Tuesday, March 19, 2013

NYC plan would keep tobacco products out of sight

Harry Patel, an employee of Blondie's Deli and Grocery, talks on the phone while waiting for customers in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Harry Patel, an employee of Blondie's Deli and Grocery, talks on the phone while waiting for customers in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Cigarette packs are displayed at a smoke shop in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

A teenager walks past Blondie's Deli and Grocery in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Cigarette packs are displayed at a convenience store in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Cigarette packs are displayed at a smoke shop in New York, Monday, March 18, 2013. A new anti-smoking proposal would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in retail stores. Mayor Michael Bloomberg says the goal is to reduce the youth smoking rate. The legislation would require stores to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in another concealed spot. They could only be visible when an adult is making a purchase or during restocking. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? Cigarettes would have to be kept out of sight in New York City stores under a first-in-the-nation plan unveiled by Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Monday, igniting complaints from retailers and smokers who said they've had enough with the city's crackdowns.

Shops from corner stores to supermarkets would have to keep tobacco products in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in other concealed spots. Officials also want to stop shops from taking cigarette coupons and honoring discounts, and are proposing a minimum price for cigarettes, below what the going rate is in much of the city now, to discourage black market sales.

Anti-smoking advocates and health experts hailed the proposals as a bold effort to take on a habit that remains the leading preventable cause of death in a city that already has helped impose the highest cigarette taxes in the country, barred smoking in restaurants, bars, parks and beaches and launched sometimes graphic advertising campaigns about the effects of smoking.

The ban on displaying cigarettes follows similar laws in Iceland, Canada, England and Ireland, but it would be the first such measure in the U.S. It's aimed at discouraging young people from smoking.

"Such displays suggest that smoking is a normal activity," Bloomberg said. "And they invite young people to experiment with tobacco."

But smokers and cigarette sellers said the measure was overreaching.

"I don't disagree that smoking itself is risky, but it's a legal product," said Audrey Silk, who's affiliated with a smokers-rights group that has sued the city over previous regulations. "Tobacco's been normal for centuries. ... It's what he's doing that's not normal."

Slated to be introduced to the City Council on Wednesday, the anti-smoking proposal was also a sign that a mayor who has built a reputation as a public health crusader isn't backing off after a setback last week, when a judge struck down the city's effort to ban supersized, sugary drinks. The city is appealing that decision.

"We're doing these health things to save lives," Bloomberg said Monday.

The billionaire mayor, who also has given $600 million of his own money to anti-smoking efforts around the world, began taking on tobacco use shortly after he became mayor in 2002. Adult smoking rates have since fallen by nearly a third ? from 21.5 percent in 2002 to 14.8 percent in 2011, Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley said.

But the youth rate has remained flat, at 8.5 percent, since 2007. Some 28,000 city public high school students tried smoking for the first time in 2011, city officials say.

Keeping cigarettes under wraps could help change that, anti-smoking advocates say. Moreover, it could cut down on impulse buys by smokers who are trying to quit, city officials say.

While some of the research focuses on cigarette advertising, an English study of 11-to-15-year-olds published last month in the journal Tobacco Control found that simply noticing tobacco products on display every time a youth visited a shop raised the odds he or she would at least try smoking by threefold, compared to peers who never noticed the products.

The American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, the American Lung Association, other anti-smoking groups and several City Council members applauded Bloomberg's announcement, made at a Queens hospital. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who largely controls what goes to a vote, said through her office that she "supports the goal of these bills" but noted they would get a full review.

Some convenience store owners fear the measure could affect their business, by potentially leaving customers uncertain whether the shop carries their favorite brand and making them wait while a proprietor digs out a pack, said Jeff Lenard, a spokesman for the National Association of Convenience stores.

"It slows down the transaction, and our name is convenience stores," he said.

Jay Kim, who owns a Manhattan deli on 34th Street, saw the proposal as a bid to net fines.

"I know the city wants to collect money," he said at his store, where packs of cigarettes can be seen behind the counter, along with numerous signs warning of the dangers of smoking and prohibiting sales to minors.

The displays would be checked as part of the shops' normal city inspections; information on the potential penalties wasn't immediately available Monday night. Repeated violations of some of the other provisions, including the minimum-price and coupon ban, could get a store shuttered.

Stores that make more than half their revenue from tobacco products would be exempt from the display ban. Customers under 18, the legal age for buying cigarettes in New York, are barred from such stores without parents.

New York City smokers already face some of the highest cigarette prices in the country. Including taxes, it's not uncommon for a pack to cost $13 or more in Manhattan. The proposed minimum price, also including taxes, is $10.50.

Other public health measures Bloomberg has championed include pressuring restaurants to use less salt and add calorie counts to menus, and banning artificial trans fats from restaurant meals.

Jennifer Bailey, smoking as she waited for a bus on 34th Street, was no fan of the proposed tobacco restrictions or Bloomberg's other public health initiatives.

"It's like New York has become a ... dictatorship," she said.

___

Associated Press writers Deepti Hajela in New York and Michael Felberbaum in Richmond, Va., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-18-Anti-Smoking-NYC/id-1a6120db2cee41da8b16f54a4eef8fe8

kevin hart Chavez Dead Hugo Chavez Dead Bonnie Franklin sinkhole justin bieber Real Madrid Vs Manchester United

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Tree seeds offer potential for sustainable biofuels

Jan. 9, 2013 ? Tree seeds, rather than biomass or fuel crop plants, could represent an abundant source of renewable energy, according to research published in the International Journal of Automotive Technology and Management. The study suggests that seeds from the Indian mahua and sal trees have almost as good a thermal efficiency as biodiesel but would produce lower emissions of carbon monoxide, waste hydrocarbons and NOx (nitrogen oxides).

Sukumar Puhan of the GKM College of Engineering and Technology and colleagues N. Vedaraman and K.C. Velappan of the Central Leather Research Institute, in Chennai, India, explain how tree seeds represent a vast untapped biomass resource for the production of automotive fuels in India. The use of tree seed oils as a source could have several additional benefits over vegetable seed oils including lower viscosity and greater volatility, both of which would reduce injector fouling, carbon deposits and piston ring sticking, common issues with some biodiesel formulations.

