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Honduran Congress will rule on Zelaya after vote

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – The leader of the Honduran Congress says lawmakers will not decide whether to restore ousted President Manuel Zelaya until after Nov. 29 presidential elections.
Congressional president Jose Alfredo Saavedra says lawmakers will vote Dec. 2 on whether Zelaya should return to the presidency.
The decision raises questions about whether the international community will recognize the outcome of the elections.
Several countries have warned they will not recognize the vote unless Zelaya is restored beforehand. But the United States has not ruled out restoring diplomatic ties with a newly elected Honduran government even if Zelaya remains out of power through the vote.
Saavedra spoke Tuesday on local HRN radio station.

Obama's Half Brother Mark Ndesandjo Speaks Up in China (Time.com)

On the streets of Guangzhou and nearby Shenzhen, Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo is turning heads. Since holding a press conference for his semiautobiographical novel Nairobi to Shenzhen: A Novel of Love in the East on Nov. 4, Ndesandjo, the half brother of U.S. President Barack Obama, has appeared on television in Hong Kong, and his picture has been splashed on the front pages of the China Daily, the South China Morning Post and other regional newspapers.
Ndesandjo had shunned the limelight until now. He is one of two children born to Barack Obama Sr. and his third wife, an American teacher named Ruth Nidesand, whom Obama Sr. met while the two were students at Harvard. Tall and slim like the President, Ndesandjo had avoided any association with the Obama name. For most of his life, he used only his stepfather's Tanzanian surname Ndesandjo, but he's now added Okoth, a word from the language of his father's Kenyan tribe, the Luo, as well as his original surname, Obama. (See Barack Obama's family tree.)
His novel, written in diary form, is based on his own experiences growing up with an abusive, alcoholic father and moving to China where he fell in love with a Chinese woman and began working with orphans. President Obama's name is mentioned just once, when Ndesandjo thanks several people, including "Barack," in the foreword. With this book, Ndesandjo says he's stepping into the public eye in order to raise awareness of domestic violence, promote volunteerism and share his tale of starting a new life in a new land. "I am an Obama, and a large part of my life was a repudiation of that," Ndesandjo tells TIME. "To a certain extent, my brother ... opened my eyes to things that I had left behind for a long time." (Ndesandjo is still reticent about detailing his personal life beyond the fictionalized account, saying he may save that for a second book, a true autobiography.)
Ndesandjo's life was hardly ordinary even before the world discovered his connection to the President of the United States. Educated in international schools in Nairobi, Ndesandjo, an American citizen, moved to the U.S. after high school, where he earned physics degrees from Stanford and Brown as well as an executive M.B.A. from Emory University. Soon after 9/11, he was laid off from his marketing job at telecommunications-equipment maker Nortel Networks in Atlanta. He decided to reinvent himself by moving to China, a country he had visited with classmates while at Emory. Since 2002, he has taught English and worked as a business consultant in Shenzhen, a 14 million–strong metropolis in southern China, just across the border from Hong Kong. (See the story of Barack Obama's mother.)
His self-published book was released just days before his brother's visit to China. Ndesandjo says he plans to introduce his wife, a native of Henan province whom he married last year, to his brother before he leaves China on Wednesday. During the course of TIME's interview in Guangzhou, Ndesandjo, who speaks fluent Mandarin and practices Chinese calligraphy, was overwhelmingly positive about his life in China, the Chinese people and culture. "I'm so happy my brother is coming to China because I've experienced the warmth and the graciousness of the Chinese people," he says. "If we can continue seeing the mutual positive points in these two great cultures, I think it'll be good for the world in general."
The two brothers have met a handful of times in their lives, the last of which was during Obama's inauguration in Washington. In his 1995 memoir Dreams from My Father, Obama describes his first encounter with his brother, an ambitious student who had severed ties with his father's side of the family as well as his African roots. "I don't feel much of an attachment [to Kenya]. Just another poor African country," Ndesandjo says in Dreams. He goes on to say, "You think that somehow I'm cut off from my roots ... Well, you're right."
One of Obama Sr.'s eight children with four women, Ndesandjo was raised by both birth parents until their divorce in the early 1970s. He has refused to tell reporters his age, but he is likely to be in his early 40s. Ndesandjo says his father was brilliant, but that alcoholism drove him to beat his wife and children. "The relationship I had with my father was a difficult one," he says, fighting back tears. "I didn't have positive memories of my dad because of domestic violence."
Ndesandjo says his mother, who runs a kindergarten in Nairobi, inspired him to work with children. A trained pianist, he has given piano lessons to Chinese orphans and performed at an event in January that raised $37,000 to alleviate poverty in China. Harley Seyedin, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in South China, the organization that sponsored the charity event, has been a close friend of Ndesandjo's for the past six years, but only learned of his friend's relationship with the President last year when reading news reports. "He's a very private person and he wanted to continue to live his modest lifestyle," says Seyedin. "But his primary message is raising awareness of domestic violence and to get the message out, you have to go public." To underline this message, Ndesandjo has arranged for 15% of the proceeds from book sales to be used to help orphans in China.
As a Kenyan-American in China, Ndesandjo is part of a growing community of Africans migrating to cities like Guangzhou to do business. Ethnic strife in China has made headlines in recent months after 200 Han and Uighur Chinese were killed in July, in the worst ethnic violence in decades. That same month, a Nigerian man was critically injured trying to escape one of many visa checks in Guangzhou's sizeable African neighborhood. Also this year, a half–African American, half-Chinese contestant on a Chinese reality-TV show and a half–South African, half-Chinese athlete on China's national volleyball team became the subject of a flurry of racist comments in China's blogosphere. But Ndesandjo is optimistic about ethnic-minority life in China, saying, "If you make an attempt to understand where these attitudes come from, it can really help."
Read "The Five Faces of Barack Obama."
See behind-the-scenes pictures of Obama in Iraq.
View this article on Time.comRelated articles on Time.com:Obama in Asia: Five Things the U.S. and China Differ On Can Obama Get Around China's 'Great Firewall'? Hong Kong Dissidents Get Organized As 20th Tiananmen Anniversary Draws Near A New Book Reveals Why China Is Unhappy Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China

New U.S. guidelines: routine mammograms start at 50

CHICAGO (Reuters) –
Sweeping new U.S. breast cancer guidelines released on Monday recommend against routine mammograms for women in their 40s, but several groups immediately rebelled against the recommendations.

The new guidelines by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an influential panel of independent experts, would sharply curtail the number of breast mammograms done in the United States, sparing women the worry of false alarms and the cost and trouble of extra tests.

U.S. cancer experts argued the altered schedule may mean more women will die from breast cancer.

The guidelines, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, are based largely on computer projections from six independent research groups in the United States and Europe.

They predicted that screening women 50 to 69 every other year will catch nearly as many breast cancers -- 81 percent -- while producing half as many false positive results.

"Although the USPSTF recognizes that the benefit of screening seems equivalent for women aged 40 to 49 years and 50 to 59 years, the incidence of breast cancer and the consequences differ," the task force, sponsored by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, wrote.

The group's last recommendations in 2002 called for routine mammograms every one to two years for all women older than 40.

Now, they recommend no routine screening for women in their 40s, and instead suggest these women decide for themselves when to start after weighing the risks and benefits.

"This is not a recommendation against mammography for women in their 40s," said Dr. Diana Petitti, professor of biomedical informatics at Arizona State University in Phoenix, who spoke on behalf of the task force.

LETTING CANCER LIE

The panel said there is not enough evidence to say women over 74 benefit from mammograms because at that age, screening may be detecting cancers that will not ever kill a woman.

