Tuesday, 30 July 2013

On rooftops, a rival for utilities

energy

13 hours ago

Panels in the Deer Valley section of Phoenix. Utilities say the subsidies given to solar-minded homeowners are too generous.

Joshua Lott for The New York Times

Panels in the Deer Valley section of Phoenix. Utilities say the subsidies given to solar-minded homeowners are too generous.

For years, power companies have watched warily as solar panels have sprouted across the nation?s rooftops. Now, in almost panicked tones, they are fighting hard to slow the spread.

Alarmed by what they say has become an existential threat to their business, utility companies are moving to roll back government incentives aimed at promoting solar energy and other renewable sources of power. At stake, the companies say, is nothing less than the future of the American electricity industry.

According to the Energy Information Administration, rooftop solar electricity ? the economics of which often depend on government incentives and mandates ? accounts for less than a quarter of 1 percent of the nation?s power generation.

And yet, to hear executives tell it, such power sources could ultimately threaten traditional utilities? ability to maintain the nation?s grid.

?We did not get in front of this disruption,? Clark Gellings, a fellow at the Electric Power Research Institute, a nonprofit arm of the industry, said during a panel discussion at the annual utility convention last month. ?It may be too late.?

Advocates of renewable energy ? not least solar industry executives who stand to get rich from the transformation ? say such statements are wildly overblown. For now, they say, the government needs to help make the economics of renewable power work for ordinary Americans. Without incentives, the young industry might wither ? and with it, their own potential profits.

The battle is playing out among energy executives, lawmakers and regulators across the country.

In Arizona, for example, the country?s second-largest solar market, the state?s largest utility is pressuring the Arizona Corporation Commission, which sets utility rates, to reconsider a generous residential credit and impose new fees on customers, months after the agency eliminated a commercial solar incentive. In North Carolina, Duke Energy is pushing to institute a new set of charges for solar customers as well.

Nowhere, though, is the battle more heated than in California, home to the nation?s largest solar market and some of the most aggressive subsidies. The outcome has the potential to set the course for solar and other renewable energies for decades to come.

At the heart of the fight is a credit system called net metering, which pays residential and commercial customers for excess renewable energy they sell back to utilities. Currently, 43 states, the District of Columbia and four territories offer a form of the incentive, according to the Energy Department.

Some keep the credit in line with the wholesale prices that utilities pay large power producers, which can be a few cents a kilowatt-hour. But in California, those payments are among the most generous because they are tied to the daytime retail rates customers pay for electricity, which include utility costs for maintaining the grid.

California?s three major utilities estimate that by the time the subsidy program fills up under its current limits, they could have to make up almost $1.4 billion a year in revenue lost to solar customers, and shift that burden to roughly 7.6 million nonsolar customers ? an extra $185 a year if evenly spread. Some studies cited by solar advocates have shown, though, that the credit system can result in a net savings for the utilities.

Utilities in California have appealed to lawmakers and regulators to reduce the credits and limit the number of people who can participate. It has been an uphill fight.

About a year ago, the utilities pushed regulators to keep the amount of rooftop solar that would qualify for the net metering program at a low level; instead, regulators effectively raised it. Still, the utilities won a concession from the Legislature, which ordered the California Public Utilities Commission to conduct a study to determine the costs and benefits of rooftop solar to both customers and the power grid with an eye toward retooling the policy.

Edward Randolph, director of the commission?s energy division, said that the study, due in the fall, was a step toward figuring out how to make the economics work for customers who want to install solar systems as well as for the nonsolar customers and the utilities. The commission wants to ensure, he said, that, ?we aren?t creating a system that 15 years from now has the utility going, ?We don?t have customers anymore but we still have an obligation to provide a distribution system ? how do we do that?? ?

The struggle over the California incentives is only the most recent and visible dust-up as many utilities cling to their established business, and its centralized distribution of energy, until they can figure out a new way to make money. It is a question the Obama administration is grappling with as well as it promotes the integration of more renewable energy into the grid.

Utility executives have watched disruptive technologies cause businesses in other industries to founder ? just as cellphones upended the traditional land-based telephone business, producing many a management shake-up ? and they want to stay ahead of a fundamental shift in the way electricity is bought, sold and delivered.

?I see an opportunity for us to recreate ourselves, just like the telecommunications industry did,? Michael W. Yackira, chief executive of NV Energy, a Nevada utility, and chairman of the industry group the Edison Electric Institute, said at the group?s convention.

The fight in California has become increasingly public, with the two sides releasing reports and counter-reports. A group of fast-growing young companies that install rooftop systems, including SolarCity, Sungevity, Sunrun and Verengo, recently formed their own lobbying group, the Alliance for Solar Choice, to battle efforts to weaken the subsidies and credit systems.

They have good reason. In California, as intended, net metering has proved a strong draw for customers. From 2010 to 2012, the amount of solar installed each year has increased by 160 percent, almost doubling the amount of electricity that rooftop systems can make, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. With federal tax credits and a rebate program for installation costs under the California Solar Initiative phasing out, determining how much to pay customers has become even more critical.

?Net metering right now is the only way for customers to get value for their rooftop solar systems,? said Adam Browning, executive director of the advocacy group Vote Solar.

Mr. Browning and other proponents say that solar customers deserve fair payment not only for the electricity they transmit but for the value that smaller, more dispersed power generators give to utilities. Making more power closer to where it is used, advocates say, can reduce stress on the grid and make it more reliable, as well as save utilities from having to build and maintain more infrastructure and large, centralized generators.

But utility executives say that when solar customers no longer pay for electricity, they also stop paying for the grid, shifting those costs to other customers. Utilities generally make their profits by making investments in infrastructure and designing customer rates to earn that money back with a guaranteed return, set on average at about 10 percent.

?If the costs to maintain the grid are not being borne by some customers, then other customers have to bear a bigger and bigger portion,? said Steve Malnight, a vice president at Pacific Gas and Electric. ?As those costs get shifted, that leads to higher and higher rates for customers who don?t take advantage of solar.?

Utility executives call this a ?death spiral.? As utilities put a heavier burden on fewer customers, it increases the appeal for them to turn their roofs over to solar panels.

A handful of utilities have taken a different approach and are instead getting into the business of developing rooftop systems themselves. Dominion, for example, is running a pilot program in Virginia in which it leases roof space from commercial customers and installs its own panels to study the benefits of a decentralized generation.

Last month, Clean Power Finance, a San Francisco-based start-up that provides financial services and software to the rooftop solar industry, announced that it had backing from Duke Energy and other utilities, including Edison International. And in May, NextEra Energy Resources bought Smart Energy Capital, a commercial solar developer.

But those are exceptions.

?The next six to 12 months are the watershed moment for distributed energy in this country,? said Edward Fenster, a chief executive of Sunrun, adding that if their side prevailed in California and Arizona, it would dissuade utilities with net metering programs elsewhere from undoing them. ?If we don?t succeed, the opposite will be the case and in two years we?ll be fighting 41 of these battles.?

This story was originally published on July 29, 2013 in The New York Times under the headline, "On rooftops, a rival for utilities."

Copyright ? 2013 The New York Times

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2f4d8660/sc/31/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Crooftops0Erival0Eutilities0E6C10A784196/story01.htm

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Gifts For Gamers: Fluxx , Fluxx The Board Game, & Other Looney ...

GIFTS FOR GAMERS?-?A weekly column at?Cold's Gold Factory?that focuses on bringing you some of the coolest gifts for gamers of all types. Remember to check back here for ideas for Gamer Birthday Gifts, Stocking Stuffers for Gamers, and Gamer Christmas Ideas.

