Showing posts with label Shows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shows. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

This Map Shows Where Americans Trust Their State Governments

Residents in Republican-leaning states are more likely to “trust” their state governments, according to a new survey released by Gallup on Friday.


According to Gallup, in only six states do at least 70 percent of residents place either a “great deal/fair amount of trust” in their state’s government — North Dakota (77 percent), Wyoming (76), Utah (75), South Dakota (74), Nebraska (73), Texas (72), and Alaska (71). 


Illinois, by far, is the worst-ranking state in the survey — only 28 percent of its residents say they have a great deal or fair amount of trust in the state government. The next-lowest levels of trust come in Rhode Island (40 percent), Maine (40), Pennsylvania (46), Louisiana (48), California (49), and Maryland (49).


Here’s a map from Gallup shading the different levels of trustworthiness:


Gallup map


Gallup found that trust tends to be higher in less-populous states than in states with larger populations. Gallup said this helped to explain why red-leaning states earned more trust in the survey.


Illinois is by far the state in which residents least trust their government, which is helped by the fact that two of its most recent governors — Democrat Rod Blagojevich and Republican George Ryan — spent time in prison on wide-ranging corruption offenses.


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This Map Shows Where Americans Trust Their State Governments

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Data Shows 15-20 Percent of ACA Enrollees Haven"t Paid Premiums

Blue Cross Blue Shield has data that shows 15 to 20 percent of Americans that are signed up for Obamacare have not paid their premiums, making the actual number of sign-ups closer to 6 million.

National Journal reports that 80 to 85 percent of people who enrolled with the insurance company through the Obamacare exchanges paid their first month’s premium. The rest have not paid, meaning they are not actually covered under any insurance plan.


Other insurance companies have reported similar numbers, according to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.


“Insurance companies… tell us from their initial customers it’s somewhere between 80, 85, some say it’s as high as 90 percent have paid so far,” Sebelius said. “Lots of companies have different timetables for when their new customers have to send their first payment. You are not fully enrolled until you pay your premium.”


National Journal estimates that if the national average of non-paying Obamacare enrollees is between 80 and 85 percent, the overall number of Americans covered under the Affordable Care Act is between 5.7 and 6 million — not the 7.1 million that have reportedly signed up.


On Thursday, the Obama administration announced the final day to enroll in an insurance plan through the Obamacare exchanges will be April 15. People who started to fill out an application online are being granted the extension to complete the process.


“For those in line on the 31st, we encourage consumers to finish the process as soon as possible,” Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services spokesman Aaron Albright said, the Wall Street Journal reports.


“They must complete their enrollment by no later than the 15th for coverage this year.”


The later deadline is seen by some Obamacare critics as a way to get more people to sign up for healthcare plans, since there will not be a way to verify if someone actually tried to sign up before the March 31 deadline.


Deadlines to sign up for plans have been fluid since the website rollout last fall. The deadline to get coverage for Jan. 1 was changed from Dec. 15 to Dec. 23, and then the March 31 date became a soft deadline.


Open enrollment for 2015 is set to begin Nov. 15, a change from the initial date of Oct. 15.


Related Stories:


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Newsmax – America



Data Shows 15-20 Percent of ACA Enrollees Haven"t Paid Premiums

Monday, March 31, 2014

Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

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Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Poll Shows San Francisco Tech Backlash Is Not Universally Supported

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Poll Shows San Francisco Tech Backlash Is Not Universally Supported

Monday, March 24, 2014

Limbaugh: Attack On Drudge Shows "Willful Ignorance" Of The "Obama Media"


RUSH LIMBAUGH: The point here is that this is total willful ignorance on the part of people who as members of the media experts on taxes and economics. They are supposed to know more than you do so they can tell you what all this means when it is discussed on the news. But they are so in the tank for Obama that all they’re tuned to is anything that might appear harmful or damaging to Obama. They then have to circle the wagons as is always the case whether than debate the merits of anything. The objective is to smear and destroy whoever they consider to be the enemy of Obama.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Limbaugh: Attack On Drudge Shows "Willful Ignorance" Of The "Obama Media"

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Snowden leak shows French telecom giant colluding with spooks

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Snowden leak shows French telecom giant colluding with spooks

Monday, March 3, 2014

Prank of the Day: Fake Chef Trolls Various Morning TV Shows

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Prank of the Day: Fake Chef Trolls Various Morning TV Shows

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

US firms in China look to services, survey shows



US companies in China are shifting their focus to the service sector in line with China’s transition from being the world’s factory floor to a knowledge-driven economy, a survey has found.


