Saturday, December 31, 2011

All eyes on German renewable energy efforts (AP)

FELDHEIM, Germany ? This tiny village of 37 gray homes and farm buildings clustered along the main road in a wind-swept corner of rural eastern Germany seems an unlikely place for a revolution.

Yet environmentalists, experts and politicians from El Salvador to Japan to South Africa have flocked here in the past year to learn how Feldheim, a village of just 145 people, is already putting into practice Germany's vision of a future powered entirely by renewable energy.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's government passed legislation in June setting the country on course to generate a third of its power through renewable sources ? such as wind, solar, geothermal and bioenergy ? within a decade, reaching 80 percent by 2050, while creating jobs, increasing energy security and reducing harmful emissions.

The goals are among the world's most ambitious, and expensive, and other industrialized nations from the U.S. to Japan are watching to see whether transforming into a nation powered by renewable energy sources can really work.

"Germany can't afford to fail, because the whole world is looking at the German model and asking, can Germany move us to new business models, new infrastructure?," said Jeremy Rifkin, a U.S. economist who has advised the European Union and Merkel.

In June, the nation passed the 20 percent mark for drawing electric power from a mix of wind, solar and other renewables. That compares with about 9 percent in the United States or Japan ? both of which rely heavily on hydroelectric power, an energy source that has long been used.

Expanding renewables depends on the right mix of resources, as well as government subsidies and investment incentive ? and a willingness by taxpayers to shoulder their share of the burden. Germans currently pay a 3.5 euro cent per kilowatt-hour tax, roughly euro157 ($205) per year for a typical family of four, to support research and investment in and subsidize the production and consumption of energy from renewable sources.

That allows for homeowners who install solar panels on their rooftops, or communities like Feldheim that build their own biogas plants, to be paid above-market prices for selling back to the grid, to ensure that their investment at least breaks even.

Critics, like the Institute for Energy Research, based in Washington, D.C., maintain such tariffs put an unfair burden of expanding renewables squarely on the taxpayer. At the same time, to make renewable energy work on the larger scale, Germany will have to pour billions into infrastructure, including updating its grid.

Key to success of the transformation will be getting the nation's powerful industries on board, to drive innovation in technology and create jobs. According to the Environment Ministry, overall investment in renewable energy production equipment more than doubled to euro29.4 billion ($38.44 billion) in 2011. Solid growth in the sector is projected through the next decade.

Some 370,000 people in Germany now have jobs in the renewable sector, more than double the number in 2004, a point used as proof that tax payers' investment is paying off.

Feldheim has zero unemployment ? despite its tiny size ? compared with roughly 30 percent in other villages in the economically depressed state of Brandenburg, which views investments in renewables as a ticket for a brighter future. Most residents work in the plant that produces biogas ? fuel made by the breakdown of organic material such as plants or food waste ? or maintain the wind and solar parks that provide the village's electricity.

"The energy revolution is already taking place right here," says Werner Frohwitter, spokesman for the Energiequelle company that helped set up and run Feldheim's energy concept.

But it's not only in the country. Earlier this month in Berlin, officials unveiled a prototype of a self-sustaining, energy-efficient home, built from recycled materials and complete with electric vehicles that can be charged in its garage.

The aim of the prototype home is to produce twice as much energy as is used by a family of four ? chosen from a willing pool of volunteers who will be selected to live in the home for 15 months ? through a combination of solar photovoltaics and energy management technology, in order to show the technology already exists to allow people to be energy self-sufficient.

"We want to show people that already today it is possible to live completely from renewable energy," said German Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer as the project, dubbed "Efficiency House Plus," was unveiled. The house is part of a wider euro1.2 million ($1.57 million) project investing in energy-efficient buildings.

"The Efficiency House Plus will set standards that can be adopted by the majority in the short term," Ramsauer told The Associated Press. "The basic principle is that the house produces more energy than needed to live. The extra energy is then used to charge electric-powered cars and bicycles or sold back to the public grid."

Germany's four leading car makers are also participating in the project with BMW AG, Daimler AG, Volkswagen AG and Opel, which is part of Buick's parent company, General Motors Co., each making an E-car for use by in the home.

Such strong cooperation between Germany's industrial sector coupled with a political landscape that emphasizes stability and a heightened public ecological sensibility makes Germany fertile ground to lead the way in the transformation from a post-carbon economy to one run on renewable energy.

"Germany has the most robust industrial economy per capita. When you talk about industrial revolution, that's Germany. It's German technology, it's German IT, it's German commutation," said Rifkin, who outlines what he calls the "The Third Industrial Revolution," in a newly released book of the same title that explains how the economies in the future could swap fossil fuels for renewable energies and still maintain growth.

Robert Pottmann, an asset manager with Munich Re, one of the world's biggest reinsurers, says the company seeks to invest about euro2.5 billion ($3.27 billion) in the next few years in renewable energy assets such as "wind farms, solar projects or maybe new electricity grids."

Alan Simpson, an independent energy and climate adviser from Britain who visited Feldheim as part of a wider tour of Germany last month to see what the renewable revolution looks like up close said it was inspiring to view what is being accomplished on the ground.

"It's great to think about Germany delivering on everything that we are being told in Great Britain is impossible," Simpson said.

Amid the excitement, there is also an awareness of the real need for the German experiment to succeed.

"If Germany can't pull this off," said Rifkin. "We don't have a plan B."

___

Associated Press writer Juergen Baetz contributed to this story from Berlin.

___

On the Internet:

Feldheim: http://www.neue-energien-forum-feldheim.de/

German Renewable Energy Agency: http://www.unendlich-viel-energie.de/en/homepage.html

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_germany_making_renewables_work

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Iran to fire long-range missiles in drill: agency (Reuters)

TEHRAN (Reuters) ? Iran will fire long-range missiles during a naval drill in the Gulf on Saturday, a semi-official news agency reported, a show of force at a time when Iran has threatened to close shipping lanes if the West imposes sanctions on its oil exports.

Iran threatened on Tuesday to stop the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz if it became the target of an oil export embargo over its nuclear ambitions, a move that could trigger military conflict with countries dependent on Gulf oil.

"The Iranian navy will test several kinds of its missiles, including its long-range missiles, in the Persian Gulf on Saturday," Admiral Mahmoud Mousavi, deputy commander of the Iranian navy, told Fars news agency.

During military drills in 2009, Iran test-fired its surface-to-surface Shahab-3 missile, said to be capable of reaching reach Israel and U.S. bases in the Middle East.