Fluxx Games From Looney Labs


FLUXX is one of my favorite family friendly table-top card games and I've featured it in an earlier Gifts For Gamers post on my Top 5 Table-Top Card Games. ?Fluxx is an awesome card game because it is super fun, easy to learn, appeals to gamers of all different types, and can be played by the whole family. ?Fluxx is a game of ever changing rules, which keeps the games feeling fresh and makes the entire Fluxx line have a nice replay value for years. ?There is a version of Fluxx made for everyone:
  1. Fluxx 4.0
  2. Star Fluxx
  3. Zombie Fluxx
  4. Pirate Fluxx
  5. Family Fluxx
  6. Monty Python Fluxx
  7. Oz Fluxx
  8. Cthulhu Fluxx
  9. Eco-Fluxx
  10. Martian Fluxx

Looney Labs Launches Fluxx the Board Game


And now Looney Labs has just released the first ever FLUXX Board Game, which looks to be a ton of fun too! ?Check out the video below for a preview on the new Fluxx board game.

From the Manufacturer


The board game that's all about change: changing rules, changing goals and now changing tiles. Occupy the right tile spaces to claim the current goal and reveal the next goal. getting you one step closer to victory.

Product Description


It's more strategic than the original card game and delivers everything you'd expect from a name like Fluxx; The Board Game.The ever-shifting landscape is made of tiles that can be rotated or uprooted elsewhere on the table.Ti win, players must position their pieces on places shown on goal cards.Victory requires accomplishing several goals but the exact number needed is subject to change!Rule changes are tracked on a comprehensive new game board.It's a game about change where everything can change - from the rules to the gameboard to the color of your pieces!

Other Fun Games From Looney Labs

Looney Labs creatures a large variety of really fun games. ?I've played a lot of their games and have enjoyed every game of theirs that I've played. ?Andy Looney and his wife are both super cool and friendly people who I met at one of the Origins Conventions. ?Any convention that I've been to I always look for the Looney Labs room to hang out and try out their new games. ?I recommend the same, if you are lucky enough to attend a gaming convention where Looney Labs is attending also.

Here are a few more of their games that you may be interested in checking out.

  1. Ice Dice
  2. Looney Pyramids
  3. Chrononauts
  4. Treehouse
  5. Are You A Werewolf?

Source: http://coldsgoldfactory.blogspot.com/2013/07/gifts-for-gamers-fluxx-board-game-looney-labs.html

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Monday, 29 July 2013

The New York Times' Nick Bilton describes "a day in the life" of his iPhone

The New York Times' Nick Bilton describes 'a day in the life' of his iPhone

Have you ever thought about how often you pick up your iPhone and use it to perform some task or another? That's exactly what Nick Bilton, tech columnist at The New York Times, did for a story published today. Bilton's post follows his iPhone app usage throughout a typical day.

Bilton begins his day with the Walk Up! alarm clock app, then spends the rest of the day grabbing information from a variety of free and paid apps. At the end of the day, he may read a few articles from Instapaper, use the Kindle app to read a book, or use Apple's Remote app to control his Apple TV before going to bed.

It's a fascinating look at one blogger's iPhone app usage throughout a day, and an indication of just how much we've come to depend on our smartphones.


Share

Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2013/07/29/the-new-york-times-nick-bilton-describes-a-day-in-the-life-of/

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Sunday, 28 July 2013

India-Pakistan composite dialogue to restart in August

NEW DELHI: The stalled Indo-Pak composite dialogue process is all set to restart in August with Islamabad proposing dates for water secretary level talks ? meant to address the Wullar Barrage issue ? and New Delhi "actively considering it". Pakistan, in fact, has also proposed a meeting between the two foreign secretaries but, as diplomatic sources confirmed, only after talks over water and Sir Creek issues are held.

The dialogue process with Pakistan was thrown off the track by the January ceasefire violations which led to killings of both Indian and Pakistani soldiers. The water talks that were to be held in late January were the first casualty of the impasse that followed. India decided to postpone the talks saying that its water resources secretary was retiring and instead proposed that the dialogue be held in March.

The postponement came days after then Pakistani commerce minister Makhdoom Fahim called off his visit to India. "There are some proposals from Pakistan for the resumption of dialogue and dates are being worked out through diplomatic channels," said an Indian government source.

Pakistan for water talks

Diplomatic sources said Pakistan has sent a list of dates to India for all government-level dialogues which are to be held in Islamabad. Pakistan wants the water talks to be held in the last week of August and Sir Creek in mid-September. It has also said that foreign secretaries could meet in October to take stock of the overall situation. It has suggested that PM Manmohan Singh could visit Pakistan around the same time to further bolster the peace process.

Indian government sources said there is no questioning of not responding favourably to the proposals by Islamabad as India has already agreed to a meeting between PM Manmohan Singh and his counterpart Nawaz Sharif on the sidelines of UNGA in New York late September.

Sharif's special advisor on foreign affairs Sartaz Aziz had proposed in a meeting with foreign minister Salman Khurshid that the two PMs meet in New York to fast track the CBMs and composite dialogue process. Speaking after Aziz, Khurshid had said India was looking forward to meetings between the various joint working groups in July itself.

The list of dates for talks is yet another initiative by Islamabad to put the peace process firmly back on track after the victory of Sharif in the recent general elections. Sharif maintained throughout his election campaign that he wanted to repair ties with India. While he insisted after taking over that Singh keep his long standing promise to visit Pakistan, Sharif accommodated his counterpart's reluctance to go there by proposing that the two meet in New York for the time being.

The Pakistani PM then went ahead and appointed former Pakistan foreign secretary Shaharyar Khan as his special envoy for reviving the track II dialogue process with India.

Source: http://timesofindia.feedsportal.com/c/33039/f/533964/s/2f3e170b/sc/2/l/0Ltimesofindia0Bindiatimes0N0Cindia0CIndia0EPakistan0Ecomposite0Edialogue0Eto0Erestart0Ein0EAugust0Carticleshow0C214136860Bcms/story01.htm

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Starbucks sales in China surge

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Starbucks is selling a lot more coffee in China. According to its latest quarterly report, Starbucks saw a 30% year-over-year jump in revenues from its Asia-Pacific region, lifted by outstanding sales in China.

"The very strong sales volumes prove that the coffee concept can succeed in traditional tea-drinking countries," said R J Hottovy, director of consumer equity research at Morningstar, Inc. "It's resonating very well with [inland] cities."

Starbucks' solid sales growth in the region was driven by the 500 new stores it opened in China last year, and its Chinese expansion plans aren't slowing down.

The Seattle-based coffee giant said it plans to open its thousandth store in China by the end the year. In addition to already being in major cities like Beijing and Shanghai, the company says its stores will have penetrated lesser-known cities. By 2014, Starbucks said China will surpass Canada to become the second largest market, after the United States.

In the last five years, overall retail coffee sales in China climbed by 10%, beating growth in Hong Kong, Japan and the 3% global average, according to data from research company Euromonitor International.
Starbucks said its marketing strategy in China is similar to that of its Western markets. It continues to focus on its core food and beverage products while also offering other locally oriented choices.

"The demographics they are targeting are younger and more affluent groups," Hottovy said.
Starbucks opened its first store in Taipei in 1998, followed by its first mainland China store in Beijing in 1999. But the coffee shop market is beginning to heat up. "Increasing competition will be the most pressing issue as more Western coffee brands enter the Chinese market," he said.

In 2012, an average Chinese person consumed about two cups of coffee per year. That's a far cry from the global average of 134 cups a year, according to Euromonitor. Coffee has less than 1% of the Chinese hot-drink market share. By contrast, tea makes up 54% of the market.

"It's still too early to say that coffee is going to replace tea, or that the Chinese flavor profile is changing," said Dana LaMendola, analyst of hot drinks at Euromonitor.

? & ? 2013 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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Source: http://www.wptv.com/dpp/news/world/starbucks-sales-in-china-surge

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Saturday, 27 July 2013

Welwyn Garden City pub fun day to raise money for cancer patients

By Helen Wright, Reporter Friday, July 26, 2013
5:38 PM

A PUB fun day to raise money for two ladies suffering from cancer will take place in Welwyn Garden City tomorrow (Saturday).