For the first time, services accounted for more than half, or 52 percent, of US companies’ revenue in China in 2013, up 11 percentage points from the previous year.


This is according to the annual China Business Report released on Tuesday by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai.


The survey, which tracks performance and confidence of the largest US business community in China, shows that companies are continuing to move beyond purely manufacturing for exports as costs surge and markets mature.


The growing importance of services contrasts sharply with manufacturing, which dropped by 10 percent to comprise 37 percent of companies’ revenues in 2013, the survey shows.


“It is important to keep in mind that China’s leadership has prioritized the development of the country’s service sectors, and American businesses are world leaders in these areas,” said Kenneth Jarrett, president of AmCham Shanghai.


Tim Huang, chief operating officer of Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Shanghai, said, “I’ve seen a growing number of our clients in the service sector in the past five years and I expect this trend to continue.”


The study interviewed 399 member companies that run operations in first-tier cities including Shanghai and Beijing, the Yangtze River Delta region, as well as central and western powerhouses of China. Fifty-four percent of them have been in the country for more than 10 years.


The service sector accounted for 46.1 percent of China’s gross domestic product in 2013, outpacing manufacturing for the first time in the country’s economic output, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Shanghai has the largest proportion of the service sector, with more than 62.6 percent.


Buoyancy in the sector is backed by the increasing presence of small and medium-sized US enterprises, thanks to growing transparency in China and lingering economic struggles in the home market, the survey found.


Thirty-seven percent of companies identified themselves as small and medium-sized enterprises in 2013, or firms with 500 or fewer employees worldwide, up from about 25 percent a year ago.


The first wave of SMEs to settle in China arrived in early 2000, largely to adjust to demands by multinational corporations that invested in the country earlier, said Chris Wingo, founder of China Sage Consultants (Shanghai) Co. His firm helped SMEs from the United States to prepare and manage their businesses in China.


But as more SMEs became interested in China’s growth, and the US economy remained lackluster, China has been on the radar for many smaller US firms since the late 2000s,Wingo added.


Robert Theleen, who chairs AmCham Shanghai and is chief executive officer of merchant bank China-Vest, which is based in the city, said that with China demonstrating its ongoing commitment to economic liberalization through initiatives like the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, it is only natural that more firms are setting up in the country.


“When you combine this improving infrastructure with the decades of experience that American businesses now have in this market, it’s easier for US companies to profit from China’s growth, regardless of their size,” he said.


China has continued to act as a key profit center for US companies, with 74 percent of respondents reporting profits in 2013. Three out of four saw positive cash flows in their China operations, up by 3 percentage points from a year ago.


Eighty-six percent of the firms surveyed said they remain “optimistic or slightly optimistic” about forecasts for China’s business prospects in the next five years.


But only 65 percent of the firms reported making additional investment in China, down from 74 percent the previous year.


In addition, as a top-three investment priority China fell by 8 percentage points among respondents to 46 percent.


Kent Kedl, managing director for China and North Asia at Control Risks, a business consultancy, said this suggests a healthy rebound in developed economies, meaning that China is no longer the only “bright spot”.


This trend is reflected in companies’ efforts to integrate China further into their global operations.


Forty-three percent of firms said they conduct their research and development for China-specific products in both the US and China, with only 7 percent relying on US headquarters as their R&D hubs for designing products for the Chinese market.


The firms surveyed cited rising costs, constraints on human resources, and intensifying competition as the top three challenges hindering business performance in 2013.