The guidelines also say there is not enough evidence to prove that women benefit from breast self-examinations, or even if they help if doctors do them.

Dr. Daniel Kopans, professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, said the new guidelines "are scientifically unjustified and will condemn women ages 40 to 49 to unnecessary deaths from breast cancer."

"If you look at their guidelines, they are saying, 'Don't examine yourself, don't let anyone else examine you, and don't get a mammogram.' Where does that leave you? It leaves you waiting to have a big cancer that you can't ignore any more," Kopans said in a telephone interview.

The American Cancer Society and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said they will not be changing their guidelines.

"The American Cancer Society will continue to recommend that women of average risk of breast cancer start screening at age 40 and get screened every year," Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the group's deputy chief medical officer, said in a telephone interview.

Dr. Carol Lee, chair of the American College of Radiology Breast Imaging Commission, said the recommendations "ignore the valid scientific data and place a great many women at risk of dying unnecessarily."

Lee and Lichtenfeld said they fear insurers -- both private and public -- will use them to pare back health costs.

"These new recommendations seem to reflect a conscious decision to ration care," Lee said, although Petitti said cost was not a factor in their decision-making.

The National Cancer Institute, which funded the modeling study, said women of average risk need to discuss the risks and benefits of mammograms with their doctors.

"NCI has had screening mammography recommendations for many years, and we need to evaluate them in light of the Task Force's recommendations -- for all women, not only for those of average risk. It's too early for us to make any decisions right now," the federal agency said in a statement.

Breast cancer is the top cancer killer of women globally, killing 500,000 annually.

(Editing by Maggie Fox and Todd Eastham)

Sexy Lingerie

By wearing a tightly-laced corset for extended periods, known as tightlacing, men and women can learn to tolerate extreme waist constriction and eventually reduce their natural waist size. Tightlacers dream of 40 to 43 centimeters (16 to 17 inches) waists, but most are satisfied with anything under 50 centimeters (20 inches). Until 1998, the Guinness Book of World Records listed Ethel Granger as having the smallest waist on record at 32.5 centimeters (13 inches). After 1998, the category changed to "smallest waist on a living person" and Cathie Jung took the title with a 37.5 centimeters (15 inches) waist. Other women, such as Polaire, also have achieved such reductions (14 inches in her case).

However, these are extreme cases. Corsets were and are still usually designed for support, with freedom of body movement an important consideration in their design. Present day corset-wearers usually tighten the corset just enough to reduce their waists by 5 to 10 centimeters (2 to 4 inches); it is very difficult for a slender woman to achieve as much as 15 centimeters (6 inches), although larger women can do so more easily.

http://www.monetlingerie.com/

Stock futures cut losses on Berkshire-Burlington

NEW YORK (Reuters) –
U.S. stock index futures cut losses on Tuesday after Berkshire Hathaway Inc said it would acquire railroad Burlington Northern Sante Fe Corp for $100 per share in cash and stock.

* S&P 500 futures fell 6.90 points and were below fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures lost 54 points, and Nasdaq 100 futures were off 6.25 points.

(Reporting by Leah Schnurr; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Giant Crack in Africa Will Create a New Ocean (LiveScience.com)

A 35-mile rift in the desert of Ethiopia will likely become a new ocean eventually, researchers now confirm.

The crack, 20 feet wide in spots, opened in 2005 and some geologists
believed then that it would spawn a new ocean. But that view was
controversial, and the rift had not been well studied.

A new study involving an international team of scientists and
reported in the journal Geophysical Research Letters finds the
processes creating the rift are nearly identical to what goes on at the
bottom of oceans, further indication a sea is in the region's future.

The same rift activity is slowly parting the Red Sea, too.

Using newly gathered seismic data from 2005, researchers
reconstructed the event to show the rift tore open along its entire
35-mile length in just days. Dabbahu, a volcano at the northern end of
the rift, erupted first, then magma pushed up through the middle of the
rift area and began "unzipping" the rift in both directions, the
researchers explained in a statement today.

"We know that seafloor ridges are created by a similar intrusion of
magma into a rift, but we never knew that a huge length of the ridge
could break open at once like this," said Cindy Ebinger, professor of
earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester and
co-author of the study.

The result shows that highly active volcanic boundaries along the
edges of tectonic ocean plates may suddenly break apart in large
sections, instead of in bits, as the leading theory held. And such
sudden large-scale events on land pose a much more serious hazard to
populations living near the rift than would several smaller events,
Ebinger said.

"The whole point of this study is to learn whether what is happening
in Ethiopia is like what is happening at the bottom of the ocean where
it's almost impossible for us to go," says Ebinger. "We knew that if we
could establish that, then Ethiopia would essentially be a unique and
superb ocean-ridge laboratory for us. Because of the unprecedented
cross-border collaboration behind this research, we now know that the
answer is yes, it is analogous."

The African and Arabian plates meet in the remote Afar desert of Northern Ethiopia
and have been spreading apart in a rifting process - at a speed of less than 1
inch per year - for the past 30 million years. This rifting formed the
186-mile Afar depression and the Red Sea. The thinking is that the Red Sea will eventually pour into the new sea in a million years or so. The new ocean would connect to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, an arm of the Arabian Sea between Yemen on the
Arabian Peninsula and Somalia in eastern Africa.

Atalay Ayele, professor at the Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia,
led the investigation, gathering seismic data with help from neighboring Eritrea and Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi, professor at the Eritrea Institute of
Technology, and from Yemen with the help of Jamal Sholan of the
National Yemen Seismological Observatory Center.

101 Amazing Earth Facts
Top 10 Ways to Destroy Earth
Earthquake News

Original Story: Giant Crack in Africa Will Create a New OceanLiveScience.com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Check out our science videos, Trivia & Quizzes and Top 10s. Join our community to debate hot-button issues like stem cells, climate change and evolution. You can also sign up for free newsletters, register for RSS feeds and get cool gadgets at the LiveScience Store.

Musical Greeting Cards

Most of (but not all) chip sounds are synthesised by simply dividing a clock square wave to get a square wave of desired frequency, and sometimes using a sawtooth/triangle wave from volume LFO or an (ADSR) envelope to get some kind of ring modulation. LFOs are used to control or influence a sound parameter such as pitch or filters in a repeating cycle.

Common file formats used to compose and play chiptunes are the SID, YM, SNDH, MOD, XM, several Adlib based file formats and numerous exotic Amiga file formats.

Musical Greeting Cards

Reading Election Day Tea Leaves (CQPolitics.com)

It is risky business to view today's key "off-year" contests -- in Virginia, New Jersey and New York -- as bellwethers for next year's much fuller slate of elections. Or, at least that's what history suggests.

Sometimes, these odd-year elections can look oddly predictive, as in 2003, when Republican pickups for governor in Mississippi and Kentucky preceded the re-election of Republican George W. Bush as president in 2004, and in 2005, when the Democratic candidates scored hard-won holds for governor in New Jersey and Virginia on the eve of their party's takeover of Congress in the 2006 elections.

But the big off-year races in 2007 ended up a wash, with a Republican takeover for governor of Louisiana, a Democratic take-back in Kentucky and a GOP hold in Mississippi. And the next year, the Democrats nonetheless celebrated Barack Obama's victory for president and big seat gains in Congress, governors' offices and state legislative races.

That said, it will come as no surprise tonight when both parties deploy their best spin, making their arguments that the most-watched races -- the contests for governor in Virginia and New Jersey, and the raucous House special election in upstate New York's 23rd Congressional District -- are harbingers of things to come next year when there are 37 Senate seats (including January's special election in Massachusetts), 38 gubernatorial seats and 435 House seats up for election.

