Saturday, December 31, 2011

Gene Mutations Linked to Thyroid Cancer Risk: Study (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 30 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers have identified three gene abnormalities that appear to raise the likelihood for developing the thyroid cancer, with one in particular -- the PTEN gene -- implicated in children's risk for the disease.

Dr. Charis Eng, founding director of the Genomic Medicine Institute of Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute, said in a news release that her team's "investigation into the genetics behind thyroid disease raises important details relevant to diagnosis and treatment. We hope to promote the earliest diagnosis and most targeted treatment possible."

The researchers unearthed the gene-cancer risk link by examining and tracking roughly 3,000 patients, many of whom had already been diagnosed with a different disease called Cowden syndrome.

The study, published in the Dec 1. issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, focused on mutations in three genes: PTEN, SDH and KLLN. Because all work on distinct cell pathways, potential treatments to reduce cancer risk would have to target each gene individually.

Thyroid cancer has experienced the largest increase among both men and women of all cancers, according to the Cleveland Clinic release.

PTEN is a tumor-suppressor gene that, when healthy, aids in cell growth and division. Inherited PTEN mutations, however, impede the gene's normal function while spurring the growth of tumors. These abnormalities are known to be present in about 80 percent of patients with Cowden syndrome, who are considered at risk for developing breast and thyroid cancer.

The investigators concluded that mutations in the PTEN gene were indeed associated with a rise in thyroid cancer risk, with some early indications that mutations in the SDH and KLLN genes might also be implicated.

Children under the age of 18, however, seem to face a unique cancer risk dynamic: While PTEN mutations were seen to elevate their risk for thyroid cancer, SDH and KLLN abnormalities did not.

PTEN testing is already a staple in the world of genetic screening, the release noted.

More information

For more on thyroid cancer, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111231/hl_hsn/genemutationslinkedtothyroidcancerriskstudy

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Prepare for Florida Bowl game traffic

The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) reminds the University of South Carolina Gamecocks and Clemson Tigers heading to and from Florida?s bowl games to check traffic before heading out by calling 511, visiting FL511.com or downloading the new 511 app on iTunes.

FDOT?s 511 Traveler Information System updates travelers on crashes, congestion and construction on all of Florida?s interstates, toll roads and major metropolitan roadways.? Callers can also use 511 for free phone transfers to Florida?s airports, seaports and neighboring 511 systems in Georgia and Louisiana.

The Florida 511 app is the newest addition to FDOT?s suite of resources for traffic information. The app features the same traffic and travel time information as the phone system and FL511.com website. The free 511 app uses the iPhone?s GPS tracking to provide users with traffic information within miles of their location. Users can even view traffic cameras associated with crashes on their iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch with the 511 app.

Florida travelers can register for My Florida 511 personalized services to hear and receive custom traffic alerts from FDOT on any cell phone or landline. Users can visit FL511.com to register their route to hear traffic and travel time information on those routes first when calling 511. Travelers can also register to receive traffic alerts via e-mail, text and/or phone call. My Florida 511 users can customize alerts based on time of day, day of the week and severity of incident.

?

Safety Tips

  • Call 511 before driving, at a rest area or have a passenger call to avoid talking while driving
  • Customize your trip at FL511.com before leaving to minimize time spent on the phone
  • Always wear a safety belt
  • Don?t drink and drive

Florida 511 Features

  • Traffic information on all interstate highways, toll roads and many other metropolitan roadways
  • Commuter travel times and reports on crashes, lane closures, construction and severe weather affecting travel
  • Public transit, airport and seaport information
  • AMBER, Silver and LEO alerts (Silver Alerts notify the public when law enforcement agencies are searching for missing adults or citizens with cognitive impairments, including Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia. Law Enforcement Officer (LEO) Alerts notify the public when law enforcement officers are searching for?an offender(s) who has seriously injured or killed a law enforcement officer.)
  • FL511.com provides travel information, traffic camera views and free personalized services, including customized travel routes and e-mail, text and phone call alerts
  • Voice-activated?and touch-tone navigation available
  • The 511 phone call and FL511.com website are available in English and Spanish

Source: http://fortjackson.wistv.com/news/schools/50909-prepare-florida-bowl-game-traffic

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NON-UNION WORKERS TO SEE 2% PAY RAISE

Wednesday December 28, 2011

NORTH ADAMS -- Non-union city employees will see a 2 percent raise in their pay effective Jan. 1.

In a 6 to 3 vote, the City Council passed an ordinance amending the city's compensation plan at their Tuesday night meeting. City Councilors Ronald Boucher, Marie Harpin and Alan Marden were the dissenting votes.

The decision to adopt Alcombright's proposal for a 2 percent raise for all non-union city employees didn't come without controversy. At one point, Alcombright and Boucher got into a heated exchange about Alcombright not polling city employees as to how they'd like to get their pay raises -- the 2 percent raise effective Jan. 1, 2012 or a 1 percent raise effective retroactively from July 1, 2011 followed by another 1 percent raise effective Jan. 1, 2012. Councilor Alan Marden also expressed his displeasure with the poll -- the result of a Finance Committee meeting on Monday, Dec. 19 -- not being conducted.

City councilor-elect and former Mayor John Barrett III continued to advocate for a 1 percent raise retroactive from July 1, 2011 followed by the other 1 percent taking effect Jan. 1, 2012.

He also took issue with the salaries of some of the city's newer employees and their being included in a 2 percent across-the-board raise.

"I don't think it's fair that any employee who has been here less than five years receives these type of raises," Barrett said.

He asked the City Council to delay adopting

Alcombright's proposal until members could look at it more thoroughly.

Alcombright said the proposal had been looked at ad nauseum.

"We're trying to do something here that is efficient and will allow employees to have their increase," he said.

The two percent raise would impact 84 employees -- 61 who are full-time and 23 who are part-time -- and cost $24,000 for the remainder of the fiscal year.

In other business, State Rep. Gailanne Cariddi, D-North Adams, updated the City Council on her efforts to solicit state funding in helping communities in the First Berkshire District cover the cost of repairs undertaken in the wake of Tropical Storm Irene.

While funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency will cover 75 percent of those repairs, cities and towns would have to pay the remaining 25 percent, she said.

"Our district is really hard pressed to come up with the remaining 25 percent in these tough economic times. We've lost so much of the population and there are less people to pay our taxes," she said.

She said Rep. Brian Dempsey, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, has informed her that a supplemental state budget is likely to be proposed in January, and he will consider Tropical Storm Irene damage repair funding requests for communities in the First Berkshire District.

"I'm going for the whole 25 percent," she said.

Prior to Cariddi's presentation, the City Council authorized the city to borrow $2.2 million to pay for repairs resulting from Tropical Storm Irene.

