রবিবার, ২৮ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Bride-to-be Killed in NY Wedding Party Boat Crash

NEW YORK CITY (KTLA) ? The driver of a boat that was carrying a wedding party when it struck a barge was arrested and charged Saturday after a body believed to be that of the bride-to-be was found.

Jojo K. John, 35, was arraigned on one count of first-degree vehicular manslaughter and three counts of second-degree vehicular assault, according to Robert Van Cura, undersheriff of the Rockland County Sheriff?s Office.

Bride2

Brian Bond and Lindsey Stewart were set to marry in two weeks (Facebook)

Authorities recovered a body Saturday during the search for victims on the Hudson River, officials said.

Lindsey Stewart, 30, and her wedding party were boating near the Tappan Zee Bridge 25 miles north of New York City when their water craft struck a construction barge on Friday at 10:30 p.m.

All six people on the 21-foot Stingray motor boat were thrown into the water, police said.

Four were injured, including the groom, 35-year-old Brian Bond.

The air and water search for Mark Lennon, who was supposed to be the best man at the wedding, was suspended on Saturday evening and was planned to resume Sunday morning.

?She is supposed to be married in two weeks from today,? Lindsey?s mother, Carol told WABC-TV. ?It can?t end like this.?

The couple?s wedding was to take place on Aug. 10.

Source: http://ktla.com/2013/07/27/bride-to-be-and-best-man-missing-after-deadly-ny-boat-crash/

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শনিবার, ২৭ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Greek Myths about Human Origins

We are ill-fated idiots. That?s what some popular and supposedly scientific ideas suggest. The ancient Greek meaning of idiot, along with their myths, can help us avert a modern tragedy of reason. Somehow a sub-natural view of rationality ignores evolutions great gifts to us: our capacities for forethought and cooperation.

The myth of Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods, describes human origins. For our ancestors ?every act was without knowledge, until Prometheus gave them his illicit gift, which would become their teacher of every art.? The word for ?art? in ancient Greek was ?techne,? the root of technique & technology. Prometheus, whose name means ?fore-thinker,? symbolizes science and foresight.

An un-human ?logic? drives the ?tragedy of the commons.? Garrett Hardin coined that term for the overexploitation of common resources by ?rational beings each?seeking to maximize his gain,? which causes collective disaster by damaging what they depend on. But this is no unavoidable fate. Rather it?s a tragedy of poor thinking by supposedly elite reasoners, blind to simple solutions.

Elinor Olstrom won a Nobel Prize in Economics for researching how groups overcome Hardin?s hard-of-thinking hurdle. But her work isn?t widely known. Before her Nobel, even prominent economists hadn?t heard of her. But we shouldn?t need Nobel laureate to see the obvious. Our survival has long required cooperation. We?ve evolved and developed ways to manage joint resources (e.g. punishing free riders) over about 10,000 generations.

Hardin claimed ?no technical solution? existed and that a ?fundamental extension in morality? was needed. His framing of the moral as distinct from the rational/technical shows how scientists can misunderstand those words. Morals are simply social coordination rules. They can be rational. Aquinas distinguished natural from supernatural moral virtues. The natural virtues, or skills (taken from Aristotle) included justice, temperance, and prudence and were needed for humans to thrive on earth.

Allowing foreseeably bad outcomes isn?t rational. Yet a supposedly rational economistic ?logic? often encourages precisely that. Hardin spoke of a ?tragedy of freedom in a commons,? which pinpoints the real issue. It?s not ?the commons?, but an unsustainable idea of freedom. No community can allow freedom to create foreseeable collective doom. The fate of this logic is inescapable. Damage what you depend on and you risk perishing. Cultures with self-undermining forms of ?rationality? and freedom don?t survive. That?s their common tragedy.

In Plato?s version of the Prometheus myth, ?scattered isolated? humans are given ?political techne? ? the arts needed to create cities. The ?pol? in politics is from ?polis? meaning city. Without this, humans, self-deficient by nature, couldn?t prosper. The political arts of social coordination prevent us from being idiots. In ancient Greek, ?idios? meant ?of one?s own or private.? They believed it crazy and irrational to live only for private interests. They had sustainable self-interest rightly understood. We?d be idiots to ignore that we evolved relational rationality and social coordination rules based on justice. We must think better or bitter fates await.

Illustration by Julia Suits, The New Yorker Cartoonist & author of The Extraordinary Catalog of Peculiar Inventions.

Previously in this series:

It Is in Our Nature to Be Self-Deficient
Inheriting Second Natures
Our Ruly Nature
It Is in Our Nature to Need Stories
Tools Are in Our Nature
We Fit Nature To Us: Evolutions two way street
Justice Is In Our Nature
Behavioral Telescope Shows How Cooperation Works
Selfish Genes Also Must Cooperate
Game Theory And The Golden Punishment Rule
Revolutionizing Economics by Evolutionizing it.
Science?s Mobile Army of Metaphors

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/~r/sciam/basic-science/~3/5qJFWpefBTE/post.cfm

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Crock Pot Buffalo Chicken Wings - LaaLoosh

Taba?ero Hot Sauce

As you may know, I am pretty much obsessed with hot sauce. I love the heat, I love the tang, and I will put it on just about anything. So when I found out about Taba?ero Hot Sauce, which is a 100% natural hot sauce, I was pretty excited to give it a try. This is truly a quality hot sauce?.you can really taste the layers of flavor and the freshness if the ingredients. I also love that it delivers some heat without it completely overpowering the food. Preservative and filler free, the taste of Taba?ero delivers exactly what it promises and then some. So if you are looking for a natural, healthier hot sauce as an alternative to the more common brands, then definitely give Taba?ero a try. You can buy it on their website or on Amazon. And make sure to give it a try in my new Crock Pot Buffalo Chicken Wings Recipe (6 Points +) that I featured it in! Keep reading for the recipe?