After the huge setbacks their party endured in the 2006 and 2008 elections, Republican strategists welcome any sign that the tides are turning back in their favor. So a sweep of today's three big races, or winning at least two out of three, is important for a party looking for bragging rights.

But this year's big contests seem a bit too idiosyncratic to provide a single takeaway message.

If polls are correct, the clearest Republican victory is likely to come in Virginia, where a strong Democratic trend over the course of the decade appears to be on the verge of at least temporary interruption. GOP nominee Bob McDonnell, a former state attorney general, has busted out to a big lead in what earlier was seen as a tossup race with Democrat Creigh Deeds, a state senator.

But McDonnell, who established his political career as a socially conservative state legislator, has played down that aspect of his persona as he has campaigned for votes in the recently Democratic-leaning Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., instead emphasizing and lucidly explaining his positions on the state's economy, taxes, transportation funding and other kitchen-table issues for most Virginia voters. He has run a much better campaign than Deeds, who comes from a lightly populated area in the western part of the state and has had trouble countering McDonnell's ties to Northern Virginia, where he grew up, and the populous Hampton Roads area to the southeast, where he lives and has his political base.

The New Jersey governor's race is much more a referendum on incumbent Jon Corzine -- who has never been overwhelmingly popular and has suffered of late from terrible job approval ratings -- than on Obama, who carried the state by 15 points in last year's presidential race and whose continued popularity in the state is Corzine's biggest hope for survival. Republicans initially touted former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie as a great recruit, but his own campaign stumbles and the lavishly self-financed campaign run by former Wall Street CEO Corzine have turned the race into a tossup. The outcome is likely to be determined by how much of the vote strays to independent candidate Chris Daggett, a former state and federal environmental policy official, and which of the major-party contenders he hurts more.

And these two statewide races have, in the campaign's final weeks, been unexpectedly overshadowed by the New York's House special election, which has drawn unusually attention as it emerged as a major skirmish in the "battle for the soul" of the Republican Party -- between centrists and other party pragmatists who believe the Republicans must recruit more moderate candidates to win in strongly Democratic-trending areas such as the Northeast, and conservatives who say the GOP needs to field candidates who will stick to the national party's right-ward platform and fight to persuade voters that is the right direction for the nation.

Through most of the campaign, the national Republican organization played the pragmatic role, backing state Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava, a moderate, in her bid for the seat vacated by nine-term Republican John M. McHugh to become secretary of the Army. But conservative activists rebelled, citing Scozzafava's support for abortion rights and same-sex marriage and her ties to labor unions, and aligned with accountant Doug Hoffman, the nominee of New York's Conservative Party. Hoffman then drew the support of some big-name national conservative figures, including 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

The schism became big national news this weekend when Scozzafava, her poll numbers plummeting, dropped out of the race -- and urged her backers to vote for Democratic nominee Bill Owens, a lawyer. But the Republican National Committee and its campaign arm, the National Republican Congressional Committee, which had invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in local advertising supporting Scozzafava's campaign, turned on a dime and switched its endorsement to Hoffman.

Strategy, Risk and End Games

But even if the GOP gets the better of these 2009 races, any claims of major momentum heading into 2010 would require a rebuttal of a wide range of national opinion polls, the results of which suggest that the Republican Party has a long way to go in order to regain the public standing it lost during Bush's tumultuous second term.

This summer, the GOP faithful had reason to hope that the November elections would send a clear message that the public had already lost faith in President Obama and the hefty Democratic majorities in both chambers of Congress. After entering office in January with soaring approval ratings, Obama saw his popularity decline as his campaign promise of "Change" met the gritty realities of the policy-making process and the nearly unanimous opposition of a determined Republican congressional minority.

Individual and organized critics held highly publicized anti-tax "tea party" rallies and besieged lawmakers' town hall meetings to lambaste the $787 billion legislation (PL 111-5) that Obama pushed through Congress in February in the name of stimulating the recession-plagued economy; the federal government's intervention in the teetering financial and auto industries; the Democrats' sweeping proposals to overhaul the nation's health care system; and an energy bill pushed by Democrats, aimed at limiting climate change, that includes a "cap and trade" program for industrial emissions that most Republicans protest as potentially crippling to the U.S. economy.

With loud voices accusing Obama of putting the United States on a path toward socialism, the president's approval ratings dropped. Until, that is they stopped falling. And where the parties stand on Election Day 2009, in the big-picture numbers, looks rather amazingly similar to where they were on Election Day 2008.

By the end of the summer, Obama's approval ratings hit a plateau, with percentages in the low to mid 50s. That puts the president's support base just about where it was in November 2008, when he won the presidency by 53 percent to 46 percent over Republican John McCain, an Arizona senator.

Of the October surveys co-sponsored by the major television networks' news divisions, an ABC News-Washington Post poll conducted Oct. 15-18 showed 57 percent of respondents approved and 40 percent disapproved of Obama's performance in office (exactly the same number as in the organization's Aug. 13-17 poll). A CBS News poll taken Oct. 5-8 showed approval exceeding disapproval by 56 percent to 34 percent (the same positive and 1 point lower negative compared to an Aug. 27-31 survey).

An NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll taken Oct. 22-25 was less generous, putting the numbers at 51 percent approval and 42 percent disapproval. But that 9-point margin is the same as in the same polling unit's Aug. 15-17 numbers.

That is not to say that many voters don't have issues with Obama on policy issues. That Oct. 22-25 NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll found 47 percent approved and 46 percent disapproved of Obama's handling of the economy. On the hot-button issue of health care, 43 percent approved and 48 percent disapproved. He did better, but not spectacular, on his handling of foreign policy, with 51 percent approving and 39 percent disapproving.

And there was a potentially worrisome number in aggregate polling done so far this year by Gallup which showed the number of self-described conservatives at 40 percent of respondents, up from 37 percent in 2008, to 36 percent who described themselves as moderate and 20 percent who called themselves liberal.

But the Republicans' potential for growth in the 2010 elections may be held back by the fact that their party's "brand," which incurred major damage from the Bush years, is still held in very low regard by most voters.

The NBC News-Wall Street Journal pollsters asked respondents' feelings about the Republican Party. Just 25 percent gave a positive response (and just 6 percent were very positive) while 46 percent were negative and 27 percent were neutral. The positive number was actually down from 32 percent in a poll taken Oct. 17-20, 2008, with about two weeks left in that year's presidential and congressional campaigns.

The Democrats' October 2009 numbers -- 42 percent positive, 36 percent negative and 20 percent neutral -- don't exactly rock the house, but they remain considerably better than the Republicans'.

A similar question asked by CNN/Opinion Research in an Oct. 16-18 poll found 36 percent had a favorable opinion of the Republican Party to 54 percent unfavorable. The Democrats' numbers were 53 percent favorable to 41 percent unfavorable.

These polling numbers, taken collectively, suggest that both parties are engaged in high-risk political strategies as they move beyond Election Day 2009 and into the bigger arena of 2010. Obama has taken on a full plate of the nation's most contentious issues during his first year in office, greatly expanded federal spending (and debt) to address the recession and seeking major changes in the nation's energy and environmental policies, all while dealing with the nation's stressful military engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan that he inherited from predecessor. So if most voters see him as falling short when the 2010 elections roll around, his Democratic Party could suffer a serious reversal.

But the Republicans are taking a big gamble, too, in taking a confrontational approach in trying to block or slow virtually every element of the president's domestic agenda. If the economy reaches a recovery phase by the fall of 2010, and especially if there is evidence of jobs growth, Democrats will freely remind voters that Republicans were quick to condemn Obama's stimulus plan as an expensive failure -- and their efforts to label the GOP as the "Party of No" will gain credence among many voters.

