Students of Rice's Shepherd School present benefit concert for Japan April 4 - Donations will support the efforts of the Japanese Red Cross

http://www.media.rice.edu/media/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEW&ID=15580

BY JESSICA STARK
Rice News staff

Students in Rice University's Shepherd School of Music are hosting a benefit concert for the Japanese Red Cross at 8 p.m. April 4 on campus to raise funds to help the people of Japan recover from the earthquake, tsunami and resulting nuclear crisis.

 
   
  MAKIKO HIRATA   MAIKO SASAKI
   

No tickets are required for "Dear Japan – with Love, 2011," but donations will be collected at the door before and after the concert and during intermission. The concert will be held at Stude Concert Hall in Alice Pratt Brown Hall.

Students and faculty from the Shepherd School, along with members of the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra, will perform works by Mozart, Bach, Debussy, Brahms, Takemitsu, Rachmaninoff and Toshi Ichiyanagi.

The concert was conceived and will be produced by Makiko Hirata and Maiko Sasaki, two Shepherd School doctoral students from Japan. They both have family and friends currently living there.

"We wanted to do whatever we could do to help, and music is what we do best," said Hirata, a pianist. "Music is a universal language. It is beyond any differences we may have as people in culture, language or even the time period that we live in. In a time of crisis especially, we need to remind ourselves of qualities we share as human beings."

Hirata and Sasaki hope that in addition to raising money, the relief concert will raise awareness that Japan is continuing to struggle with aftershocks, unstable nuclear power plants, the scarcity of electricity and damage from the initial earthquake and tsunami.

"Public and media interest might wane, but the people of Japan haven't yet recovered from this disaster," said Sasaki, a clarinetist. "By gathering together around beautiful music, we want our audience and musicians to share time and space together to send our good wishes, as well as funds, to Japan."

Donations will be collected by the Japanese Association of Greater Houston.

"We are so grateful for the support of the Shepherd School as we put this event together," Hirata said. "We are also so appreciative of the assistance given to us by the Japanese Association of Greater Houston and the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra."

The concert lineup is:

  • J.S. Bach's "Bist du Bei Mir, BWV 508"

  • Toru Takemitsu's "Itinerant"

  • Debussy's "Deux Romances"

  • Rachmaninoff's "Vocalise"

  • Brahms' "Piano Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60"

  • Toshi Ichiyanagi's "Trio Webster"

  • Mozart’s "Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat Major, K. 595"

The first six selections will be performed by Hirata, Sasaki and faculty of the Shepherd School of Music.

The Mozart concerto will be performed by internationally renowned concert pianist and Shepherd School Professor of Piano Jon Kimura Parker, members of the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra and students of the Shepherd School.

The concert is just one of the relief efforts taking place at Rice University. At 7 p.m. April 13, Rice students and faculty will gather on campus in Keck Hall, Room 100, for "Makeruna Japan: Rice is With You," a panel discussion and fundraiser designed to raise awareness of the crisis in Japan and money for the Japanese Red Cross Society. The proceeds from a recent boba tea sale by the Japanese Association of Students also went to the society.

Sasaki also created a website, www.helpjapan-houston.org, to promote other musical and artistic fundraising efforts for Japanese disaster relief, including a mini-concert from 1 to 4 p.m. April 2 in the Houston Galleria near Gigi's Asian Bistro.

Filed under  //  $4   4th   april   benefit   concert   donations   jessica   news   red cross   rice   staff   stark   university  
Posted by Bryan Hays 

Bada Bing: Microsoft In Search Comeback -- InformationWeek

Bing upgrades have Redmond on the road to recovery in search market while the competition stagnates.

By Paul McDougall,  InformationWeek
-->March 26, 2010
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=224200445

Microsoft's efforts to promote and revamp Bing appear to be paying off, as the search engine has enjoyed steady gains in the U.S. market since its launch in June 2009.

Microsoft's share of U.S. search traffic increased to 11.5% in February from 10.7% in January, according to the most recent figures from market watcher comScore. Yahoo, currently the number two player in the market, saw its share fall from 17% to 16.8% over the same period.