Crock Pot Buffalo Wings

Juicy, spicy, and oh so tender, these crock pot buffalo wings are a real treat. Slow cooked to maintain moist and tender chicken, then crisped in the oven for a bit of crunch and to seal in all those succulent juices. Peel the skin off the wings to shave off some extra Points.

Ingredients

  • 1 8oz bottle Taba?ero All Natural Hot Sauce
  • 3 lbs chicken wings (about 30 small wings)
  • 4 tbsp light butter (I used Brummel & Brown)
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tbsp dried oregano
  • 1 tbsp onion powder
  • 1 tbsp garlic powder
  • 2 tbsp cornstarch
  • 2 tbsp water

Instructions

  1. In a small sauce pan, combine butter, Taba?ero Hot Sauce, oregano, Worcestershire sauce, onion powder, and garlic powder and set over medium high heat. Bring to a simmer, then turn heat to low and let cook for about 5-8 more minutes.
  2. Place chicken wings in crock pot, and then pour hot sauce mixture over top of the wings.
  3. Cook on high for about 3 hours. Then, preheat oven to 400 degrees. Line a large, rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil and mist with non-fat cooking spray.
  4. Spread wings evenly onto baking sheet and place in oven, while reserving the cooking sauce in the crock pot. Let cook until wings become browned and begin to crisp, about 25-30 minutes.
  5. Meanwhile, in a very small bowl, combine cornstarch and water. Then, stir it into the sauce that?s remaining in the crock pot, until sauce begins to thicken a bit.
  6. Pour sauce over wings and serve.

Preparation time: 10 minute(s)

Cooking time: 3 hour(s) 40 minute(s)

Diet tags: Reduced fat, Reduced carbohydrate

Number of servings (yield): 10

Culinary tradition: USA (Traditional)

Calories: 273

Fat: 11

Protein: 37

Entire recipe makes 10 servings
Serving size is about 3 wings
Each serving = 6 Points +

PER SERVING: 273 calories; 11g fat; 2g carbohydrates; 37g protein; 0g fiber

Entire recipe makes 10 servings
Serving size is about 3 wings
Each serving = 6 Points +

PER SERVING: 273 calories; 11g fat; 2g carbohydrates; 37g protein; 0g fiber

Source: http://www.laaloosh.com/2013/07/26/tabanero-hot-sauce-review-and-a-new-crock-pot-buffalo-chicken-wings-recipe/

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AP PHOTOS: Pope ventures into tough Rio shantytown

Pope Francis spent Thursday morning in one of Rio de Janeiro's most violent shantytowns, whose residents gave him a warm and happy greeting.

The pontiff mounted an open vehicle to cruise through the narrow streets of the Varginha slum past residents crowding the route under a sea of umbrellas. As he is fond of doing, Francis also got down and walked into the crowds to shake hands and talk with people.

Later in the day, the pope headed to Rio's famed Copacabana beach, to deliver an address to hundreds of thousands of young Roman Catholics attending the church's World Youth Day festival.

Here's a gallery of images from the fourth day of the pope' visit to Brazil.

___

AP photographers and photo editors on Twitter: http://apne.ws/15Oo6jo

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-pope-ventures-tough-rio-shantytown-204622929.html

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শুক্রবার, ২৬ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Militants in Iraq ambush truck convoy, kill 14

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Militants ambushed a truck convoy with Iraqi Shiites in a remote area in the country's north and killed 14 drivers, police said Thursday, the latest in a series of brazen attacks aiming to further destabilize the nation.

The attackers first fired mortar rounds at a nearby military base and bombed a communication tower to draw security forces' attention away before intercepting the convoy late Wednesday night near Sarha village, said Col. Hussein Ali Rasheed. The village is located just outside the northern city of Tuz Khormato, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) north of Baghdad.

According to Rasheed, the city's police chief, all the casualties were Shiite truck drivers from Baghdad and their assistants. Their bodies were found with gunshots to the head, he said.

Further north, in the city of Kirkuk, a parked car bomb targeted a passing police patrol on Thursday morning, critically wounding six policemen, police Col. Salah Abdul-Qadir said. Kirkuk is 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of Baghdad.

Across Iraq, insurgents have in the recent months escalated attacks on civilians and government forces. The violence has reached levels not seen since 2008, fueling worries of a return to the widespread sectarian killing that pushed the country to the brink of civil war after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. More than 3,000 people have been killed since April.

Insurgent attacks have also become more audacious, such as Sunday's raids against two major high-security prisons near Baghdad that killed dozens and set free hundreds of inmates, including al-Qaida-linked militants.

On Tuesday, al-Qaida's Iraq branch claimed responsibility for the prison attacks. The following day, the international police agency Interpol issued a security alert to warn counties in the region about the fugitives, saying the breakouts from the Iraqi prisons pose "a major threat to global security."

Many of the escaped prisoners were senior members of al-Qaida in Iraq, including some who were facing the death penalty, according to Interpol.