Source: http://www.thetranscript.com/headlines/ci_19629544?source=rss

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Can foreign tourists help US economy?

Agustina Ocampo is the kind of foreign traveler businesses salivate over.

The 22-year-old Argentine recently dropped more than $5,000 on food, hotels and clothes in Las Vegas during a trip that also took her to Seattle's Space Needle, Disneyland and the San Diego Zoo. But she doubts she will return soon.

"It is a little bit of a headache," said Ocampo, a student who waited months to find out whether her tourist visa application would be approved.

More than a decade after the federal government strengthened travel requirements after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, foreign visitors say getting a temporary visa remains a daunting and sometimes insurmountable hurdle.

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The tourism industry hopes to change that with a campaign to persuade Congress to overhaul the State Department's tourist visa application process.

"After 9/11, we were all shaken and there was a real concern for security, and I still think that concern exists," said Jim Evans, a former hotel chain CEO heading a national effort to promote foreign travel to the U.S.

At the same time, he said, the U.S. needs "to be more cognizant of the importance of every single traveler."

Tourism leaders said the decline in foreign visitors over the past decade is costing American businesses and workers $859 billion in untapped revenue and at least half a million potential jobs at a time when the slowly recovering economy needs both.

While the State Department has beefed up tourist services in recent years, reducing wait times significantly for would-be visitors will likely be a challenge as officials try to balance terrorist threats and illegal immigration with tight budgets that limit hiring.

"Security is job one for us," said Edward Ramotowski, managing director of the department's visa services. "The reason we have a visa system is to enforce the immigration laws of the United States."

Anti-immigration proponents argue travel to the U.S. is already too accessible and that allowing more visitors would put the nation at greater risk.

"Everybody would like to find a way to admit as many people as possible to visit here providing that they visit and then go home," said Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, an anti-immigration group based in Washington, D.C.

"A lot of consular officers underestimate how much people want to come and live here," she said.

Nearly 7.6 million nonimmigrant visas were issued in 2001, compared with fewer than 6.5 million in 2010. The number of visa applicants also dropped sharply after 2001. Those combined forces pushed the U.S. share of global travelers down to 12 percent last year, from 17 percent before 2001.

The proposed immigration overhaul has largely been driven by the U.S. Travel Association, the tourism industry's lobbying giant, and has been endorsed by business titans such as the National Retail Federation, Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, and Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. Republicans and Democrats in Congress are backing the proposed changes through six bills in the House and Senate.

Geoff Freeman, the travel association's chief operating officer, said the State Department should be required to keep visa interview wait times at a maximum of 10 days.

"Every day a person is waiting for that interview is a day a person cannot be here supporting the American economy," he said.

For most foreigners, taking a last-minute business or leisure trip to New York, Los Angeles, Miami or other U.S. travel hubs would be nearly impossible. The average wait time for a visa interview in Rio de Janeiro, for example, was 87 days, according to the State Department.

The Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan agency that audits federal programs, concluded that wait times are likely much longer than reported because some department employees artificially reduce the wait times by not scheduling interviews during high-demand periods.

The vast majority of visitors enter through the country's visa waiver program, which allows travelers from 36 nations with good relationships with the U.S. to temporarily visit without a visa. Travel proponents want to add nations whose residents are unlikely to illegally move to the U.S., including Argentina, Brazil, Poland and Taiwan.

Tourists from the rest of the world, including India, China, Mexico and other nations with affluent travelers looking to use their passports, must obtain a nonimmigrant visa. The process can be expensive and time-consuming.

People living far from a visa processing center must arrange travel to the interview location, not knowing whether they will be approved. Roughly 78 percent of all tourist visas were approved so far in 2011.

Tourism proponents want the department to embrace videoconferencing as a way to interview more people quickly. The department has no plans to implement videoconferencing interviews because of safety and technological concerns, Ramotowski said.

In-person interviews weren't the norm before 9/11, when consular officials had the authority to approve travelers based on an application alone. Since then, however, screenings have become more strenuous, with fingerprint checks and facial recognition screening of photographs.

The State Department has made moves to boost its tourist services in recent years, transferring employees from underworked offices to bustling embassies and consular posts. Many visa processing centers are also operating under extended hours.

Other proposed changes include granting more multi-entry visas and charging premium fees to tourists who want a visa right away, similar to the premium passport fee charged to Americans with last-minute passport requests. The tourism industry also wants more visa processing officers and to allow travelers to submit applications in their native language.

"We can't afford to treat them in a way that gives them an impression that maybe they aren't welcome," said Rolf Lundberg, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's top lobbyist.

To help make the U.S. appear more welcoming, Congress approved last year a $200 million annual marketing campaign.

In Las Vegas, where travelers to the Strip have traditionally kept Nevada's economy afloat, tourism and government leaders are desperate to keep businesses open and create jobs in a state with the nation's highest unemployment rate.

"The industries affected by tourism are all behind it," said Republican Rep. Joe Heck of southern Nevada, who has sponsored a bill in the House that would require shorter visa interview delays, among other measures. "We need the jobs."

Ocampo, who spent her vacation shopping at upscale boutiques and visiting family in California, said she would be more eager to come back if she knew her business was wanted.

"Everyone wants to visit the Statue of Liberty and Disneyland," she said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45802686/ns/travel-news/

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From Macy's to Sears, tales of holiday highs, lows (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Macy's Inc (M.N) and Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) continue to get high marks from Wall Street as the busy season draws to a close, while Sears Holdings Corp (SHLD.O) proved that it was really not a jolly holiday for all stores.

Sears said it would close dozens of Sears and Kmart stores after sales at its existing locations dropped 5.2 percent from the beginning of the quarter through Christmas. Its shares plunged 26 percent on Tuesday.

The announcement comes two weeks after Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N) said that the bigger discounts it offered to kick-start the holiday season ate into profits.

Success stories, particularly at Macy's and Wal-Mart, show that they and other retailers are benefiting from recent overhauls and the right mix of holiday season discounts.

"To sum up the whole season, I would say extremely focused on bargains, that's where the consumer's mindset is, and the retailers generally, overall, delivered pretty compelling bargains, they gave the consumer a reason to shop," said B. Riley & Co senior analyst Jeff Van Sinderen.

While it is too early to tell, analysts said that the season's promotional prices largely seemed to be in line with what retailers set out to do to entice shoppers.

Macy's surpassed rivals such as J.C. Penney Co Inc (JCP.N) by opening at midnight on Black Friday and from earlier decisions such as letting regional managers pick merchandise that caters to their clientele. After Macy's November sales rose more than expected, it said that if such momentum held up, its profit could also be stronger than forecast.