The team points out that vast tonnages of seeds from the deciduous mahua (Madhuca indica) and semi-deciduous sal (Shorea robusta) trees are simply left to waste on the forest floor. The mahua kernel constitutes 70% of the seed and contains 50% oil, which can be extracted at levels of 34 to 37%. Sal can produce about 20% oil. The oil is chemically converted to biodiesel using the process of transesterification, which reacts the oily triglyceride content with alcohol using a catalyst. The team has now successfully tested this chemistry on seeds from the mahua and sal trees. They also demonstrated efficacy with neem seed, although suggest the economics of using this species are prohibitive because the tree has greater value for its wood and also has a much longer maturation period than mahua at 25 years.

It is estimated that there are 64 million hectares of wasteland across India including 15 million hectares of degraded, notified forestland that could be converted to plantation to provide sal and mahua seed in a sustainable fashion as well as generating employment opportunities for a large number of people. This would amount to about 120 person-days work per hectares given an estimated productive lifespan of the mahua of 60 years. The mahua takes just ten years to reach seed-producing maturity.

"Biodiesel production from tree seeds in India will not only reduce the dependence on crude oil imports, but also reduce the environmental impact of transportation and increase employment opportunities," the team concludes.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Inderscience Publishers, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. N. Vedaraman, Sukumar Puhan, K.C. Velappan. Liquid biofuels from tree borne seed oils for automotive diesel engines. International Journal of Automotive Technology and Management, 2012; 12 (3): 223 DOI: 10.1504/IJATM.2012.050356

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/uu7p6xSGMFY/130109124203.htm

charles addams pinewood derby cars republican debate tonight tinker tailor soldier spy rich forever rick ross project runway all stars elin nordegren

Wind shift may have freed whales trapped off Quebec

(Reuters) - A group of killer whales trapped under the ice of Hudson Bay and taking turns breathing from a small hole may have been freed by a shift in the winds, Canadian media reported on Thursday.

The 11 whales, who sometimes appeared to be panicking as they fought for air, created a worldwide sensation as news and a video about their plight spread.

The mammals, which likely included two adults and several younger ones, were first spotted by a local Inuit hunter on Tuesday.

Residents from the nearby Inuit community of Inukjuak in northern Quebec had planned to widen the hole. But the whales were gone when they arrived at the site on Thursday morning, according to The Globe and Mail newspaper.

One resident, Johnny Williams, told the paper that the ice likely broke up from the shifting winds, allowing the creatures to swim to freedom.

The community's mayor had asked for an ice breaker and other assistance from the Canadian government. Experts from Canada's fisheries and oceans department were dispatched to the area.

(Reporting By Russ Blinch; Editing by Xavier Briand)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wind-shift-may-freed-whales-trapped-off-quebec-171059483.html

clayton kershaw tyler perry face transplant maundy thursday fab melo google glasses kim kardashian and kanye west

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Seychelles inflation falls to 5.8 pct in December

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pop diva Mariah Carey said she hired increased security following what she described as threats reportedly made against her by fellow 'American Idol' judge Nicki Minaj, according to an interview on ABC News. Carey, 42, one of three new judges to join the "American Idol" panel for the hit talent show's new season on January 16, told Barbara Walters in an interview airing on Monday, "it felt like an unsafe work environment." "Anytime anybody's reeling threats at somebody, you know, it's not appropriate," Carey said. "I'm a professional. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/seychelles-inflation-falls-5-8-pct-december-055320790--business.html

tornado in dallas texas the island president the maldives harper lee mega millions numbers the fray seahawks new uniforms 2012

Bama starts with bang at BCS championship game

Alabama's Eddie Lacy (42) reacts after rushing for a touchdown during the first half of the BCS National Championship college football game against Notre Dame Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Alabama's Eddie Lacy (42) reacts after rushing for a touchdown during the first half of the BCS National Championship college football game against Notre Dame Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Alabama's Eddie Lacy (42) breaks away for a touchdown run during the first half of the BCS National Championship college football game against Notre Dame Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Alabama head coach Nick Saban leads his players on the field before the BCS National Championship college football game against Notre Dame Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Alabama head coach Nick Saban, left, shakes hands with Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly before the BCS National Championship college football game Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

A Notre Dame fan cheers as the team warms up before the BCS National Championship college football game against Alabama Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

(AP) ? One of the most anticipated BCS championship games began with Alabama getting the ball and driving it down the field for a touchdown against No. 1 Notre Dame's vaunted defense.

Sun Life Stadium was packed and raucous for the kickoff Monday night.

The Fighting Irish won the coin toss, decided to kickoff and the Crimson Tide marched down the field with ease, driving 82 yards on five plays to take a 7-0 lead on Eddie Lacy's 20-yard touchdown run up the middle with 12:03 left in the first quarter.

It was only the third rushing touchdown Notre Dame has allowed this season.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-07-T25-BCS%20Championship/id-eda2c266e6094fc68656534985c7a377

eddie murphy Stephanie Bongiovi stanford football guy fieri Jill Kelley hope solo hope solo

Oil down after dour Europe jobless report

BANGKOK (AP) ? The price of oil fell below $93 Wednesday after unemployment in the countries that use the euro rose to its highest level since the single currency was founded.

Benchmark oil for February delivery was down 19 cents to $92.96 per barrel at midday Bangkok time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 4 cents to finish at $93.15 a barrel in New York.

Unemployment in the 17 euro countries rose to 11.8 percent in November from 11.7 percent in October, a reflection of a weak economy and the highest jobless rate since the euro was founded in 1999. Germany, the region's biggest economy, said industrial orders fell more than expected in November due to weaker foreign demand. German exports also fell.

"The outlook for global commodities is likely to remain uncertain in the next twelve months with low growth hampering demand especially in Europe," Michael Hewson of CMC Markets said in an email commentary.

Oil traders will be monitoring fresh information this week on U.S. supplies of crude and refined products.

Data for the week ended Jan. 4 is expected to show a rise of 1.5 million barrels for crude oil and an increase of 2.6 million barrels in gasoline stocks, according to a survey of analysts by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos. The Energy Department's Energy Information Administration releases its crude inventories report later Wednesday.

Brent crude, used to price international varieties of oil, fell 12 cents to $111.82 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other energy futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

? Wholesale gasoline fell 2.3 cents to $2.772 a gallon.