___

Associated Press writer Adam Schreck contributed to this report in Baghdad.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/militants-iraq-ambush-truck-convoy-kill-14-094535264.html

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বুধবার, ২৪ জুলাই, ২০১৩

The Internet's Favorite Remix Artist Spills His Secrets

If you haven't seen any of Pogo's mesmerizing and melodious film remixes, please please do that now. Once you've been entranced, come back here and watch this video about the man behind the magic.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-internets-favorite-remix-artist-spills-his-secrets-881124238

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The Wooden Window Workshop (West End, London, by JitBhail)

Review of The Wooden Window Workshop by JitBhail
User photo: JitBhail

Offensive content?

Review of The Wooden Window Workshop from 24 July 2013

Paid them a deposit and they never provided the windows. Took them to court and got a county court judgement against them (3QT27042). They haven't been trading since 1985 as advertised. According to Companies House?they started in 2011. Avoid them at all costs.

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? Qype 2013 - Review of The Wooden Window Workshop by JitBhail Made with Love in Hamburg, Germany

Source: http://www.qype.co.uk/review/3923587

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My dinner with the President of SOUTH Sudan (not Sudan) ? President Kiir was not happy with President Obama ? click to read and find out

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: gretawire.foxnewsinsider.com --- Tuesday, July 23, 2013
The tweet I copied below reminded me of this: When I traveled to Africa with Reverend Franklin Graham in April 2012, I had dinner with the President of South Sudan, President Kiir. At the time, President Kiir was angry with President Obama. Kiir said at dinner that the only time he heard from President Obama was about a week or so before we had dinner?.that it was for President Obama?s selfish purposes and that it was because President Obama wanted him to open up his oil fields. The President of South Sudan, then in a fight with the President of Sudan (Bashir) that continues to today, had shut down the South Sudan oil fields in January 2012. President Kiiur said the only reason that President Obama called him two weeks earlier, and for the first time, was because the Chinese buy so much oil from South Sudan and with the oil fields shut down, China was going to the international market for oil and thus driving up oil prices all over the world, including our gas prices in USA and it was an election year (2012.) President Kiir expressed anger that President Obama was trying to use him for President Obama?s political purposes (gas prices in an election year.) President Kiir said his new country (July 2009) had problems and that he had hoped President Obama would have helped them instead of use him. I have no idea what is what ..whether gas prices in USA would go up from shutting down the oil fields in South Sudan or even that quickly ...

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/blogs/Gretawire/~3/usL09BC301I/

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'Law & Order' star Dennis Farina dead at 69

Celebs

1 hour ago

IMAGE: Dennis Farina

Paul Drinkwater / AP

Dennis Farina has died at age 69.

Actor Dennis Farina, the Chicago cop turned actor who played Det. Joe Fontana on TV's "Law & Order" and also starred in numerous movies, died Monday at age 69, his publicist tells NBC News. The cause of death was a blood clot in his lung, she said.

"We are deeply saddened by the loss of a great actor and a wonderful man," publicist Lori De Waal said in a statement. "Dennis Farina was always warm-hearted and professional, with a great sense of humor and passion for his profession. He will be greatly missed by his family, friends, and colleagues. We hope that he finds a new life where great roles are plentiful and the Cubs are always winning the pennant."

Farina died in Scottsdale, Ariz., and his girlfriend of 35 years, Marianne Cahill, was with him, his publicist says.

Before becoming an actor, Farina worked as a Chicago police officer for nearly 20 years. He was serving as a police consultant to movie director Michael Mann on the 1981 film "Thief" when Mann gave him a small role, which led to a rich acting career in which he mostly played policemen or mobsters.

In 2004 when Farina joined the uber-successful crime drama "Law & Order," he told TODAY's Katie Couric that he enjoyed the stylish detective he played. "I hope he's never defined, really, to tell you the truth," Farina told Couric.? "It's fun finding out myself what he's gonna do next or what characteristics he might have."

Recently, he starred in the HBO horse-racing series "Luck," and produced and starred in "The Last Rites of Joe May," an independent film. Farina also had a recurring role on Fox's "New Girl." He also starred in HBO's Golden Globe-winning miniseries, "Empire Falls," and is remembered fondly for his role on the short-lived "Crime Story."

His movie resume included "Get Shorty," "Saving Private Ryan," "Snatch" and "Midnight Run." He won an American Comedy Award for his "Get Shorty" role.

His love for his Chicago hometown never left him, and he remained a frequent face in Chicago theater. When he landed his "Law & Order" role, he cracked, "The only downside is that I won't see enough Cubs and Bears games."

And in a 1998 interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, Farina said that Chicagoans are even more loyal to their hometown than New Yorkers.

"You know the first thing a Chicagoan tells you is, `I?m from Chicago!?" he said. "And then the questions come if they discover you?re one, too. `What parish are you from? What ward are you from? Who?s your alderman??"

Fans remembered Farina on Twitter, and were quick to acknowledge that his pre-acting career endeared him to them. "The Dennis Farina news bums me out," wrote Zack Stentz. "He was a wonderful throwback to an earlier generation of actors who lived real lives before they acted."

In addition to his girlfriend, Farina is survived by three children and six grandchildren.

This is a breaking news story and will be updated.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/law-order-star-dennis-farina-dead-69-6C10707427

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৩ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Windows Home Server

You can buy more time by resetting the trial period. From memory, it only works twice, so if you wait till the last day or so to do it, you'll get a total of @ 90 days. That should provide plenty of time to get a real copy from somewhere.

?

Open Comand prompt

Type?slmgr.vbs /rearm

Reboot

?

http://connecteddigi...011-essentials/?The article also appears to include instructions for rearming automatically using task scheduler.