Washington has expressed concern about Tehran's missiles, which include the Shahab-3 strategic intermediate range ballistic missile with a range of up to 1,000 km (625 miles), the Ghadr-1 with an estimated 1,600 km range and a Shahab-3 variant known as Sajjil-2 with a range of up to 2,400 km.

Iran began a 10-day naval drill in the Gulf last Saturday to show its resolve to counter any attack by foes such as Israel or the United States.

Iranian media have said the exercise differed from previous ones in terms of "the vastness of the area of action and the military equipment and tactics that are being employed."

The United States and Israel have said they do not rule out military action against Iran if diplomacy fails to resolve a dispute over the country's nuclear program, which Tehran says is peaceful but which the West says is a cover to build a bomb.

HURTING ECONOMY

Iran has said it would respond to any attack by targeting U.S. interests in the region and Israel, as well as by closing the Strait of Hormuz.

The U.S. Navy, whose Fifth Fleet is based in the Gulf island of Bahrain, said it would not accept any Iranian disruption of the flow of oil in the strategic waterway.

"The firing of missiles is the final part of the navy drill," said Mousavi. "The final phase of the drill is to prepare the navy for confronting the enemy in war situations."

Navy commander Rear Admiral Ali Rastegari also said "medium-range, short-range missiles and smart torpedoes" would be test-fired.

Experts say Iran might be able to close the Hormuz Strait temporarily, but that such a move would damage its own economy.

Tensions with the West have risen since the U.N. nuclear watchdog reported on November 8 that Iran appears to have worked on designing an atomic bomb and may still be pursuing research to that end.

Iran denies this and says it needs nuclear technology to generate electricity to meet growing domestic demand.

Tehran has been hit by four rounds of U.N. sanctions since 2006 as well as U.S. and European Union sanctions over its refusal to suspend sensitive nuclear work.

Some analysts say sanctions on Iran's vital energy sector might push the clerical establishment to change its nuclear policy. Over 60 percent of state revenue is from crude exports and most of Iran's petrol imports are shipped through Hormuz.

"Iranian leaders are worried about sanctions on oil exports ... That is why they are making such threats," said analyst Hossein Kazemi. "Sanctions on oil income will paralyze the country."

The Islamic Republic's leadership has repeatedly brushed off the impact of sanctions on the oil-dependent economy.

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/wl_nm/us_iran_missiles

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Friday, December 30, 2011

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 4G LTE EL01 Update is Ready, TouchWiz for Tablets has Arrived on Verizon

If you own a Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 with 4G LTE on Verizon, you should have a pretty major update available to you any day now. The update is version EL01 and includes TouchWiz for tablets along with a ton of other fixes and improvements. The document above (click to enlarge) will walk you through all of the major changes such as the mini apps tray, quick panel, and social hub widget. If stock Honeycomb was becoming a bore, this should give you some much needed spice.

The update itself is 351MB in size, so be sure you are in a strong LTE area or on WiFi before attempting to download.

More details after the break. ?

More info.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DroidLife/~3/YFgZr-TfmV4/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Jobs focus has kept Ontario's green energy plan alive

Date: Wednesday Dec. 28, 2011 7:29 AM ET

TORONTO ? The Ontario government has been able to stick by its green energy plans amid a looming recession by making the project about jobs, but its biggest challenge may be one of public relations, not finance.

The focus on green energy has come at a political cost, with the Liberals losing their majority mandate after this fall's election. That result ushered in a precarious new term that some worry could lead to an overhaul of the green plans if the Liberal government falls.

Experts don't believe in a doomsday scenario for green energy in Ontario, because despite the ongoing controversy, the Green Energy Act has been tied to jobs -- and it's the only solution that has been put forward to deal with pressures in the electricity system.

But that doesn't mean the government isn't going to have an uphill battle trying to implement the changes.

"It's a very difficult issue, the biggest problem is public opinion, getting the public to accept the fact that essentially our energy supplies are going to have to change," said Henry Jacek, a politics expert at McMaster University in Hamilton.

"People want the energy but they don't want to look at the infrastructure that creates that energy."

There has been ongoing opposition from many rural areas where residents worry about the health effects of having wind turbines placed near their homes, and complain about a lack of local consultation.

"Rural Ontario hasn't had strong local democracy since the Green Energy Act was passed," said John Laforet, former president of Wind Concerns Ontario, and the man who spearheaded the revolt against the Liberals in those parts.

"What caused the political backlash was three years of the government just refusing to listen. It was citizens who had tried everything else to express their concerns and frustrations and watching it fall on deaf ears in Toronto, rise up and stand up for themselves and defeat those MPPs who weren't prepared to do the job."

The Liberals lost some high-profile politicians in that fight, including former Education Minister Leona Dombrowsky and Environment Minister John Wilkinson.

"It's quite clear where rural municipalities stand on this issue," Laforet said.

"If the industry wants to have a future in Ontario -- and if the Liberals want to have a future governing Ontario -- I think it's going to be important for everyone involved, to talk to citizens who are opposing these projects to find out what and what can be done."

Environmentalists have praised some aspects of the act but continue to express concern over the province's commitment to nuclear power, which makes up 50 per cent of its energy source, as well as a lack of focus on conservation efforts.

"The GEA has been an amazing success since it was passed in 2009, but the GEA will effectively expire in 2018 if the government doesn't permit green and clean sources to displace at least some nuclear supply," said Shawn-Patrick Stensil, a nuclear analyst with Greenpeace Canada.

"Otherwise put, if the Liberals don't reduce their commitment to nuclear, the GEA may suffer the same fate under the Liberals as under the Tories."

The harshest criticism for the plan, however, has revolved around costs.

Ontario's auditor general added his voice to the chorus of critics recently by casting doubt on the Liberals' job-creation figures and suggesting that 30,000 of the promised 50,000 jobs that were to be created under the Green Energy Act would likely to be short-term construction gigs.

What's more, he argued, studies in other jurisdictions have shown that for every job created through renewable energy, two to four jobs are often lost in other sectors due to higher electricity prices.

Auditor Jim McCarter also exposed how independent decision-making over renewable energy projects has effectively been quashed by concentrating power in the energy minister's office, and found that the government fast-tracked billions of dollars of wind and solar energy projects with little oversight -- a move that will add about $220 million a year to the cost of electricity in Ontario.

"The auditor general's report put the lid on the Green Energy Act," said Progressive Conservative critic Vic Fedeli.

"How can you continue to hold out any hope at all for any of the policies in there?"

The Tories support hydroelectric, gas and nuclear energy, and would opt to scrap the act if elected.