To send a link to this page to a friend, you must be logged in.

The event will take place at the Hollybush Pub in Hollybush Lane and has been organised by Donna Dudley, Dionne Appleyard and Becca Singleton.

There will be a bouncy castle, face painting, bingo, children?s karaoke competition and loads more to keep everyone of all ages entertained.

In the evening there will be a raffle with prizes which have been donated by local shops ands businesses.

The money will then be donated to Lily Appleyard and Julie Dudley who are fighting the illness.

Donna said: ?We just wanted to raise some money to make things a bit easier for them.

?They can?t work at the moment so even if we could just raise enough so they can just have a nice day out that would be great.?

The fun day starts at noon, to find out more information call 01707 371582.

Source: http://www.herts24.co.uk/welwyn_garden_city_pub_fun_day_to_raise_money_for_cancer_patients_1_2302052

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New inductees to enter Baseball Hall of Fame

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. ? One created baseball?s foremost dynasty, one transformed the role of the men in blue, and one notched the first hit in the first professional game.

That?s the impressive legacy of baseball pioneers Jacob Ruppert, Hank O?Day and James ?Deacon? White, who are finally about to receive the recognition they deserve ? induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

The three men represent the Class of 2013 and they?ve all been dead for more than 70 years, making Sunday?s festivities something out of the ordinary. For only the second time in 42 years, baseball writers failed to elect anyone to the Hall of Fame, sending a firm signal that stars of the Steroids Era ? including Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa, and Roger Clemens, who didn?t even come close in their first year of eligibility ? will be judged in a different light.

?When December rolled around and the ballots were out for completion, it started to dawn on us that there was a better-than-likely chance that the writers might not come to a 75 per cent vote on anyone this year,? said Hall of Fame president Jeff Idelson. ?Disappointed? Yes, because we feel there are candidates on the ballot who certainly deserved consideration. But surprised? No.?

Approval on 75 per cent of returned ballots is needed for induction, and with pitchers Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine and slugger Frank Thomas eligible for the first time next year, Bonds, Sosa and Clemens figure to be on the outside looking in for a long while.

?I believe that this past year was an aberration ? the first real ballot with some uncertainty among how the voters feel about some of the candidates on it,? Idelson said. ?But looking forward, we don?t believe that this is the norm.?

One thing remains constant ? the awards for those who have chronicled the game. Longtime Philadelphia Daily News writer Paul Hagen will be honoured with the J.G. Taylor Spink Award and the family of late Toronto Blue Jays broadcaster Tom Cheek will be given the Ford C. Frick Award in a ceremony on Saturday at Doubleday Field. Dr. Frank Jobe, whose groundbreaking surgery on pitcher Tommy John has evolved into a game-changing medical procedure, also will be honoured.

The Baseball Writers? Association of America last failed to elect a player in 1971, when former New York Yankees great Yogi Berra fell just short. Back then, the Veterans Committee selected Dave Bancroft, Jake Beckley, Chick Hafey, Harry Hooper, Joe Kelley, Rube Marquard, Satchel Paige and George Weiss.

This time, the 16-member Pre-Integration Era Committee dug deep into the archives to elect an owner, an umpire, and a player who had significant roles in baseball?s earliest decades.

Ruppert, who was born in Manhattan in 1867, went to work for his father in the family brewing business instead of attending college. He also fashioned a military career, rising to the rank of colonel in the National Guard, and served four terms in Congress from 1899-1907 before becoming president of the Jacob Ruppert Brewing Co. upon the death of his father in 1915.

Interested in baseball since he was a kid, Ruppert and Tillinghast Huston purchased the Yankees prior to the 1915 season for $480,000, then proceeded to transform what had been a perennial also-ran in the American League into a powerhouse.

Miller Huggins was hired as manager soon after Ruppert gained control of the franchise, and Ruppert then snared Babe Ruth in a 1919 trade with the Boston Red Sox, a deal that changed the dynamics of the sport. Four years later, Ruppert had Yankee Stadium constructed and ?The House That Ruth Built? became baseball?s mecca. Ruppert also hired general manager Ed Barrow from the Red Sox in 1921, and together they won 10 AL pennants and seven World Series in 18 seasons.

O?Day was born on the rural west side of Chicago in 1859, played ball as a kid with his older brothers, and after completing his education apprenticed as a steamfitter while pitching for several local teams. He turned pro in 1884, but his arm suffered mightily in seven years of action and he retired not long after leading the New York Giants to the National League pennant in 1889 and pitching a complete game to clinch the 19th century precursor to the modern World Series.

During his playing days, O?Day umpired occasionally and was so proficient he was hired in 1895. After working a season in the minor leagues, he joined the National League in 1897 and went on to umpire more than 4,000 games. His greatest contribution to baseball was convincing everyone associated with the game to treat the men in blue with dignity. Despite repeated physical and verbal assaults from players and fans, O?Day maintained his signature code of fairness, often ignoring enormous bribes to favour the home team, and his colleagues eventually adopted his pioneering ways.

White, a barehanded catcher, was one of major league baseball?s earliest stars. In fact, he was the first batter in the first professional game on May 4, 1871, and laced a double. An outstanding hitter, White, who grew up in Caton, N.Y., near Corning, was regarded as the best catcher in baseball before switching to third base late in his nearly 20-year career.

A deeply religious man, White earned the nickname ?Deacon? and was dubbed ?the most admirable superstar of the 1870s? by Bill James in his ?Historical Baseball Extract.? A left-handed batter, White played for the Cleveland Forest Citys, Chicago White Stockings, Cincinnati Reds, Buffalo Bisons, Detroit Wolverines and Pittsburgh Alleghenys. He had a .312 batting average and accumulated 2,067 hits, 270 doubles, 98 triples, 24 home runs and 988 RBIs before retiring in 1890.

White died in 1939 in Aurora, Ill., and six years later Hall of Famer Connie Mack, a teammate of White?s in Buffalo, wrote in a letter that White merited induction.

Now, White?s special day is here, and great grandson Jerry Watkins will speak on his behalf. Dennis McNamara, a great grandnephew of O?Day, will deliver a speech on behalf of the 10th umpire to be enshrined, and Anne Vernon, great grandniece of Ruppert, will speak on behalf of the family.

Forty of the 62 living Hall of Famers are expected back and will be part of something special. Twelve men elected between 1939 and 1945 will be celebrated, and returning Hall of Famers will read the text of those players? plaques in their honour. None of those 12 inductees, which include Lou Gehrig and Rogers Hornsby, experienced a formal induction in Cooperstown.

Hall of Fame weekend is the bread-and-butter moment of the year for local business owners, who count on a substantial influx of fans to help make ends meet. A record crowd of over 70,000 descended on this one-stoplight village six years ago for the induction ceremony honouring Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn.

?It was crazy busy,? said Sherrie Kingsley, who with her husband operates The Inn at Cooperstown. ?It was an overwhelming amount of people for our village, but we were expecting it.?

Neither Kingsley nor Idelson is sure what to expect this time around, but they?re not too concerned. The Inn is booked as usual, and Main Street has been bustling.

?Hall of Fame weekend has taken on a life of being a weekend of baseball celebration,? Idelson said. ?Is it about the inductees first and foremost? Of course. It is a celebration of them. But it?s also the biggest baseball reunion there is on the baseball calendar.

?No, our numbers we don?t believe will be as robust as with the headline names. We still feel that the weekend is going to be successful.?