"I see Macy's as the market-share winner," said independent retail analyst Brian Sozzi, who said shoppers did not see "slash-and-burn discounting" at the department store chain.

"They are the destination place among department stores," he said.

For Walmart, this season was a chance to prove that returning to its historic strategy of low prices on a wide variety of goods would bring shoppers back to the world's largest chain after two tough years.

Realizing that times are tough for its shoppers, many of whom do not have credit cards or bank accounts, Walmart brought back layaway in mid-October. That move hurt competitors.

Layaway sales, where items are put aside for customers until they fully pay for them, fell at Kmart, while Target Corp (TGT.N) saw sales of toys crimped by Wal-Mart's layaway push even before Thanksgiving.

Retailers are expected to ring up $469.1 billion in holiday season sales, or a rise of 3.8 percent from 2010, according to the National Retail Federation.

Meanwhile, U.S. consumer confidence rose to an eight-month high in December, the Conference Board said, suggesting that Americans have a brighter take on the economy heading into 2012.

The S&P retail index (.RLX) was up modestly on Tuesday, roughly in line with the broader S&P 500 index (.SPX).

TEEN ANGST

In general, analysts said that retailers did a good job of having the right level of inventory in place, which meant there was not a need for major panicked discounting.

But it appeared that few retailers foresaw just how mild the weather would be so far in most parts of the country, leading to a glut of warm coats, sweaters and other such items.

That could put pressure on companies such as winter outerwear makers VF Corp (VFC.N), which makes The North Face line, and Columbia Sportswear Co (COLM.O), said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners.

"While the economic tone seems a bit better, the lower-end consumer is still most constrained and thus we think investors are still best positioned in those companies targeting higher-end consumers," such as Tiffany & Co (TIF.N), True Religion Apparel Inc (TRLG.O) and Nordstrom Inc (JWN.N), said Caris & Company analyst Dorothy Lakner.

Lakner's favorite small and mid-cap stocks are Zumiez Inc (ZUMZ.O) and American Eagle Outfitters Inc (AEO.N), "where specific strategies set them apart," she said.

Among chains catering to teens, American Eagle appeared to have "better traffic consistently" throughout the season, while Abercrombie & Fitch Co (ANF.N) kept its prices too high, even with discounts, said Sozzi.

American Eagle's success "has come at the expense of the higher priced Abercrombie, which got hammered," said Johnson.

Another teen-focused retailer, Aeropostale Inc (ARO.N), struggled without fresh fashion and lost out to competitors such as Forever 21, H&M (HMb.ST) and Fast Retailing's (9983.T) Uniqlo, he said.

Lakner also called out Children's Place Retail Stores Inc (PLCE.O) as one of retail's "best turnaround stories."

(Reporting by Jessica Wohl in Chicago and Phil Wahba in New York. Editing by Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/bs_nm/us_usa_retail_season

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

US cities struggle to control sewer overflows (AP)

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. ? Twice in recent summers, visitors to parts of Michigan's western coast were greeted by mounds of garbage strewn along miles of sandy beach: plastic bottles, eating utensils, food wrappers, even hypodermic syringes.

At least some of the rubbish had drifted across Lake Michigan from Milwaukee, a vivid reminder that many cities still flush nasty stuff into streams and lakes during heavy storms, fouling the waters with bacteria and viruses that can make people seriously ill.

Thousands of overflows from sewage systems that collect storm water and wastewater are believed to occur each year. Regulators and environmentalists want them stopped, and since the late 1990s the Environmental Protection Agency or state officials have reached legal agreements with more than 40 cities or counties ? Atlanta, Los Angeles, Baltimore, St. Louis and Indianapolis among them ? to improve wastewater systems that in some cases are a century old. Costs are reaching hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars.

But the price of progress is becoming too high for local governments, with the bad economy cutting into tax revenues and residents rebelling against higher water and sewer rates. Responding to pleas for leniency, the Obama administration is promising more flexibility as hard-pressed cities look for less conventional and cheaper ways to reduce overflows.

"The current economic times make the need for sensible and effective approaches even more pressing," said an October memo to EPA regional offices from Nancy Stoner, who runs the agency's water policy office, and Cynthia Giles, chief of enforcement. They said EPA staffers would work out details of the new policy.

It won't be easy, considering the costs and inflamed emotions involved.

Carol Rodwell and neighbors carted away 18 bags of garbage from a 400-foot stretch of Lake Michigan frontage near Ludington after last year's trash flotilla. She was shocked to learn that federal law lets cities discharge untreated sewage when their plants and storage facilities are flooded.

"It was maddening that they had permission to do this and we had to live with the consequences," Rodwell said.

Kevin Shafer, executive director of the Milwaukee sewage system, insisted it was only partly to blame, saying some of the rubbish probably came from trash cans or dumpsters swamped when the area got about 9 inches of rain in a single day.

Milwaukee has spent $4 billion since the 1980s improving its sewer system, Shafer said. It now has 521 million gallons of storage capacity in underground tunnels. Since the mid-1990s, less than 2 percent of the water entering the system each year has been released without treatment.

The ultimate goal is zero overflows, but officials don't expect to get there until about 2035 because it will require being able to handle the kind of flooding that previously happened rarely but is becoming more common.

"It gets a lot more expensive to get that last drop," Shafer said. "The way the economy is today, you have to balance that cost with all the other needs we have. You don't want to bankrupt a community."

One partial solution gaining popularity with cities is "green infrastructure" ? natural and man-made features that enable more water to soak into the ground instead of washing into storm drains and creeks. Stoner and Giles of EPA instructed field staff last year to incorporate green features into storm water and sewer permits as much as possible.

Examples would include requiring office buildings to cover flat roofs with plants, using permeable pavement on roads and parking lots, and increasing parkland and urban green space.

Milwaukee is encouraging residents to use rain barrels and plant "rain gardens," which have wildflowers and deep-rooted vegetation particularly suited to absorbing excess water.

Indianapolis last year renegotiated an earlier deal with EPA that cuts the city's costs by hundreds of millions through greater use of green features, Mayor Greg Ballard said.

A new ordinance in Santa Monica, Calif., orders building developers to capture the first three-quarters of an inch of rainwater in a storm and encourages meeting the requirement with green infrastructure. Cleveland has pledged to spend $42 million over eight years on green projects, said Jennifer Elting, spokeswoman for the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District.

An assortment of measures are required in Chicago under a deal struck with EPA this month that sets deadlines for completing a gigantic tunnel and reservoir project, which has lagged since work began nearly 40 years despite repeated sewer overflows.

The U.S. Conference of Mayors has pressured EPA to give cities more time and options for limiting overflows. Testifying before Congress this month, Omaha Mayor Jim Suttle said the agency's embrace of green infrastructure was a welcome change from a heavy-handed approach that demanded big-ticket investments in conventional water treatment equipment.

