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星期五, 10月 24, 2014

華美福利會十一月起提供免費法律咨詢

華美福利會與公民權利和經濟平等律師委員會合作,將辦理“促進成功企業”項目,1119日(週三)起推出商業法律咨詢服務。
華美福利會表示,這項商業法律咨詢服務,為商戶,僱主提供保密的,30分鐘一對一免費咨詢服務。首次法律服務於1119日(週三)晚630分到晚上8:30分在華美福利會舉行。
提供法律咨詢的所有律師,將來自律師委員會,以及Ropes & Gray律師事務所的法律顧問。他們提供法律咨詢服務範圍包括:成立新的公司或者經營現有企業,有關不同形式成立的公司的責任和條件,例如小型股份有限公司和有限公司,賦稅和可能的減免或優惠,與供應商和/或者賣方簽訂合同時必須包括的條款,租約和條款,商業區劃法,僱傭條件,知識產權等。

查詢詳情或預約,可洽華美福利會,617-426-9492 分機 205,或以電郵scarlettwu@aaca-boston.org Scarlett聯絡。

波士頓經文處長賴銘琪展開轄訪工作 先到羅德島州

駐波士頓臺北經濟文化辦事處新任處長賴銘琪十月廿二日起踏出麻州,展開轄區拜會之旅,與在地民代,官員晤談,為推動台灣與各州的交流,就政治、經貿、教育及文化等議題交換意見           
            賴銘琪從九月廿四日抵達波士頓履新後,先拜會本地僑團,再忙於慶祝雙十的各項活動,直至十月廿二日,才安排到往羅德島州拜會,由新聞組副組長陳文昌陪同,晤見了羅德島州拜會聯邦眾議員James Langevin,以及羅德島州眾議會議長Nicholas Mattiello,還參觀了羅德島州眾議會
在這期間,賴銘琪向每日發行量達十萬份的「波士頓前鋒報(Boston Herald)」投書,發表「台灣支持香港民主」一文,並引述馬英九總統最近談話中指出的台灣並非香港,絕不接受「一國兩制」等說法。
賴處長表示,此次訪問羅德島州為就任以來首次至麻州以外之地區訪問,往後將多利用機會與紐英崙地區的各界重要人士會面,以增進雙方之瞭解。

片說明:

駐波士頓經文處處長賴銘琪與聯邦眾議員James Langevin合影。(圖由經文處提供)

羅州眾議長Nicholas Mattiello、賴處長及眾議員Brain Kennedy。(圖由經文處提供)

MIRA10/29辦選票問題論壇

The issues of eliminating gas tax indexing, expanding the bottle bill, repealing the casino the law, and earned sick time for employees are all questions that will appear on your ballot on November 4th. Join us for a non-partisan ballot question forum in Boston next Wednesday, October 29th.  People representing the yes and no sides of the ballot questions will be on hand to give their pitches of why they think you should vote for their side.  There will also be an opportunity for questions from the audience.  See details below.  You can RSVP through Facebook.  This promises to be an informative and exciting evening.
We sincerely hope you will join us and also help spread the word about the event.

Thanks,

Cheryl Clyburn Crawford
Executive Director
MassVOTE
P.S. HowlRound.TV plans to live stream the forum. It will be live on their homepage once the event gets underway.
  




Americans toss 40 percent of food produced, while 50 million go hungry; New report raises concerns about food waste in U.S.