Honorees to be feted on Saturday:

PAUL HAGEN: Born in East Aurora, N.Y. ? to be given the J.G. Taylor Spink Award presented by the Baseball Writers? Association of America for meritorious contributions to baseball writing. ? attended Ohio University and began his writing career in 1974 working in San Bernardino, Calif., where he covered the Los Angeles Dodgers for three years. ? also worked in the Dallas-Fort Worth area for a decade covering the Texas Rangers for the Dallas Times-Herald and Fort Worth Star-Telegram. ? worked for 25 years in Philadelphia covering the Phillies for the Philadelphia Daily News. ? currently works for MLB.com, as a national reporter focusing on the Phillies.

TOM CHEEK: Born June 13, 1939 in Pensacola, Fla. and died Oct. 9, 2005 in Oldsmar, Fla. after battling brain cancer. ? to be honoured with the 2013 Ford C. Frick Award presented annually by the Baseball Hall of Fame for excellence in baseball broadcasting. ? Toronto Blue Jays radio play-by-play man who called the team?s first 4,306 regular-season and 41 playoff games from 1977-2004 before missing a game due to illness and the death of his father. ? on Aug. 29, 2004 was honoured by the Blue Jays with his induction into the Level of Excellence, the club?s highest award for individual achievement. Cheek became just the seventh inductee and only the second member of non-uniformed personnel so honoured. ? served in the U.S. Air Force and after his discharge attended the Cambridge School of Broadcasting in Boston for two years. ? began his radio career in Plattsburgh, N.Y. as disc jockey for WEAV in 1962. ? moved to Burlington, Vt. and began calling baseball, basketball, football, and hockey for the University of Vermont. ? served as a guest announcer for the Montreal Expos from 1974-76. ? best known for his call of the Joe Carter home run in Game 6 that clinched the 1993 World Series: ?Touch ?em all Joe, you?ll never hit a bigger home run in your life.?

Honorees to be feted on Sunday:

JACOB RUPPERT JR.: born in New York City on Aug. 5, 1867 and died Jan. 13, 1939. ? became a National Guard colonel and served four terms in Congress from 1899-1907. ? started in the family brewing business and became president of the Jacob Ruppert Brewing Co. with the death of his father in 1915. ? teamed with Tillinghast Huston to purchase the New York Yankees prior to the 1915 season. ? brought in future Hall of Famers Miller Huggins as manager and Ed Barrow as general manager and purchased the contract of Babe Ruth from the Red Sox prior to the 1920 season to quickly turn an also-ran team into the game?s most prominent franchise. ? built Yankee Stadium, which opened in 1923. ? while he was the Yankees owner, the Bronx Bombers won 10 American League pennants and seven World Series. ? became the 33rd executive elected to the Hall of Fame, receiving 15 of 16 votes (93.8 per cent) from the Pre-Integration Era Committee.

JAMES LAURIE ?DEACON? WHITE: Born Dec. 7, 1847 in Caton, N.Y. and died July 7, 1939 in Aurora, Ill. ? was a brilliant bare-handed catcher during the earliest days of professional baseball. ? played in the first professional league, the National Association, which debuted in 1871, and was the first batter in the first professional game on May 4, 1871 and hit a double. ? also played for Chicago in the National League?s inaugural year of 1876 ? regarded as the best catcher in baseball before switching to third base late in his nearly 20-year career. ? played for the Cleveland Forest Citys, Chicago White Stockings, Cincinnati Reds, Buffalo Bisons, Detroit Wolverines and Pittsburgh Alleghenys. ? despite league schedules that often were limited to 70 or 80 games, batted .312 for his career, accumulating 2,067 hits, 270 doubles, 98 triples, 24 home runs and 988 RBIs before retiring in 1890. ? won two batting titles and three RBI crowns. ? didn?t drink, smoke or gamble, earning the nickname ?Deacon.? ? was dubbed ?the most admirable superstar of the 1870s? by Bill James in his ?Historical Baseball Extract.? ? received 14 of 16 votes (87.5 per cent) from the Pre-Integration Era Committee.

HENRY ?HANK? O?DAY: Born July 8, 1859, in Chicago and died July 2, 1935, in Chicago. ? played ball as a kid with his older brothers and pitched for several local teams while apprenticing as a steamfitter. ? turned pro in 1884 and fashioned a 73-100 record in seven years, also playing the outfield. ? led the New York Giants to the National League pennant in 1889 and pitched a complete game to clinch the 19th century precursor to the modern World Series. ? was hired as an umpire in 1895 and joined the NL staff two years later. .. umpired more than 4,000 games, including 10 World Series. ? called the first modern World Series in 1903. ? was the ruling umpire in the famous Cubs vs. Giants game on Sept. 23, 1908 when Chicago?s Johnny Evers tagged out New York?s Fred Merkle following what appeared to be the game-winning hit by the Giants. O?Day ruled that because Merkle had not touched second base that the force out ended the game, which was ruled a tie when the fans overran the field. The Cubs later won a re-played version of the game and captured the National League pennant. ? convinced everyone associated with the game to treat umpires with dignity. ? managed the Reds in 1912 and the Cubs in 1914 and returned to umpiring after he was replaced in both cities. ? retired in 1927 and became the NL?s special scout of umpires and players. ? the 10th umpire to be elected to the Hall of Fame.

Source: http://thechronicleherald.ca/sports/1144688-new-inductees-to-enter-baseball-hall-of-fame

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Friday, 26 July 2013

Ayurveda &/O Ashwsgandha anyone? - Health, Fitness, and Sports

I am researching safer, legal alternatives to the chemical drugs that doctors prefer to prescribe for anxiety/stress, etc.

I am in the process of modifying my physical activity and exercise. I am studying EFT(emotional freedom technique). and I have found some basic information on Ayurveda, and the herb Ashwsgandha. anyone used this? any success?

thank you.
_________________
Android and google calendar. now I never miss an appointment. If only they could help me to remember to change to appropriate attire. Its embarrassing on a subway to realize your pajama fly has unsnapped and your bunny slippers are missing an ear.

Source: http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt236247.html

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Halliburton admits destroying Gulf oil spill evidence

Halliburton has admitted ordering employees to delete computer simulations

Halliburton has admitted ordering employees to delete computer simulations about cementing of the Deepwater Horizon oil well. Photograph: Richard Carson/Reuters

Halliburton has agreed to plead guilty to destroying evidence related to the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the US department of justice said on Thursday.

The government said Halliburton's guilty plea was the third by a company over the spill and would require the world's second-largest oilfield services company to pay a maximum US$200,000 statutory fine.

Halliburton also agreed to three years' probation and to continue co-operating with the criminal probe into the 20 April 2010 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig.

Court approval of the deal is required. Houston-based Halliburton also made a separate, voluntary $55m payment to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the justice department said.

Edward Sherman, a Tulane University law professor, said the plea could suggest weakness in Halliburton's position in negotiating a settlement over spill-related liabilities. "Their willingness to plead to this may also indicate that they'd like to settle up with the federal government on the civil penalties," he said. "It may indicate a softening of their position."

Halliburton said in a statement that it pleaded guilty to the misdemeanour charge and confirmed the plea agreement's terms.

The disaster caused 11 deaths and triggered the largest US offshore oil spill following the rupture of the Macondo oil well, which was 65% owned by BP. Halliburton had earlier provided cementing services to help seal the well.

According to the government Halliburton recommended to BP that the Macondo well contain 21 centralisers ? metal collars that can improve cementing ? but BP chose to use six. The government said that during an internal probe into the cementing after the blowout Halliburton ordered workers to destroy computer simulations that showed little difference between using six and 21 centralisers.

Efforts to locate the simulations forensically were unsuccessful, the government said.

BP and Transocean Ltd, which owned the drilling rig, have previously entered guilty pleas over other aspects of the Gulf oil spill and agreed to pay respective criminal fines of $1.26bn and $400mn. Both declined to comment on the Halliburton plea.