"Using enforcement actions as the default option sends the message via the mass media to our citizens that mayors are not trustworthy, and that they condone water pollution," Suttle said.

The federal government should help struggling cities pay for sewer improvements but shouldn't let them off the hook for overflows, said Lyman Welch, water quality program manager with the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a Chicago-based environmental group.

"Cities have had decades to deal with this problem," Welch said. "We need firm deadlines and we need strong enforcement so it can finally be solved."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_us/us_awash_in_sewage

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Sports briefs: 12/28/11

NCAA schools override plan to offer multiyear scholarships

For the second time in less than two weeks, schools are objecting to a reform measure sought by university presidents and endorsed by NCAA president Mark Emmert.

More than 75 schools are asking to override a plan approved in October to allow multiyear athletic scholarships rather than the one-year renewable awards schools currently provide. That's the minimum number of dissenters needed for reconsideration by the Division I Board of Directors when it meets next month in Indianapolis at the annual NCAA convention. The NCAA announced the change Friday.

On Dec. 15, the NCAA suspended plans to give athletes a $2,000 stipend for living costs not covered by scholarships after at least 125 schools objected. The higher number of protests allows the organization to immediately put the change on hold.

Both measures were pushed by Emmert and adopted as emergency legislation after a presidential summit in August.

Golf

Five Americans were picked for the Curtis Cup, the biennial women's amateur event which will be June 8-10 at Nairn in Scotland. Amy Anderson, Lindy Duncan, Austin Ernst, Tiffany Lua and Brooke Pancake made the team. Three others will be selected in January

Tennis

Defending champion Spain hired former French Open finalist Alex Corretja as its new Davis Cup captain. The Spanish federation said that Corretja has a two-year contract. He replaces Albert Costa, who left this month after leading Spain to two Davis Cup titles in three years.

Sailing

Supermaxis Wild Oats XI and Investec Loyal were locked in a tight tactical struggle in the Sydney to Hobart yacht race after trading the lead on the way toward Tasmania. Wild Oats XI, winner in five of the past six years, lost the lead for the first time since the fleet of 88 yachts left Monday from Sydney, Australia. Investec Loyal moved in front during an eventful night of racing in light wind. Wild Oats XI is about 125 miles from the finish in this 700-mile race. The leading yachts are expected to reach Hobart today.

Judo

Japanese prosecutors filed rape charges against two-time Olympic champion Masato Uchishiba. Tokyo prosecutors said Uchishiba, 33, is accused of raping a teenager at a hotel in September after intoxicating her with an alcoholic drink and taking advantage of her inability to resist. Her identity is being withheld because she is a minor. Police arrested Uchishiba in earlier this month. He has denied the accusation, saying the sex was consensual. If convicted, he could face more than three years in prison.

First published on December 28, 2011 at 12:00 am

Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11362/1199644-139.stm?cmpid=sports.xml

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Christmas Karaoke Party w/ Graham @ Texas Roads Winery

Dec 22, 7-11pm @ Texas Roads Winery

Our First Annual Christmas Karaoke Party for Van Zandt Foster Kiddos. Please bring a $10 gift? to share the JOY of Christmas.

Graham wil be our "Jolly Karaoke Master" as always.--- Free food- $4 wine slushys all night!? $ 5 glass of wine!

Visit our gift shop for some great Christmas Gifts!

Christmas Specials--All week !! -buy 3 bottles of wine or more & get 10% off

We Proudly Promote Texas Music?

Our event calender shows all of Texas Music Live Events--? Please also? LIKE us on Facebook

Texas Roads Winery

134 W. Dallas St -Canton , TX? 903-567-6801/ cell 214-802-7726

www.texasroadswinery.com

linda@texasroadswinery.com

"Come in as a Stranger & Leave as a Friend"

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Source: http://athens.kltv.com/news/community-spirit/75632-christmas-karaoke-party-w-graham-texas-roads-winery

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Super Mario Galaxy Tricks Collection

This is a reupload of an old video. There's some quality issues, like the frame rate and a bad audio desync late in. There are all tricks I found in SMG pretty soon after its release. A few of them were found first by other people, and several of them have also been obsoleted by now. 10 minutes of content though, so enjoy.

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  1. Super Mario Galaxy Tricks Collection This is a reupload of an old video. There's some quality issues, like the frame rate and a bad audio desync late in. There are...
  2. Super Mario Galaxy 2 Tricks and Shortcuts Collection This is a collection of most of the known tricks and shortcuts in SMG2. A lot of these I found on my own, but there...
  3. Super Mario Galaxy 2 ? Tricks & Shortcuts [Part 1/2] You need some help with some of the levels? You search usefull shortcuts? Then you?re right here! Watch this video to get some tips, tricks...
  4. Super Mario Galaxy 2 ? Tricks & Shortcuts [Part 1/2] You need some help with some of the levels? You search useful shortcuts? Then you?re right here! Watch this video to get some tips, tricks...
  5. Super Mario Galaxy ? Freezeflame Galaxy Tricks Tricks you can do in FreezeFlame Galaxy to save some time. Enjoy! People also searched for these:freezeflame galaxy major shortcuts| mario galaxy beating mario freeze...

Source: http://wiimarket.silkenhut.com/wii-cheats/super-mario-galaxy-tricks-collection-2/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Salvation Army Collects Wedding Ring Donations

By Chris DignamCNN

POSTED: 8:51 pm EST December 23, 2011

UPDATED: 1:29 pm EST December 24, 2011

Salvation Army bell-ringers are a familiar ornament outside local retailers during the holiday season, but over the past month it hasn't been the rings from their bells that are catching people's ears."Wedding rings seem to be the token item this year for donations," said Haven Sink, director of public relations for the Salvation Army in Wake County, North Carolina.A wave of wedding ring donations has hit the Salvation Army's Red Kettle campaign this year, with seven separate instances of ring donations reported over the past month, according to the organization."It's very curious," said Jennifer Byrd, national public relations director for the Salvation Army. "Maybe some of these rings came from marriages that didn't work out and they just wanted to do something positive with them?"On Friday, a diamond ring was donated at a Goffstown, New Hampshire, kettle, one of three rings generously deposited by the same donor."I was overwhelmed," said Salvation Army organizer Debbie Urella, upon finding a third ring in a red bucket. "I know who donated the rings. We've helped her in the past and she wanted to repay us." The donor chose to remain anonymous.Urella plans to have the rings appraised after Christmas.The phenomenon has hit other parts of the country as well. Wedding bands have turned up at the bottom of red kettles in two cities in Florida, in Raleigh, North Carolina, in Shawnee, Kansas, and in Spokane, Washington, where a diamond ring worth $5,000 was wrapped in a dollar bill."I think people know that when they give something to the Salvation Army they trust the organization will do the most good with it," Byrd said. "Whether it's a diamond ring or otherwise, they know it will help people in their local community."