? Heating oil fell 0.3 cents to $3.056 a gallon.

? Natural gas fell 2.6 cents to $3.192 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-09-Oil%20Prices/id-a9b42773853348cdb9f97bfa049522a7

Foo Canoodle Isaac path Tropical Storm Isaac path Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Isaac Path Isaac Hurricane

Our Journey to Fatherhood: Happy New Year


Happy New Year everyone!?? Hope everyone had a great Christmas and New Years and that 2013 is a great year for you all.

We took our first real family vacation since the kids were born to Zihuatanejo Mexico.? We stayed in a beautiful private home on the cliffs of the Zihuatanejo Bay and the Pacific Ocean and had a fantastic time.?? The kids took their first plane ride (and maybe last when you read the story below).?? Don't know what we were thinking in taking the kids that far away for so long (14 days), but we made it through and have some great stories to tell for years to come.

Having traveled a fair amount as a couple, we quickly realized that there are so many things we had taken for granted when flying with kids.? Like going through the airport security line for instance.? OMG.?? We had only carried two diaper bags, one carry-on and a car seat between us so we thought it would be easy/breazy.....we were WRONG.???? Scene:? Take off my shoes and put all my items (tickets, boarding passes and passports for 5 people) in the bin, send everything through the baggage scanner.? Pick up baby #1 and carry him through the people scanner.? Ask the TSA agent to send the stroller though the people scanner while you wait for it on the other end only to find out that they need the stroller to go through the baggage scanner.?? Wait for the stroller to come through the baggage scanner so I can strap baby #1 (now screaming) in the stroller.? Put on my shoes while I wait for baby #2 to be passed through the people scanner only to realize that I had no where to put her as I had sent through the single stroller rather than the double stroller first.?? Oh where to put the second baby while I wait for the double stroller to come through the scanner? ? Now two babies are screaming and we are holding up the line!? Stress level going up! ? The double stroller comes through the baggage scanner along with the first of the diaper bags.?? We had forgotten to separate all the baby liquids from the diaper bag so the TSA agent requested they do a manual search of the diaper bag.?? Stress level going up.? Fine.? However, they needed one of us to be there for the search.? I now have two babies, one in a stroller and one in my arms (both screaming) and the third is on the other side waiting to go through the people scanner and we are STILL holding up the line!!? Stress level going up!? You would think that on the Saturday before Christmas people would be in a Holiday mood..but no such luck).? Stress Level WAY WAY up! ? Put baby #2 in the double stroller and follow the TSA agent for the manual scan.? Meanwhile, Jim comes through the people scanner with baby #3 and the thing goes off!?? Remove items from pocket and re enter the scanner. ? You would think all is good?? Nope.? Although manual inspection of the (first) diaper bag is complete, two kids are still screaming, still holding up the line as the second diaper bag comes through the scanner and, you guessed it, we had forgotten to remove all liquids!? UGH. ?? Stress Level at an all time high!?? After what seemed like 10 minutes, diaper bag two manual inspection is complete and we are off!?? OMG.....what just happened?

Going down to Mexico was relatively easy given that my mom and her husband flew to LA to take the same flight down with us and GOD BLESS THEM for doing that!? We had purchased a seat for one of the babies and had registered the two others as lap infants.?? Having my mom next to me to hold one of the kids was a life saver as I don't know what we would have done without her (and I secretly worried the entire vacation as to how Jim and I were going to handle the 3 kids ALONE on the way home!...but that story pales in comparison to what happened next).

Landed in Mexico almost 3 hours after take off and we breathed a sigh of relief.?? Waited for customs for over an hour as three planes landed at the same time.? Kids were hungry, we were hot, sweaty and hungry and ready to get the vacation started.?? Finally reach customs and were moved through relatively easily.?? Had the kids passports (and birth certificates showing us both as parents just in case) and we were put through with no issue at all.?? Once through customs, you had to collect all your baggage, run it through ANOTHER scanner before meeting the last of the customs agents to determine if they are gong to search your bags before exiting the terminal.?? Since we had checked all our bags at the ticket counter in LA, we hadn't thought about logistics once landing in Mexico.?? UGH?? My mom, her husband, Jim and myself had each checked at least one bag, we had three pack-n-plays, three car seats, two additional bags for the kids....in total we had 12 items to put through the scanner.?? UGH.

At this point, everyone is scrambling to get all their bags and get through the scanner as quickly as possible.?? We didn't want to hold up the line this time.?? So, we all kicked into high gear and got all our bags through the scanner in record time.? Once through, the agent saw how many bags (and people and babies) were traveling together and waived us through!? Good right?? NO.

I was the first to get through the security doors. ? Once through those double doors you see all those drivers holding up name plates, people asking to carry your bags for $, relatives waiting for their loved ones...you get the drill.? It was insane.?? It took me a few minutes but I found our driver.?? I gave him my bags and asked him to go get both cars? (we couldn't fit into one!) and bring them to the curb.?? Jim comes through next with the single stroller and a couple of bags.? My mom comes through next with a couple of bags.? Everyone is headed to the curb to meet the cars.?? I walk back into the security area and grab more bags and take them to the curb.? I ask Jim if he has all three kids and all I hear is "Yes".?? I have now walked back into the security area again to get more bags not knowing that it was against the Mexican Law (!) to walk back into the security area after being cleared!! ? Who knew? ? Besides, my vacation is getting ready to start!? Woo Hoo! ? Well, as I collected the last of the bags to take to the car, the agents were notifying security of what I was doing.?? I get to the curb with the last of the bags and realize that, although I had asked Jim if he had all three KIDS, he thought I had asked him if he had all three CAR SEATS.... to which he had replied YES!?? OMG We were missing the girls!!!?? We had left them in their stroller inside the security area in customs!!!?? I immediately RAN back into the building and up to the security doors to go get them.? Now, unbeknownst to me, agents were waiting on me as I had already broken their law TWICE. ? They ran after me and pulled me aside (I swear they were ready to draw guns! ha) and told me I couldn't go any further.?? I am now in FULL PANIC mode!? I don't speak Spanish but tried to tell them that my daughters were behind the doors and that I NEEDED to get them!?? (although I have been to Zih several times and it's VERY VERY safe, at this point all I am thinking about is all my friends saying it was a bad idea to go to Mexico with all the kidnapping going on down there!).?? After what seemed like an hour, the doors opened up and I recognized a familiar face from the plane!?? She could see the look on my face and knew immediately what was wrong.?? She said that she had seen my girls and she said they were beside the scanner (crying) but that her husband was waiting there for us!?? Thank GOD!?? Just then I could see my mom's husband coming through the doors with his bags.?? I asked him to grab the girls as the security agents were not going to let me go back in!??? He turned around, walked behind the scanner (and thousands of people) and, after what seemed like a lifetime, wheeled my girls out of the security area.?? Of course they were screaming...but that was THE BEST sound in the world!!!?? OMG WHAT have we gotten ourselves into is all I was thinking?????