And while Republican leaders are fond of telling Democrats that they now own all the big issues and that they need to get over blaming Bush, it would take a horrendous political collapse by Obama to make that anything but wishful thinking. Democrats for 40 years were able to make political hay out of the name of Republican Herbert Hoover, who was president when the Great Depression hit. And there are still some Republicans who are fond of reminding voters of the unpopular presidency of Democrat Jimmy Carter, nearly 30 years after he lost his 1980 bid for re-election.

Collision Repair Irvine

Automobile repair shops can be specialty shops like muffler shops, transmission specialists, body shop, tire shops and automobile electrification shops. Examples include MAACO and AAMCO. There are also independently-owned specialists who work only on specific makes of cars, such as European car specialists and BMW repair specialists.

In the UK, a Garage does not typically specialize in one area of the vehicle.[citation needed] Instead, they tend to repair all mechanical and servicing requirements, the only specialty being body repair and painting.

http://www.collisionrepairexperts.com/

Photo Calendars

Calendars may be either complete or incomplete. Complete calendars provide a way of naming each consecutive day, while incomplete calendars do not. The early Roman calendar, which had no way of designating the days of the winter months other than to lump them together as "winter", is an example of an incomplete calendar, while the Gregorian calendar is an example of a complete calendar.

Even where there is a commonly used calendar such as the Gregorian calendar, alternate calendars may also be used, such as a fiscal calendar or the astronomical year numbering system.

Photo Calendars

Primate fossil called only a distant relative

NEW YORK – Remember Ida, the fossil discovery announced last May with its own book and TV documentary? A publicity blitz called it "the link" that would reveal the earliest evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans. Experts protested that Ida wasn't even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction.
In fact, Ida is as far removed from the monkey-ape-human ancestry as a primate could be, says Erik Seiffert of Stony Brook University in New York.
He and his colleagues compared 360 specific anatomical features of 117 living and extinct primate species to draw up a family tree. They report the results in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.
Ida is a skeleton of a 47 million-year-old cat-sized creature found in Germany. It starred in a book, "The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor."
Ida represents a previously unknown primate species called Darwinius. The scientists who formally announced the finding said they weren't claiming Darwinius was a direct ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans. But they did argue that it belongs in the same major evolutionary grouping, and that it showed what an actual ancestor of that era might have looked like.
The new analysis says Darwinius does not belong in the same primate category as monkeys, apes and humans. Instead, the analysis concluded, it falls into the other major grouping, which includes lemurs.
Experts agreed.
"This is a rigorous analysis based on many features," said Eric Sargis, an anthropology professor at Yale. He said he'd found the argument of the Darwinius researchers unconvincing, so the new result came as no surprise.
In fact, it confirms what most scientists think, said David Begun, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Toronto.
Jorn Hurum of the Natural History Museum in Oslo, Norway, an author of the Ida paper, said he welcomed the new analysis.
Darwinius is an example of a group of primates called adapoids, and "we are happy to start the scientific discussion" about what Ida means for where adapoids fit on the primate family tree, he wrote in an e-mail.
___
On the Net:
Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

Experts: Swine flu exacerbates pork industry woes

WASHINGTON – The pork industry is facing one of its worst struggles in memory and an unwanted link to the so-called swine flu is exacerbating problems, experts told Congress on Thursday.
"Over the past 24 months, pork producers have lost an average of $23 on each hog marketed ... and things look bleak going forward," said Don Butler, president of the National Pork Producers Council.
Butler and other industry leaders testified to the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy and Poulty.
Experts told the panel that the media labeling the H1N1 flu virus as "swine flu" was an unforeseen blow to an industry that already was struggling with its bottom line.
Butler said research by the National Pork Producers Council showed a short-term reduction in pork prices immediately after the swine flu label stuck on the H1N1 virus. He says the council's research also shows a lasting negative connotation in the eyes of some consumers even though the USDA has said that swine flu cannot be transmitted by eating pork products.
Mark Greenwood, a vice president at AgStar Financial Services in Mankato, Minn., said the sustained struggle of pork producers distinguishes what is going on now from previous troughs in the industry. He said a downturn in the hog industry in 1998 and 1999 does not compare to the current crisis because it was much shorter and less severe. He also said producers who survived that downturn have more at stake now.
"I think producers that are left — they're committed to the industry," Greenwood said. "In 1998 and 1999, folks had more flexibility."
The testimony about the industry's struggles came days after the USDA confirmed that a Minnesota pig was the first pig in the country to contract the H1N1 virus.

Scientist worked on early warning defense systems

WASHINGTON – A former government scientist arrested earlier this week tried to provide Israel with classified information on satellites and early warning defense systems, says a grand jury indictment.
The grand jury indictment follows Monday's arrest of Stewart D. Nozette, who spent 16 years doing sensitive defense work for the Energy Department, the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
The information Nozette allegedly tried to provide Israel in an FBI sting operation dealt with "satellites, early warning systems, means of defense or retaliation against large-scale attack, communications intelligence information and major elements of defense strategy," said the indictment, which did not elaborate.
Earlier this week, a former colleague said that Nozette was primarily a defense technologist who had worked on the Reagan-era Star Wars missile shield effort formally named the Strategic Defense Initiative.
The former colleague, Stanford University professor Scott Hubbard, said Nozette worked on the Star Wars project at the Energy Department's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. According to the indictment, Nozette worked there from 1990 to 1999.
One aspect of Nozette's work on the Strategic Defense Initiative involved a project called Timber Wind, an effort to develop a rocket engine powered by a nuclear reactor, said Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists.
"On a number of occasions I asked Dr. Nozette about the program, but he was always quite scrupulous about rebuffing my inquiries," Aftergood wrote on his group's Web site. "Timber Wind was canceled shortly after it became public, and other nuclear rocket initiatives likewise faded away in the 1990s, as the effort to develop nuclear rocketry for military or civilian applications surged and then collapsed."
At the Energy Department, Nozette had a "Q" clearance, which is equivalent to the Pentagon's Top Secret clearance.
Nozette, who received a Ph.D. in planetary sciences from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983, faces a court appearance next Thursday before a federal magistrate. He is jailed without bond.
Neither a criminal complaint filed earlier this week against Nozette nor the indictment allege that the government of Israel or anyone acting on its behalf violated U.S. law. The grand jury indictment alleging two counts of attempted espionage was handed up Wednesday.
___
On the Net:
Federation of American Scientists:
http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/2009/10/nozette.html