Copyright CNN 2011

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Source: http://www.theindychannel.com/money/30067277/detail.html

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AP Enterprise: Paul's nonprofits push law's limit (Star Tribune)

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Kim's last gift to NKorea: loads of fish (AP)

SEOUL, South Korea ? The people of North Korea's capital have received a special gift from recently deceased leader Kim Jong Il: loads and loads of fish.

North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency has reported that Kim was concerned about the supply of fish in Pyongyang, and had looked into the matter the day before he died. North Korea announced Monday that he died of a massive heart attack on Saturday.

The report, issued late Friday, said Kim's young son and heir, Kim Jong Un, "took all necessary measures to truck fresh fish to the capital city in time and supply the fish to the citizens, even in the mourning period."

North Korea is in official mourning until after Kim's funeral Dec. 28-29.

North Korean media have been flowing with eulogies for Kim Jong Il, who ruled the country for 17 years after the death of his father, North Korea's national founder and eternal President Kim Il Sung. Both Kims were the object of intense personality cults.

With Kim Jong Un poised to extend the Kim family dynasty into an additional generation, North Korea is quickly building the mythology by emphasizing his bloodline and the Kim family legacy, from its roots as revolutionaries fighting the Japanese to their spiritual role as protectors of the North Korean people.

The state media has broadcast constant scenes of public mourning, with women and children wailing, soldiers bowing before Kim's smiling portrait and senior officials lining up to view his body, which is on display in a glass case at the same funeral palace where his father's embalmed remains are on view.

North Korea has also claimed Kim's death generated a series of spectacular natural phenomena, creating a mysterious glow atop a revered mountain, cracking a sheet of ice on a lake with a loud roar and inspiring a crane to circle a statue of the nation's founder before perching in a tree and drooping its head in sorrow.

The reports have stressed how the North Korean people are deeply indebted to the largesse of their leaders, despite the deepening political isolation and economic hardship they have faced in recent years, including severe famines and shortages of electricity, food and other necessities.

"Leader Kim Jong Il is always with us as we have respected Comrade Kim Jong Un identical to him," KCNA quoted Song Hye Yong, a 42-year-old woman, as saying as she carried "a bag full of fish in her hand."

The report also quoted Kim Jong Hwa, a saleswoman at a grocery in the central district of the city, as saying she was deeply touched by leader Kim Jong Il's gift of fish to the people.

"All of citizens are deeply moved by his deep care," she said.

Despite initial jitters over possible instability, officials in Seoul and Washington are calling the political transition in North Korea smooth so far. There have been no outward signs of unrest on the streets or unusual troop movements along the borders.

The North, however, is highly sensitive to what it sees as outside threats.

Its government-run website, Uriminzokkiri, has slammed South Korea for putting its military on alert, calling that move an "insult" to a nation in mourning.

The Korean peninsula remains in a state of war because the three-year Korean War ended in 1953 in a truce, not a peace treaty. Tanks and troops still guard the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone dividing the two sides.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_as/as_kim_jong_il

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The Indian land grab In Africa

Goimonitor.com | 20 December, 2011

By GOI Monitor

Indian companies venturing abroad is always regarded as a healthy trend, an indicator of India's new-found economic status. But little is known about how these companies are flexing their imperalistic muscles in poorer countries, grabbing the land and giving little in return. A report ?India?s Role in the New Global Farmland Grab? by researcher Rick Rowden brings forth these atrocities which are shockingly similar to what India used to blame rich western countires for.

Joiing the race with China, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, South Korea and the European Union, Indian and Indian-owned companies are acquiring land in Africa at throwaway prices, indulging in enviornmental damange and exporting the food while locals continue to starve. The origin of this unhealthy practice can be traced back to the food crisis of 2008 when rich countries were forced to confront the reality of how fragile the global food scenario can be, especially for those without sufficient cultivable land. To ensure more direct control over food, these countries started acquiring land in poorer African countries and shipping the produce back home. A recent World Bank report found that 45 million hectares of large scale farmland deals had been announced between 2008 and 2009.

The initial support to such forays was based on the belief that the world is facing scarce food supply because of long-term under-investment in the agricultural sectors of many developing countries. However, as stressed by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, "the diagnosis and remedy are incorrect?Hunger and malnutrition are not primarily the result of insufficient food production; they are the result of poverty and inequality, particularly in rural areas, where 75 per cent of the world?s poor still reside.?

Outsourcing farming, the Indian way

There are various factors driving the ?outsourcing? of domestic food production in India. Primary among these are stagnation or drop in crop yield due to "green revolution fatigue?, government?s concerns related to long term food security besides the allure of much cheaper land and more abundant water resources in African countries. The subsidies being offered by governments of African countries is another enticement. In many cases, the companies have been offered special incentives, including the offer to lease massive tracts of arable land at very generous terms with access to water and the ability to fully repatriate the profits generated.

According to figures provided by governments of various East African countries in 2010, more than 80 Indian companies have invested around $ 2.4 billion in buying or leasing huge plantations in Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Senegal and Mozambique to grow food grains and other cash crops for the Indian market. The high input cost of farming is also driving these companies to explore Africa. Talking to news agency IANS earlier this year, S.N. Pandey, an executive with Lucky Group, one of the companies which have invested in Africa, stressed on the price factor. ?The cost of agricultural production in Africa is almost half that in India. There is less need for fertiliser and pesticides, labour is cheap and overall output is higher,? he was quoted as saying.

Indian agriculture companies also complain that India?s small and fragmented land holdings are unsuitable for large-scale commercial farming, and there are too many bureaucratic hurdles to investment. Recent offers by African governments allow Indian farmers to acquire much larger tracts of contiguous land on lease for 50 years, and in some cases even up to 99 years at throwaway prices. According to a news report in the Indian Express, ?The land lease rate in Punjab?s Doaba region is a minimum of Rs 40,000 per acre. In contrast, in most African nations, the land lease rate in terms of Indian currency comes to Rs 700 per acre. This means that for every one acre in Punjab, Indian investors can own 60 acre in Africa. With a per capita land holding of 1.5 acre in Punjab, agriculture is ceasing to be a sustainable activity.?

A sample of Indian companies investing in agricultural land overseas

Nobody bothers about locals

In some countries such as Ethiopia, where there is a lack of effective governance and democracy, local populations have reportedly suffered evictions with no recourse. Of all the land-grabbing deals in recent years, perhaps none has received as much attention as that of Karuturi Global's massive land leases in Ethiopia?s Gambela region. While the East African country claims the entry of foreign investors would help develop the large tracts of wastelands, experts say there is no such thing as ?waste or idle land? in Ethiopia, or anywhere in Africa.