The New Democrats support parts of the act, but would like to see some aspects, like its feed-in-tariff program, applied to smaller projects, as well as a renewed focus on efficiency and conservation.

Energy Minister Chris Bentley has said he will take a look at the auditor's recommendations, but insisted the focus on green energy was the right move, even if the province ends up finding itself in the midst of another recession.

"We started this in the depths of a world economic recession when we were fighting for jobs, fighting to create opportunities," said Bentley.

"It's been very successful so far, 20,000-plus jobs, billions of dollars worth of investments either here or committed. We're involved in a review right now that will help us address the price issue, improve the approach, and we're going to continue to strengthen it."

That perseverance may give hope to other jurisdictions struggling to get the environment on the agenda when jobs are voters' main concern.

But just like Ontarians cared little about the success of green energy in places like Germany, Jacek said voters in other areas won't be swayed by Ontario's strategy.

"I don't think public opinion is looking at what's going on in other places," Jacek said.

"It's a very local orientation -- it's what can I see and hear from my front porch."

Source: http://toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20111211/ontario-green-energy-plan-jobs-focus-111228/20111228?hub=TorontoNewHome

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SB Nation: Deaths pulled hockey community together

ESPN ignored a full year of hockey tragedy in their 2011 Year in Review segment. But as coverage of the game shifts, it's time to realize that ESPN doesn't control the message anymore. Average fans do.

Dec 27, 2011 - I'm not one of those hockey fans that feels ESPN should treat us like first-class citizens. I'm obviously an advocate for our sport and somebody that thinks hockey is far superior to baseball, football, basketball or any other game that's played on the planet, but I'm also not out of touch.

I realize that hockey fans are in the minority, and that as long as it's an expensive game to play and a complicated game to understand, the sport will never catch on the way basketball or football or baseball have. When I was a kid, it was $25 a season to play baseball. Hockey was nearly $1,000 a season. It's just sort of the way it is. Hockey will never match up in popularity in places where you can't just pick up a puck and a stick and go play on the pond, and as a result, the NHL will never be as popular as MLB or the NFL. If you haven't resigned yourself to that yet, you should do it now.

At the same time, ESPN is still a news organization, and their embarrasing refusal to cover even the most obvious hockey stories via their television product was on full display over the Christmas holiday, when they aired their annual Year In Review special. In that special, they honor athletes who have passed away in the last calendar year, and despite the tragic year the hockey family suffered, we were completely ignored by the Worldwide Leader in the 2011 edition.

We'll let a FanPost at Flyers blog Broad Street Hockey do the explaining.

ESPN aired their tribute to athletes who have died in 2011.

Not a single hockey player was mentioned.

So, here, I would like to pay tribute to those players of the sport (whether active in 2011 or not) and any dedicated staff members who passed away. The crew killed on the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash is included as well.

Mention anyone who is missed, and they will be added.

Remember those who were lost. They are part of our world as hockey players. ESPN forgets, but we will not.

What followed was a lengthy list of members of the hockey community who passed on in 2011, crowdsourced by readers from all across the Internet. It's a remarkably long list that included both active players, coaches, scouts and others, as well as those who were no longer active at the time of their death.

Its length is both tragic, message-sending, and oddly therapeutic. The rest of the sports world may have forgotten about the tragic deaths of Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien and Wade Belak, or the shocking tragedy that was the loss of the entire Lokomotiv Yaroslavl hockey club.

They may not have ever even heard of Mandi Schwartz, the Yale womens hockey player who lost her inspring battle with leukemia, in April. They may not have remembered the life of E.J. McGuire, the highly-respected head of NHL Central Scouting, who also passed from cancer in April, or that of Harley Hotchkiss, the NHL owner responsible for bringing the league to Calgary.

But that's the therapy of it. They might not have remembered, but we remember. In light of a slap in the face from THE trendsetters in American sports media, the hockey community has come together and said that they won't be ignored.

Luckily, we live in a time when we don't have to be ignored, even when the so-called Worldwide Leader In Sports does just that. More than ever, that "hockey community" today doesn't include just players, coaches, front office staff and owners. It includes you, me, and that guy with the tattoos that sits in the sixth row of Section 127.

The lack of hockey coverage from networks like ESPN is disappointing and at times insulting, but it's forced the NHL to get creative in how they view the media. Five years ago, I was an average fan of the Philadelphia Flyers, and now, I've attended NHL Drafts, All-Star Games, the Stanley Cup Final, two Winter Classics and countless regular season games as a member of the media.

I don't say this to toot my own horn, because we have an entire network of writers that have the had the similar opportunities. In every case, those chances to embed average fans inside NHL locker rooms have hopefully brought other average fans closer to the sport they love.

We're not the only ones doing it, either. Puck Daddy at Yahoo! Sports has become a must-read for hockey fans, as has Pro Hockey Talk at NBC and countless team blogs around the web that aren't part of the SB Nation network. NHL.com is, for my money, the best league-run website on the Internet, NHL Network is consistently improving their coverage, and the soon-to-be-launched NBC Sports Network has already proven that they'll be dedicated to covering hockey in a suitable manner.

Twitter is the great equalizer in all of it, of course, and while I don't have to numbers to back up a claim that hockey fans are some of the most vocal Tweeters, I do know that hockey topics trend worldwide more than the Worldwide Leader In Sports would ever have you believe.

Quality hockey coverage is out there, and in most cases, that coverage is bringing fans closer to the game than ever before. So while it might be frustrating and it might be insulting when ESPN ignores us, especially over highly emotional topics like the most tragic year the sport has ever seen, it's time to realize that it doesn't matter.

No matter what, we're not going to forget. That's what's important.

Do you like this story?

Travis Hughes

NHL Editor

Travis founded Broad Street Hockey in January of 2009, which makes him a Flyers fan. This fact means that everybody hates him, and honestly, he wouldn't have it any other way.

In his other... Read full bio


Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_hockey/~3/2Y2pIhngtZQ/espn-hockey-year-in-review-tribute-death-tragedy-nhl

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Video: Investing in Second Homes

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45797134/

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Analysis: China needs new policy course as capital tide turns (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? China's economy has surfed for years on a crest of hefty capital inflows, but the tide that brought gains in money supply is turning as global growth slows.

Capital has flowed out the past two months. If that persists, the challenge for the People's Bank of China will be to adjust policies to keep the country's growth rates from falling much.

That will be no mean feat for policymakers schooled in absorbing inflows averaging 256 billion yuan ($40.5 billion) a month since July 2005, but short on experience of how to handle outflows.