Stocks rise as financial, consumer stocks gain

NEW YORK – Investors encouraged by a good batch of earnings reports and forecasts jumped back into stocks after a two-day slide.
Stocks posted big gains Thursday as investors snapped up financial shares after several banks said they weren't seeing as many loans go bad. The market extended its advance in afternoon trading when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said it expects sales to grow this year and increase at a faster pace next year.
The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 132 points and logged the biggest gain of major indexes after Wal-Mart's forecast and as several companies included in the indicator reported earnings that beat expectations.
The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite index advanced the least among major indicators following a disappointing forecast from online retailer eBay Inc.
Tech stocks could get a lift Friday following Amazon.com Inc.'s report that its third-quarter earnings jumped 62 percent. The online retailer brought in more revenue than expected and said it expects sales will continue to grow. The company's report arrived after markets closed, and its shares jumped 15 percent in late trading after ticking up only 3 cents during the day.
Consumer stocks rose after Wal-Mart said it expects sales to increase 1 to 2 percent this year and 4 to 6 percent next year. The nation's largest retailer also said it would focus on emerging markets when opening stores. Meanwhile, clothing retailer J. Crew Group Inc. raised its earnings forecast because of stronger sales and profit margins.
Financial stocks rose after PNC Financial Services Group Inc. and Fifth Third Bancorp each said that bad loans weren't piling up as fast as they had been. Financials had pulled the market lower Wednesday after an analyst took issue with a profit report at Wells Fargo & Co.
Dow components Travelers Cos., McDonald's Corp., 3M Co. and AT&T Inc. posted stronger results than analysts had forecast.
Adam Gould, senior portfolio manager at Direxion Funds in New York, said the market's bounce on the Wal-Mart forecast illustrates how difficult it is to keep stocks down and allow those who missed the seven-month run to buy shares at lower prices.
"People have wanted to see some type of correction but whenever any earnings come out and beat and whenever any economic news comes out that is decent, the market rallies," he said.
The Dow rose 131.95, or 1.3 percent, to 10,081.31. The index is 11 points below its highest close of the year, which it reached on Monday.
The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 11.51, or 1.1 percent, to 1,092.91. The Nasdaq rose 14.56, or 0.7 percent, to 2,165.29.
Two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 5.3 billion shares compared with 5.7 billion Wednesday.
Bond prices fell. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.42 percent from 3.39 percent late Wednesday.
Mixed economic and earnings reports signal that the economy remains in flux.
The Labor Department said workers filing for unemployment benefits for the first time rose more than expected last week. New claims rose to 531,000 last week from 520,000 the previous week.
Separately, a private forecast of economic activity rose for the sixth straight month in September. The Conference Board's index of leading economic indicators rose 1 percent last month after a 0.4 percent gain in August.
Jeffrey Beamer, Portfolio Manager of Lacerte Capital in Dallas, said earnings reports showing improved profits but still-weak revenue raise questions about whether the market can hold its gains. Cost-cutting, he noted, can only help so much.

"You may look great this quarter but what are you going to do in the coming quarters," Beamer said. "If the earnings aren't just really solid we could get a decent pullback here."

The S&P 500 index is up 61.6 percent from a 12-year low in March.

Wal-Mart slipped 15 cents to $50.48, while J. Crew jumped $5.75, or 15.2 percent, to $43.49.

PNC Financial rose $5.69, or 12.7 percent, to $50.65 and Fifth Third rose 69 cents, or 6.8 percent, to $10.80.

Travelers, the insurer, rose $3.68, or 7.7 percent, to $51.70, while McDonald's advanced $1.17, or 2 percent, to $59.50. Manufacturer 3M advanced $2.46, or 3.2 percent, to $78.79, while AT&T rose 16 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $26.10.

Crude fell 18 cents to settle at $81.19 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, while gold fell.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 8.27, or 1.4 percent, to 613.38.

Overseas markets fell after Wednesday's slide in U.S. stocks. Britain's FTSE 100 fell 1 percent, Germany's DAX index dropped 1.2 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 1.4 percent. Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 0.6 percent.

Senators urge Obama on Asia-Pacific trade deal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
Two more senators on Thursday urged President Barack Obama to pursue a regional trade deal in the fast-growing Asia-Pacific region.

"The Asia Pacific region holds tremendous potential for American manufacturers, farmers and service suppliers," Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus and Senator Charles Grassley said in a letter to Obama.

They urged him to complete the Transpacific Strategic Economic Partnership Agreement (TPP) begun by the administration of former President George W. Bush in 2008.

That would build on existing free trade deals with Singapore, Peru, Chile and Australia by creating a regional trade pact that also includes Vietnam, New Zealand and Brunei.

The TPP would create a high-level regional trade framework "that has the potential to further open new and emerging Asia Pacific markets to U.S. exports," Baucus said.

"Trade needs to be part of the economic recovery effort, and finalizing this agreement would send a message to the world that U.S. trade policy is back in business," Grassley said.

Grassley has strongly criticized Obama for failing to push for congressional approval of free trade deals with Panama, Colombia and South Korea.

Obama administration officials say those pacts are on their agenda, but each has problems that need to be fixed. They have not offered any timeframe for sending them to Congress and some observers think they could languish for another year.

Obama will be in Singapore next month for the annual Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit. That 21-member grouping also includes China, Japan, South Korea and Russia.

Senator Richard Lugar has urged Obama to use that meeting to launch negotiations with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations on a regional free trade.

That group includes Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and other countries in Southeast Asia.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk was noncommittal when asked about Lugar's proposal last week.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Deputy made Feb. visit to Colorado balloon family

FORT COLLINS, Colo. – A Colorado sheriff's deputy responded to a 911 hang-up in February at the home of a family now known for reporting that their young son was in a balloon that got away.
The Larimer County Sheriff's deputy who went to the home said he heard a man yelling and, once inside, noticed Mayumi Heene had a mark on her cheek and broken blood vessels in her eye. She said it was because of a problem with her contacts.
Richard Heene said he was yelling because his children stayed up past their bedtime.
The deputy concluded he didn't have probable cause to make an arrest, but believed a physical altercation may have occurred. No charges were filed.
It was one of three 911 calls made from the home within the past year, but the only one in which a report was filed.

Biden visits Reno to tout stimulus, support Reid

RENO, Nev. – Vice President Joe Biden visited economically troubled Nevada on Friday to promote the progress of the federal stimulus program and boost the re-election campaign of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who has troubles of his own.
Hundreds of backers and a handful of protesters gathered early Friday outside the arena at the University of Nevada, Reno, where Biden and Reid were to speak after a $2,400-a-plate fundraising breakfast.
Biden arrived with a message that the Democratic leader is working successfully in Washington to help his home state, which has been hit hard by the recession.
But Nevada tops the list of the most economically stressed states, according to an analysis by The Associated Press, and that could spell trouble for Reid, whose pitch to voters has relied on what he can do for the state from his position in the Senate.
Republican critics seized on the fact that the 13.2 percent jobless rate is at an historic high and Nevada leads the nation in the rate of foreclosures and bankruptcies. The casino industry, the economic engine that drives the state, has been battered by reluctant tourists and gamblers pinching their pennies.
"Nevadans know that Sen. Reid pushed hard to get this stimulus package through the Senate, but their state has lost over 43,000 jobs lost since the legislation was signed into law," said Jahan Wilcox, Republican National Committee spokesman.
"The people of Nevada deserve to know why the leader of the Senate wasted hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars just to lose tens of thousands of jobs in the Silver State," he said.
A group of four protesters stood across the street from the motorcade's arrival area outside the Lawlor Events Center with signs that read "Biden-Reid on a bankroll — ours," "No more spending — broke," and "How's the penthouse on the Ritz, Harry?"
A newspaper poll earlier this month showed Reid trailing two Republicans who are running to unseat him: former state GOP chairwoman Sue Lowden and Danny Tarkanian, son of former UNLV basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian.
Reid, who is running for a fifth term, had 39 percent to Lowden's 49 percent, according to the survey of 500 registered voters conducted by Washington, D.C.-based Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. for the Las Vegas Review-Journal. The poll had a sampling error margin of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.
Reid lagged behind Tarkanian in a head-to-head matchup 43 percent to 48 percent.
Lowden sponsored a free breakfast of coffee and donuts in a Reno hotel-casino parking lot Friday to people who brought food for the local food bank — a move intended to underscore the contrast to Reid's pricey breakfast.
Lowden said Reid's clout as majority leader is exaggerated. She said Nevada currently gets back 65 cents for every dollar taxpayers send to Washington, D.C., compared with 98 cents on the dollar while former Republican Sen. Paul Laxalt represented Nevada from 1974 to 1987.
About 500 people lined up to get into the Biden-Reid appearance at the Lawlor Events Center.
Among them was Cloyd Phillips, executive director of a local community services agency that he says has received stimulus funds in the past. He said the money has been used to provide funding for computer training classes for seniors, financial literacy training and other workplace development programs.
He told the Reno Gazette-Journal he wanted to make sure he got word to Biden and Reid that smaller groups are benefiting from the recovery act, not just large corporations.
Biden's visit comes five months after resident Barack Obama traveled to Las Vegas to headline a celebrity fundraiser for Reid featuring performances by Bette Midler and Sheryl Crow.
Obama urged Nevadans to return Reid for another six-year term, saying his leadership was crucial to passing the $787 billion stimulus package and an expansion of children's health insurance earlier this year.