For the third consecutive year, surging costs ranked the top business hurdle, with 89 percent of companies reporting increases in primary costs from labor to tax and materials.


Last year, companies also became increasingly concerned about complying with China’s laws and regulations following efforts by the central government to target firms for corruption investigations.






US firms in China look to services, survey shows

Friday, February 21, 2014

Krauthammer: Ukrainian Defense Minister Ignoring Hagel"s Calls Shows How Weak, Irrelevant US Has Become



When it comes to working with the United States, Russia is “playing a zero sum game,” Charles Krauthammer said on Fox News Thursday.


“The premise of the whole reset policy was that we are not in competition and Putin could not believe his luck, to come across a naif from the White House who believed that,” he said. “The Russians did not cooperate on Iran. They’re running Syria. They’re arming Syria. Thumbing their nose at us with Snowden and now Ukraine. And they are playing a zero sum game.”


“The fact that no one answers our call in the Defense Ministry in Kiev is a sign of how weak and irrelevant the U.S. has become,” he continued. “I can assure you that if Putin’s on the line, the phone is answered.”




Townhall’s Featured Blog



Krauthammer: Ukrainian Defense Minister Ignoring Hagel"s Calls Shows How Weak, Irrelevant US Has Become

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Mass Grave in China Shows Animals Were Fried by Large Eruption

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Mass Grave in China Shows Animals Were Fried by Large Eruption

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Photographer Shows Proof of Shocking Similarities In Human Templates Between Complete Strangers

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Photographer Shows Proof of Shocking Similarities In Human Templates Between Complete Strangers

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

David Letterman - The Daily Show"s John Oliver

David Letterman - The Daily Show"s John Oliver
http://img.youtube.com/vi/mQIbogP5Wes/0.jpg



“Daily Show” summer fill-in John Oliver seeks hosting advice from Dave. Click this link to SUBSCRIBE the THE LATE SHOW YouTube Channel! http://bit.ly/15RBrIF.




Read more about David Letterman - The Daily Show"s John Oliver and other interesting subjects concerning Top News Videos at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, February 10, 2014

Photographer Shows Proof of Shocking Similarities In Human Templates Between Complete Strangers

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Photographer Shows Proof of Shocking Similarities In Human Templates Between Complete Strangers

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Miley Cyrus Shows More Nipple In Vogue Germany And In W Magazine Outtakes

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Miley Cyrus Shows More Nipple In Vogue Germany And In W Magazine Outtakes

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Ditch Mitch – New Kentucky Poll Shows Trouble For Mitch McConnell

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Ditch Mitch – New Kentucky Poll Shows Trouble For Mitch McConnell

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Mandela"s 1st township home shows lack of progress








A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A plaque hangs near the front door of former South African president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in the township of Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moved to the house in Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





Children light candles in front of former president Nelson Mandela’s first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A condolence book for former president Nelson Mandela situated outside his first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)





A boy stands in front of a painting showing former South African president Nelson Mandela out of his first township home in Alexandra in Johannesburg, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013. Mandela moves to the house at Alexandra in 1941. South Africa is readying itself for the arrival of a flood of world leaders for the memorial service and funeral of Nelson Mandela as thousands of mourners continued to flock to sites around the country Saturday to pay homage to the freedom struggle icon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)













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(AP) — A silver and blue plaque with the words “Mandela’s Place” mounted on the brick wall of a small, dilapidated row house is the only recognition of the world-famous statesman who lived there when he was in his early 20s: Nelson Mandela.


There aren’t even any signs in the sprawling Alexandra township to help visitors find their way along trash-strewn streets to get to the house. But the dusty and dangerous slum itself serves as a bleak reminder that nearly 20 years after Mandela became president, many of South Africa’s black communities remain mired in poverty.


A trickle of poor Alexandra residents and their children showed up on Saturday to pay their respects to the anti-apartheid champion at a makeshift shrine with a few dozen candles stuck in the ground, two bundles of wilting flowers nearby and three posters of Mandela.