Several studies have shown that local competition for grazing land and access to water bodies are the two most important sources of inter-communal conflict in most parts of Ethiopia populated by pastoralists. Indeed, in almost every case of recent land leases involving foreign enterprises, locals have complained that they lost access to grazing land and water due to these projects. This has also been the case, for example, with foreign investments in both the Bako and Gambela regions of Ethiopia where many Indian firms operate. Proponents of the new land rush also often claim that the foreign investments in land will create jobs for locals, improve living conditions and increase national GDP. In Ethiopia, over 3 lakh families have been potentially displaced but only about 20,000 people are expected to get jobs on the new highly-mechanised farms.

According to a news report on BBC online, ?there have allegedly been a number of arrests and killings of local people who oppose the recent land investments.? The indigenous Mazenger people of Gambela have been struggling to protect their ancient forest-covered lands along tributaries to the White Nile that have come into conflict with the lease given to the Indian company Verdanta Harvests Plc., which plans to clear their land and use it for a tea and spice plantation. According to the documents available with Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia (SMNE), the locals were made aware of the plan to lease out their ancient lands and ?secret forests? only in early 2010. They approached the Ethiopian President Girma Wolde-Giorgis, who mostly has representative powers, and won his support. The Environmental Protection Authority of Ethiopia (EPAE) also recommended that the lease project be stopped since the short-term benefits of leasing would not outweigh the long-term costs to the country. However, the local Governor announced that the 3,000 hectare of forests had already been leased out for 50 years. Despite another intervention by the President, the project is moving forward and the forests are being cleared.

?If what is going on in Gambela was happening in New Delhi, India, or in Oxford, England, Bismarck, North Dakota, or in Saskatoon, Canada, this would be unthinkable. If it is not allowed in these places, why is it justified in Ethiopia," asks Obang Metho of SMNE.

Environmental concerns and contracts

One of the most significant concerns about the trend of overseas investors relates to environmental impacts of establishing increasing numbers of large-scale, mechanised mono-cropping farms that are dependent on high levels of water usage besides heavy doses of pesticides and herbicides which impact both the soil and the underground water. ?The ecological sustainability of land and water resources is an important concern, especially considering the relatively short-term orientation of the foreign investors versus the long-term outlook needed in considering the environmental impacts of land uses,? says D Byerlee, who presented a paper on ?Drivers of Investment in Large-Scale Farming: Evidence and Implications,? at a World Bank conference in 2009.

Amid growing controversy around investments in Ethiopia, the Ethiopian Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development recently made public the 12 Land Rent Contractual Agreements for land leases including five contracts with Indian companies. All these contracts specified that the companies were to ensure that environmental impact assessments were undertaken and submitted to the authorities shortly after assuming operations and that the investors would otherwise abide by current Ethiopian conservation laws. They did not specify who exactly would undertake the environmental impact assessments, the quality and scope of such assessments and transparency of the process by which they are to be undertaken. Regarding water usage, each of the five contracts specified that the companies had the right to build dams, water boreholes and irrigation systems as they see fit. Only the smallest contract for Verdanta Harvests PLc.?s tea plantation did not mention water rights. Interestingly, only the biggest contract for Karuturi Agro Products Plc. included the additional clause that the company also had the right to ?use irrigation water from rivers or ground water.? However, there was no mention of payment for this water usage, the quantity of water to be used and over what period of time.

All five contracts stated that the Indian companies have the ?right?- not the obligation- to provide power, health clinics, schools, etc. It was not specified to whom these services might be provided ?the local population or just the company workers. Yet, the provision of such facilities had been a high-profile claim made earlier by the government as to why the investors should be allowed to undertake these projects. None of the five contracts of the Indian companies mentioned labour laws or specified any wages or working conditions for their local employees. Nor did the contracts seem to justify the claim made by the companies and government regarding the increase in agricultural productivity and transfer of such new technologies to local farmers. If the omission suggests that the Indian companies alone shall retain the higher value technology, it is unclear how this will help local farmers in Ethiopia in the future.

Indian government's role play

Following a 2009 visit by Namibian President Hifikepunye Pohamba, the then Minister for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor said: ?We are now in talks with Namibia after their President's visit, to use land for our purposes.?

At the sixth Agriwatch Global Pulses Summit in New Delhi in 2010, India's Food and Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar asked the delegates to ponder over the ?viability of Indians leasing land abroad for growing pulses and exporting it back to India.?

Both these statements point towards India's objective to ensure food security by acquiring land in lesser developed countries. The Indian government acts as a facilitator to the whole process rather than the main player. It is supporting the conventional new greenfield foreign direct investments, merger and acquisition purchases of existing firms; public-private partnerships ; specific tariff reductions on agricultural goods imported to India through the negotiation of regional bilateral trade and investment treaties and double taxation (avoidance) agreements.

Another major way the Indian government has financially facilitated the process is by giving concessional lines of credit to various developing country governments, banks, and financial institutions, as well as to regional financial institutions, through the Indian Export- Import (Exim) Bank. Often such lines of credit are for the purpose of national development projects and where these projects involve agricultural development, Indian foreign investors stand ready to win concessions and contracts for agricultural development in the form of their foreign direct investment.

The largest single line of credit approved by the Exim Bank so far has gone to Ethiopia ($ 640 million) for its Tindaho Sugar Project and it is also widely expected to facilitate Indian investments. The soft loans, with an annual interest rate of 1.75 per cent, are to be repaid over 20 years.

In trade policy, a number of economic incentives such as duty-free tariff preference schemes have been put in place by the Indian government in order to encourage private companies to invest in land abroad. For example, Ethiopian farm produce entering Indian markets is now taxed less than produce from India, according to Anand Seth, the deputy director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations.

The defence put up by companies

Indian companies reject their characterisation as neo-colonials and insist they are just doing business. Many companies claim the land acquisitions are simply strategies for their expansion and vertical integration. Raju Poosapati, the vice president of India's Yes Bank, which advises Indian investors in Africa, said a government ban on non-Basmati rice exports had driven Indian companies to go abroad in order to be able to grow and sell it in global markets.

Karuturi Global Ltd. clarified that it pays its workers at least Ethiopia?s minimum wage of 8 birr, and abides by Ethiopia?s labour and environmental laws. Speaking to Bloomberg, Sai Ramakrishna Karuturi, founder and head of Karuturi Global Ltd., said, ?We have to be very, very cognisant of the fact that we are dealing with people who are easily exploitable,? adding that the company will create up to 20,000 jobs and has plans to build a hospital, a cinema, a school and a day-care center in the settlement. ?We?re going to have a very healthy township that we will build. We are creating jobs where there were none,? he said. However, Metho says so far there has been no sign or mention of any of this according to reports from the local people.