The rest of the trip was fantastic unless you count the trip home where Jim had a 102 fever, Travis was sick and Campbell didn't do well with the takeoff and landings (she had two MAJOR meltdowns during flight) and Piper had to stay in her car seat the entire time and she wasn't happy.? Luckily, we had very understanding people around us who pitched in when we needed it.??? Thank you to those of you who were there as you know how hard that was for us...we sincerely appreciated all your efforts!

2013 New Years Resolution???????

NEVER travel with Triplets without a two-on-one coverage!

Happy New Year to you all!!!

xo

Source: http://thejourneytofatherhood.blogspot.com/2013/01/happy-new-year.html

metta kashi neil diamond orange crush harden nor easter nor easter

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Mars rover gives its first brushoff

NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS

This image from the Mars Hand Lens Imager on NASA's Curiosity rover shows the patch of rock cleaned by the first use of the rover's wire-bristle brush on Jan. 6.

By Alan Boyle

NASA's Curiosity rover used the wire-bristle brush on the end of its 7-foot-long robotic arm for the first time over the weekend, to sweep the dust off a patch of rock wide enough to put a soda can on.

Sunday's use of the motorized Dust Removal Tool, or DRT, marks yet another first for the $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory mission, which began operations on the Red Planet with Curiosity's landing last August. The mission team selected an easy target for the tryout: a flat patch of rock known as "Ekwir_1" in the Yellowknife Bay area of Mars' Gale Crater, where Curiosity has been spending the past few weeks.


"We wanted to be sure we had an optimal target for the first use," Diana Trujillo of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the mission's activity lead for the DRT, explained in today's status report. "We need to place the instrument within less than half an inch of the target without putting the hardware at risk. We needed a flat target, one that wasn't rough, one that was covered with dust. The results certainly look good."

The area cleaned by the DRT measured about 1.85 inches by 2.44 inches (47 by 62 millimeters). In addition to the brush, the end of Curiosity's robotic arm is equipped with a percussive drill, a close-up camera known as the Mars Hand Lens Imager, the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer and a dirt scooper.

The rover team is evaluating several rocks in the area as potential targets for the first use of the drill sometime in the next few weeks. Brushing off potential targets will be part of the preparation for that drilling operation.

The primary aim of Curiosity's two-year mission is to sample rocks, soil and the atmosphere at Mars' Gale Crater to determine whether the chemical requirements for life could have been present there billions of years ago.

More about Curiosity's mission:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/07/16401107-mars-rover-gives-its-first-brush-off?lite

super tuesday epidemiology total eclipse of the heart jionni lavalle earthquake san francisco donald payne elizabeth berkley

FirstService Expands Into Commercial Property Association ...

January 7, 2013

By Barbra Murray, Contributing Editor

And the commercial real estate services firm consolidations continue. With the acquisition of Tampa-based CLW Real Estate Services Group, commercial real estate services firm Cassidy Turley has expanded its foothold in Florida and a handful of key markets from the West Coast to the East Coast in a single move.

Cassidy Turley and CLW are not strangers; the possibility of a merger has been brewing for two years. ?For some time friends of both firms?whether clients or other influencers or just people who are interested in what each of us have been doing?have suggested that there was a real cultural fit and a like-minded view of the industry and the opportunities,? Joe Stettinius, CEO of Cassidy Turley, told Commercial Property Executive. ?We?ve had lots of discussions along the way and those discussions came to fruition shortly before the end of the year. It was really the culmination of a lot of work over a period time.

Twenty-five-year-old CLW, which will now operate as Cassidy Turley, comes to the table with a reputation as one of the top firms in metropolitan Tampa and gives Cassidy Turley its first offices in Orlando and Jacksonville. But it?s not all about Florida, as CLW has long offered its leasing, property and project management and seniors housing services to clients across the country. Sixty percent of CLW?s brokerage business is produced outside of the Sunshine State, with a great deal of activity taking place in areas surrounding the firm?s offices in Atlanta, Boston and Newport Beach, Calif., and points in between.

Geography was not the only motivation for the joining of forces. CLW also brings with it a far-reaching roster of national corporate clients, as well as a crackerjack team of approximately 100 employees, including 20 brokerage professionals. ?Given where we felt Florida was in the cycle, [expanding there] wasn?t a priority in the short term,? said Stettinius. ?In the mid to long term, we?re cognizant of the population trends, and certainly the Sunbelt and South Florida are a pretty dynamic growth opportunity mid- to long-term, but what was more important was CLW; the expertise, the mindset and cultural fit. So the fact that they?re in Florida is almost an ancillary benefit. We are really focused on having great people who are experts at what we do and CLW represents that in spades.?

The year could bring more mergers for Cassidy Turley. The firm has a notable presence in every major market across the country?for the most part. ?Chicago is at the top of our list in terms of an opportunity going forward, and another place that clients ask about would be Seattle,? he noted. ?[Beyond that] going forward, in terms of acquisitions and opportunities to grow, organic growth in the cities where we already have a presence and with the clients we already have is really important. And then outside of that, acquisitions that are either accretive in terms of profitability or capability are important as well.?

Cassidy Turley is just one commercial real estate services firm that has kicked off 2013 by snapping up other, smaller companies as a means of expansion?overnight expansion. During the first week of the year, CBRE Group Inc. announced its acquisition of Atlanta-based Resource Real Estate Partners L.L.C. and TPA Realty Services L.L.C. Additionally, Newmark Grubb Knight Frank?s parent company, BGC Partners Inc., revealed that it had brought Philadelphia?s Smith Mack and Denver?s Frederick Ross Company into the fold.