Source: http://forum.wegotserved.com/index.php/topic/28572-windows-home-server/

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Stocks edge higher, helped by gold miners

NEW YORK (AP) ? Rising commodity prices made up for weak earnings reports on Monday, pushing the stock market slightly higher.

Higher gold and copper prices boosted the stocks of mining companies in early afternoon trading. That helped offset lackluster results from a handful of large U.S. companies. McDonald's stock fell after it reported a disappointing second-quarter and warned of a tough year ahead. Media company Gannett dropped after its revenues fell short of financial analysts' expectations.

It's a big week for corporate earnings. More than 150 companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index are reporting earnings this week.

For the most part, corporations have reported second-quarter earnings that have beaten analysts' low expectations, though there have been some big disappointments. On Friday, Microsoft plunged after the software giant wrote off nearly $1 billion on its new tablet computer and reported declining revenue. Coca-Cola slumped last Tuesday after the company said it sold less soda in North America.

"Earnings are not stellar," said Brad Reynolds, chief investment officer at investment adviser LJPR. "It just seems that the market is ok with that."

Investors were more than OK with gold's price Monday. Mining stocks rose after the price of gold climbed above $1,300 for first time in a month. Newmont Mining rose $1.80, or 6 percent, to $30.49 at 12:50 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold gained 66 cents, or 2.3 percent, to $29.22.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose four points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,696. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 15 points, or 0.1 percent, to 15,559. The Nasdaq composite climbed 13 points, or 0.4 percent, to 3,600.

One sector that struggled was homebuilders. Sales of previously occupied homes slipped in June to an annual rate of 5.08 million, the National Association of Realtors said Monday.

As a result, Pulte Group fell 34 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $19.03. Lennar fell 53 cents, or 1.5 percent to $35.01.

Still, the stock market has surged in July after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke assured investors that the U.S. central bank would not pull back on its stimulus before the economy was strong enough. The Fed is buying $85 billion of bonds to keep long-term interest rates low and to encourage spending.

The S&P 500 has gained 5.6 percent in July. That puts the index on track for it best month since October 2011.

Small company stocks have fared even better. The Russell 2000 closed above 1,000 for the first time July 5 and is up 7.8 percent for the month. That signals that investors have become more comfortable buying riskier assets.

In commodities trading, the price of oil fell 80 cents, or 0.73 percent, to $107.07 a barrel.

Gold gained $39.30, or 3 percent, to $1,332.20 an ounce.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note was unchanged from Friday at 2.48 percent.

S&P 500 companies are forecast to report earnings growth of 3.6 percent for the second quarter, according to data from S&P Capital IQ.

As of Monday, 63 percent of the companies that have reported earnings have exceeded expectations. That's above the historical average.

Among other stocks making big moves.

? Hasbro Inc.'s stock rose 77 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $46.15. The nation's second biggest toy maker said Monday that it is expanding its merchandising relationship with The Walt Disney Co. for properties including Marvel and Star Wars.

? Yahoo fell 96 cents, or 3.2 percent, to $28.18. The company said Monday that activist investor Dan Loeb and two other directors nominated by his hedge fund, Third Point LLC, are leaving Yahoo's board after big gains in the company's stock price the past year.

? Kimberly-Clark, which makes consumer products such as Kleenex tissue and Huggies diapers, fell $1.46, or 1.5 percent, to $97.45. The company reported revenue that fell short of financial analyst's expectations on Monday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stocks-edge-higher-helped-gold-miners-155705490.html

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With no oversight, Six Flags will investigate itself after coaster death

Witnesses say the woman who was killed after being thrown from a roller coaster in Texas was concerned that her lap restraint didn't work. NBC's Charles Hadlock reports.

By M. Alex Johnson, Staff Writer, NBC News

The investigation of the death of a woman on a roller coaster at Six Flags Over Texas will be led by Six Flags itself, because there's no state or federal agency responsible for enforcing the safety of amusement parks.

Rosy Esparza of Dallas died Friday night when she fell from the Texas Giant, which is billed as the world's steepest wooden roller coaster.


Six Flags initially said in a statement that it was "working with authorities" to figure out what happened. But it later had to admit that it was running the investigation itself because there are no authorities to work with.

No federal agency has legal authority to enforce safety standards. And Texas is one of at least 17 states that have no agency responsible for inspecting amusement park rides, according to NBC News' survey of state codes in all 50 states.

While he was previously in the House, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., introduced legislation every congressional session to establish federal regulation of amusement park rides beginning in 1999. But the measure never passed.

Markey renewed his call Sunday for federal regulation of "roller coasters that hurdle riders at extreme speeds along precipitous drops."

"A baby stroller is subject to tougher federal regulation than a roller coaster carrying a child in excess of 100 miles per hour," Markey said in a statement. "This is a mistake."

The Texas Giant, a 14-story-high, 4,900-feet-long roller coaster that is among the premier attractions at the park in Arlington, Texas, remains closed until Six Flags concludes its investigation, a park spokeswoman said. The park gave no timetable for reporting any information.

Nadine Kelley, who had been waiting in line for the ride Friday night, told NBC 5 of Dallas that riders who were sitting behind the woman said that "right when they came down off the first bump and hit that first turn, she flew out."

The woman was accompanied by two children, who were "hysterical," Kelley said. "They were saying that their mother flew out of the car."

"It was sad. It was very sad," she said. "We kept telling them to let them out because they were hysterical. The daughter and the son said, 'We have to go get my mom. We have to go get my mom.' We were kind of in disbelief, and we just said a prayer for her."