"I think this indicates a significant change in the environment for monetary policy -- from large 'twin surpluses' to a more balanced external position," Hua Zhongwei, an economist at Huachuang Securities in Beijing, told Reuters.

"So the situation under which the central bank 'passively' releases liquidity into the economy will change. It may have to pump out money in a pro-active way," he said.

The most likely way that pump will operate is through a simple reversal of the increases in the amount of cash commercial banks are required to keep as reserves -- the same tool that was used to drain the excess liquidity created by capital inflows.

The 600 basis points of required reserve ratio (RRR) hikes between January 2010 and June 2011 to a record level of 21.5 percent drained some 4 trillion yuan from China's economy.

That was as the central bank fought to bring money supply growth down from a breakneck -- and dangerously inflationary --pace close to 30 percent in late 2009, to a level closer to the 12-14 percent that international economists believe China targets.

A WAY TO COMPENSATE

Unlocking that reservoir of reserves is the obvious way to compensate for the $8.3 billion in outflows revealed in central bank foreign exchange data for October and November. The 50 bps RRR cut on November 30 released an estimated 350 billion yuan into the banking system.

Capital outflows from China may continue in the short term as Europe's sovereign debt crisis undermines risk appetite and investors seek safe havens.

Foreign direct investment in China fell 9.8 percent in November from a year earlier to $8.8 billion, the first drop in 28 months as inflows from the United States and Europe faltered.

The beauty of injecting liquidity via RRR cuts is that it compensates for capital flight without notionally shifting the declared stance of monetary policy, assuming it is the level of money supply growth that officials target.

That's especially important in an economy with average inflation this year running 1.5 percentage points above the 4 percent official target and retail sales growth galloping at a 17 percent clip so far in 2011.

The central bank insists it will keep policy prudent in 2012, even though many economists believe it shifted to a looser policy stance when it cut banks' reserve requirement ratio (RRR) in November for the first time in three years.

CREATING CASH POOLS

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan has raised the idea of creating cash "pools" to absorb hot money inflows. Analysts say that implies Zhou always intended to recycle the cash mopped up via reserve rises to cushion slowing growth.

"It's time to unleash money from the pools," Hua said.

Private sector economists polled by Reuters earlier this month expected the PBOC cut deliver 200 bps of RRR cuts by the end of 2012 and refrain from an outright cut to interest rates unless there is a sudden shock to the economy.

The next cut in the RRR is widely expected to come soon because demand for bank liquidity rises ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year, which begins on January 23.

A related issue for liquidity is that the amount of maturing central bank bills is expected to shrink to a monthly average of 65 billion yuan in the January-March period from a monthly average of 222.5 billion yuan in 2011.

Freeing up the money banks can lend is desirable on many levels for China's leadership, which remains sensitive to public opinion despite the lack of direct parliamentary elections.

Real returns on bank deposits are negative, hurting savers faced with annual inflation stubbornly higher than the one-year deposit rate of 3.5 percent.

THE JAWS OF LOAN SHARKS

Small business owners say they have been forced into the jaws of loan sharks by the tight credit policies of the past two years, sparking a national scandal.

Analysts expect the central bank to target 8-9 trillion yuan in new loans for 2012 -- up from 7.5 trillion yuan they estimate was targeted this year -- to keep credit conditions accommodative and indicating a willingness to loosen the grip on the loan-to-deposit ratio, now at 75 percent.

And tweaking the currency, which market participants believe China has been doing recently, is a diplomatic minefield given that many politicians around the world believe China keeps its currency weak to support exports.

Analysts expect yuan appreciation to the dollar to slow to around 3 percent in 2012 from this year's 4 percent rate, with much of the rise anticipated in the second half of next year if China opts for yuan stability to cope with the deepening debt crisis in its biggest export market -- Europe.

Peng Wensheng, chief economist at CICC in Beijing, expects the central bank to cut RRR to 18 percent by the end of 2012 to achieve a 14 percent annual growth of broad M2 money supply -- a level he says is compatible with 8-9 percent economic growth.

Peng reckons net foreign exchange purchases could halve to 1.5 trillion yuan in 2012 from an estimated 3 trillion yuan this year, suggesting the central bank has to pump out the balance to compensate for the fall in the monetary base.

"The authorities can inject cash into the banking system via reserve requirement cuts or open market operations," Peng said in a note to clients.

"(But) even if the authorities have a positive attitude towards expanding credit, there are doubts over how they will be able to achieve the goals," he said.

(Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Nick Edwards and Richard Borsuk)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/ts_nm/us_china_economy_policy

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

2012 MMA crystal ball: Where are these 34-somethings 12 months from now?

2012 MMA crystal ball: Where are these 34-somethings 12 months from now?Retirement is inevitable for every athlete. Whether it's voluntary or forced is up to the athlete. In fighting, it's too often forced. There's no exact age or time. Some guys have to walk away in their early 30's, others like the incredible Randy Couture, make it into their late 40's.

The end of the 2011 was unkind to several legends of MMA who are past their 34th birthdays. As a result, their careers are gasping for their last breath of air.

In 2012, we could see the end of the road for Tito Ortiz, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Matt Hughes. Then there's Brock Lesnar.

He's not a legend, but he is the pay-per-view king of the sport and yet his future could be in question following UFC 141. Lesnar has battled serious health issues and after his loss to Cain Velasquez 15 months ago, many question his passion for the sport.

During our "The MMA Insiders" show on ESPN1100/98.9 FM in Las Vegas, Yahoo! Sports' Kevin Iole, MMA analyst Frank Trigg and myself talked about who will be standing at the end of 2012.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/2012-MMA-crystal-ball-Where-are-these-34-someth?urn=mma-wp11097

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Little Drummer Boy (Americablog)

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Monday, December 26, 2011

2008 Freshman NCAA Class (D-Rose class)

I was pretty bored and looking through draft classes and was amazed how much talent was in this NCAA class.