Some signed a book of condolences set atop a card table by Nomalizo Xhoma, the great-granddaughter of the man who owned the house and took in borders, including Mandela.


“I’m so sad because he was our father and did so many things for us, fighting for us when people beat us during apartheid,” said Pheello Mahlaba, 11. “I’m proud to be from the same neighborhood where he lived.”


The promise of a better life has largely evaded the square-mile Alexandra township. The shabby area is in dramatic contrast to the wealthy, mostly white, Sandton suburb of Johannesburg, whose high-rise towers glisten just across a highway.


Alexandra’s hundreds of thousands of residents occupy an area meant for less than 100,000 and get by with scarce electricity, toilets that serve more than a dozen families, high unemployment, crime and rampant drug use. A project aimed at showcasing the neighborhood’s rich anti-apartheid history was abandoned years after its construction.


This is not the dynamic South Africa celebrated by tourists and world leaders. Residents say Mandela would be disappointed by the lack of progress since the end of apartheid.


“He won’t be satisfied because the place, I can say, it’s now a disaster,” says Emmanuel Mangena, a community development worker at an alcohol and drug counseling center in Alexandra.


Mandela moved to Alexandra in 1941 when he was 23 and the township’s residents were challenging white-minority rule. Mandela participated in bus boycotts here.


He stayed in Alexandra until 1943, describing the house in his autobiography as “no more than a shack, with a dirt floor, no heat, no electricity, no running water. But it was a place of my own and I was happy to have it …


“Alexandra occupies a treasured place in my heart,” Mandela said in the book, “Long Walk to Freedom.” ”It was the first place I ever lived away from home. Even though I was later to live in Orlando, a small section of Soweto, for a far longer period than I did in Alexandra, I always regarded Alexandra Township as a home where I had no specific house, and Orlando as a place where I had a house but no home.”


The area surrounding Mandela’s other home in Soweto, Johannesburg’s most famous township, is a bustling tourist attraction. Thousands of foreign tourists flock to see the bed where Mandela once slept and the Soweto museum is surrounded by vendors, artists and dancers.


That activity is conspicuously absent in Alexandra, where many people live in shacks and restaurants often consist of vendors cooking meat on ramshackle portable grills set up on crumbling sidewalks.


“There are few townships, including Soweto, that have such a rich history of the struggle for freedom. If one looks at the key moments in the struggle against white majority rule, Alexandra was in the forefront,” says Noor Nieftagodien, who co-authored a book on the history of Alexandra and teaches at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. “There’s a sense among (Alexandra residents) that they played such an important role. And people there will say they gave birth to Mandela the radical politician. It completely transformed him.”


“The lack of development of the old Alexandra is an indictment of the new South Africa,” Nieftagodien said.


South Africa has come a long way since overcoming apartheid, but it has a long way to go. The country still has a faltering education system and an uneven record on providing basic services, along with allegations of corruption and cronyism. The gulf remains wide between the wealthy white minority and millions of blacks mired in poverty.


Alexandra is typical of townships across South Africa where unemployment is even higher than the national average of 25.2 percent. The rate in Alex, as it is called, is nearly 40 percent, estimates Nieftagodien.


Alexandra has seen some improvements. In 2001, the Alexandra Renewal Project started in which the government invested more than 1 billion rand ($ 100 million). Until then Alex had been the poorest urban location in the country, Nieftagodien said.


Mandela’s former residence was not upgraded, “and now the old man’s dead, what a pity,” said Vusi Oratile, who lives nearby. The Xhoma family still owns the house, and rents it out.


“The house is not looking good,” added Swazi Ntshingila, 43. She said that while residents are very proud that Mandela stayed here, “we are not supposed to be living like this though.”


Community development worker Mangena said Alex’s drug problems are getting worse.


“Poverty is getting rife here in Alex. Crime is happening every day. It’s about drugs,” he said, adding that the drugs lead to burglaries, home break-ins and car theft. “Even laundry drying on the line, you steal it.”


Thabo Rakgonle and his friend Tebogo Simelane are among the 20-somethings out of work. On a recent weekday, they sat listening to music outside a corner store. They say they are proud to be from Alexandra, but they lament its lack of running water, toilets and sports facilities.