Market leader Google, meanwhile, enjoyed an increase of just .1%, from 65.4% in January to 65.5% in February, comScore said.

Microsoft's gains in search are in part due to its steady efforts to publicize and upgrade Bing. The company this week announced yet another slew of enhancements to the search engine.

Most notable is an upgrade to the Quick Tabs feature, which delivers results based on what the search engine believes is the intent of the user's query. For instance, a search on "Barcelona" yields tabs that give users one-click access to weather, news, and travel information related to the Spanish city.

Going forward, the information delivered through Quick Tabs will be displayed much more prominently, said group product manager Todd Schwartz, in a blog post.

"Over the next few months we are going to test some new design concepts moving Quick Tabs functionality to the top of the page for 1-click access to our most robust, visual, and organized pages," wrote Schwartz.

Microsoft also plans to enhance Bing's ability to deliver real-time information. For instance, a new feature will connect users who search for a particular news source, such as USA Today, not only to the main site but also to links to the most popular stories, based on what's being shared across social networks like Facebook and Twitter at any given time.

Additionally, Microsoft unveiled a new application this week that integrates data from the location-based social networking service Foursquare.

"Let's say you're travelling to New York City for the week, but you don't know what's hot in Greenwich Village. Selecting the foursquare Map App in Bing Maps, and zooming into to Greenwich Village will get you tips that show you what locals are saying about the hot spots in that area," said Schwartz.

Yahoo, for its part, may be suffering from the perception that it's abandoning the search market, as it will eventually outsource search on its pages to Microsoft under an alliance the two companies struck last year. That will further boost Microsoft's share of the search market.

As for Google, its dominance of the search advertising market is drawing scrutiny from antitrust regulators in the U.S. and Europe, and any efforts by the company to grow its stake significantly beyond the 65% mark could spark regulatory action.

Indeed, many of Google's recent moves to grow revenue come not from attempts to further build search share but from endeavors to exploit new markets like e-mail and cloud-based software such as Google Apps, which offers e-mail, document, and calendar services.

While month-to-month comparisons show incremental shifts in the market, the longer-term view indicates that Microsoft is gaining significant search share while Google stagnates and Yahoo fades out.

Bing launched in June 2009, when Microsoft's share of the search market was just 8.4%, Yahoo's share was 19.6%, and Google held a 65% stake. ComScore's February numbers therefore indicate Microsoft's share of U.S. search traffic has increased 37% since Bing went live, Yahoo's share has declined 14%, and Google has remained flat at the 65% mark.

The upshot: Microsoft is likely to continue its search gains, at least in the near term, while Yahoo struggles and Google's increases taper off.

Filed under  //  bing   engine   engines   good news   microsoft   news   search   search engine   search engines  
Posted by Bryan Hays 

Pitts: The Good News About This New Health Care Bill - CNBC

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Pitts: The Good News About This New Health Care Bill
| March 22, 2010 | 08:56 AM EDT

 

I don’t think this was a good bill and I hope it’s not a complete disaster as a law. It will vastly increase the size and scope of government while at the same time decreasing the stake that physicians have to practice both the art and science of medicine. And the numbers? Staggering when you consider they are absurdly under-scored. Even with readjustment, it will make the Social Security trust fund look like Fort Knox. The day the President signs this into law could be viewed by a near-future generation of Americans as a day of infamy -- if we let it.

So here’s the good news – the solution is innovation.

We have to embrace innovative technologies for medical records and prescribing. We need innovative clinical trial designs and molecular diagnostics so that we can develop better, more personalized medicines faster and for far less then the current $1 billion plus delivery charge. We need innovation in access and reimbursement policies that rewards speed-to-best-treatment rather than more lower-cost patients per hour.

Will more people have access to health insurance?

They will and that’s a good thing. But, let’s be honest, we’re not talking about erasing the word “uninsured” from the American healthcare dictionary – we’re just redefining what it means.

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Filed under  //  2010   bill   good   good news   health carehealth care bill   healthcare   march   march 2010   news  
Posted by Bryan Hays