2008 draft-freshman

1-derrick rose memphis

2- michael beasley kansas st

3- o.j mayo usc

5- kevin love UCLA

7- eric gordon indiana

11- jered bayless arizona

14- anthony randolph- LSU

19- j.j hickson N.C State

35- deandre jordan- Texas A and M

2009 draft-sophmore

1- Blake griffen -oklahoma

3- james harden arizona st

6- johnny flynn sryacuse

16- james johnson wake forest

19 jeff teague wake forest

37 dejaun blair Pitt

2010 draft junior

2- evan turner ohio st

4- wesley johnson syracuse

6- ekpe udoh Baylor

14- patrick peterson Kentucky

2011 nba draft Senior

10 Jimmer BYU

22- Kenneth Faried

25-marshoon Brooks Providence

27 Jajuan Johnson Purdue

28 Norris Cole- Clevland State

30 Jimmy Butler Marquette

*Note there are a lot of names I left off but I did so for the sake of time and space. I was wondering what some of you guys thought about this class. I don't think there is any other class of freshman that will have reach the level of talent this class has. Maybe there has been one before it that I havent seen. But if all these kids would have stayed 4 years (not realistic I'm aware) college basketball last season would have been unreal.

FanPosts are user-created posts from the BlogABull community, and are to be treated as the opinions and views of that particular user, not that of the blogger or blog community as a whole.

Source: http://www.blogabull.com/2011/12/24/2660121/2008-freshman-ncaa-class-d-rose-class

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pistolsguy: Do other QBs wear their wedding ring while they play like Ryan Fitzpatrick does? Can we get @bweeden3 to weigh in on this?

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Do other QBs wear their wedding ring while they play like Ryan Fitzpatrick does? Can we get @bweeden3 to weigh in on this? pistolsguy

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Source: http://twitter.com/pistolsguy/statuses/150649647080284160

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Foxtails Brigade : I'm Not Really in the Christmas Mood This Year [Video]

I try to get excited for the holidays, I do. When I was a kid, it really was my favorite time of year. But nowadays, it feels more like an obligation than a celebration. So this year, I'm putting this song on repeat and sleeping 'till New Years. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JqNuNhpPY0A/foxtails-brigade--im-not-really-in-the-christmas-mood-this-year

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Indonesia girl back with family after 2004 tsunami

Fifteen-year-old Wati, second right, poses for a photograph with her father Yusuf, right, mother Yusniar, left, and younger brother Aris at their home in Meulaboh, Aceh province, Indonesia, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. The girl who was swept away in the Indian Ocean tsunami seven years ago has been reunited with her parents. (AP Photo)

Fifteen-year-old Wati, second right, poses for a photograph with her father Yusuf, right, mother Yusniar, left, and younger brother Aris at their home in Meulaboh, Aceh province, Indonesia, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. The girl who was swept away in the Indian Ocean tsunami seven years ago has been reunited with her parents. (AP Photo)

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (AP) ? A girl who was swept away in the Indian Ocean tsunami seven years ago said Friday she broke down in tears this week after tracking down her parents, who had long lost hope of finding her alive.

The 15-year-old showed up in Aceh province's hard-hit town of Meulaboh earlier this week, saying that not long after the wave hit she was "adopted" by a woman who called her Wati and forced her to beg, sometimes beating her and keeping her in the streets until 1 a.m.

When the teen stopped bringing in money, she was told, "Go ahead, leave ... go find your parents then, they're in Meulaboh."

With only patchy memories about her past ? she was only 8 when the tsunami hit, an age where most children don't know their relatives' full names ? Wati began her search, telling people she thought her grandfather was "Ibrahim."

She met a pedicab driver in Meulaboh, who brought her to a man by that name. Though she didn't look familiar, he, in turn, quickly summoned her parents.

"When I saw my mother, I knew it was her," said the wide-eyed girl, her hair cropped close to her head. "I just knew."

The family, who say the girl's original name is Meri Yuranda, is also now convinced.

The Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen nations hit Aceh ? closest to the epicenter of the magnitude-9.1 quake that spawned the towering waves ? the hardest.

With tens of thousands of bodies washed to sea in that province alone, many families continue to cling to hope of finding lost loved ones. Reunions, however, are rare. And all announced in the last five years have turned out to be untrue. Even so, some mothers continue to believe a child is theirs even after DNA tests prove otherwise.

Either way, without any challenges to the claims, Wati now has a family.

Yusniar binti Ibrahim Nur, the mother, told The Associated Press she had all the evidence she needed.

"She has her father's face," the 35-year-old woman said by telephone. "And when I saw the scar over her eye and mole on her hip, I was even more sure."

It doesn't worry her, she said, that the girl and her husband have different accounts of what happened on the day the tsunami hit their tiny village of Ujong Baroh just outside of Meulaboh.

Wati remembers her father putting her into a boat with her younger sister, long presumed dead as well, and then getting separated. She says she remembers being surrounded by water and crying.

Her father says he put both of his daughters on the roof of their house hoping they'd be safe.

"Maybe she fell into the boat, maybe someone helped her. I just don't know," said Yusniar.

"I just thank God my prayers have been answered," she said. "For years, I searched everywhere. I'd really given up."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-23-AS-Indonesia-Tsunami-Reunited-Family/id-0fca14e61a6a40ed91da745f2e25872e

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Family Photo: The Kidman-Urbans Hit the Street

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman stay in step with daughter Sunday Rose, 3?, while shopping in Soho Sunday afternoon in New York City.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/0xMgbZiEQ4A/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Alvin Tompkins of Rochester arrested following police pursuit (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/177434094?client_source=feed&format=rss

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They're back: Filipino stewardesses dance again (AP)

MANILA, Philippines ? Who says plane travel can't be fun?

Flight attendants for a low-cost Philippine airline who gained fame by dancing through safety demonstrations are back swaying through the aisles.

They've swapped the Lady Gaga tunes that made them popular last year for Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas Is You."

Manila-based Cebu Pacific airline says the choreographed dance helps passengers pay more attention to the safety demonstration.

Said spokeswoman Candice Iyog on Thursday, "Now that it's Christmas, we wanted to bring a little more fun into the flight."

Iyog told The Associated Press that reaction has been good.

Video of the routine shows four attendants in orange shirts and khaki shorts dancing away on select flights.

___

Online: http://apne.ws/rPGu5D

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_re_as/as_philippines_dancing_flight_crew

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Aol Shareholders Freak Out Over Exec Departures ? As They Should

aolcareers1An inordinate amount of business deals with telling stories about the future. The reason Yahoo's market cap is down to $19.83 billion from a high of $55 billion is because shareholders don't believe that it has a future. The reason Aol bought Bebo for $850 million (a little over half of Aol's current market cap!) is that at the time it essentially believed -- after processing analysis and reports, of course -- that it was worth that much ?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/zAz2RUSYVS0/

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Monday, December 19, 2011

'Barefoot Bandit' pleads guilty in Wash. court (AP)

COUPEVILLE, Wash. ? The young man who gained international notoriety as the "Barefoot Bandit" while evading police in stolen planes, boats and cars during a two-year crime spree pleaded guilty Friday to dozens of state charges that could keep him in prison for the next decade.

