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March 2012 Riverfront Readings at The Writers Place

Kansas City, MO - infoZine - Philip Stephens is the author of a novel, Miss Me When I'm Gone (Penguin/Plume, 2011); a collection of poems, The Determined Days (The Overlook Press, 2000), which was a finalist for the PEN Center USA West Award; and a chapbook, The Signalmen, the recipient of the Hanks Chapbook Award from the St. Louis Poetry Center. His poems are included in American Poetry: The Next Generation (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2000), Phoenix Rising: The Next Generation of Expansive Poetry (Word Press, 2005), and Blank Verse (Ohio University Press, 2007), and they have appeared in The North American Review, The Oxford American, and The Southwest Review, as well as other publications. His prose has been published in The Oxford American, Bomb, and Best Music Writing 2004 (Da Capo Press, 2004). His most recent poem appeared in Mead, and a short story, "You Don't Belong Here," is forthcoming in Kansas City Noir (Akashic, November 2012). He lives with his wife and two sons in Kansas City, Missouri. Tasha Haas writes fiction and teaches English, creative writing and children's literature at Kansas City Kansas Community College. She has more than twelve years experience teaching at the university level, and has also conducted workshops in fiction, poetry, and experimental writing at local arts centers, public libraries, and elsewhere. She taught fiction writing as an adjunct instructor at the University of Kansas for eight years, and has also worked free-lance as an editor and writing consultant on novel, memoir, non-fiction, and poetry manuscripts. In addition to her new book, Certain Dawn, Inevitable Dawn, published by Woodley Press in December 2010, Tasha's writing has been published in several literary magazines including Conjunctions, Coal City Review, Flint Hills Review, South Dakota Review, Stickman Review, and elsewhere. She earned her M.F.A. in Fiction Writing from Bowling Green State.

This event features music by Run Little Rabbit.

What: Riverfront Readings featuring Philip Stephens and Tasha Haas When: Friday, March 9th, 8:00 PM Where: The Writers Place, 3607 Pennsylvania, KCMO

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March 2012 Riverfront Readings at The Writers Place

Limbaugh apologizes for string of 'insulting word choices'

In an about-face, conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh said Saturday that he was sorry for lambasting as a "prostitute" a Georgetown University law student who spoke publicly in favor of the Obama administration's policy on contraception coverage.

Limbaugh published the apology on his website, a day after President Barack Obama telephoned the student, Sandra Fluke, to say he stood by her in the face of personal attacks on right-wing radio. The apology came as several advertisers said they were leaving the program.

"For over 20 years, I have illustrated the absurd with absurdity, three hours a day, five days a week. In this instance, I chose the wrong words in my analogy of the situation. I did not mean a personal attack on Ms. Fluke," he wrote. He then reiterated his opposition to the Obama administration policy, which requires health insurance plans to cover contraceptives for women.

On the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday editions of his show, Limbaugh attacked Fluke, alleging she was sexually promiscuous, politically motivated and "an anti-Catholic plant."

Fluke had testified to congressional Democrats in support of their national health care policy that would compel her college to offer health plans that cover her birth control.

"My choice of words was not the best, and in the attempt to be humorous, I created a national stir," Limbaugh said on his website. "I sincerely apologize to Ms. Fluke for the insulting word choices."

Attempts to reach

Fluke had been invited to testify to a House committee about her school's health care plan, which does not include contraception. Republican lawmakers barred her from testifying during that hearing, but Democrats invited her back and she spoke to the Democratic lawmakers at an unofficial session.

The issue has been debated in the presidential race, with Republican candidates in particular criticizing the Obama plan's requirements for employers such as Catholic hospitals. Democrats - and many Republican leaders, too - have suggested the issue could energize women to vote for Obama and other Democrats in November.

Limbaugh was not swayed by Fluke's statements before the House panel.

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Limbaugh apologizes for string of 'insulting word choices'

YouTube No Substitute to Press Release to Restate Earnings

CFOs are a pretty conservative lot, when it comes to the march of investor relations toward social media. In the case of one relatively new type of dissemination --- video --- to get out the word about that most sensitive of disclosures --- an earnings restatement --- it seems it may pay to stick with the good old press release.

"Announcing a restatement online via video is likely to benefit firms only when top management apologizes for the restatement and accepts responsibility by making an internal attribution for the error," according to a study in the March/April issue of The Accounting Review. "When management apologizes but denies responsibility by making an external attribution," the study goes on, "announcing a restatement online via video is likely to have unintended negative effects on investors."

The results in the magazine, published by the American Accounting Association, may not be too surprising. After all, as the AAA says in a press release, that "for all its vaunted powers, video can present special hazards for a company when those powers are most needed -- namely when there is bad news to report."

Digging Into the Details

But the degree of work that went into the research, and some of the details with in the findings, are worth considering.

"Managing the response of investors to events as negative as restatements is a formidable undertaking. Doing so via video over the Internet makes it all the more formidable," according to Frank D. Hodge of the University of Washington's Foster School of Business, who carried out the study with W. Brooke Elliott of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Lisa M. Sedor of DePaul University.

The study -- titled "Using Online Video to Announce a Restatement: Influences on Investment Decisions and the Mediating Role of Trust" -- note that the General Accountability Office has estimated that restatements reduced market capitalization of companies by $36 billion over a three-year period.

Restatements have a long tradition of causing difficulties for investors -- a tradition that grew along with the number of restatements in the years after Sarbanes-Oxley took effect a decade ago.

The study in The Accounting Review, however, makes a start at quantifying the damage, both in cases of the company taking responsibility, and cases of it placing responsibility elsewhere. Asked to gauge the trustworthiness of CEOs accepting responsibility via video for their companies' flawed financial statements, for example, professional managers gave the CEOs an average rating of 6.15 on a one-to-seven scale (with seven being highest.) Asked to rate a chief who blames external accountants, the managers bestowed an average of 4.0.

Admitting Versus Ducking

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YouTube No Substitute to Press Release to Restate Earnings

Kid Cudi and Dot Da Genius of WZRD rage with the cast of Project X – Video

02-03-2012 13:12 Check out highlights of Kid Cudi and Dot Da Genius at the Project X premiere party. Then catch Project X in theaters today and continue the party with the new album WZRD in stores and on iTunes now: bit.ly Follow Kid Cudi @wizardcud and Dot Da Genius @DotDaGenius on Twitter. Like Kid Cudi on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com Find out more about Project X, in theaters now: http://www.projectxthemovie.com & http

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Kid Cudi and Dot Da Genius of WZRD rage with the cast of Project X - Video

Someone like you practice – Video

03-03-2012 07:02

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Someone like you practice - Video