may not have the special power to hire, fire, promote or demote,” said Matthew Koski, an attorney with the National Employment Lawyers Association, a group for lawyers who represent workers.
Supervisors who make final employment decisions may be in a different office or a different state, he said.
The case is Vance v. Ball State University, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 11-556. (Reporting by Terry Baynes in New York; Editing by Eddie Evans and Prudence Crowther)
With Black Friday here if you’re planning on going out and doing a lot of shopping today, you may want to plan your route using a new service available on Google Maps. Google has added indoor layouts for some stores and malls to the web version of Google Maps. The update brings indoor floor plans for over 10,000 locations around the world, and include other indoor maps for locations like museums and airports as well.
Those locations include retail stores and more. Indoor floor plans have been available on Android for some time now, but this marks the first time indoor store layouts have been brought to the web-based version of Google Maps. Google says it has brought the indoor layout service to the web version just in time for holiday shopping.
The cool part is if you’re wondering around the store looking for a specific item, the layouts will tell you specifically where you can find certain sections such as tools and hardware or electronics. Other than retail stores there also indoor layouts for airports, museums, universities, and Las Vegas casinos on Google Maps. iOS users can even take advantage of the new service by going to maps.google.com using Safari.
Businesses interested in having their buildings added to Google Maps, can go here to upload their own floorplans.
Black Friday Guide For Gay Shoppers: HRC’s Buyer’s Guide Ranks Brands’ Corporate Equality
Posted in: Today's ChiliGreat news for holiday shoppers who will be hitting Abercrombie & Fitch, Starbucks and Target this Black Friday: all three companies get top rankings in the new Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation’s Buyer’s Guide.
The report, also titled “Buying for Workplace Equality 2013,” divides popular businesses and their related products into three categories based on their score on the HRC Foundation’s Corporate Equality Index. With a score of 100, Abercrombie & Fitch and Target rank alongside General Mills and Kellogg’s as being among the businesses and brands to receive the highest workplace equality scores.
On the flip side, the Trump Organization, Urban Outfitters and even Tupperware received considerably less favorable ratings, placing them among the report’s businesses/brands to receive the lowest workplace equality scores.
Bob Burnett: Reappraising Obama
Posted in: Today's Chili Obama’s reelection was remarkable considering the sluggish economy, the $1 billion plus spent to defeat him, and the fact that at the beginning of his campaign many Democrats were unenthusiastic. Obviously voters reappraised the president.
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LONDON — A naked man clambered atop a large equestrian statue in the heart of London’s Whitehall government district Friday, striking a variety of precarious poses before being coaxed down by police nearly three hours later.
London police said that the man, believed to be in his 30s or 40s, first climbed atop the massive bronze statue of the 19th-century duke of Cambridge around noon.
There’s the walking from store to store, the stretching to reach the good stuff on the top shelf, maybe some heavy lifting once you’re carrying all those bags — it’s tempting to consider your Black Friday shopping adventure actual exercise.
Before you go and skip your workout for the day, let’s just say there are more efficient ways to fit in a sweat session. But that said, if you’re planning to spend the day (or night… or both!) at the mall, it certainly can’t hurt to try to make the experience a bit more active.
We’ve polled some of our favorite fitness experts and added our own suggestions for easy ways you can simply move more during Black Friday — no dumbbells necessary.
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Radley Balko: Black Friday Links
Posted in: Today's Chili— Long Island town to 96-year-old man: Clean up your debris, or you’re getting a summons.
— The DEA chief in Colorado has an interesting name.
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