Reid "knows how to get things done," the president said.

LED Light Bulbs

LED Light Bulbs

Lighting is the deliberate application of light to achieve some aesthetic or practical effect. Lighting includes use of both artificial light sources such as lamps and natural illumination of interiors from daylight. Daylighting (through windows, skylights, etc.) is often used as the main source of light during daytime in buildings given its low cost. Artificial lighting represents a major component of energy consumption, accounting for a significant part of all energy consumed worldwide.

Artificial lighting is most commonly provided today by electric lights, but gas lighting, candles, or oil lamps were used in the past, and still are used in certain situations. Proper lighting can enhance task performance or aesthetics, while there can be energy wastage and adverse health effects of lighting. Indoor lighting is a form of fixture or furnishing, and a key part of interior design. Lighting can also be an intrinsic component of landscaping.

Father of Anna Nicole's daughter due to testify

LOS ANGELES – Larry Birkhead, who gained fame in a custody battle over Anna Nicole Smith's daughter, was due to testify in the preliminary hearing for two doctors and the man who once fought him for custody of little Dannielynn.
Howard K. Stern, the boyfriend-lawyer who claimed he was the baby's father, lost that battle when Birkhead proved by DNA evidence that the little girl was his. Now Stern sits in the defendant's chair before a judge who will decide if he and the two doctors must stand trial in Smith's drug overdose death.
Dr. Khristine Eroshevich, Dr. Sandeep Kapoor and Stern are not charged with killing her but with conspiring to illegally provide her with controlled substances.
In testimony by Smith's former bodyguard, Stern was portrayed as a devoted companion to the celebrity model who went through a "commitment ceremony" with her five months before she died.
Witness Maurice Brighthaupt said he was present at the ceremony on a boat off the Bahamas on Sept. 28, 2006, the same month that Smith gave birth to her baby and saw her only son Daniel die.
"It was a unification through the eyes of God is how they put it," Brighthaupt said.
But Brighthaupt also offered damaging testimony against both Stern and Eroshevich saying he witnessed them injecting Smith with medication. It was the first time he has made such an allegation and Stern's attorney Steve Sadow attacked his account as false. He showed that Brighthaupt had given different stories to cable TV outlets after Smith's death in return for payments of $150,000 for his interviews.
Brighthaupt, who spent two full days on the witness stand, was to wind up his testimony Friday morning before Birkhead was due on the witness stand.
He has not commented on Birkhead's role in Smith's life except to say that he was with Smith in May of 2004 when she met Birkhead at the Kentucky Derby and began dating him.
Sadow indicated outside court he was looking forward to Birkhead's testimony.
"I think Larry's going to do his best to tell the truth," said Sadow. "If he does, he'll be very helpful to Howard."
Under Sadow's cross-examination, Brighthaupt said that many of the things he told his TV interviewers were lies, crafted to protect Smith's reputation. Among them was his statement that he never saw her take illicit drugs and never saw the drug methadone in her house. He also said then that Smith was in control of everything including decisions about her medication. He said now that was a lie.
"I had a lot of time to think about everything I said in the past and I'm trying to rectify everything now," he said.
He also acknowledged he had tried to sell a book on the case but the publisher rejected his manuscript calling it "too boring."
Thursday's court session was marked by Superior Court Judge Robert J. Perry's decision to bar the prosecution from inquiring about an alleged sexual relationship between Smith and Eroshevich who had been her longtime psychiatrist and friend.
"This is a preliminary hearing," Perry told the prosecutors. "It's not a trial. It's to determine if there's probable cause for a trial. I'm just not going to turn this into some circus sideshow."
Perry said the issue could be raised again at trial before another judge, who could then rule on its relevance.
Outside court, attorney Adam Braun, who represents Eroshevich, called the sexual allegation a distraction and said the judge made the right call in barring the testimony.

Search warrants executed in the case and released a few weeks ago described photos of Smith and Eroshevich in a bathtub in a sexual situation.

Brighthaupt offered no testimony against Kapoor and said he had not heard of him. Kapoor's lawyer asked him no questions.

___

Associated Press writer Anthony McCartney contributed to this report.

Parks and Recreation Software

Computer software is so called to distinguish it from computer hardware, which encompasses the physical interconnections and devices required to store and execute (or run) the software. At the lowest level, software consists of a machine language specific to an individual processor. A machine language consists of groups of binary values signifying processor instructions that change the state of the computer from its preceding state. Software is an ordered sequence of instructions for changing the state of the computer hardware in a particular sequence. It is usually written in high-level programming languages that are easier and more efficient for humans to use (closer to natural language) than machine language. High-level languages are compiled or interpreted into machine language object code. Software may also be written in an assembly language, essentially, a mnemonic representation of a machine language using a natural language alphabet. Assembly language must be assembled into object code via an assembler.

The term "software" was first used in this sense by John W. Tukey in 1958. In computer science and software engineering, computer software is all computer programs. The theory that is the basis for most modern software was first proposed by Alan Turing in his 1935 essay Computable numbers with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem.

http://www.csisoftwareusa.com/industries/parks-and-recreation.php

LED Rope Light

LED Rope Light

Lighting is the deliberate application of light to achieve some aesthetic or practical effect. Lighting includes use of both artificial light sources such as lamps and natural illumination of interiors from daylight. Daylighting (through windows, skylights, etc.) is often used as the main source of light during daytime in buildings given its low cost. Artificial lighting represents a major component of energy consumption, accounting for a significant part of all energy consumed worldwide.

Artificial lighting is most commonly provided today by electric lights, but gas lighting, candles, or oil lamps were used in the past, and still are used in certain situations. Proper lighting can enhance task performance or aesthetics, while there can be energy wastage and adverse health effects of lighting. Indoor lighting is a form of fixture or furnishing, and a key part of interior design. Lighting can also be an intrinsic component of landscaping.

Garden Gates

Servitudes are legal arrangements of land use arising out of private agreements. Under the feudal system, most land in England was cultivated in common fields, where peasants were allocated strips of arable land that were used to support the needs of the local village or manor. By the sixteenth century the growth of population and prosperity provided incentives for landowners to use their land in more profitable ways, dispossessing the peasantry. Common fields were aggregated and enclosed by large and enterprising farmers -- either through negotiation among one another or by lease from the landlord -- to maximize the productivity of the available land and contain livestock. Fences redefined the means by which land is used, resulting in the modern law of servitudes.

Ownership of the fence varies. In some parts of the country all boundaries are shared; in other parts of the country you may own the boundary on the left-hand or right-hand side, however, only the title deeds can be depended on to tell you which side is yours. (A 'T' symbol indicates who is the owner). It used to be normal for the cladding to be on the non-owners side (enabling access to the posts for the owner when repairs need doing), but increasingly this cannot be depended on.