Alfred Cannon, Esparza's next-door neighbor, said Esparza was "an incredible mother to those kids."

NBCDFW: Neighbors recall woman who died on Six Flags coaster

Texas: Safety certificate 'not an endorsement' of safety
The Texas Giant is what's called a "super hybrid" ? a roller coaster with traditional wooden components that rides on steel tracks.?

"This track allows us to do much more with a wooden structure: steeper drops, steeper banks," Fred Grubb, president of Rocky Mountain Construction of Hayden, Idaho, said after his company rebuilt the ride two years ago.

The rebuilding deepened the ride's first drop to 79 degrees and banked several of its turns beyond 95 degrees, with one reaching 115 degrees, Grubb told Funworld, the magazine of the International Association for Amusement Parks and Attractions.

An independent inspection of the new ride would have been conducted by the Texas Insurance Department. But the department won't be part of the death investigation because the park's insurance isn't in question.

That's the case even though the Amusement Safety Organization, based in Montecito, Calif., had previously recorded four "significant injuries" on the ride this year, after having recorded seven last year. Nearly all were for whiplash-like neck injuries, it said.

Meanwhile, federal oversight and statistics on amusement park safety are almost nonexistent.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and the National Safety Council both cite amusement park safety standards set by the American Society for Testing and Materials, but those standards are voluntary.

In Texas, the Insurance Department is responsible for setting regulations for amusement park rides. It requires an annual safety inspection certifying that ride meets ASTM standards. Texas law specifies that the inspection must be carried out by an inspector hired by the insurance company ? not by any government authority.

To drive home the point that Texas isn't responsible for the safety of ?any roller coaster, the Insurance Department states: "Recognition by the Department that the amusement ride has satisfied these standards is not an endorsement by the Department or a statement regarding the safe operation of the amusement ride."

"There's absolutely no federal oversight, no state investigative oversight or any local investigative oversight," Ken Martin, an independent inspector and consultant on amusement park rides from Richmond, Va., told NBC News.

"It sounds like the fox guarding the henhouse to me," Martin said.

As of December, eight states required no permits or inspections for amusement park rides, according to a survey of state codes in all 50 states by NBC News:

  • Alabama
  • Mississippi
  • Montana
  • South Dakota
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • West Virginia
  • Wyoming

In addition to Texas, six states accepted inspections from park-employed or -contracted inspectors or park insurance companies:

Florida doesn't inspect permanent facilities that employ 1,000 or?more full-time employees and maintain their own safety?inspectors.

Minnesota allows inspections by inspectors contracted by the park or by the State Agricultural Society.

Charles Hadlock of NBC News contributed to this report.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2ef85984/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C210C1960A10A830Ewith0Eno0Eoversight0Esix0Eflags0Ewill0Einvestigate0Eitself0Eafter0Ecoaster0Edeath0Dlite/story01.htm

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Baseball Therapy: The High-Pitch-Count Hangover by Russell A. Carleton

July 22, 2013

by Russell A. Carleton

A week ago, Tim Lincecum pitched a no-hitter against the San Diego Padres, striking out 13, walking four, and throwing?gulp!?148 pitches. He also drew a walk at the plate and scored a run. I'm sure recording the last out is a moment he?ll remember for the rest of his life, just as it was for Johan Santana, who last year pitched the first no-hitter in Mets history in a comparatively efficient 134 pitches.

Generally, pitchers don't go more than 100 pitches in a game, but this was a special occasion. I used to use the same logic when I wanted to stay up late as a kid. The thing is that once you use the "special occasion" excuse and find out how much fun it is to stay up until midnight, it becomes easy to think of every occasion as special. There's a re-run of that one episode of Deep Space Nine that was so cool? (The baseball one!) That's special and worth staying up the extra hour. The next day, you feel a little groggier, but you get through, and it's not like anything really bad happened. Right?

I have to imagine that a manager who has a pitcher nearing the 100-pitch threshold, but who really has good stuff that night, finds himself in the same basic position. Should he let the pitcher stay up late and face one more batter, or walk out to the mound with a glass of warm milk and tuck the pitcher in for the night?

Here at BP, the idea of pitcher abuse and extreme pitch counts has been previously discussed by Rany Jazayerli and Keith Woolner, but it's been more than a decade since their work. Let's re-visit the issue of pitch counts and the effects that a 140-pitch marathon might have on a pitcher and his performance the next time that he goes out to the mound.

But first...

Warning! Gory Mathematical Details Ahead!
I calculated pitch counts for all starters in all games from 2003-2012. For the purposes of these analyses, I used only pitchers who were starters in their previous outing and were now pitching again as starters five days later (that is, a standard four days of rest between starts).

Source: http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=21272

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A Very Modern Wedding, a Full House Reunion & More from the Weekend

What You Missed Over The Weekend

07/22/2013 at 06:00 AM EDT

From left: Chord Overstreet & Dianna Agron, Jesse Tyler Ferguson & Justin Mikita, John Stamos & Lori Loughlin

Justin Campbell/StarTraks; Jason Merritt/Getty; Jamie McCarthy/Getty

We know, we know: The #greatkatewait had you sitting on the edge of your beach chair.

But if you were busy soaking up some rays ? or, equally likely, picking out a onesie for the royal baby ? here are five things you might have missed this weekend:

5. So Where Was the Most Happening Party This Weekend?

In our PEOPLE photo booth, duh! We hung out with all of your favorite Comic-Con stars, from The Vampire Diaries cast to Roseanne Barr, as the annual San Diego convention continued into the weekend. And you just never know what an actor is capable of when they let loose for the camera after a day of self-promotion. See who struck a pose exclusively for PEOPLE.