“He’s a warrior. He’s a great warrior,” the soft-spoken Rakgonle said of Mandela. “So I think he just actually forgot us here.”


Across the street from Mandela’s house, visible over a crumbling wall, the Alexandra Heritage Centre was built to highlight the township’s anti-apartheid history. But eight years after the building was completed, it remains empty except for the young drug-users who hang out there.


Reforming the house where Mandela lived and opening it as a landmark complete with furniture dating from when Mandela lived there could turn Alexandra into a destination point that helps the community so Mandela’s “spirit will live on,” said community leader Linda Twala. “Right now, it’s an unfinished legacy.”


___


Alan Clendenning in Johannesburg contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Mandela"s 1st township home shows lack of progress

Friday, December 6, 2013

Glenn Greenwald: U.S. Spying on Allies Shows "Institutional Obsession" With Surveillance

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Glenn Greenwald: U.S. Spying on Allies Shows "Institutional Obsession" With Surveillance

Saturday, November 23, 2013

This film made of Instagram photos shows how alike we really are


When you’re browsing Instagram, it’s hard not to get a sense of deja vu — whether it’s a delicious cup of coffee or an adorable baby, people are capturing images of largely the same things. “Instagram is an incredible resource for all kinds of images,” says filmmaker Thomas Jullien. “I wanted to create structure out of this chaos.” In his aptly titled video An Instagram short film, Jullien gathered 852 different photos, each from a different Instagram user, and organized them by subject. You’ll see nearly identical shots of everything from closeups of eye makeup to iconic locations like the Statue of Liberty, and it’s a strangely compelling watch despite its familiarity. You might think that your photo of the Sydney Opera House is something special, but it’s been taken many times before.




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This film made of Instagram photos shows how alike we really are

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Monty Python Troupe to Reunite for Live Shows


Peter Kramer/Associated Press


From left, Michael Palin, John Cleese, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam and Eric Idle in 2009.




A certain Norwegian Blue parrot is still dead, nearly 44 years after it shuffled off its mortal coil and joined the choir invisible in a famous television comedy sketch. But there is life yet in Monty Python, the singularly influential British troupe, whose surviving members are to announce this week that they will join together for their first live performances in more than a decade.





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Everybody expects the announcement of a Monty Python reunion after several public remarks made and hints dropped recently by the comedy team, which first appeared in 1969 in the BBC comedy series “Monty Python’s Flying Circus,” and which went on to create and star in feature films like “Monty Python and the Holy Grail” and “Monty Python’s Life of Brian.”


Terry Jones, a founding member of the group, told the BBC on Tuesday, “We’re getting together and putting on a show — it’s real.”


His comment followed several days of enigmatic tweets posted by his longtime collaborator Eric Idle, who has been counting down to a Monty Python-related announcement scheduled for Thursday.


“Python meeting this morning,” Mr. Idle wrote Tuesday on his Twitter feed. “Can’t wait.” He added that a news conference was scheduled for Thursday, one that will probably be carried by the British satellite broadcaster Sky News and also streamed on the Internet.


The surviving principal members of Monty Python, including John Cleese, Terry Gilliam and Michael Palin, have not offered further details of what might be disclosed at the news conference. (A sixth founding member of the troupe, Graham Chapman, died in 1989.)


But a report in the British newspaper The Sun said that the group was preparing to announce its reconstitution after what were said to be “months of secret talks.”


Though they have not performed together in an official capacity since a 1998 appearance at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, Colo., the surviving Monty Python members have infrequently shared the stage in recent years.


They have gathered for events like the 2009 premiere of the IFC documentary “Monty Python: Almost the Truth (the Lawyer’s Cut)” and the 2005 Broadway opening of the musical “Monty Python’s Spamalot,” which continues to be performed (and mint money for the troupe members) in productions around the world.


Several of them also lent their voices to the animated 2012 documentary “A Liar’s Autobiography,” about the life of Mr. Chapman.