Garden Gates

AP Interview: White House expands climate campaign

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama's so-called green team has undergone a growth spurt.
The group of Cabinet secretaries and White House advisers who meet regularly to craft the president's energy and environmental agenda now numbers 13, double what it was during the administration's early days.
It's just one of the signs that the administration is stepping up its push to pass energy and climate legislation this year, as the Senate continues to wrangle with Obama's other top domestic priority, health care reform. The House has already passed a bill.
Since the summer, when everyone else's attention was focused on the heated town hall meetings over health care, Obama administration officials have been meeting with more than half the Senate, made calls to nearly 100 mayors in 17 states, and met with numerous governors, according to White House records. Their goal, according to Carol Browner, the president's assistant for energy and climate change, "is to get the bill moving and keep it moving."
"It's really engaging a wide array of people across the administration to make sure that we're answering the questions that the Senate needs answered and working with individual members as they think about how they can support comprehensive energy legislation," Browner said Thursday in an interview with The Associated Press. "It's just grown and grown and grown, with more and more Cabinet agencies and secretaries wanting to be involved."
In the days and hours before the House vote in June, White House officials and the president himself pressed reluctant lawmakers to vote for the legislation. The bill passed narrowly, 219-212. The climb to 60 votes in the Senate is expected to be even more steep, and it comes as the administration is under pressure to make progress on climate change before international negotiations in Copenhagen in December. The Senate bill would cut greenhouse gases 80 percent by 2050.
The White House effort started earlier this year. The first big meeting between Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., who introduced the bill last week, and administration officials took place over dinner in March at his Georgetown home. Browner, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, White House science adviser John Holdren and State Department climate negotiators Todd Stern and Jonathan Pershing attended.
That same month, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., Kerry's co-sponsor on the legislation, and Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., were meeting with White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel to discuss the global warming bill when Obama dropped in to emphasize that it was one of his top priorities.
There has also been a permanent White House representative at a weekly meeting held by Boxer and Kerry of nearly 20 senators working to advance the legislation.
"Now there will be a more unified meeting process between senators and the administration in order to lock things in," said Kerry. "We are getting into the stage of negotiations where people need to close."
Browner met for 45 minutes on Thursday with three Democratic senators concerned about the cost curbing greenhouse gases will have on their home-state industries. Their votes are crucial for the measure to pass.
"It's important for us to get right from the senators their thinking," Browner said. "As the bill starts to move ... we want to make sure that we in the administration know what members are most focused on and what's going to be key to ensuring their support for comprehensive energy legislation."
How much support the administration is getting is unclear. Kerry on Thursday acknowledged that there was still work to do. Boxer said Sunday during an interview on C-SPAN that she did not have the 60 votes. Hearings on the measure may also be pushed back to later in October to wait for an EPA analysis of the legislation.
Browner would not handicap the bill Thursday, saying only that she wanted the legislation "to be as far along as we possibly can be."
In a sign of how important a domestic bill is to the White House's efforts, Browner has no plans yet to attend the U.N. conference in Copenhagen — and she says she won't be going if the bill is still working its way through Congress.
"Obviously, we'd love to sign the bill" into law before then, Browner said. "I don't think that is going to happen."

Calling 'Em Out: The White House Takes on the Press (Time.com)

There was never a single moment when White House staff decided the major media outlets were falling down on the job. There were instead several such moments.
For press secretary Robert Gibbs, the realization came in early September, when the New York Times ran a front-page story about the bubbling parental outrage over President Obama's plan to address schoolchildren - even though the benign contents of the speech were not yet public. "You had to be like, 'Wait a minute,'" says Gibbs. "This thing has become a three-ring circus." (See who's who in Barack Obama's White House.)
For deputy communications director Dan Pfeiffer, the more hyperbolic attacks on health-care reform this summer, which were often covered as a "controversy," flipped an internal switch. "When you are having a debate about whether or not you want to kill people's grandmother," he explains, "the normal rules of engagement don't apply."
And for his boss, Anita Dunn, the aha moment came when the Washington Post ran a second op-ed from a Republican politician decrying the "32" alleged czars appointed by the Obama Administration. Nine of those so-called czars, it turned out, were subject to Senate confirmation, making them decidedly unlike the Russian monarchs. "The idea - that the Washington Post didn't even question it," Dunn says, still marveling at the decision. (Read Mark Halperin's grades for the Obama Administration.)
All the criticism, both fair and misleading, took a toll, regularly knocking the White House off message. So a new White House strategy has emerged: rather than just giving reporters ammunition to "fact-check" Obama's many critics, the White House decided it would become a player, issuing biting attacks on those pundits, politicians and outlets that make what the White House believes to be misleading or simply false claims, like the assertion that health-care reform would establish new "sex clinics" in schools. Obama, fresh from his vacation on Martha's Vineyard, cheered on the effort, telling his aides he wanted to "call 'em out."
The take-no-prisoners turn has come as a surprise to some in the press, considering the largely favorable coverage that candidate Obama received last fall and given the President's vows to lower the rhetorical temperature in Washington and not pay attention to cable hyperbole. Instead, the White House blog now issues regular denunciations of the Administration's critics, including a recent post that announced "Fox lies" and suggested that the cable network was unpatriotic for criticizing Obama's 2016 Olympics effort. (See pictures of Barack Obama's nation of hope.)
White House officials offer no apologies. "The best analogy is probably baseball," says Gibbs. "The only way to get somebody to stop crowding the plate is to throw a fastball at them. They move."
The general in this war is Dunn, 51, a veteran campaign strategist who arrived at the White House in May. She has been a force in Democratic campaigns since the late 1980s and helmed Obama's rapid-response operation during his run. At the White House, she has become a devoted consumer of conservative-media reports and a fierce critic of Fox News, leading the Administration's effort to block officials, including Obama, from appearing on the network. "It's opinion journalism masquerading as news," Dunn says. "They are boosting their audience. But that doesn't mean we are going to sit back." Fox News's head of news, Michael Clemente, counters that the White House criticism unfairly conflates the network's reporters and its pundits, like Glenn Beck, whom he likens to "the op-ed page of a newspaper." (See pictures of Barack Obama behind the scenes on Inauguration Day.)
As a mother - who plans to transition to a new job later this year in order to spend more time with her 13-year-old son - Dunn is a rarity in the almost all-boys club that is Obama's inner circle. But her impact on the White House has been unmistakable. Since her arrival, the communications operation has been tightly refocused, with greater emphasis on planning ahead to shape the news cycle and controlling staff contacts with the press. In daily internal meetings, she points out where to strike back or admit error.
It is not hard to awaken her fiercer instincts. "Here in the White House, you are reluctant to feel like you have to go to that place," she says. "But we have to be more aggressive rather than just sit back and defend ourselves, because they will say anything. They will take any small thing and distort it." In other words, after eight months at the White House, the days of nonpartisan harmony are long gone - it's Us against Them. And the Obama Administration is playing to win.
Read a brief history of presidents and the press.
See pictures of Obama in the west.
View this article on Time.comRelated articles on Time.com:The Obama Team's Debut: Not Quite Ready on Day One The "Call 'Em Out" White House Targets Fox News What Even The White House Respects About Fox News - Swampland.com Goolsbee: "There's Some Light at the End of the Tunnel" Twittering in Obamaland: The Social-Networking Administration

Racing Schools

The Sports Car Club of America's SPEED World Challenge Touring Car and GT championships are dominant in North America while the venerable British Touring Car Championship continues in the United Kingdom. America's historic Trans-Am Series is undergoing a period of transition, but is still the longest-running road racing series in the U.S. The National Auto Sport Association also provides a venue for amateurs to compete in home-built factory derived vehicles on various local circuits.