The situation seems quite similar to what foreign corporates are doing in tribal areas of Orissa and Chattisgarh in India. Metho believes a close coordination between Indian and African activists can help serve the cause of marginalised communities in both the worlds.

The research report ?India?s Role in the New Global Farmland Grab? can be accessed here

Source: http://farmlandgrab.org/post/view/19793

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Rhapsody president shaves head to mark 1M subscribers milestone

Rhapsody

"Before" and "after" pictures of Rhapsody President Jon Irwin, who vowed to shave his head if the company reached a milestone of 1 million paying subscribers in the U.S.

Rhapsody President Jon Irwin vowed to shave his head if the Seattle digital music company reached a milestone: 1 million paying subscribers in the U.S.

And today, Irwin is sporting a chrome dome.

Rhapsody?

"We've accomplished quite a bit over the past decade, so it's no small statement to say that 2011 was probably our biggest year yet," Irwin said. "I told our team that when we topped one million paid subscribers, I'd shave my head ... it was probably the best free haircut I've ever had."

Rhapsody?s music subscription service lets users stream unlimited music online or download tunes to listen to offline. The company?s library has more than 13 million songs and a subscription costs $10 a month.

In February 2010, Rhapsody was spun off by its parent companies, RealNetworks?

FOLLOW the Puget Sound Business Journal on Twitter @PSBJ and on Facebook |

Rhapsody President Jon Irwin vowed to shave his head if the Seattle digital music company reached a milestone: 1 million paying subscribers in the U.S.

And today, Irwin is sporting a chrome dome.

Rhapsody?

"We've accomplished quite a bit over the past decade, so it's no small statement to say that 2011 was probably our biggest year yet," Irwin said. "I told our team that when we topped one million paid subscribers, I'd shave my head ... it was probably the best free haircut I've ever had."

Rhapsody?s music subscription service lets users stream unlimited music online or download tunes to listen to offline. The company?s library has more than 13 million songs and a subscription costs $10 a month.

In February 2010, Rhapsody was spun off by its parent companies, RealNetworks?

FOLLOW the Puget Sound Business Journal on Twitter @PSBJ and on Facebook | Click here to sign up for the PSBJ Daily Update.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bizj_national/~3/FlmwVUqp6eA/rhapsody-hits-1m-milestone-co.html

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Mitt Romney Wants to Deport President Obama's Uncle Omar


GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney says he would deport President Barack Obama's uncle, who authorities say was arrested in August for DUI near Boston.

Onyango "Omar" Obama is, allegedly, an illegal immigrant.

In an interview with Boston radio host Howie Carr, Romney said "yes" when asked if "Uncle Omar" should be deported. Romney at first did not recognize the name, and was far from incendiary about it, saying simply that U.S. immigration laws should be enforced.

Take a listen to the exchange:

Onyango Obama is the 67-year-old half-brother of the commander-in-chief's late father, Barack Obama, Sr. His case is pending in Framingham, Mass., District Court.

He was initially held without bail by immigration officials on allegations he violated an official order to return Kenya issued 20 years ago but has since been released.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/mitt-romney-wants-to-deport-president-obamas-uncle-omar/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Netflix CEO's stock options slashed after bad year (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? Netflix CEO Reed Hastings will pay a $1.5 million penalty for blunders that alienated the video subscription service's customers and pulverized its stock.

The punishment will be delivered with a 50 percent reduction in his stock option awards next year, according to regulatory documents filed Thursday. Instead of the $3 million stock option allowance he received this year, Hastings will get $1.5 million in 2012. His base salary will remain unchanged at $500,000.

It would have been difficult to make a case for giving Hastings a raise coming off a year in which his decisions transformed Netflix from Wall Street darling to bum. The company's stock price plunged, and subscribers fled in a rebellion against a U.S. price increase of as much as 60 percent. The aftershocks of the subscriber exodus are expected to saddle Netflix with a net loss next year, the first time that has happened in a decade.

Netflix Inc. declined to comment on the changes to Hastings' compensation.

Hastings has repeatedly taken the blame for mismanaging the announcement of the price increase in July and then making things worse two months later by trying to spin off Netflix's DVD-by-mail rental service into a separate website called Qwikster. Since scrapping that idea in October, Hastings has been trying to repair some of the damage.

That will probably take a while. Netflix's stock price has plunged 75 percent since mid-July to wipe out $12 billion in shareholder wealth. The backlash surprised and humbled Hastings, who revealed at an investor conference this month that he once thought Netflix's stock would hit $1,000. Netflix's stock gained $2.87 Thursday to close at $73.84, down from its July high of just under $305.

The stock's downfall elicited some gallows humor from Hastings on his Facebook page. "In Wyoming with 10 investors at a ranch/retreat. I think I might need a food taster," Hastings posted two days after announcing his Qwikster plan.

Hastings' missteps also have cost Netflix at least 800,000 subscribers. That's how many customers Netflix lost during the July-September period. Netflix has said the exodus extended into October and November, though it isn't providing specifics until it reports fourth-quarter earnings next month.

Some analysts have suggested Netflix should consider rescinding at least part of its price increase, but Hastings has brushed aside the notion so far. At the investor conference, he predicted his bad moves will eventually forgotten if Netflix's service for streaming video over high-speed Internet connections keeps growing throughout the world as DVDs slowly fade into obsolescence.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_hi_te/us_netflix_executive_compensation

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What The EPA Just Did (Balloon Juice)

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Proposals for Commercial Space Shuttles Revealed (ContributorNetwork)

NASASpaceFlight.com is reporting a deal to fly the space shuttles Atlantis and Endeavour commercially has fallen through, ending the last attempt to save what remains of the shuttle orbiter fleet from being museum pieces.

But enough of a business case has been made for a commercial version of the shuttle, with its unique capabilities, that the group of investors who proposed to commercialize the existing shuttles now propose to build a new version of the shuttle for commercial use.

How would have the commercialized space shuttle worked?

There have been schemes to fly a space shuttle orbiter commercially since the 1980s, most recently earlier this year by United Space Alliance, according to MSNBC. Each attempt has failed on one sticking point or another, including the cost of operating a shuttle safely, NASA's role in a commercial space shuttle, and commercial markets for a shuttle.

The latest attempt, led by Kevin Holleran, a London businessman, would not have involved any money from NASA, which would have been a show stopper with NASA's plate filled and budget limited. Private money would have been used to refurbish the two orbiters, start up production lines of solid rocket boosters and external tanks, and to revamp processing facilities. The orbiters would start flying against with one flight at the end of 2014, ramping up to four a year in 2017. The cost of operating the shuttles commercially would be much less than had been under NASA's stewardship.