4. How Pen?lope Cruz Is Taking Her Pregnancy to New Heights

Forget flats: The mom-to-be is taking on any bumps in the road in slingback platform shoes (and with her own bump on display, of course!). Stepping out at Saturday's Los Veranos de la Villa Music Festival in Madrid with husband Javier Bardem, Cruz ? already Mom to 2-year-old Leo ? made a stylish statement. Would you rock these wedges?

3. Glee's Support System

A week after the tragic death of cast member Cory Monteith, Glee stars Kevin McHale, Dianna Agron and Jenna Ushkowitz came together in Los Angeles for Chord Overstreet's concert on Saturday. Overstreet reportedly dedicated a song to his late pal at the performance, which was his first live show with a band. See their group shot.

2. Your '90s Dream Just Came True

If you've ever worn a scrunchie, this is for you: With the snap of his black leather vest, John Stamos revisited his Full House alter-ego on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on Friday for a one-time Jesse and the Rippers reprisal performance. In what is the latest reunion for the sitcom (which aired its last episode in 1995), the Uncle Jesse actor hit the stage to perform a medley of songs, including "Forever" by the Beach Boys, Elvis Presley's "Little Sister" and Chan Romero's "Hippy Hippy Shake." Even his biggest fan, on-screen love Lori Loughlin ? better known as Aunt Becky ? was in attendance to rock out with the fictional band. Prepare to feel nostalgic.

1. The Most Modern Wedding This Weekend

Jesse Tyler Ferguson, who plays Mitchell Pritchett on ABC sitcom Modern Family, married his real-life love, Justin Mikita, in downtown New York City on Saturday. Playwright and screenwriter Tony Kushner officiated the ceremony, which "was so beautifully honest," attendee (and So You Think You Can Dance judge) Nigel Lythgoe Tweeted post-vows. Added Ferguson early Sunday morning: "Never been happier." Get all the details!

Source: http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/NLu1f85WROs/0,,20719320,00.html

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সোমবার, ২২ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Play the Digital Watch Game Online - Technabob

July 22nd, 2013 by: Paul Strauss


Before the advent of modern handheld gaming, some of us had to find ways to entertain ourselves on the train ride to work. One popular pastime was to see how quickly you could stop the timer on your digital watch. While most of us no longer wear a digital watch, there?s still a way to relive the glory days of this primitive digital sport.

digital watch game

Yes, you can now play the Digital Watch Game from the convenience of your web browser, complete with Casio LCD chronograph. If nothing else, check it out for the Digital Watch Game theme song!

Just head on over to UsVsThem and get ready with your mouse button. Now, how do I strap this to my wrist?

[via Kottke via Doobybrain]

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Source: http://technabob.com/blog/2013/07/22/digital-watch-game-online/

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Korean Pilots Association and Asiana Pilots Union Statement on Investigation of Asiana Flight 214

Korean Pilots Association and Asiana Pilots Union Statement on Investigation of Asiana Flight 214

The?Asiana Pilots?Union (APU) and Air Line Pilots Association of Korea (ALPA-K) today issued the following statement on the events and investigation surrounding the crash of Asiana Flight 214.

?Accidents that occur in aviation are not due only to a single cause, but from many causes. The list of causes often includes defects in aircraft, airline policies, pilot duty hours, working environment, issues which hinder the safety in the aerodrome area, weather conditions, ATC situations, and pilot error.

?The purpose of an accident investigation is not to benefit national interest of one country or enhance the corporate image of an airline, but to prevent the same or similar accidents from occurring in the future. In order to achieve this, the investigation must rule out any elements, including any prejudices or intended plans, which could affect the result of an investigation.

?Through the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Association (IFALPA) and the Air Line Pilots Assn., Int'l (ALPA),?APU and ALPA-K have conveyed our concerns about the possibility of inaccurately identifying the cause of the accident, due to NTSB's press conferences which only give prominence to the possibility of a pilot error and unprecedented speed in disclosure of related materials to the public.

?From the moment we were first?informed?of the accident, the Asiana Pilots Union, in coordination with ALPA-K, dispatched a?member pilot who has aircraft accident investigation committee qualification and experience to the accident site. We will continue to keep in close contact with IFALPA and ALPA and we thank them for their continued assistance in receiving the latest developments?on the investigation."

Copyright Business Wire 2013

Source: http://www.istockanalyst.com/article/viewarticle/articleid/6503884

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8 Ways to be cool & be happy despite a heat wave | Care2 Healthy ...

Green Divas are keeping cool and having fun in the Toyota MPG Challenge*

I?m not sure what the temperature is where you are, but here in New Jersey we are experiencing a string of seriously steamy days that makes going out the door feel more like walking into a sauna. Everyone seems a little cranky and we are all getting weary from talk of the weather and idiotic posts on Facebook about popped corn and God cooking NJ (yes, I am guilty of sharing both of these, because they made me LOL at a weak moment and I just couldn?t help myself).

Despite the lack of cool air in the studio (thank you Mercury Retrograde and failed central air!), we had a wonderful show and now I know we can be cool and have fun regardless of the high temperatures.