More such transactions appear to be on the horizon in the industry and, as is the case with Cassidy Turley?s mindset, such moves may not necessarily center on location.

?I think geography has become less important and capabilities more important so I think you?ll continue to see lots of mergers,? Stettinius added. ?And the industry is still extremely fragmented so I think you?ll see more consolidation as we move forward into what will hopefully be a better environment.?

Like us on facebook:?https://www.facebook.com/pages/Commercial-Property-Executive/258033884191

?

Source: http://www.cpexecutive.com/regions/mid-atlantic/firstservice-expands-into-commercial-property-association-management/

Jon Lord Colorado shootings dark knight rises Aurora shooting James Eagan Holmes jeremy lin Sage Stallone

Monday, January 7, 2013

Drilling barge pulled from rocks off Alaska island

This aerial photo shows the Shell floating drill rig Kulluk in Kodiak Island's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

This aerial photo shows the Shell floating drill rig Kulluk in Kodiak Island's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

This aerial photo shows the Shell floating drill rig Kulluk in Kodiak Island, Alaska's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

This aerial photo shows a U.S. Army CH-47 Chinook helicopter sling a trailer aboard the Shell floating drill rig in Kodiak Island, Alaska's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

This aerial photo shows the Shell floating drill rig Kulluk in Kodiak Island, Alaska's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

This aerial photo shows the Shell floating drill rig Kulluk in Kodiak Island, Alaska's Kiliuda Bay on Monday afternoon, Jan. 7, 2013, as salvage teams conduct an in-depth assessment of its seaworthiness. The Kulluk, which ran aground a week ago on Sitkalidak Island near Kodiak, was taken to Kiliuda Bay for repairs and a survey. (AP Photo/Kodiak Daily Mirror, James Brooks)

(AP) ? A large floating drill rig that ran aground a week ago on a remote Alaska island arrived as planned Monday in the shelter of a Kodiak Island bay after being towed about 45 miles through swells as high as 15 feet, officials said.

The Royal Dutch Shell PLC vessel was lifted off rocks late Sunday and towed away from the southeast side of Sitkalidak Island, where it sat exposed to the full-on fury of Gulf of Alaska winter storms since grounding near the beach there on New Year's Eve.

The Kulluk ? a circular barge with a diameter as long as nearly three basketball courts ? was towed for about 12 hours to the protected waters in Kiliuda Bay, where it will undergo further inspection, including an underwater look at its hull.

"We could not be more impressed with the caliber of the response and recovery crews who were safe and meticulous in their effort to move the Kulluk offshore," Shell Alaska spokesman Curtis Smith said by email.

The vessel will remain in the bay 43 miles southwest of the city of Kodiak until inspectors review its condition and the Coast Guard clears it to travel. Shell incident commander Sean Churchfield said there's no timetable for departure.

"Until we have that damage assessment, we'll not be able to develop those plans," Churchfield said at a news conference Monday.

The massive effort to move and salvage the ship involves more than 730 people, according to the Unified Command, which includes the Coast Guard, Shell and contractors involved in the tow and salvage operation. Eleven people are aboard the ship ? a salvage crew of 10 people and one Shell representative

Shell earlier reported superficial damage above the deck and seawater that entered through open hatches. Water has knocked out regular and emergency generators, but portable generators were put on board last week.

The Kulluk is 266 feet in diameter with a derrick in its middle and a funnel-shaped, reinforced steel hull that allows it to operate in ice. Its derrick rises 160 feet. The barge drilled last year in the Beaufort Sea and was headed to Seattle for upgrades and maintenance when it ran into trouble.

Its towing vessel, the 360-foot anchor handler Aiviq, on Dec. 27 lost its line to the Kulluk in heavy seas and hours later lost power to all four of its engines, possibly due to contaminated fuel.

Four reattached lines between the Aiviq or other vessels also broke in stormy weather. The Aiviq on New Year's Eve again broke its line, leaving the Kulluk attached to the tugboat Alert.

Coast Guard Capt. Paul Mehler, the federal on-scene coordinator, said Monday the Alert also experienced a mechanical problem the night the Kulluk went aground. The agency is investigating.

"The understanding the night of the response was that when she was taking maximum power, there was an engine problem," Mehler said. "They did recover that within 30 minutes. The details of that, I couldn't answer yet."

Inspections after the grounding determined that the Kulluk could be towed, and the Aiviq on Sunday reattached a tow line. Tension was added to test the line Sunday night and increased as high tide approached, Churchfield said.

He was not on scene but did not hear of complications.

"The Kulluk came off reasonably easy, would be my assessment," he said.

Mehler said he was in the command center when salvors reported the Kulluk had come off the rocks.

"I won't say that I saw anyone high-fiving," Mehler said. "I'll say there was certainly a sense of relief, but recognizing now we have a lot more work to do."

Likewise, the tow "has gone pretty much according to plan," Churchfield said.

Inspections will involve an underwater look at the hull with divers or remotely operated underwater vehicles or divers or both, he said.

The Kulluk will be tethered to two tugs in the bay and will attempt to set its anchor. If that doesn't work, he said, additional tugs will be used to keep it in place. Four more tugs were on scene Monday.

A tug trailing the drill vessel used infrared equipment to watch for oil sheens and reported no petroleum discharge.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-07-Shell-Arctic%20Drill%20Ship/id-5b90ba88c9b84f98a5ca7dd94aff35f6

peter paul and mary edgar rice burroughs dallas clark litter marinol flight attendant pau gasol trade

Facebook's Confidence Is Shaken - Business Insider

Lately, Facebook has been making a lot of defensive moves.

The social network which once wowed us with product launches like Timeline and News Feed now seems to be scared of fast-growing startups, and it's losing focus.

The clearest example is Snapchat, a startup that's exploded to millions of users in a little over one year. More than 50 million photos are shared over the mobile app every day ? that's higher than Instagram's daily upload number.