NATIONAL CONSUMERS LEAGUE PRESS RELEASEAmericans toss 40 percent of food produced, while 50 million go hungry; New report raises concerns about food waste in U.S.
For immediate release: October 24, 2014
Contact: Ben Klein, National Consumers League, benk@nclnet.org(202) 835-3323
Washington, DC- A new report published to coincide with Food Day reveals that America is one of the worst food waste offenders, tossing 35 million tons of food each year, and offers solutions for retailers and consumers. Released by the National Consumers League, the report finds that, worldwide, a quarter to a third of all food goes to waste, and in America, the figures are more stark: 40 percent of our food remains uneaten, and the numbers are trending upwards.
“We hope this report sounds the alarm. America needs to grapple with this issue and begin to take steps to change the national mindset on food and food waste. Like the United Kingdom, which has embarked on a national strategy to reduce food waste by 50 percent by the year 2020, Americans need to be mindful of our buying and consuming habits. We are throwing away 40 percent of the food we produce, while nearly 50 million Americans struggle to put food on the table,” said Sally Greenberg, executive director of NCL. “It is a shame that we as American consumers waste so much food while millions of families are food insecure. It’s a disconnect that needs to be addressed. ”
NCL’s new report, Wasted: Solutions to the American Food Waste Problem, is an examination of the financial, ethical, and environmental concerns associated with food waste, and offers solutions to address the challenge. The report highlights how certain retailer practices encourage consumers’ overbuying and highlights the crucial role industry, environmental, and consumer groups working together could play in reducing food waste and decreasing its substantial environmental and landfill consequences.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Americans threw out 35 million tons of food in 2012, 50 percent more than in 1990. American families toss out an estimated 25 percent of the food they purchase, costing between $1,350 and $2,275 for a family of four each year. At the same time in the United States, 14 percent of households struggle to put food on the table. Raising consciousness about the importance of food as a commodity could lead to more responsible habits, according to the consumer advocacy group.
“Food waste has ethical, financial, and environmental implications. Wasting food, when one in nine people on earth suffers from chronic hunger, is wrong,” said Kelsey Albright, NCL food policy fellow and the lead author of the report. “As Americans’ relationship with food trends further from the farm and closer to the grocery store isles, knowledge about origin, preparation, and storage is lost, and our appreciation of food and incentives to conserve this precious resource have diminished.”
NCL’s Food Waste report demonstrates that many consumers are aware wasting food is a problem, but consistently underestimate their contribution to it. Few people realize the environmental effects of growing, transporting, and ultimately throwing out food. The amount of oil needed to feed each person every year is 400 gallons. Additional oil is used when transporting uneaten food as trash. When food begins decomposing in garbage dumps, methane, the second most prevalent greenhouse gas emitted in the United States, is released.  
“While there is waste at every stage in the American supply chain, the good news is that consumers are responsible for the largest percentage of food waste, and they have the power to make a difference,” said Greenberg. “Our report emphasizes consumers’ need for information about food storage and expiration dates and encourages retailers to promote better consumer choices.”
TIPS FOR CONSUMERS TO REDUCE WASTE
  1. Plan out meals in advance and use a list when grocery shopping to prevent overbuying.  Always inventory the fridge and pantry before heading to the grocery store.
  2. Properly store and preserve food, preparing or freezing what can’t be used before it goes bad. Learn classic preservation methods like canning and drying produce.
  3. Know how to properly read and interpret expiration/sell-by and use-by dates. Rely on senses to determine whether food has spoiled or is still edible.
  4. Make smaller portions for dinner at home and always take home – and actually eat –leftovers from restaurants.
  5. Get creative and repurpose foods that may go bad soon. For example, stale bread can be turned into croutons and breadcrumbs; apples into applesauce or baked goods.
  6. Compost scraps of food that cannot be eaten.
“This report outlines why addressing food waste should be the next big environmental movement in this country," said Elizabeth Bennett, the founder of Fruitcycle, a social enterprise that makes healthy snacks from fruit that would otherwise go to waste. "The massive scope of the issue means that there is tremendous opportunity for consumers, farmers, retailers, and other businesses to work together to create solutions."
NCL’s report was released in conjunction with Food Day, a nationwide celebration for healthy, affordable, and sustainable food.
To read the new report, visit www.nclnet.org/foodwaste.

星期四, 10月 23, 2014

Social Security Announces 1.7 Percent Benefit Increase for 2015

Social Security Announces 1.7 Percent Benefit Increase for 2015
Monthly Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits for nearly 64 million Americans will increase 1.7 percent in 2015, the Social Security Administration announced today.
The 1.7 percent cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) will begin with benefits that more than 58 million Social Security beneficiaries receive in January 2015. Increased payments to more than 8 million SSI beneficiaries will begin on December 31, 2014. The Social Security Act ties the annual COLA to the increase in the Consumer Price Index as determined by the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Some other changes that take effect in January of each year are based on the increase in average wages. Based on that increase, the maximum amount of earnings subject to the Social Security tax (taxable maximum) will increase to $118,500 from $117,000. Of the estimated 168 million workers who will pay Social Security taxes in 2015, about 10 million will pay higher taxes because of the increase in the taxable maximum.
Information about Medicare changes for 2015 is available at www.Medicare.gov.
The Social Security Act provides for how the COLA is calculated. To read more, please visit www.socialsecurity.gov/cola.


BTBA seminar onTwo-neuron microculture 10/25

We are pleased to invite Dr. Chia-Ling Chang (Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Center for Neurological disease (CND)) as a speaker in BTBA academic seminar on Oct 25 (Sat). Dr. Chang will speak on the topic of “Two-neuron microculture: An in vitro model to study synapse formation and function.” She will present her work on performing electrophysiological, pharmacological and morphological techniques from two-neuron microculture preparations of mouse hippocampal glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons to investigate the input and output of cells in a developing circuit.
 
Speaker: Dr. Chia-Ling Chang, Postdoc at Brigham and Women Hospital, Center for Neurological disease (CND)

Title: Two-neuron microculture: An in vitro model to study synapse formation and function

Time: 2pm on Oct 25 (Sat), 2014

Location: MIT Building 5, Room 134

Background of Speaker:

Dr. Chang is a postdoc in Dr. Jie Shen's lab at Brigham and Women Hospital, Center for Neurological disease (CND). Her research goal is to study the role of Presenilin in the regulation of synaptic function. She started her PhD in Dr. Christian Rosenmund's lab at Baylor College of Medicine Neuroscience Program and transferred with lab to Charite University Berlin. Her PhD work is to study synapse formation and function using two-neuron microcircuit. Before her PhD study, Dr. Chang worked as a project intern in Baylor College of Medicine and got her master degree in National Yang-Ming University.