Listen to the whole podcast . . .
Here are some things I learned about staying cool in a stinky LONG heat wave

  1. Find Balance ? I?m currently driving a fabulous Toyota Prius Plug-in in a 30-day MPG Challenge for charity. There are several of us in the New York metro area trying to get the highest average MPGe to win money for our chosen charities ? my charity is Eleventh Hour Rescue. They saved my gorgeous girl Gracie and I?m seriously motivated to win. So, I got it in my head that driving without air conditioning was necessary. That lasted for about 5 minutes on the hot highway, midday in the severe heat we?ve been having. I know opening the windows lowers MPG from drag, but I began alternating between having the AC on, recycling the air as long as possible, then opening the windows, which is when I discovered that this was probably what it would feel like to be in a windy sauna. There was NO relief without the AC. Sorry Eleventh Hour. I?m doing my best not to have heat stroke while driving and remain hopeful that my competitors aren?t any more stoic than me about driving in this heat!
  2. ?

  3. Stay Hydrated ? I seem to get dehydrated quickly without even knowing it! I try to drink more fresh, clean and cool water and less of my beloved tea, which tends to ultimately dehydrate from the caffeine. I?m very lucky to have an extraordinary water filtration system installed in my home by Pur2o, so I can fill up my glass or stainless steel bottles and keep hydrated on the road.

    GD Meg's Gazpacho in an Upcycled Salsa Jar

  4. ?

  5. Eat Fresh & Healthy ? I have been making gazpacho and keeping a cold batch at the ready in the refrigerator. Some of the herbs and veggies come from my garden, but I got to visit my town?s farmer?s market (it was already 90 degrees in the shade @ 9am!) to get more fresh supplies. I?ve also been making fresh organic fruit salad and keeping that on-hand as well. It is refreshing, cooling and healthy. Green Dude Eco Ed did a great segment on why eating local is so important. Please listen to this short podcast
  6. Keep a Sense of Humor ? Being silly and having fun can help me get through a lot, hence the homage to Freddie Mercury and Wayne?s World in the video above. *it is important to play safe, so I want to be clear, we were driving literally 5 miles per hour around my very sleepy block.

    Silly stuff in the GD studio - not necessarily GD philosophy

  7. Keep an Eye on Family, Friends & Neighbors who may be at Risk in Extreme Heat - Not everyone has air conditioning and even if they do, people with health conditions as well as the elderly could be at risk or may not be able to get out to get food or medications. Please pay extra attention to those who may need assistance ? hey, it?s just another great reason to visit.
  8. Play Fun Indoor Games ? Maybe create a fun indoor picnic and getting out the family?s favorite board games for a special hot day/fun day full of activities for safe, cool fun.
  9. Don?t be Bugged by Bugs ? It?s great to get outside in the evening even if it is still 90 degrees, but those bugs can be pretty pesky if not downright annoying. Green Diva Mizar shared a great, effective non-toxic but repellent recipe with us this week on the Green Divas website. Here?s a quick podcast of the DIY segment where she describes it:
  10. Listen to Your Favorite Uplifting, Inspiring & Fun Podcast! Ok, so here?s a fairly shameless plug . . . Aside from the Green Divas Radio Show, Green Diva Studio is now producing an inspiring podcast series by actress and storyteller, Kristin Ace called Good Vibrations with Kristin. Hope you will lift your vibrations with Kristin, and of course the latest Green Divas Radio Show podcast:

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Read more: Community, Family, Fun, General Health, Health, Inspiration, Life, Mental Wellness, The Green Divas Podcast, Videos, Videos, green diva quickie videos, heat-wave, humor, local food, podcast, staying cool, tips for staying cool

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BATTLE FOR SOULS - Church, betting shops to share Sundays; Clergy warns against widespread gambling on day once revered by Christians and non-Christians

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

Source: http://worldpress.org/feed.cfm?http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20130721/lead/lead1.html

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Write a Cover Letter to Introduce a Resume : Sales Executive

July 21st, 2013 ?|? Published in Cover Letter Sample

Example Letter to Write a Cover Letter to Introduce a Resume : Sales Executive?- Business Format

Rita Wilkinson
Address
City, State Zip

January 1, 20XX

Mr. John Doe
123 Broadway
New York, NY 10003

Dear Mr. Doe:

I saw your advertisement for a Sales Executive to take City Food Service to new heights, and I wish to apply for the job. Enclosed is my resume and some clips for your consideration.

I am a graduate of International University with a degree in Marketing, and a Masters degree holder in Business Administration.I also received special courses in food and beverage services management. I have seven years working experience in catering, sales, and banquet services. I am very knowledgeable in kitchen and restaurant operations, budgeting and sales management. I have prospecting, selling, strong negotiation s and leadership skills.
You will find that my performance at Regional Foods Incorporated contributed substantially to their millions of dollars in revenue. I would be just as dedicated to building your organization?s sales.

Of course, what my resume cannot express is my passion for food service sales and helping to build a company. The people I have listed as references will endorse me as honest and hard working.

May I please request an interview at your convenience to discuss how I can make a lasting contribution to City Food Service? I will contact you next week to schedule a time.

Thank you very much.

Best regards,

Rita Wilkinson

Source: http://officewriting.com/write-a-cover-letter-to-introduce-a-resume-33/

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রবিবার, ২১ জুলাই, ২০১৩

7/19/2013: EPA Fines XTO Energy for Lycoming County Frack Water Spills; DOE Study: Fracking ...