What finally caused the commercial shuttle deal to fall through?

The show stopper for this effort seems to have been the fact NASA had already started to repurpose its various facilities, such as the launch pads from which the shuttles had taken off, for the heavy lift Space Launch System. The effort might have worked out had it been started a year before, but by the time it became a serious proposition it was too late.

What do the investors propose to do now?

Thanks to marketing research by Mary Lynne Dittmar of Dittmar Associates, the investors are confident that a market exists for a space craft with the shuttle's capabilities. These capabilities go beyond just the ability to lift mass to low Earth orbit. They include a large crew, a payload bay, airlocks, and a remote manipulator arm that could be used to deploy satellites and assemble structures in space.

Therefore the investors propose to build an entirely new shuttle, using 21st century technology, that will have many if not all of the capabilities of the venerable NASA space shuttles that had flown for 30 years. If "Shuttle 2.0" could be made to fly cheaply enough and often enough, the full commercial potential of space shuttles could be realized decades after they were first proposed during the Nixon administration.

Mark R. Whittington is the author of Children of Apollo and The Last Moonwalker. He has written on space subjects for a variety of periodicals, including The Houston Chronicle, The Washington Post, USA Today, the L.A. Times and The Weekly Standard.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111220/sc_ac/10714089_proposals_for_commercial_space_shuttles_revealed

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Iraq oil security tested as U.S. forces withdraw (Reuters)

BAGHDAD (Reuters) ? A bombing of southern Iraqi crude pipelines despite a nationwide alert against a possible surge in insurgent attacks has heightened fears for the future security of Iraq's vital oil sector as American troops withdraw.

The oil hub city of Basra, which handles the bulk of the OPEC member's oil exports, has generally seen fewer attacks this year than other cities in the country.

But militants have stepped up assaults over the past months and bombed oil installations despite tight security, testing the ability of Iraqi security forces to halt attacks nearly nine years after the U.S. invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

On Tuesday, three bombs hit a pipeline network that transports crude from Iraq's southern oilfields to storage tanks around Basra, igniting a fire and disrupting output at the Rumaila field, the workhorse of Iraq's oil industry.

"Increased violence directly or indirectly affecting the oil industry is the main risk and unknown in all assumptions, as the impact on projects from a strong deterioration naturally could be massive," said Samuel Ciszuk, a consultant at KBC.

Protecting Iraqi oil reserves, the world's fourth largest, is crucial to Baghdad's plans to rebuild a shattered economy after years of war and economic sanctions, and its desire to become a top producer once again to rival Saudi Arabia.

Oil firms are awarding tenders for work in their fields to reach the production targets they have set after signing a dozen deals in Iraq that could quadruple output capacity to Saudi levels of 12 million barrels per day.

As Washington prepares to end its military presence by December 31, Iraqi officials say the American pullout will not affect oil security because U.S. troops have not been involved in protecting oilfields since 2005.

But Tuesday's attack occurred despite an increase in oil police patrols to protect installations against a possible surge in al Qaeda violence before the U.S. withdrawal.

"There is direct targeting of the oil sector ... By the start of the withdrawal there will be attacks not just on oil, but they (insurgents) will try to unsettle the situation in the country," Major General Hamid Ibrahim, head of Iraq's energy protection told Reuters.

VIOLENCE EASES BUT OIL SITES STILL TARGETED

Overall violence in Iraq has dropped since the peak of sectarian killings in 2006-07, and the Shi'ite Muslim south, where most oil output occurs, is relatively calm. But attacks remain common and militants still target oil infrastructure.

The Iraq-Turkey pipeline in the north, which carries around a quarter of Iraq's oil exports, is regularly hit by sabotage, usually blamed on al Qaeda and former members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath party.

In early June, bombs were planted atop four crude depots of the Zubair 1 storage facility in Basra, setting ablaze one tank.

Zubair is surrounded by tight security and visitors pass three checkpoints to reach the site. Yet the bombers managed to plant four bombs without being seen by guards.

Tuesday's attack on the oil pipelines was in the same area of Zubair, according to security officials in Basra who said the bombers could have been had inside help.

Diplomatic sources said they believed disputes between the oil workers union and the state-run South Oil Co were behind June's attack, but did not dispel fears insurgents could turn their sights on foreign oil firms after the U.S. withdrawal.

Iraqi officials, however, say there have been no indications that oil firms could come into the crosshairs of insurgents.

"Foreign companies were and are still working in Iraq... There have been some incidents in Basra but they did not target the oil companies specifically," the deputy prime minister for energy affairs, Hussain al-Shahristani, told Reuters.

But Shahristani said Iraq still needed the Americans' help to protect its offshore oil platforms and export pipelines.

The Iraqi navy took over responsibility this year for guarding Iraq's 35 square-nautical-mile-slice of the Gulf and offshore oil export terminals -- the nation's economic lifeline.

More than once this past summer, neighboring Iran sent a fast boat into Iraqi Gulf waters, testing its defenses. Iraqi forces chased the intruders away without escalating tensions.

Competitive oil development in Iraq, however, could increase friction with Iran, OPEC's No. 2 producer, and lure potential foreign investment away from Iraq's neighbors.

The Iraqis can get by for basic security with the training and equipment they have now, said a U.S. military official involved in trained the Iraqi navy since 2004.

"They can do the basics with what they have," the official said. "But if the Iranians came with their ships and missiles, they can't match up."

JITTERS

Foreign investors who ventured into the country's promising energy sector were already on edge before the latest attacks.

On November 24, three bombs tore through a busy market in Basra, a day before a major energy conference, killing 19 people.

After the bombing, local officials said they believed the attack had targeted the country's oil sector ahead of the U.S. withdrawal to undermine Iraq's potential economic power.

Oil majors ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell and ENI, who already work in Iraq, steered clear, leaving their booths empty during the three-day conference.

A day later, a bomb threat at the conference sent foreign executives fleeing. A suspected bomb was found in a car parked outside the venue and police said it was a false alarm.

But an Iraqi security source said an alert had been sent by Iraqi intelligence and security services to security contractors to get executives out of the meeting as it might get targeted.

Local Iraqi officials blamed the incident on neighboring countries with a competitive interest in limiting Iraq's oil growth. Basra, Iraq's major port, sits near Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait - all major oil exporters.

"Every time Basra moves a step ahead they want to push it back a mile," a senior Basra police officer said.

"This oil and gas conference was like a sword on the Gulf's neck, because major companies are coming here to invest instead of going to their countries."

(Additional reporting by Aref Mohammed; Edited by Patrick Markey and Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/wl_nm/us_iraq_oil_security

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