What may frighten Zuckerberg most about Snapchat is the fact that it's Facebook's polar opposite, and it's wildly popular. Instead of uploading and sharing photos with the world, Snapchat lets users share private photos with small numbers of people and it deletes the images soon after they're sent. They're never uploaded to a website and they can't be viewed more than once by the recipient.

Facebook tried to flex its muscles and kill the app by copying it. It made an exact replica called Poke, which burst to the top of the app store just after its launch, only to face the wrath of Snapchat's loyal users. While Snapchat is still the #5 free app in the App Store, Facebook's Poke has fallen out of the top 100.

Snapchat isn't the first product that's made Facebook veer off course. Consider:

Those two latter projects are the easiest ways for the company to bolt on new sales dollars without changing the user experience. Yet they don't exist, even though they're old news at competing media.

Notable venture capitalist Fred Wilson recently called it an "institutionalized copycat," that rips off "everything." That's harsh, but companies don't control their own reputations.

The company appears to be at a crossroads. It is becoming known more for its privacy scandals and copycatting than for its innovation.

Is it a company worthy of ruling the tech world through innovation or a defensive corporate giant that avoids risk?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/facebooks-confidence-is-shaken-2013-1

oscar nominations rough riders joy division norco rand paul detained asexual jim carrey

It's Cold Outside, So Stay In! Your Guide to Winter TV

Here are 25 reasons to bundle up and stay inside -- these are the new and returning shows we can't wait to watch this season!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/winter-tv-guide-2013/1-b-513127?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Awinter-tv-guide-2013-513127

British Open MC Chris Colorado shooting suspect accuweather Finding Nemo 2 Provigil denver post

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Eton adds two more solar-powered Bluetooth sound systems to its Rukus lineup

Eton adds two more solarpowered Bluetooth sound systems to its Rukus lineup

For those about to rock out (in direct sunlight, at least), Eton won't just salute you, but offer you more options for your environmentally-friendly moshing. At this year's CES, it's launching two more solar-powered Bluetooth boomboxes to compliment the Rukus that arrived at 2012's show. The Rugged Rukus offers the same hardware as the flagship, but wrapped in a sturdy IPX-4 shell that'll keep it safe from knocks and splashes. It's also trotting out the Rukus XL, a not-too-distant cousin of the old Soulra XL iPod dock, which ditches the e-ink display in favor of a chunky, triangular body, flip-out solar panel and six more speaker drivers. The Rugged Rukus will arrive in Q1 and will cost $99.99, and the Rukus XL setting you back $199.99 when it arrives in Q2.

Continue reading Eton adds two more solar-powered Bluetooth sound systems to its Rukus lineup

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/kw7G3EbXU5c/

kenyon martin kenyon martin big miracle slab city super bowl snacks appleton super bowl recipes

Caturday. #cats #catsofinstagram #pets | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/brookemedlin/8349838681/

mr rogers jamie lee curtis spring equinox audacious pollen count mexico city first day of spring

Michael J. Fox to play newscaster in new NBC show

File -- In a Nov. 6, 2006 file photo actor Michael J. Fox greets supporters at a rally for Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle in Milwaukee. On his upcoming NBC comedy, Fox will play a newscaster who quits his job because of Parkinson's Disease but returns to work in the show's first episode because a new medical regimen has helped him control many of the disease's symptoms. NBC said Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, his comedy closely tracks many aspects of Fox's personal life and tries to have fun with an image that has left him an object of pity-fueled admiration.(AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)

File -- In a Nov. 6, 2006 file photo actor Michael J. Fox greets supporters at a rally for Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle in Milwaukee. On his upcoming NBC comedy, Fox will play a newscaster who quits his job because of Parkinson's Disease but returns to work in the show's first episode because a new medical regimen has helped him control many of the disease's symptoms. NBC said Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, his comedy closely tracks many aspects of Fox's personal life and tries to have fun with an image that has left him an object of pity-fueled admiration.(AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ? On his upcoming NBC comedy, Michael J. Fox will play a newscaster who had quit his job due to Parkinson's Disease but returns to work in the show's first episode because a new medical regimen has helped him control many of the disease's symptoms.

It mirrors the life of the former "Family Ties" and "Spin City" star, who said last year that drugs have helped minimize the physical tics of Parkinson's and have enabled him to take on more acting jobs.

The yet-to-be-named sitcom is a key piece of NBC's strategy to build upon a revival that has brought the network back from many years in the ratings wilderness. Show like "The Voice" and "Revolution" have made NBC the only one of the four biggest networks to gain in viewership over last season.

Though it's not definite, NBC is penciling Fox's comedy in for September on its low-rated Thursday schedule. The long-running Thursday comedy "30 Rock" ends its run on Jan. 31, and "The Office" will exit after a special one-hour episode this spring.

In the family comedy, Fox's character will be the father of two teenage children and a younger boy, Jennifer Salke, the network's entertainment president, said on Sunday. It will be set in New York City, and filmed there, too, she said.

The real-life disease has left Fox an object of pity-fueled admiration, yet Fox "approaches his life and his work with a lot of irreverence," Salke said.

"It's a family show that has him dealing with work and office relationships as well as dealing with kind of his public persona, which is very real," she said. "You see, he gets a standing ovation everywhere he shows up, and the idea that he's sort of been put up on this pedestal by the country and the world, really. He's just a regular guy, who gets frustrated, who gets mad at having to sit at home."

Fox is meeting this week with actresses who may be cast as his wife on the show.

Fox has appeared in limited roles over the past few years, most notably as a lawyer in CBS' "The Good Wife." But it's his track record as the star of two previous sitcoms that has NBC executives eagerly looking forward to the new show. He left ABC's "Spin City" in 2000 after four seasons, saying he hoped to help find a cure for Parkinson's.

NBC focused this season on improving its standing earlier in the week, building from the popular Sunday night football franchise and a new fall edition of "The Voice" on Mondays and Tuesdays. The strategy worked better than executives envisioned, said Robert Greenblatt, NBC entertainment chairman.

In the "must-see" days of "Friends" and "Seinfeld," NBC was the king of Thursday nights. But its ratings are a fraction of what they were, as its current comedies haven't matched critical acclaim with a large audience.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-01-06-TV-Michael%20J%20Fox/id-1f7a85a64244480fa803bc2090c43db6

bestbuy gamestop black friday deals Sephora Cyber Monday 2012 Walmart.com detroit lions

Baby Boomers' Last Wishes: Motorcycle Hearses And Facebook Obits

Lew Bird, 67, says before passing away his friend requested his funeral include one last ride on a motorcycle.