Abstract:

Neural circuits are composed of mainly glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons, which operate excitation and inhibition signals in the central nervous system. Precise balance between excitation and inhibition through synapse connections is crucial for normal brain function. Development of synaptic connectivity is governed by both activity-independent and activity dependent mechanisms. It has been found that neuronal activity modulates GABAergic synapse formation and function using slice or mass cultures. However, it is difficult to dissect the contribution of intrinsic programs from extrinsic environmental effects in an intact network to this process. Here, we perform electrophysiological, pharmacological and morphological techniques from two-neuron microculture preparations of mouse hippocampal glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons to investigate the input and output of cells in a developing circuit. In our reduced preparation where extrinsic effects are minimal, we find that glutamatergic neurons show no change in output or input regardless of partner neuron cell type or neuronal activity level. In contrast, we find that glutamatergic input causes the GABAergic neuron to modify its output, by way of an increase in synapse formation and a decrease in synaptic release efficiency. These findings are consistent with GABAergic synapse maturation observed in many brain regions. Additionally, changes in GABAergic output are cell wide and not target cell specific. We also find that glutamatergic neuronal activity determined the AMPA receptor properties of synapses on the partner GABAergic neuron. All modifications of GABAergic input and output required activity of the glutamatergic neuron. As our system has reduced extrinsic factors, the changes we see in the GABAergic neuron due to glutamatergic input may reflect initiation of maturation programs that underlie the formation and function of in vivo neural circuits. 

Look forward to seeing you on Saturday.

Sincerely,
Committee of BTBA Academic Seminar 
-- 
BTBA committee

星期三, 10月 22, 2014

台商會高爾夫球俱樂部 10/26 練球

TCCNE GOLF CLUB MEETING ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 at 10 AM
新英格蘭大波士頓台灣商會
高爾夫俱樂部
You are invited to join us at the Southborough Golf Learning and Fitting Center to hone your golf skills. Our club meets every other Sundays from 10 AM to 12 PM. There will be experienced golfers at the driving range during our practice to go over practice tips and correct bad habits. The practice area is indoors and heated during colder weathers. All are welcome.
時間 When: Sunday, October 26, 2014 at 10 AM to 12 PM
地點 Where: Southborough Golf Learning and Fitting Center
Open year round (heated tee’s)
20 Turnpike Road, Southborough (Rt. 9 East, Southborough/Framingham Line)
Te: (508) 480-9992
費用 Costs: We don’t collect member dues. But the cost of the golf balls are on you. The Center charges $7.50 for a small basket; $11 medium and $13 Jumbo.
報名 Registration: 胡美惠 Meihuei Hu 617-278-3955 or email: meihueihu@rcn.com 
RSVP three days before the event
TCCNE golfers: Been Wang, Ping Hsu, Ming Tsai, David Tsai, Roger Tsai, K.S. Tsay
Club Chair: 胡美惠 Meihuei Hu

波士頓亞美電影節 10/23 晚開幕

BAAFF opening night screening "Revenge of the Green Dragons"
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Buy your tickets before they sell out! 
Revenge of the Green Dragons

Thursday, OCTOBER 23, 7:30PM

Brattle Theater 
40 Brattle Street, Cambridge MA (Harvard Square)

Special guests: Directors
 Andrew Lau, whose Internal Affairs was remade into the Oscar-winning movie The Departed, and Andrew Loo.
Cast members: 
Shing Ka, Celia Au, Carl Li, Geoff Pierson, Tak Wah, and Richard Lam.
In the vein of crime classics like MEAN STREETS and INFERNAL AFFAIRS, REVENGE OF THE GREEN DRAGONS follows two immigrant brothers Sonny (Justin Chon) and Steven (Kevin Wu) who survive the impoverished despair of New York in the 1980s by joining Chinatown gang, "The Green Dragons". From acclaimed Director Andrew Lau and Andrew Loo, and legendary Executive Producer Martin Scorsese comes a brilliant mix between a Hong Kong action film and a New York City crime thriller, portraying the never-before-told true story of "The Green Dragons". > READ MORE
Opening Night co-presented by:
Visit baaff.org for more info.
Festival Highlights Include:
9-MAN A streetball battle in the heart of Chinatown featuring a chaotic, Chinese-only game played in parking lots and streets. Q&A with Director Ursula Liang, Executive Producer Melanie Riley-Green, Co-producer Theresa Navarro. >>> Read More 
A LEADING MAN When a young and talented Chinese American actor is fired from a starring role in a television show, he attempts to salvage his career by entering into a romantic relationship with a successful casting director. East Coast Premiere and Q&A with Director Steven J. Kung. >>> Read More
TO BE TAKEI Over seven decades, actor and activist George Takei boldly journeyed from a WWII internment camp, to the helm of the starship Enterprise, to the daily news feeds of five million Facebook fans. Join George and his husband Brad on this star's playful and profound trek for life, liberty, and love. Q&A with George Takei. 
>>> Read More