Wearing handcuffs and an orange jail uniform, Colton Harris-Moore spoke softly in court and sat next to his attorneys with his eyes downcast, looking even younger than his 20 years.

Several victims and a few curious citizens watched in Island County Superior Court, along with Harris-Moore's aunt.

"He was a menace," Island County Prosecutor Greg Banks told the court. "His burglaries threatened and distressed people. People were afraid to leave their houses."

He pleaded guilty to a total of 16 counts from Island County, including identity theft, theft of firearm and residential burglary. Then the hearing continued with Harris-Moore pleading guilty to 17 counts from San Juan County.

Harris-Moore's daring run from the law earned him international fame and a movie deal to help repay his victims after he flew a stolen plane from Indiana to the Bahamas in July 2010, crash-landed it near a mangrove swamp and was arrested by Bahamian authorities in a hail of bullets.

Friday's proceedings before Judge Vickie Churchill consolidate cases against Harris-Moore in three Washington counties, including Snohomish. He has already pleaded guilty to federal charges in Seattle and will be sentenced for those crimes early next year. He will serve his state and federal sentences at the same time.

State prosecutors asked for a nine-and-a-half year sentence. Browne and attorney Emma Scanlan, are seeking a six-year term, citing Harris-Moore's bleak childhood in a Camano Island trailer with an alcoholic mother and a series of her convict boyfriends. They laid out the details of his upbringing in psychiatric and mitigation reports filed with the court.

Harris-Moore's first conviction came at age 12, in 2004, for possession of stolen property, and according to the reports, his first experience with burglary came when he broke into the homes of his classmates to steal food because his mother spent most of her Social Security income on beer and cigarettes ? something she has denied.

Over the next three years he was convicted of theft, burglary, malicious mischief and assault, among other crimes. At one point he was arrested when a detective posed as a pizza-delivery driver.

In 2007, the boy was sentenced to three years in a juvenile lockup after pleading guilty to three burglary counts in Island County. But he fled the minimum-security facility in April 2008 and was soon back to his old tricks, breaking into unoccupied vacation homes, stealing food and sometimes staying there.

As red-faced investigators repeatedly failed to catch him, his antics escalated: He began stealing planes from small, rural airports and crash-landing them ? at least five in all.

"What was characterized by the media as the swashbuckling adventures of a rakish teenager were in fact the actions of a depressed, possibly suicidal young man with waxing and waning post-traumatic stress disorder (following his first plane crash in November 2008)," wrote Dr. Richard S. Adler, a psychiatrist who evaluated him for the defense lawyers.

Waves of burglaries broke out on Orcas Island, where Kyle Ater runs his Homegrown Market and Deli, in late 2009 and in early 2010, after stolen planes were found at the airport there. The second time, Harris-Moore left Ater's new security system in a utility sink, under a running faucet. He took cash and a tray of croissants, and Ater's insurance company jacked up his rates.

Mike Parnell, a former owner of the Oakley sunglasses company who lives on Orcas, was repeatedly victimized. Harris-Moore hid out for long periods in the second level of his hangar at the airport, and when Parnell and his family would go on trips in their plane, Harris-Moore would take their car to their house and eat their food. At one point, Harris-Moore entered their home while Parnell was there with his wife and three children and grabbed his wife's car keys off a counter.

"We were all fearing for our lives," Parnell said Thursday. "The kids wouldn't sleep in their own bedrooms. We purchased night vision goggles. I'm glad that day is finally approaching when we will finally know what the consequences are, and I hope it's sufficient for the way our whole island suffered."

Harris-Moore's final spree came after he stole a pistol in eastern British Columbia and took a plane from a hangar in Idaho, where investigators found bare footprints on the floor and wall. That plane crashed near Granite Falls, Wash., after it ran out of fuel.

He made his way to Oregon in a 32-foot boat stolen in southwestern Washington ? stopping first to leave $100 at an animal shelter in Raymond, Wash. From Oregon, authorities said, Harris-Moore traveled across the United States, frequently stealing cars from the parking lots of small airports. In Indiana, he stole another plane and made for the Bahamas, more than 1,000 miles away, where authorities finally caught him in a manhunt that spanned multiple islands.

Among the courtroom spectators Friday were 18-year-olds Annie Cain and Hayley Hanna, who drove from nearby Langley to be at the courthouse at 5:30 a.m. ? four hours before the hearing.

"We wanted to be here just because he's so young, and everything he did, it's fascinating," Cain said.

Hanna got to the point even more quickly: "He's a badass," she said.

"This man is a serial burglar," San Juan County Prosecutor Randall Gaylord told The Associated Press. "I'm glad he's going to be held accountable, and I'm really glad he's taking responsibility for these things. I hope he gets through this chapter in his life, is resilient and is able to move on."

Fox bought the movie rights in a deal that could be worth $1.3 million, and Dustin Lance Black, who won an Academy Award for writing the movie "Milk," about the gay rights activist Harvey Milk, is working on the screenplay.

Harris-Moore doesn't get to keep any of the money under the terms of his federal plea deal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_us/us_barefoot_bandit

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

France hands Carlos the Jackal another life prison term (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? A French court sentenced flamboyant Marxist militant Carlos the Jackal to another life prison term on Thursday for bomb attacks that killed 11 people nearly three decades ago.

The Venezuelan defendant, 62, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, has been locked up in France for almost 20 years serving a life sentence in a separate case for killing two police officers and an informant in Paris in 1975.

Sentencing Ramirez to an additional life term, the special terrorism court in Paris made up of seven magistrates said he should serve a minimum of 18 years in jail.

The verdict could push back the date on which he can apply for conditional release, currently set for 2012.

Defense lawyers called the decision a scandal and said their client would file an appeal.

Ramirez was accused of masterminding four separate attacks in France on two trains, a train station and a Paris street that killed 11 people and wounded nearly 200.

Prosecutors said the bombings were his answer to the police seizure of two of his gang, including his lover, and had argued that he remained a danger to the public.

Earlier on Thursday, Ramirez - once one of the most wanted international criminals - addressed the court in a five-hour monologue, alternately rambling, vitriolic and poignant, calling himself a "living martyr" in defending his innocence.

Ramirez, a self-dubbed "elite gunman," appeared resigned to a guilty verdict. Death in prison, he said at one point, "is the role of a revolutionary."

"I am in prison ... condemned in a pre-decided case," he told the court, his voice rising in volume.