Halliburton, BP and Transocean are also defendants in a federal civil trial that began in February to apportion blame and set damages for the oil spill.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2013/jul/26/halliburton-destroying-gulf-oil-evidence

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GM stock must nearly triple for taxpayers to break even

shares

13 hours ago

epa03732259 (FILE) A file picture dated 19 November 2008 shows flags fly outside of General Motors World Headquarters in the Renaissance Center in Det...

JEFF KOWALSKY / EPA

General Motors HQ in Detroit. The US government is divesting itself of partial ownership in the automaker after it bailed it out. But GM shares will have to nearly triple for taxpayers to break even.

The good news for shareholders is that General Motors shares are on a rise, gaining more than 25 percent in value so far this year ? and closing at $37.43 on Wednesday.

But that's not good enough for U.S. taxpayers who received 61 percent of GM's equity in exchange for a $50 billion bailout linked to the automaker?s 2009 bankruptcy. While the increase is likely to benefit the U.S. Treasury as it continues selling down its stake in the Detroit automaker, the latest report by a special federal watchdog cautions that GM shares would have to nearly triple ? to $95.51 a share ? for the government to break even.

?There?s no question that Treasury, the taxpayers, are going to lose money on the GM investment,? Special Inspector General Christy Romero told the Associated Press.

GM received $49.5 billion to complete its restructuring, a bailout initiated by former President George W. Bush in 2008 and completed by his successor, Barack Obama, in 2009 as the carmaker exited a managed bankruptcy. The White House also approved a bailout for GM?s crosstown rival, Chrysler, but only after Italian automaker Fiat stepped in and effectively assumed control.

The White House has said repeatedly that it has no interest in being in the car business. And it began selling down its stake in November 2010 when GM staged its initial public offering. Priced at $33 a share, it reduced the Treasury?s stake to 33 percent.

Late last year, the government announced plans to sell off the remaining stock by April 2014. That followed heavy pressure on the Obama Administration during the 2012 presidential campaign during which Republican candidate Mitt Romney said he would sell off the remaining stock immediately. Ironically, that would have been at a low point when GM was trading at barely $18 a share and such a move might have pushed losses on the sale to nearly $20 billion.

In recent months, as GM stock has rebounded, pushing part the November 2010 IPO price, the Treasury has accelerated its sell-off.

While some observers had worried that could actually hurt the stock price GM has been benefiting from other positive factors, such as the rebounding U.S. automotive market ? which is now approaching sales levels of 2007. GM also got a psychological boost with its recent return to the closely followed S&P 500 stock index. Because many funds are required to buy shares covered by the index, analysts believe that has boosted demand for the automaker?s stock, driving up its price.

As of June 6, the latest date covered by the Special Inspector General?s report, Washington still held 189 million shares of GM, or 14 percent of the outstanding stock.

To cover the outstanding balance as of that date ? a total of $18.1 billion, the government would need a $95.51 share price, the report noted. Were the stock to be sold at the price at that point of $36.61, it would still lose about $11.2 billion on the bailout. The escalating price could further reduce the loss but there are no indications that GM stock could come close to the point of a break-even, industry analysts warn.

The other maker to receive a bailout, Chrysler, has repeatedly said that it paid off the government in full for its rescue. That is partially true. The ?new? Chrysler that emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection has paid off the loan it received after the filing. But about $2.9 billion loaned to Chrysler before its bankruptcy filing was assigned to the ?old? Chrysler and written off as a loss.

Copyright ? 2009-2013, The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2f1e0e6f/sc/2/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cgm0Estock0Emust0Enearly0Etriple0Etaxpayers0Ebreak0Eeven0E6C10A736738/story01.htm

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Wednesday, 24 July 2013

OVERNIGHT ENERGY: The wide world of natural gas exports (geopolitics edition)

ON TAP THURSDAY: Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) headlines an event on the geopolitical impact of natural gas exports.

The topic is a hot one on Capitol Hill as lawmakers debate the effects of expanding shipments of natural gas abroad.

Melanie Kenderdine, counselor to Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, will also speak at the event, which is hosted by the Bipartisan Policy Center.

The Energy Department is currently weighing a suite of applications for natural gas exports. Some lawmakers have accused the Department of Energy of dragging its feet on the decisions.

On the geopolitical side, export proponents argue the United States could help wrest allies away from Russia, a big player in the natural gas trade. It also could help lower natural gas prices worldwide, lawmakers argue.

Some liberal Democrats, though, are skeptical of sending more natural gas overseas, arguing it would raise domestic energy prices.

Click here for more on the event.?

House action to watch: The House may debate energy-related legislation Thursday that has become a battleground over the White House increase in the "social cost of carbon." Keep watching The Hill's Floor Action blog and E2-Wire for the latest.

THE REST OF THURSDAY'S AGENDA:

Senate panel to grill Navy energy nominee

President Obama?s pick to run the Navy?s energy operations will face the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday for his confirmation hearing.

Vice Adm. Dennis McGinn (Ret.) will likely face questions from Republicans about his advocacy for renewable energy.

McGinn currently leads the American Council on Renewable Energy, and has been a proponent of the Navy?s green energy efforts.

Those renewable energy programs, such as transitioning the Navy fleet to run on more domestic biofuels and incorporating more wind and solar generation, have caught flak from Republicans who call them too expensive.

Democrats have defended the renewable energy push, saying it insulates the armed forces from oil price shocks.

House GOP to take aim at ?fracking? rule

A House Natural Resources Committee panel will hold a Thursday hearing on legislation to thwart planned Interior Department regulation of oil-and-gas ?fracking? on public lands.

Click here for the witness list and a copy of the bill.

Agency to gaze into global energy crystal ball

The federal Energy Information Administration (EIA) will unveil its latest International Energy Outlook at a press conference Thursday morning at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

It forecast examines production, consumption and other trends through 2040. EIA chief Adam Sieminski will speak at the rollout.

?The IEO2013 includes projections of world energy demand by region and primary energy source through 2040; electricity generation by energy source; and energy-related carbon dioxide emissions,? an advisory states.

?Among other topics, Mr. Sieminski will discuss EIA?s view on long-term petroleum and other liquids fuel supplies, prospects for global natural gas markets, energy demand growth among developing nations, and key uncertainties that may alter the long-term projections,? it states.

Science committee to explore coal tech

The latest forum for allegations that the White House is waging a ?war on coal? will be the House Science, Space and Technology Committee.

A panel will hold a hearing Thursday titled, ?The Future of Coal: Utilizing America?s Abundant Energy Resources.? Witnesses will include the head of the Energy Department?s (DOE) fossil energy office.

The DOE recently solicited applications for billions of dollars in loan guarantees for coal and other fossil energy projects that avoid or trap carbon emissions, and the department also does R&D into coal technologies.

But Republicans contend another agency ? the Environmental Protection Agency ? is crushing the coal industry with various existing and planned air pollution rules. Expect to hear criticism of the ?war on coal? Thursday, while Obama administration defenders say it?s low-cost natural gas ? not regulations ? that are behind coal?s woes.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:

Check out these stories that ran on E2-Wire Wednesday ...

? Obama taps former Senate energy aide for White House role

? NJ Dem Senate hopeful: 'Millions will die' from climate change

? Obama: Grow middle class to fight climate change

? Energy bills advance with House vote

? Sen. Markey, greens urge action on offshore drilling after Gulf blowout

? GOP slams EPA on ?fracking? as committee leader weighs bill

? Ex-Energy chief Chu backs Rep. Holt in NJ Senate race

? Biden, in India, calls climate change a risk to development

? Senate Dems 'disappointed' Great Lakes not mentioned in Obama climate plan

? Judge upholds SEC?s ?conflict minerals? disclosure rule

? ?Social cost of carbon? battle hits House floor

NEWS BITES:

Dems form group to promote ?sustainable coal?

Current and former Democratic lawmakers launched a group Wednesday that aims to accelerate advanced coal technologies.