As recently as this February, Mr. Idle seemed to pour cold water on the possibility that he and his fellow former Pythons would ever reunite. In a post on his personal blog, he dismissed such notions as nothing more than “silly talk.” (Not to be confused with silly walks.)


But Mr. Jones suggested that a certain motivating force had helped the troupe members overcome any personal animosities that may have developed over the years.


“I’m quite excited about it,” he told the BBC, regarding the planned reunion. “I hope it makes us a lot of money. I hope to be able to pay off my mortgage!”




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Monty Python Troupe to Reunite for Live Shows

Friday, November 15, 2013

WRAPUP 3-U.S. factory output shows signs of broadening beyond autos

WRAPUP 3-U.S. factory output shows signs of broadening beyond autos
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Fri Nov 15, 2013 10:54am EST



 * Manufacturing output rises 0.3 percent in October * Weak mining, utilities hold down industrial production * New York state factory activity contracts in November By Lucia Mutikani WASHINGTON, Nov 15 (Reuters) - U.S. manufacturing output rose for a third straight month in October even as automobile assembly fell, suggesting a broadening in activity in a sector regaining momentum after hitting a speed bump early this year. While other data on Friday showed factory activity fell in New York state early this month, economists said that probably was a delayed reaction to last month"s 16-day partial shutdown of the federal government. "This (New York state) report does not provide any basis to be concerned about the broader outlook for manufacturing activity," said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics in New York. Manufacturing output increased 0.3 percent last month after edging up 0.1 percent in September, the Federal Reserve said. The increase, which matched economists" expectations, was despite a 1.3 percent fall in auto production. Auto assembly fell for the first time since July. Manufacturing output last month was supported by gains in the production of primary metals, furniture and computer and electronic products, among others. "The gains in non-motor vehicle-related production signals a broadening in the production base beyond motor vehicles, which has been the key driver for the U.S. manufacturing sector output in recent months," said Millan Mulraine, senior economist at TD Securities in New York. In a second report, the New York Federal Reserve said its "Empire State" index of business conditions fell to minus 2.21 this month from 1.52 in October. It was the first negative reading since May. A reading below zero indicates a contraction in factory activity in the region. Economists said the survey was not a good predictor of national manufacturing activity as a small amount of factory production took place in New York state. Manufacturing is regaining some steam after hitting a soft patch early in the year. With the Institute for Supply Management survey signaling strength in national factory activity and global trade data improving, economists expect manufacturing to accelerate in the months ahead. Stocks on Wall Street were trading higher, while the dollar was weaker against a basket of currencies as investors continued to digest remarks by Fed chair nominee Janet Yellen that the central bank"s accommodative policies would continue. U.S. Treasury debt prices were slightly weaker. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION DIPS Despite the rise in manufacturing output last month, overall industrial production slipped 0.1 percent, weighed down by declines at power plants and mines. Weather-sensitive utilities output fell 1.1 percent last month after surging 4.5 percent in September. Mining production contracted 1.6 percent in October, the first drop in seven months. The Fed attributed the fall to temporary shutdowns of oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico as Tropical Storm Karen approached. Last month, the amount of industrial capacity in use fell 0.2 percentage point to 78.1 percent. Industrial capacity utilization - a measure of how fully firms are using their resources - was 2.1 percentage points below its long-run average. Officials at the Fed tend to look at utilization measures as a signal of how much "slack" remains in the economy, and how much room growth has to run before it becomes inflationary. Economists said the fall in capacity utilization could stoke fears of disinflation and make it difficult for the Fed to scale back its massive monthly bond purchasing program. The lack of inflation pressures was underscored by a third report from the Labor Department showing import prices fell 0.7 percent in October as petroleum prices fell by the most in nearly 1-1/2 years. Prices excluding petroleum barely rose last month and were down 1.3 percent from a year ago. "With price growth slowing in the European Union and the U.S., central banks will find it harder to justify near-term reduction of stimulus," said Jay Morelock, an economist at FTN Financial in New York. 





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