Lew Bird, 67, says before passing away his friend requested his funeral include one last ride on a motorcycle.

Old Aristocracy Hill isn't a part of Springfield, Ill., that draws a lot of attention. The quiet neighborhood dates back to before the Civil War, its historic homes now carefully preserved by proud business owners.

But outside a stately funeral home, a large black-and-chrome Harley Davidson motorcycle trike pulls out of the parking lot, towing a matching casket in its glass-sided trailer.

It's not something you would expect to see, but it's exactly what 67-year-old Lew Bird says his friend Dave Rondelli wanted: one last ride.

"Our generation, the baby boomers, have really taken to motorcycles. We're retiring, and we can afford to do that kind of thing," Bird says. "He loved it. He retired, and he rode his bike a lot. You know, guess if you're going to go out, go out the way you like to go."

Chris Butler, director of Butler Funeral Home, says he bought the motorcycle funeral coach because his customers are increasingly seeking a highly personal and unique experience. Funeral customs and rituals, he adds, tend to evolve with time and reflect the culture in which they're practiced.

"Today people are wanting very much [for] their ceremonies to reflect their life, the meaning of their life," Butler explains. "So we can offer families the traditional as well as unique options for remembering their loved one."

He also says posting an obituary on his company's Facebook page is another option to get funeral information out to the community quickly. But not everyone in the business agrees it's a good idea.

Randall Earl, former president of The National Funeral Directors Association, which tracks trends in the industry, has been in the business for 40 years and holds concerns about some of the innovations, including utilizing social media in the funeral planning and grieving process.

"It can be very harmful if you have family members who are angry with other family members and they have a death," Earl says.

He maintains that it's just too difficult to control what's said and done by mourners on social media platforms.

"I would say we're just trying to protect our business as well as the families we serve, and I do not have a Twitter or Facebook for those reasons," Earl explains.

Others, like Greg Young, argue that protecting families and social media don't have to be mutually exclusive. The 32-year-old entrepreneur, who left his job at IBM five years ago to launch funeralinnovations.com, maintains that careful use of social media can vastly improve a memorial experience, while upholding an appropriate level of privacy.

"Every funeral home needs to have their own strategy; there's no cookie-cutter approach," Young says. "There may be some times that you do not want to post the obituary, and we do have those cases that we work with."

Young's company sells Web, mobile and social media marketing, and believes that, like so many other things, the future of funeral planning will rely on tablets and smartphones. As families scatter across the globe, he says that often the best way for his clients to connect with mourners may well indeed be online.

"We're really starting to push webcasting, which has been out there for years, but funeral homes typically have not accepted it," Young explains. "We think it's very important to preserve that moment, so that generations to come can easily come back and access that information and learn more about their ancestors."

All of the recent innovations webcasting for genealogy, Facebook pages for grieving families, mobile devices to plan a funeral or find an obituary, even a motorcycle hearse may or may not stand the test of time.

But what's clear is that whatever changes endure will likely be those sought by baby boomers, who continue to drive consumer trends in life and in death.

Copyright 2013 WUIS-FM. To see more, visit http://www.wuis.org/.

Source: http://www.gpb.org/news/2013/01/04/baby-boomers-last-wishes-motorcycle-hearses-and-facebook-obits

p zynga Tropical Storm Sandy W S B H

The Harrowing Helicopter Rescue of the Kulluk Rig

Coast Guard aircraft commander Jason Evans pointed his MH-60 Jayhawk directly into sustained 50 knot winds as he came into a hover 40 feet above the deck of the oil rig Kulluk. Below him, the rig plunged up and down in swells as high as 30 feet. It was the afternoon of Saturday, December 29, two days after a buckle on the tow line connecting the conical oil rig to the Shell tug Aiviq broke, leaving the Kulluk powerless is violent Gulf of Alaska seas. Evan?s aircraft was one of two Coast Guard helicopters charged with evacuating the 18 workers on board.

The hazards of the mission?high winds, heavy seas, freezing water?were evident to Evans and his three-man crew, and typical of their search and rescue (SAR) missions out of Air Station Kodiak. Unique was the design of the Kulluk, which has no propulsion of its own and from a distance looked like a toy top, a wobbling, brightly-colored cone bobbing on the churning surface of the Gulf of Alaska. The Kulluk?s superstructure stretches 150 feet up from the vessels? deck.

"Usually when you're going to a fishing vessel or a pleasure craft, you can keep your blades above their masts or antennas or superstructure," says Evans, a 36-year-old lieutenant who has been stationed in Kodiak for a year and a half. "But because this is 150 feet, there's no way to stay above the superstructure. You've got that superstructure beside you, abeam you, and it's swinging toward you the whole time."

The Coast Guard crew was able to communicate with the Kulluk workers by radio. They were experienced mariners, and not injured. Often a Coast Guard rescue swimmer is sent down in the helicopter?s rescue basket to facilitate a rescue, but that wouldn?t be necessary in this case. Instead, Evans gave the swimmer a new job: to watch the blade tips. "If the superstructure starts approaching 10 feet you need to say something to me immediately," the pilot told the swimmer. Meanwhile, Evans tried to avoid spatial disorientation by keeping his own focus on the horizon. He was also aware of an additional hazard: a replacement tow line that by Saturday once again connected the Kulluk to its primary tow vessel, the Aiviq.

The tow line was 500 to 700 feet long, and attached to the Kulluk right beneath his aircraft. "That was one of my concerns?is there a hazard of the tow line recoiling, rebounding into the rotor blades, if it were to break again," Evans says. Earlier in the day, Evans? crew had hoisted four baskets full of spare parts down to the deck of the crippled Aiviq, whose engines were partially disabled by contaminated fuel. He?d asked about the tow line, concerned that it could snap, spring up, and get fouled in the hovering helicopter. Though Evans was told that the lack of slack in the line would make such a recoil extremely unlikely, it remained one more hazard to keep in mind.