The CoalBlue Project features Reps. Bill Enyart (D-Ill.) and Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.), as well as former Reps. Rick Boucher (D-Va.), Jerry Costello (D-Ill.) and Tim Holdren (D-Pa.).

The group?s formation comes as forthcoming greenhouse gas emissions regulations for power plants threaten to shutter coal-fired generators ? unless utilities install advanced technologies that are currently costly.

?As Democrats from states with proud traditions in the coal fields, we view the mission of the CoalBlue Project as essential within the broader context of national energy policy,? Rahall and Enyart said in a statement. ?A viable energy future can only be achieved with clean coal.?

House GOP bill would slash international climate funds

The House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday a spending plan that would end U.S. contributions to a pair of World Bank-administered programs: The Strategic Climate Fund and the Clean Technology Fund.

Click here for a copy of the fiscal 2014 State and Foreign Operations bill and accompanying committee report language.

Please send tips and comments to Ben Geman, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and Zack Colman, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Follow E2 on Twitter: @E2Wire, @Ben_Geman, @zcolman


Source: http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/e2-wire/313269-overnight-energy-the-wide-world-of-natural-gas-exports-geopolitics-edition

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Optimists better at regulating stress

[unable to retrieve full-text content]It's no surprise that those who tend to see a rose's blooms before its thorns are also better at handling stress. But science has failed to reliably associate optimism with individuals' biological stress response -- until now.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/mental_health/~3/G1OdSZAoB5s/130723134538.htm

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Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Sales Leads: Dos Equis,Jamba Juice, eBay, Spirit Airlines, Gain, Wendy's https:/...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/portada/posts/10153019584795024

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The Return of the 'Maverick'

There are rumblings of a great hero's return in the Senate. An old legend has been dusted off after years spent lurking in the shadows, forgotten and abandoned in favor of newer, flashier political personas. After a long wait, people are calling Sen. John McCain the "maverick" again.?

RELATED: Look Who's Feuding Now: A Map of Conservative Fingerpointing

You may have noticed John McCain at the forefront of every major Senate fight over the last few months. He helped broker the bipartisan Gang of Eight immigration reform bill that passed the Senate, and was a key hand in drumming up the 14 Republican votes required to help it pass. He was in the middle of the "nuclear option" negotiations to avoid a filibuster fight. And he won, too. On Sunday, during an appearance on CNN's State of the Union, McCain called for a review of "stand your ground" laws and praised the President's impromptu Friday speech about Trayvon Martin and race.

RELATED: Ethics Committee Would Have Considered Expelling Ensign

This recent round of McCain politicking has op-ed writers clamouring over themselves to declare that the old John McCain is back, finally. The Chicago Tribune's Jules Whitcover says "that the old maverick is back," after the Arizona senator turned into a staunch conservative to earn the 2008 Republican nomination. "The maverick is back, and this is good for America, good for the Senate and good for Republicans if they have the sense to know it, which some do but many do not,"?writes The Hill's Brent Budowsy. Other have noticed, too, like?National Journal's Chris Frates, who says "the fun, moderate, maverick is back."?

RELATED: George Will Has Some Terrible Advice for Republicans

After McCain won the nomination in 2008 and lost to Obama, he spent the following two years more or less keeping up the hard-line conservative act, to the dismay of his former fans. McCain railed against Obamacare, demanded we "complete the danged fence" on the border with Mexico, and led the unbearable search for the truth in Benghazi. He abandoned the good faith deal-making reputation that made him so popular before. But that's in the past, and the John McCain people actually like is here again.?

RELATED: Huntsman Daughters Follow in Meghan McCain's Footsteps

And Republicans should be thankful for it, according to Budowsky: "Americans widely despise Congress today, including House Republicans. They scorn the gridlock and obstruction that McCain is wisely working to end." And McCain somehow realized the same thing. People don't like Congress! "There?s a view that a reason for coming here is not to get something done but to prevent anything from getting done," McCain told?The Washington Post's Dana Milbank. McCain sees the tide shifting in Democrats favor. The Republican-held Congress has spent too long trying to stop anything from getting done and people are tired of it. McCain credited his rebirth to "be in tune with the people of Arizona," when speaking with Milbank.?

RELATED: Congress Is No Fun Anymore

And the return of the maverick, the popular model of McCain toys, has brought on a massive amount of praise for the 76-year-old Republican. "The important thing is not where McCain has been but that he?s back. He?s needed more than ever," says Milbank. The maverick's return could save the entire Republican party, if you believe some of his fans. "McCain could be the cavalry of common sense arriving to rescue his party from becoming a demographic black hole that alienates everyone except old conservative white men, and rescue the House and Senate from the black hole of historic public disapproval," says Budowsky. Or, he's just making it harder to figure out what will happen next. "And the Senate just got a lot more unpredictable," Frates says. That damn Maverick. He was always so unpredictable.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/return-maverick-143000213.html

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Verizon reveals new Droid accessories, includes SOL Republic headphones, speakers and external batteries (eyes-on)

Verizon reveals new Droid accessories, includes SOL Republic headphones, speakers and external batteries eyeson

What do you need after getting your very own Droid Mini / Ultra / Maxx? Why, accessories to go along with them, of course. Big Red introduced a slew of add-ons to accompany the newly announced phones this morning, which include cases from Speck, Incipio and Otterbox, a set of SOL Republic headphones, a SOL Republic Bluetooth speaker and matching 4,000mAh and 2,000mAh external batteries to extend the life of your just procured handsets. The speaker features something called Heist mode, which lets up to five people log on via Bluetooth. Unfortunately that's all we can share about these for now, as they've yet to announce pricing, availability or anything else for that matter. We'll be sure to share more once we have more information. To get a closer look at some of these accessories, have a peek at our eyes-on gallery below.

Zach Honig contributed to this report.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/oW0S9QKmQOg/

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Boy Inhales Blowgun Dart

A 15-year-old boy in Ohio required a visit to the emergency room after he inhaled a dart from a homemade blowgun, according to a new report of his case.

The dart lodged in the boy's airway after he inhaled deeply while holding the blowgun in his mouth. Blowguns are designed to allow darts to be propelled outward by the force of an exhaled breath. The gun mostly consists of a narrow tube.

When he arrived at the emergency room, the boy had already been coughing for three hours. Although the boy said he had just been playing with his siblings ? with no mention of the blowgun ? X-rays of his airway revealed the dart. After further questioning, the boy admitted to using the blowgun.

The case highlights the potential dangers of blowguns for teens, especially when the blowguns are made by using instructions on the Internet, which the boy had done. Most websites that provide instructions regarding how to make blowguns do not adequately warn about the guns' risks, the researchers said. [See 9 Weird Ways Kids Can Get Hurt].

"It's really a setup for foreign body aspiration," study researcher Dr. Kris Jatana, an ear, nose and throat doctor at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, said of blowgun use by teens. (Aspiration means inhaling a foreign material.)

When a child inhales deeply (to produce a forceful breath to propel the dart forward), their vocal chords open fully, which makes it easier for objects to enter their airway, Jatana said.

The boy underwent a nonsurgical procedure ?in which a tube is inserted down the throat to view objects in the airway, and the dart was removed. Despite inhaling a sharp object, the boy was not harmed by the ordeal, according to the case report.

Over the next three months, the doctors saw two more cases of teen boys (ages 14 and 15) who inhaled darts from homemade blowguns. In both cases, the darts were removed without complications.

But the three boys were all very fortunate not to have any serious complications, Jatana told LiveScience. Anytime an object is inhaled and trapped in the airway, it can be a life-threatening problem, he said. A dart could puncture a hole in the airway or lungs, or injure the voice box.

Because of their risks, blowguns should probably not be used by children or teens, Jatana said.

With the Internet providing easy access to blowgun instructions, such cases may become more common in the future, the researchers said.