Production car racing or known in the US as showroom stock, is an economical and rules restricted version of touring car racing, mainly to restrict costs.

Racing Schools

Frank pushing quick movement on credit card bill

WASHINGTON – Rep. Barney Frank, the tough-talking liberal ushering through a major rewrite of rules governing Wall Street, sounded a warning shot on Thursday to big banks: Start playing nice or Congress will make your life even more difficult.
Last spring, Frank helped push a bill through Congress that imposes strict new rules on lenders, including a limitation on when and how banks hike rates. Most of the rules will take effect in mid-February, a date set by Congress to give banks time to prepare for the changes.
But the Massachusetts Democrat, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, said at a hearing on Thursday that lenders have abused the grace period by using the time to hike rates ahead of the new rules. He has introduced legislation that would move up the enactment date to Dec. 1.
"It is very clear that this is the kind of protection that shouldn't wait and we should move forward," Frank said about the new credit card rules.
Frank also said he is open to providing relief to merchants that pay heavy fees to banks in exchange for accepting credit cards from their customers. Thursday's hearing was primarily focused on legislation by Vermont Democratic Rep. Peter Welch that would regulate those fees.
The hearing included testimony from Kathy Miller, a grocery store owner in Elmore, Vt., whose voice cracked with emotion as she described the strain put on her business because of the high fees, known as "interchange," levied by credit card companies.
Some lobbyists have speculated that Frank's sudden interest in Welch's bill is a warning to banks to tone down their opposition to his broader effort to impose new consumer protections. The financial industry has launched a multimillion-dollar effort to try to defeat legislation backed by Frank and President Barack Obama that would create a new federal regulator to police the fine print on such products as credit cards and mortgages.
Banks contend that tougher restrictions and the creation of a new federal regulator will hurt the availability of credit. In an effort to counter the backlash in Congress and elsewhere, some banks have announced they will adopt consumer-friendly policies on their own.
This week Bank of America Corp. pledged not to hike credit card interest rates or fees before February.
Frank called Bank of America's promise "welcome" but added that lenders have otherwise abused the grace period given to them by Congress. Further, he said, the bank's pledge was an indication that credit card companies could be forced to comply with the law sooner than planned.

Big Japanese brands readying 3D flat-screen TVs

CHIBA, Japan – Japan's big name electronic manufacturers are readying flat-screen TVs that can show high-definition movies and video games in 3D for launch next year.
At the country's biggest consumer electronics show that opened Tuesday just outside of Tokyo all the major makers displayed 3-D prototypes. Sony Corp. and Panasonic Corp. said they would bring their first models to market next year.
The companies are plowing ahead even before there is much content available, with spokesmen saying only that preparation is under way. Demonstrations at the exhibitions were mainly short clips of movies, nature scenes and sports.
Current technology requires that viewers wear special electronic glasses so early buyers are unlikely to watch everyday TV on 3D sets.
Some companies such as Sharp Corp. displayed 3D sets at the show but are waiting until there is more content available before they set a product launch date.

Profits up at top retailer Tesco

LONDON (AFP) –
The country's biggest retailer Tesco said Tuesday that net profits rose 1.3 percent in the first half of its financial year, boosted by acquisitions, and added it was well placed for economic recovery.

Profits after tax advanced to 1.027 billion pounds in the six months to August 29, which compared with 1.014 billion pound in the same period last year, Tesco said in a statement.

Pre-tax profits before exceptional items jumped 8.6 percent to 1.57 billion pounds, which was ahead of market expectations.

Worldwide group revenues meanwhile swelled by 9.3 percent to 27.8 billion pounds in the reporting period, during which Tesco created 6,500 jobs despite the global economic downturn.

In recession-struck Britain, Tesco sales excluding petrol increased by 2.1 percent.

"Our UK business is delivering solid growth and improving volumes," said Tesco chief executive Terry Leahy in the earnings release.

"This progress across the group, combined with our strong financial position funding continued investment in new space and new businesses, means we're well-placed for the global recovery."

He added: "Last year's acquisitions -- Homever in Korea and Tesco Bank -- are already making good contributions to sales and profits.

"In International, the markets with the greatest growth potential for the long-term have been some of the hardest hit in the short-term but we have nevertheless delivered a good performance against strong headwinds."

Tesco is the world's third-biggest retailer after US giant Wal-Mart and French group Carrefour.

The group also announced on Tuesday it has relaunched its financial services unit, Tesco Personal Finance, as Tesco Bank.

Tesco Bank, which provides credit cards, insurance policies, small loans and savings accounts, has almost six million customers in Britain.

The supermarket group agreed to buy Royal Bank of Scotland's 50-percent share in their joint venture, Tesco Personal Finance, for 950 million pounds last year.

The supermarket chain agreed to buy South Korea's debt-stricken discount retail chain Homever for 1.86 billion dollars last year.

UN Pakistan offices shut after blast: spokeswoman

ISLAMABAD (AFP) –
The Pakistani Taliban on Tuesday claimed responsibility for a blast at a United Nations office in the capital which left five aid workers dead, a spokesman for the insurgents told AFP.

"This attack was launched by us -- we claim responsibility," Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed location.

News of the claim comes as the United Nations kept its offices closed throughout the country following the suicide blast in Islamabad, a spokeswoman said.

The world body is reviewing its security measures after the suicide bomber, dressed in military uniform, walked past cameras, metal detectors and guards and detonated explosives in the heavily-fortified office in the heart of the capital on Monday.

"We are assessing the security situation," said spokeswoman Ishrat Rizvi. "Today the offices are closed... we hope that the offices will be open soon."

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the attacker managed to navigate the tough security by dressing in a paramilitary uniform and asking to use the toilet, thus managing to make it to the lobby to detonate about eight kilograms (17 pounds) of explosives. Related article: Blast shows Pakistan Taliban strength

Four Pakistanis and an Iraqi working for the WFP were killed.

Rizvi said their security team was assessing whether to reopen the offices on a day-by-day basis, but said they were committed to continuing their work.

"The closure of the offices will affect the operations but our effort and intention is to continue our humanitarian assistance," she told AFP.

No decisions had been taken yet over whether to remove any of about 2,000 UN staff working for at least 19 agencies across Pakistan.

The attack on a humanitarian target provoked worldwide outrage, with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calling it "a terrible tragedy for the United Nations and the humanitarian community in Pakistan".

In New York, the UN Staff Union said in a statement it was "extremely concerned" that the world body had not implemented "all necessary safety and security arrangements to protect its staff."

It is the second time the UN community in Pakistan has been hit this year, with two employees from the refugee agency UNHCR and children's agency UNICEF killed in the June suicide bombing at a luxury hotel in northwest Peshawar.

German Bosch could see first loss since WWII: report

FRANKFURT (AFP) –
The world's leading auto parts maker, Bosch, could lose up to three billion euros (4.4 billion dollars) this year, its first loss since World War II, a press report said on Tuesday.

In 2008, Bosch had posted a net profit of 372 million euros, which was already a drop of 87 percent from the previous year.

A spokesman for the German group declined to comment on the report in the business daily Handelsblatt, terming it "market speculation."

Auto parts companies have suffered heavily from the global economic slowdown, and Bosch's results were also hit by investments in solar energy and lithium ion battery development.

The report cited sources close to the company as saying that it was trying by all means to reduce losses, such as through the sale by Bosch of brake activities in the United States to the Japanese group Akebono Brake Industry.

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