As Evans held the hover over the Kulluk, flight mechanic Derrick Suba lowered the metal rescue basket toward the? deck. The Kulluk?s crew had been instructed to let the basket touch the deck before they grabbed it, to discharge any static electricity. Tied to the basket was a long line that the crew on deck would use to stabilize the basket as the rig workers were raised back up to the helicopter one-by-one. "The Kulluk had a lot of movement, a lot of pitch, a lot of roll. The elevation of the deck was changing at least 30 foot altitude," Evans says. "We'd be trying to maintain a 40-foot deck height and they'd take a big swell and the deck would come all the way up right under the bottom of the aircraft." Such conditions made Suba?s job of managing the hoist cable extremely challenging. "If he had too much tension in the cable, the deck would drop out from underneath the basket as the rig workers were trying to get loaded in," Evans says.

Although the conditions were extreme, they?re exactly what the air crew trains for, and in less than half an hour six of the oil workers were safely inside the aircraft (a second Kodiak Jayhawk recovered the remaining 12 in two separate trips). "That's a risky flight, a risky situation," says Evans, who has flown several more missions to the Kulluk since the Saturday rescue. "Whenever the seas are that heavy and the winds are that strong, it's raining, it's snowing, lower ceilings, there's reduced visibility, that compounds it."

The extended Kulluk scenario had been demanding for Kodiak Coasties, who usually get some downtime between late December and early January. Since the disaster began, the Coast Guard cutter Alex Haley, which carries a crew of 112, has been stationed near the grounded oil rig (the ship had been scheduled for a Bering Sea patrol before it was drawn into efforts to prevent the Kulluk?s grounding). "We are putting all the assets, all the personnel that we can towards the response," Coast Guard Capt. Paul Mehler said at a Thursday press conference organized by Unified Command, the collaboration of industry and government representatives who have joined to manage the response. "It is definitely a heavy lift for our crews but it is not beyond what we can do safely and what we're manage."

"It's a huge group effort at all levels to manage and prioritize flights, assets, and people," says Evans. "We've been burning through crews one right after another." Evans was flying again on New Year?s Eve, sent out specifically to try to document the Kulluk?s grounding, which occurred just before 9 p.m. on Monday, December 31. Meanwhile, many of his fellow pilots were celebrating at the Golden Anchor, a bar at the air station. "Winds were sustained 60 mph and it was gusting 70. Seas were 30 feet and when we got on scene it started blowing snow and rain," Evans says. "We could not even orbit the Kulluk because the winds were so strong. I told the crew, This is not worth it, we're going home." His crew ended up flying by the Golden Anchor 10 seconds after the ball dropped.

In many ways, it?s fortunate that the Kulluk debacle is unfolding so close to Coast Guard resources. The rig is now grounded 40 miles southwest of the Kodiak Air Station, the largest Coast Guard facility in Alaska. The helicopter flight takes just 20 minutes. The Coast Guard has five MH-60s at the air station right now, as well as three smaller 65 Dolphin helicopters. That won?t be the case for much longer. On January 13, two of those Jayhawks along with their aircrews are scheduled to be transferred to St. Paul, a tiny island in the Bering Sea that serves as a SAR staging ground during the historically dangerous winter crab-fishing season. Those helicopters and crews will depart for St. Paul as scheduled next week, according to Coast Guard public affairs officer Sara Francis. In the meantime, Shell has announced intentions to bring in its own aircraft?hopefully manned by pilots who have plenty of experience flying the Gulf of Alaska in wintertime.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/outdoors/survival/stories/the-harrowing-helicopter-rescue-of-the-kulluk-rig-14940780?src=rss

When Is Veterans Day 2012 brooke burke Alexa Vega Bram Stoker books Paula Broadwell Photos Veterans Day 2012 Nate Silver

Saturday, January 5, 2013

From Race To Ethnicity: Census Rethinks Hispanic On Questionnaire

USA Today:

Hispanics may become a race of their own in the U.S. Census ? a major change that some Latino advocacy groups are opposing.

Currently, the Census considers Hispanic not a race but an ethnic background. Hispanics can be of any race, and Hispanic origin is asked on Census forms in a question separate from the one about race.

Read the whole story at USA Today

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/04/census-hispanic-race-ethnicity_n_2409702.html

louis oosthuizen phil mickelson 10 year old gives birth c. difficile carmelo anthony nurse jackie nurse jackie

Post Bar & Grill Could Expand into Creve Coeur - Maplewood ...

Since the Post Sports Bar & Grill opened in Maplewood in 2009, Owner Adrian Glass said "everything we've done was with the idea of growing" the business. The time to grow has apparently arrived, and the restaurant has found what it hopes is a home for The Post II Sports Bar & Grill, in Creve Coeur.

Glass has filed a request for a Conditional Use Permit to open the eatery in the former Growlers Pub space, vacant for two years at the Farmers Bank shopping center across from CityPlace.

Glass told Patch Wednesday he "couldn't have handpicked" a better location in the Interstate 270 loop area and cited the area's lunch crowd and happy hour crowd, along with the lack of a real sports bar in Creve Coeur, as attractions.

The restaurant, which he says brings the "excitement of attending the game along with the comfort of home," is also a home to fantasy sports leagues and drafts.

A public hearing on the permit will be held January 22 at the Creve Coeur Planning and Zoning Commission meeting. The decision to open in the Growlers space is contingent on the city lifting a requirement that only allows restaurant space in certain zoned areas under 2 acres to reach a total of 25 percent of the overall square footage. ?

The proposed restaurant in this case would take up a total of 32 percent of the existing space on the site. City planning officials are considering a city-wide move to lift the 25 percent limitation, but the existing request applies only to the Core Business District.?A public hearing on the text amendment to scrap the 25 percent limit will also be held January 22.?

City officials altered a similar requirement in 2012 which ultimately led to Ray's Donuts?locating at the Shoppes at Westgate.

If the amendment passes and the conditional use permit is issued, Glass said the restaurant would target a June 1 opening. Further expansion into areas like Lafayette Square, Soulard or St. Charles County would be evaluated after a calendar year in business in Creve Coeur.

Source: http://maplewood-brentwood.patch.com/articles/post-ii-sports-bar-grill-targets-june-opening

dyngus day indonesia quake stephen strasburg shabazz legion baby found alive in morgue rockies