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<strong><center><a href="http://www.cutsetreppsmov.us/3077/172/375/1393/2924.10tt62883642AAF1.php"><H3>NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ll to 63.3 percent last month. It's the lowest such figure since
May 1979.The falling participation rate tarnished the only apparent good
news in the jobs report the Labor Department released Friday: The unemployment
rate dropped to a four-year low of 7.6 percent in March from
7.7 in February.People without a job who stop looking for one are
no longer counted as unemployed. That's why the U.S. unemployment rate dropped
in March despite weak hiring. If the 496,000 who left the labor
force last month had still been looking for jobs, the unemployment rate
would have risen to 7.9 percent in March."Unemployment dropped for all the
wrong reasons," says Craig Alexander, chief economist with TD Bank Financial
Group. "It dropped because more workers stopped looking for jobs. It signaled
less confidence and optimism that there are jobs out there."The participation
rate peaked at 67.3 percent in 2000, reflecting an influx of women
into the work force. It's been falling steadily ever since.Part of the
drop reflects the baby boom generation's gradual move into retirement. But
such demographics aren't the whole answer.Even Americans of prime working
age 25 to 54 years old are dropping out of
the workforce. Their participation rate fell to 81.1 percent last month,
tied with November for the lowest since December 1984."It's the lack of
job opportunities the lack of demand for workers that is
keeping these workers from working or seeking work," says
d suffer in the spotlight. Maybe
the new pope will keep his distance from the society, for fear
of giving an appearance of favoritism. Or, he could use his new
authority to become from their perspective
too involved in the society, like John Paul. And they wonder if
Jesuits would somehow be blamed for any of Francis' decisions that prove
unpopular.Jesuits were already at a crossroads when Francis was elected.
Although the order remains the largest in the church for men, membership
has dropped by more than half since peaking in 1965, Gaunt said.The
decline came mostly in the West. But In South Asia and India,
Christianity, and Catholicism specifically, have been growing, and so too
have the numbers of Jesuits in those areas. Gaunt calls it "the
changing Jesuit geography." India now has the largest national group of
Jesuits with just over 3,900 members, followed by the U.S., with just
under 2,500. About one-third of the world's 17,287 Jesuits came from developing
countries, a figure that is expected to rise in coming years.For U.S.
Jesuits, this has meant a long season of wondering where they go
from here. The order is restructuring in the U.S., merging their 10
smaller provinces into four larger ones.Lay people now staff most Jesuit
schools and ministries, so the order has started Jesuit spirituality retreats
and instruction for lay faculty and staff to help maintain the religious
identity of what they've built. Among the newer J
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