SHADES OF CHE GUEVARA

Ramirez, a colorful figure recognizable at the height of his fame by his Che Guevara-style beret, sunglasses and Havana cigars, sealed his notoriety in a bloody hostage-taking of OPEC oil ministers in 1975.

During the Cold War he received backing from Soviet bloc and Middle Eastern countries, staging attacks throughout Europe for more than two decades before being captured in Sudan in 1994.

During the six-week trial, Ramirez appeared more like a master of ceremonies than a defendant, talking over speakers, interrupting judges, correcting lawyers and occasionally beaming benevolently from his caged-in defendant's box.

He denied any specific involvement in the four bombings in 1982 and 1983 on a Paris street, two trains and a Marseille train station that wounded nearly 200 people and left 11 dead. Prosecutors say the bombings were Ramirez's answer to the police seizure of two of his gang, including his lover.

"There is nothing ... to connect me with these four attacks," he told the court, making a zero sign with his thumb and index finger.

Like a modern-day Scheherazade, Ramirez wove story after story, often smiling and waxing nostalgic about former comrades, and sometimes turning fiery to rail at the system.

His unrelenting discourse touched on a variety of topics, from prison life to Zionist strategy, Soviet passports, the French state, hashish and even the death penalty.

Ramirez broke down, his powerful voice wavering when, at the end of his speech, he read from what he said was the last will of fallen Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

"I will continue the fight," he read from the text, before breaking off, overcome with emotion. A group of about a dozen youths in the courtroom audience raised their fists in the air, shouting encouragement at Ramirez.

"Salam Alaikum," or "Peace be with you," said Ramirez, who converted to Islam while in prison, before giving a final fist in the air to the crowd.

MAN OF COMBAT

Accused of being a gun-for-hire by his opponents, and a cold-blooded killer by a former cohort turned witness against him, Ramirez introduced himself on the first day of the trial as "a revolutionary by profession."

Casting himself as a convenient scapegoat, he questioned why no one had ever been arrested in France for the attacks. He and his lawyers said the evidence in the case was based on unreliable witnesses and photocopies of documents from Eastern European secret service archives.

Clearly enjoying the limelight, Ramirez displayed a fondness for name-dropping, variously citing a cast of historical and modern-day heads of state from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Soviet leader Stalin to former French president Jacques Chirac, mentioning the latter's guilty verdict given in the same courthouse earlier in the day.

He explained to the court the proper way to load a 9-millimeter pistol, correcting a prosecutor's knowledge of how many bullets such a gun holds.

"You really aren't a man of combat," he told him.

Prosecutors had argued Ramirez remains a public danger and demanded he be sentenced to an additional life term and serve a minimum of 18 years.

(Additional reporting by Thierry Leveque and Vicky Buffery; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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

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Keystone pipeline looms large in U.S. tax-cut talks (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Lawmakers intensified efforts on Friday to extend payroll tax relief for Americans, and it appeared likely that language to speed approval of a controversial oil pipeline might be part of a deal.

With Senate leaders huddling in offices near the Senate chamber in search of a payroll tax cut deal, the House of Representatives separately approved a nearly $1 trillion funding bill to avert a government shutdown this weekend and keep federal agencies operating through to September 2012.

About one-third of House Republicans bucked Speaker John Boehner, however, voting against the bill because of concerns over its price tag.

The Democratic-controlled Senate was expected to approve the 1,209-page government funding bill on Saturday and quickly dispatch it to the White House for President Barack Obama to sign into law.

That would leave the payroll tax cut bill as the last major piece of business in a congressional session that has been dominated by acrimonious fights over taxes and spending. The partisan rancour has soured Americans on Congress.

Republicans and Democrats are now squabbling over how to pay

the $120 billion cost of the payroll tax cut. Republicans are standing firm on their demand that the Keystone XL pipeline be part of any deal, arguing it will be a major job creator.

Republican leaders want to expedite construction of the pipeline from Canada to Gulf of Mexico refineries in Texas. President Barack Obama has threatened to veto any coupling of the pipeline approval process to the payroll tax bill. But on Friday, the administration softened its tone.

White House spokesman Jay Carney, asked whether Obama would accept a bill that included a provision on the pipeline, said the most important thing was to get a bill done.

Obama has delayed a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline until 2013 and called for consideration of other routes to avoid ecologically sensitive areas. Environmental groups, a core Democratic constituency, strongly oppose the project.

But labor unions and some Democrats support it.

"Here's an opportunity for the president to say he's not going to let a few radical environmentalists stand in the way of a project that would create thousands of jobs and make America more secure at the same time," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

TAX BREAKS, WAR SAVINGS

A Senate Democratic aide said negotiators were discussing ways to resolve the Keystone XL Pipeline issue, as well as how to make up for lost revenues if the payroll tax cut is continued for another year.

This could include killing a tax break on corporate jets and using savings from the completion of a drawdown of U.S. troops from Iraq by the end of the year, the aide said.

If Keystone becomes part of a deal, Obama and fellow Democrats will likely face the ire of environmentalists for abandoning their previous hardline stance. Earlier this week, Demorats also abandoned demands for a new surtax on the rich to pay for their payroll tax cut.

The payroll tax cut, first enacted one year ago, is set to expire on December 31. Democrats have been pushing for a one-year extension that would put about $1,000 more in the pockets of 160 million wage earners.

The White House and many economists argue that the payroll tax cut will help stimulate the struggling economy. Republican lawmakers question that but have grudgingly agreed to extend it.

Republican Representative Mike Simpson predicted the fight would soon be resolved.

"Both sides want to extend the tax cut, both sides want to extend the unemployment insurance. ... We all know those things have to happen, so we will come to a compromise."

Friday's negotiations were also focused on extending long-term unemployment benefits for millions of Americans and preventing a pay cut for doctors treating patients under the Medicare healthcare program for the elderly.

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro, Rachelle Younglai and Kim Dixon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/ts_nm/us_usa_taxes

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Christopher Hitchens: 'God is not great' - but bookmobiles are

Author and staunch atheist Christopher Hitchens died yesterday, Vanity Fair reported. How did the man who could write on everything begin his life of learning? The bookmobile ? a vital entity now in danger of becoming obsolete. Hitchens' mind was a testament to their ongoing necessity.

The death of Christopher Hitchens, the iconoclastic journalist and staunch atheist known for the breadth of his intellect and the depth of his convictions, is an occasion to reflect on what we?ve lost now that such a stellar mind is no longer a part of the public scene. But Mr. Hitchens? passing should also be a time to consider how a mind like his was sparked in the first place.