As shown in this case, teens do not always tell the truth, which can complicate receiving a correct diagnosis. If a teen boy comes to the emergency room with vague respiratory symptoms, doctors should be suspicious that he may have inhaled something, the doctors wrote in their report. Symptoms of aspiration include difficulty breathing, coughing, wheezing and spitting up or coughing blood.

The report is published in the July 22 issue of the journal Pediatrics.

Follow Rachael Rettner @RachaelRettner. Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?&?Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com .

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boy-inhales-blowgun-dart-112932844.html

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Monday, 22 July 2013

Two 2000 NBA title rings Kobe Bryant gave to his mom dad sold at auction on Saturday Joe Bryants ring fetched 174184 whil...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Jul 21, 2013 @ 10:16am ET)

8:00 PM: Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin tweeted on Saturday: "44 years ago today Neil (Armstrong) took this photo of me at Tranquility Base on the moon. We all miss you Neil."

7:45 PM: A New York Mets fan at Citi Field just missed getting smacked in the face by a flying bat that flew out of the hands of Anthony Recker during Saturday's game against the Phillies.

7:30 PM: Minnesota Twins owner Jim Pohlad said on Friday that he doesn't plan on firing manager Ron Gardenhire during the season: "I'm not going to put Gardy out of his misery. I don't think he's miserable. He's got a great job and we love him."

7:15 PM: About 900 people attended Friday's funeral of Jon Richardson, son of Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson & former president of Bank of America Stadium. Among those attending were Roger Goodell, Jerry Jones & Robert Kraft.

7:00 PM: Ben Volin of the Boston Globe notes that New York Giants safety Will Hill became the fourth member of the 2008 Florida Gators BCS title team to be suspended for violating NFL drug policies.

6:45 PM: Siohvaughn Funches-Wade, ex-wife of Miami Heat player Dwyane Wade, sat outside Chicago's Daley Center on Friday holding a sign that read: "NBA Miami Heat star, mother of his children on the streets".

6:30 PM: Arizona State University president Michael Crow disagrees with allowing for-profit Grand Canyon University to move up to NCAA Division I this season: "We are against using athletics as a mechanism to make profits. It's contrary to what we're trying to do."

6:15 PM: Charles Barkley said on Friday about the Philadelphia 76ers' prolonged search for a coach: "I think that's one of the silliest things that I've seen in sports in a long time .... To not have a coach under contract by now, I think that's a joke. I don't know what they're waiting on."

6:00 PM: Hay Beautiful, a horse scheduled to compete in a race at Meadowlands Racetrack Friday night, had to be euthanized after suffering serious injuries in a trailer accident on Interstate 80 near Parsippany, New Jersey.

5:45 PM: Pittsburgh Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said in a radio interview Friday about the team's first-half season success: "Don't bark if you're not going to bite. And we're in a position now where we can bite .... We've been able to show other people we're a team of action."

5:30 PM: St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Matt Holliday has been placed on the 15-day disabled list with a right hamstring strain.

5:15 PM: NASCAR announced Friday it is suspending the use of aerial cameras after 10 people were injured when a Fox Sports cable snapped during a race in Charlotte two months ago.

5:00 PM: Baltimore Orioles pitcher Kevin Gausman tweeted on Saturday about last year's movie theater shootings in Aurora, Colorado: "One year ago my hometown Aurora was victim of a terrible tragedy. My prayers are with the victims families. #5280Strong #NeverForget"

4:45 PM: MLB.com notes that as of Saturday morning, the Seattle Mariners have homered in 23 straight games. The MLB record streak is 27 games set by the 2002 Texas Rangers.

4:30 PM: Fans at Wrigley Field for Friday's Pearl Jam concert had to deal with a 2 1/2 hour rain delay, which led to the show not ending until 2 a.m. Saturday morning.

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=54207

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Need a Faat, Light, and Powerful Notebook for College

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Source: forum.notebookreview.com --- Sunday, July 21, 2013
What is your budget? 1000-2000 What country will you be buying this in? Guam What size notebook do you prefer? Thin and Light (13 - 14-inch screen) Mainstream (15 - 16-inch screen) What brands do you like or dislike? Like: Apple, Samsung, Sony Vaio, Asus Would you consider a refurbished laptop? No What are the primary tasks you need this notebook for? Web Surfing, Office and Productivity Software, Listening to Music, Photo Editing, Video Editing, Video Chat and Conference, Movie Streaming and Viewing, Casual Gaming, Graphic Intense 3D Gaming What games will you be playing? Starcraft II, CoD Where will you be using this laptop? Will be used different places How many hours of battery life do you need? 7-12 Will you be buying online or in store? online Which OS do you prefer? Windows 7 or Mac OS List the screen resolutions that interest you: High Resolution (1600 x 900) Max Resolution (1920 x 1080) Do you prefer a glossy or matte screen? Glossy or Matte is fine Is the laptops design important to you? Yes Approximately what date will you be buying this laptop? Around 09/20/2013 How long do you want this laptop to last? 4-5 years How much storage capacity do you need? 500 GB Are you interested in SSD for storage? Yes Do you want a built-in optical drive, what type? No ...

Source: http://forum.notebookreview.com/what-notebook-should-i-buy/725919-need-faat-light-powerful-notebook-college.html

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Sunday, 21 July 2013

Michelle Cound, Chris Froome Girlfriend, Anticipates Wedding

Michelle Cound, Chris Froome Girlfriend, Anticipates Wedding


LOS ANGELES (LALATE) ? Michelle Cound, Chris Froome?s girlfriend and fianc?e (photo above), anticipates a wedding soon after Froome?s Tour de France conclusion. Who is Chris Froome?s girlfriend, how long have they been dating, and could a wedding be in store for the couple?

Michelle Cound and Chris Froome began dating two years ago. Her dad tells news this week that, only four months after meeting Froome, Michelle moved to Monaco to live with Chris. Cound?s dad John says, just as Froome?s career was taking off, Chris felt that he had found his soul partner in Michelle. The two met in South Africa for a cycling event. But four months later, she left everything she had to move to Monaco to live with Froome.

?It was a whirlwind romance really. Chris was doing incredibly well and the synergy between the two of them was immediately apparent, it?s incredible. Michelle seems to be so supportive of Chris, their goals are so aligned.? Her dad also tell the Telegraph ?She has sacrificed a lot for him. But she went with her heart and it has all turned out well.?

Cound dominated news earlier this year after a Twitter feud with Bradley Wiggins? wife, Cath Wiggins. Michelle?s dad tells the Telegraph that his daughter has learned from the Twitter feud. ?She knows her mind and that?s good, but I mentioned to her the other day that now Chris is a global sports superstar, people are going to be saying lots of stupid things about him and she has to become immune to that and rise above it.? For now, the proud dad tells news that he anticipates that the couple will marry in 2014. For live results of the Tour de France today click HERE.


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Chris Froome, Michelle Cound, Tour de France

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Source: http://news.lalate.com/2013/07/21/michelle-cound-chris-froome-girlfriend-anticipates-wedding/

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'Justice for Trayvon' rallies set for 100 cities

FILE -This combo image made from file photos shows Trayvon Martin, left, and George Zimmerman. The jury in the trial of neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman began deliberating his fate, Friday, July 12, 2013, on charges in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photos, File)

FILE -This combo image made from file photos shows Trayvon Martin, left, and George Zimmerman. The jury in the trial of neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman began deliberating his fate, Friday, July 12, 2013, on charges in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photos, File)

ATLANTA (AP) ? One week after a Florida jury found George Zimmerman not guilty in the death of unarmed teen Trayvon Martin, rallies are scheduled in 100 cities to press for civil rights charges against the former neighborhood watch leader.

Zimmerman claimed self-defense after shooting Martin during an altercation. The case has become a flashpoint in national debates over guns, race relations and self-defense laws. Zimmerman identifies as Hispanic. Martin was black.

The Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network has organized the "Justice for Trayvon" rallies and vigils outside federal buildings from New York and Los Angeles to Des Moines, Iowa, and Little Rock, Ark. He wants the Justice Department to pursue a case.

The group says Martin's mother and brother will attend the New York event. His father will appear in Miami.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-07-20-US-Neighborhood-Watch-Rallies/id-cb704f91acf648778b1c0bd0444b2856

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Rights within reach: For some gay couples, marriage is mere miles away ? but that's still too far

Jean-Marc Giboux / for NBC News

Laura Hartman, left, and her partner, Anne Dickey, walk along the Mississippi River with their three-year-old son, Theodore, in Davenport, Iowa, on July 13. They live across the river in Rock Island, Ill., where same-sex marriage is not legal.

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

ROCK ISLAND, Ill. -- The right to get married for some lesbian and gay couples is mere miles away, or just a hop across the river.

Take same-sex couples in western Illinois, who upon crossing the Mississippi River enter Iowa, where gay marriage was legalized in 2009. Gay and lesbian couples living in states like Nebraska, Oregon, West Virginia, Virginia, New Jersey and Pennsylvania experience similar frustration: an easily traversed body of water separating them from a slew of rights and recognition. For them, marriage is close but out of reach -- a reality that didn?t change despite recent Supreme Court decisions advancing gay rights.

?You feel the freedom,? said Dennis Henry, 65, of traveling to his home state of Iowa from Monmouth, Ill., where he lives with his partner, Larry Shaw. ?You cross this divide, the Mississippi River, and you get over there and you're a full-fledged American citizen with the same rights everybody else in the country has.?

?And then you have to turn around, come back, and you leave them. You leave those rights,? added Shaw, 67. The couple has been together nearly 35 years.?

The high court in June struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, effectively ordering federal recognition of same-sex marriage in the 13 states where it is legal, and opening access for those couples to more than 1,100 federal benefits they?d been previously denied. The court also declined to weigh in on a case challenging Proposition 8, a constitutional amendment limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples in California. Gay and lesbian couples resumed marriage ceremonies there on June 28.

But like Shaw and Henry, a majority of the nation?s 650,000 same-sex couples live in one of the 35 states where same-sex marriage is banned, mostly by voter-approved constitutional amendments. Four states allow civil unions, including three that -- like Illinois -- don?t permit gays and lesbians to tie the knot, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Another three states that ban same-sex marriage allow domestic partnerships.

?(The) constitutional amendments have made America a house divided, in which families on one side of a border are denied crucial protections and personal dignity that they can see on the other side of the border, and this is intolerable,? said Evan Wolfson, president of Freedom to Marry, which campaigns for LGBT rights. ?Americans should not have their families vulnerable and their marriages sputter in and out like cell phone service depending on what side of a border they find themselves.?

Rock Island residents Anne Dickey and Laura Hartman, who entered a civil union in Illinois in 2011, said they believe the court?s DOMA decision has highlighted the differences between states where gay couples can and can?t get married.?

?That sort of raises a feeling of injustice,? said Hartman, 35. ?Now the differences between a couple in Iowa and a couple in Virginia (where same-sex marriage is illegal and where the couple used to live) are bigger than they were before, and that is upsetting. ... That?s not OK.?

This patchwork of state recognition of gay marriage -- legal, not legal -- together with alternatives to it like civil unions or domestic partnerships, has left same-sex couples with a ?fractured identity,? legally-speaking, depending on where they live, Hartman said.?

?I think that?s part of what it's like for people when they cross state lines," she said. "?We?re married ... we?re not married. ... Who are we? What is our relationship?'?

An impossible choice
Dickey, 39, and Hartman debated whether they should settle down in Iowa as they completed their move from Virginia in 2009 for Hartman?s job as an ?assistant professor of religion at Augustana College in Rock Island.

Iowa?s supreme court ruled that year that gay couples had the right to wed. That forced Dickey and Hartman to make a tough decision: move to a state where their relationship would be legally recognized, or to Illinois, which at the time had seemingly stronger protections for same-sex couples with children (Dickey was then pregnant with their now 3-year-old son, Theodore).

They chose Illinois. Hartman said their decision showed the ?tragic dimension? of a situation that other same-sex couples have had to face, too.?

?We had to choose between my relationship with him and my relationship with her -- which one was going to be protected? We couldn?t have both, at the time,? she said. (Before the Iowa Supreme Court decision allowing same-sex marriage, second-parent adoptions by gay couples were costly, invasive and for a brief period, on a judge-by-judge basis. A court decision in 2012 mandated that both same-sex parents be automatically placed on their child?s birth certificate at the time of birth, making adoption unnecessary, according to LGBT advocacy group, One Iowa).

Dickey and Hartman, who are part of a civil rights lawsuit seeking same-sex marriage in Illinois, feel it?s just a matter of time before they can legally wed and say they are committed to seeing the process through in the state where they live.

"We are neighbors and citizens here, and so we want this community and this government to be the ones that recognize us," Hartman said.

National Conference of State Legislatures

This map of the United States shows states that do and don't allow same-sex marriage, plus those that provide civil unions.

But Shaw and Henry have many regrets about their decision to move to Monmouth, Ill., a town about 30 miles from the border with Iowa. They returned to the Midwest in the early 1980s from California to care for their ailing parents and settled in Illinois rather than the Hawkeye state.

The couple has talked over and over about moving to Iowa. Henry mused that in his hometown of Keota, which he just had to ?get out of? as a young man, the couple could be married.

?I wish we were back there,? he said, later adding, ?It?s just funny that now that little town that I hated looks pretty darn good ... you just kind of come full circle?in your old age.?

But for the time being, they can?t imagine leaving behind their successful real estate business.

?The sacrifices that we have to make to leave here and go to Iowa ? I?m not sure,? said Shaw, who has had open heart surgery and had a toe on his right foot amputated due to his diabetes. ?We've got to think about keeping a roof over our heads and money coming in, and at our age, do we want to start over again??

The fight goes on
Frank Schubert, political director?of the National Organization for Marriage, which has?led?the fight?to limit marriage to opposite-sex couples, said gay couples always had geographic limits on where they could marry -- and that hasn?t changed since the high court weighed in.

?There is no right to same-sex marriage, period. Marriage is determined by the states; that?s what the majority in Windsor (DOMA) had to say, that the states get to determine it and if that?s true, then they have to accept and respect the right of states to determine marriage in the traditional way just like they demand that we accept states like New York and Massachusetts that have redefined marriage,? he said.

?I think that it?s certainly not an ideal environment, but it?s one the Supreme Court has created through their judicial activism,? he added. ?It?s one of the reasons why many people are looking at a Federal Marriage Amendment to restore marriage nationwide.?

Campaign groups supportive of same-sex marriage said they would use the momentum of the court victories to push for initiatives or legislative votes in states like Oregon and New Jersey, while also seeking repeals of bans in states such as Ohio and Michigan.?

Gay couples in states where same-sex marriage isn?t allowed are waiting to hear from the federal government about which benefits denied under DOMA they could now receive. Shaw and Henry talk about how they?d like to share social security and veterans? benefits with each other (Henry served in the Air Force in Vietnam). They?re also concerned about ensuring inheritance rights for one another.

?How can DOMA have failed and now all the states that have marriage are going to get all of these federal benefits. What about the rest of us?? Shaw said. ?That puts the federal government in a position they?re going to have to discriminate, and that?s not right.?

They believe marriage will come to Illinois, but even five years could prove an ?eternity? at their age, Henry said. If they can wed, the ceremony will be simple.

?Unfortunately, so many of our friends have passed on," Shaw said. "It wouldn't be a big one.?

He later added, "I just think after all these years, it's between him and I."

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