Skip to next paragraph

How did the man who could write on everything from Charles Dickens to Mother Teresa and Benazir Bhutto to Saul Bellow begin his life of learning?

Hitchens, in an essay published not long before his death, traced his intellectual origins to a bookmobile.

?When I was very young I lived in a remote village on the edge of an English moorland,? Hitchens recalled. ?Every week, a mobile library would stop near my house, and I would step up through the back door of a large van to find its carpeted interior lined with bookshelves.... If I live to see retirement, I would quite like to be a driver of such a vehicle, bringing books to eager young readers like a Librarian in the Rye.?

Hitchens, alas, didn?t live to indulge his senior years behind the wheel of a bookmobile. And even if he had survived, the celebrated essayist and political commentator might have had some trouble finding a job as a bookmobile driver.

As gas prices rise, more reading services migrate online, and local governments face cutbacks, bookmobile services in some communities have been curtailed or eliminated. As libraries increase digital collections, many of which can be accessed at the click of a button, bookmobiles might seem obsolete.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/nHq4fNZuD4s/Christopher-Hitchens-God-is-not-great-but-bookmobiles-are

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Nuke agency chief faces stunning public rebuke

FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2011, file photo, Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko speaks to members of the media in Atlanta. Jaczko said Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2011, he is worried that U.S. nuclear plant operators have become complacent, just nine months after the nuclear disaster in Japan. He said recent instances of human error and other problems have endangered workers and threatened safety at a handful of the 65 nuclear power plants in the United States. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2011, file photo, Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko speaks to members of the media in Atlanta. Jaczko said Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2011, he is worried that U.S. nuclear plant operators have become complacent, just nine months after the nuclear disaster in Japan. He said recent instances of human error and other problems have endangered workers and threatened safety at a handful of the 65 nuclear power plants in the United States. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File)

(AP) ? In a stunning public rebuke, four members of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission sat next to the panel's embattled chairman, Gregory Jaczko, on Wednesday and told Congress he was an intimidating bully whose actions could compromise the nation's nuclear safety.

Jaczko denied wrongdoing but said he has suggested the five commissioners talk to a "trusted third party" to improve communications.

The hearing before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee at times seemed more like a soap opera than an oversight session on nuclear power. Several lawmakers said they had trouble believing what they were hearing ? or even that the session was called at all.

"I feel like I'm sitting here trying to referee a fight," said Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., the committee's senior Democrat. "I haven't done that since my kids were tiny."

Noting that Congress has a low approval rating, Cummings said, "Congress isn't functioning very well at all. So I don't want to sit here and tell you how to conduct your business."

The commissioners ? two Democrats and two Republicans ? said Jaczko, a Democrat, is responsible for an increasingly tense and unsettled work environment at the NRC. The four commissioners sent a letter to the White House in October expressing "grave concern" about Jaczko' s actions.

The commissioners told Congress the women at the NRC felt particularly intimidated by Jaczko. Commissioner William Magwood told the oversight panel that Jaczko had bullied and belittled at least three female staff members, one of whom told Magwood she was "humiliated" by what Magwood called a "raging verbal assault."

Kristine Svinicki, the commission's only woman, told committee investigators that she was so uncomfortable around Jaczko that she asked her chief of staff to "keep watch" over a private meeting with the chairman in Svinicki's office.

Asked about the incident Wednesday, Jaczko said, "I'm very passionate about safety, and all the things that I do at the agency are directed towards doing what I think is the right thing for safety."

Pressed, Jaczko said he went to Svinicki's office "to speak with her about a letter, I believe." At one point, he said, Svinicki "became concerned, and as I recall I simply motioned. I said, 'Let's just sit down, let's just calm down and let's just work through it.' We continued to discuss it, and then at some point I left."

Asked if he had ever apologized for that incident or any of other incidents described at the hearing, Jaczko said he was hearing many of the allegations for the first time ? despite an inspector general's report on his behavior in June and a letter from fellow commissioners sent to him and the White House in October.

"Certainly if there's ever been a time when I have made someone feel uncomfortable, I always like to know so that I can take whatever action is necessary to remedy that," Jaczko said.

Magwood, a Democrat, disputed a claim by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that the allegations against Jaczko were politically motivated. Jaczko worked for Reid before joining the NRC, and Reid's strong support for Jaczko is considered crucial in keeping his job.

Reid is the leading congressional opponent of a planned nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain in Nevada. Jaczko has made a series of decisions over the past two years that have aided the Obama administration's goal of shutting down Yucca Mountain.

Rep. Dennis Ross, D-Fla., said the situation reminded him of the movie "The Caine Mutiny," in which Humphrey Bogart's character was put on trial by his own crew members.

"So, I mean, it begs the question, Capt. ? I mean, Chairman ? Jaczko. How has the voyage been so far?" Ross asked.

Jaczko apologized for the distraction that had been created and said he looked forward to discussing ways "to improve communication and trust."

Even so, Jaczko denied that he has bullied and intimidated staff members and said he has no plans to step down.

Under fierce questioning from the House panel, Jaczko refused to name a single thing he had done wrong in his 2 1/2-year tenure as NRC chair.

"I have no plans to resign, because I continue to believe under my leadership the agency has performed very well," Jaczko said. "We have committed ourselves to safety, and I believe my record shows that."

Commissioner William Ostendorff said the issue was not Yucca Mountain or party politics, but Jaczko's "bullying and intimidation" of NRC staffers and even some commissioners, which Ostendorff said "should not and cannot be tolerated."

Ostendorff, a Republican, said he had "lost faith" in Jaczko's ability to lead the commission.

Jaczko acknowledged having a heated conversation with a senior NRC manager about the agency's response to Japan's nuclear crisis last spring.

"I often engaged my colleagues in discussions about safety and that's been my style," Jaczko said.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, said Jaczko should resign. "You're telling me they are all wrong and you are right," he told Jaczko. "That to me is a lack of leadership."

Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, said he found Jaczko's answers hard to believe. "I've never seen such self-deluded behavior by any individual probably in my whole life," he said.

"It is clear from your statements and your actions that you believe your judgment and your passion surpasses the four (other commissioners) combined," Labrador said

White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley said this week that problems at the NRC stem from the commission's "strong chairman" structure, in which the leader of the five-member panel has far greater powers than the remaining four commissioners.

__

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Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-14-NRC%20Dissension/id-3550b6aeb96741d9ae8c1d12e09862fd

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