EPA Fines XTO Energy for Lycoming County Frack Water Spills ? ?The Environmental Protection Agency has fined XTO Energy, a subsidiary of Exxon Mobil, $100,000 for violating the federal Clean Water Act. The company?s drilling operations discharged between 6,300 and 57,373 gallons of waste water into the Susquehanna river system in Penn Township, Lycoming County. The waste water contained high levels of strontium, chloride, bromide, barium, and total dissolved solids and flowed continually for more than two months in the fall of 2010, according to the EPA. An employee with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection discovered an open valve at a waste water storage tank during an inspection. The settlement, announced on Wednesday, also requires XTO to spend an estimated $20 million to improve its waste water disposal process. ?Today?s settlement holds XTO accountable for a previous violation of the Clean Water Act and requires operational changes and improved management practices to help ensure the safe and responsible handling of wastewater produced during natural gas exploration and production activities,? said Robert G. Dreher, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department?s Environment and Natural Resources Division in a release. ?The Justice Department is committed to ensuring that our natural resources are developed in an environmentally responsible manner.? As part of the settlement, XTO will now be required to recycle at least 50 percent of its wastewater, meaning that water will be used to frack other wells. Waste water pits or open tanks are prohibited, the company must install remote monitoring systems and establish a 24-hour emergency phone number. Although XTO is not one of the top ten drillers in the state, it is?one of the top ten violators, with nearly one violation per well. The most recent data available shows the company with 212 active wells, and a staggering 179 violations incurred by just 25 wells. The top offender is the?Marquardt 8537H well, in Penn Township,?which seems to be the site of this discharge. Penn Township, Lycoming County, which covers about?26 square miles and is home to about 1000 people, has endured one of the highest numbers of drilling violations than any other municipality in the state. With 109 active wells, environmental regulators have issued 165 violations by both XTO Energy and EXCO Resources.?? (StateImpact PA)

DOE Study: Fracking Chemicals Didn't Taint Water ? ?PITTSBURGH (AP) ? A landmark federal study on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, shows no evidence that chemicals from the natural gas drilling process moved up to contaminate drinking water aquifers at a western Pennsylvania drilling site, the Department of Energy told The Associated Press. After a year of monitoring, the researchers found that the chemical-laced fluids used to free gas trapped deep below the surface stayed thousands of feet below the shallower areas that supply drinking water, geologist Richard Hammack said. Although the results are preliminary ? the study is still ongoing ? they are a boost to a natural gas industry that has fought complaints from environmental groups and property owners who call fracking dangerous. Drilling fluids tagged with unique markers were injected more than 8,000 feet below the surface but were not detected in a monitoring zone 3,000 feet higher. That means the potentially dangerous substances stayed about a mile away from drinking water supplies. "This is good news," said Duke University scientist Rob Jackson, who was not involved with the study. He called it a "useful and important approach" to monitoring fracking, but he cautioned that the single study doesn't prove that fracking can't pollute, since geology and industry practices vary widely in Pennsylvania and across the nation. The boom in gas drilling has led to tens of thousands of new wells being drilled in recent years, many in the Marcellus Shale formation that lies under parts of Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio and West Virginia. That's led to major economic benefits but also fears that the chemicals used in the drilling process could spread to water supplies. The mix of chemicals varies by company and region, and while some are openly listed the industry has complained that disclosing special formulas could violate trade secrets. Some of the chemicals are toxic and could cause health problems in significant doses, so the lack of full transparency has worried landowners and public health experts. The study done by the National Energy Technology Laboratory in Pittsburgh marked the first time that a drilling company let government scientists inject special tracers into the fracking fluid and then continue regular monitoring to see whether it spread toward drinking water sources. The research is being done at a drilling site in Greene County, which is southwest of Pittsburgh and adjacent to West Virginia. Eight Marcellus Shale wells were monitored seismically and one was injected with four different man-made tracers at different stages of the fracking process, which involves setting off small explosions to break the rock apart. The scientists also monitored a separate series of older gas wells that are about 3,000 feet above the Marcellus to see if the fracking fluid reached up to them. The industry and many state and federal regulators have long contended that fracking itself won't contaminate surface drinking water because of the extreme depth of the gas wells. Most are more than a mile underground, while drinking water aquifers are usually within 500 to 1000 feet of the surface. Kathryn Klaber, CEO of the industry-led Marcellus Shale Coalition, called the study "great news." "It's important that we continue to seek partnerships that can study these issues and inform the public of the findings," Klaber said. While the lack of contamination is encouraging, Jackson said he wondered whether the unidentified drilling company might have consciously or unconsciously taken extra care with the research site, since it was being watched. He also noted that other aspects of the drilling process can cause pollution, such as poor well construction, surface spills of chemicals and wastewater. Jackson and his colleagues at Duke have done numerous studies over the last few years that looked at whether gas drilling is contaminating nearby drinking water, with mixed results. None has found chemical contamination but they did find evidence that natural gas escaped from some wells near the surface and polluted drinking water in northeastern Pennsylvania. Scott Anderson, a drilling expert with the Environment Defense Fund, said the results sound very interesting. "Very few people think that fracking at significant depths routinely leads to water contamination. But the jury is still out on what the odds are that this might happen in special situations," Anderson said. One finding surprised the researchers: Seismic monitoring determined one hydraulic fracture traveled 1,800 feet out from the well bore; most traveled just a few hundred feet. That's significant because some environmental groups have questioned whether the fractures could go all the way to the surface. The researchers believe that fracture may have hit naturally occurring faults, and that's something both industry and regulators don't want. "We would like to be able to predict those areas" with natural faults and avoid them, Hammack said. Jackson said the 1,800-foot fracture was interesting but noted it is still a mile from the surface. The DOE team will start to publish full results of the tests over the next few months, said Hammack, who called the large amount of field data from the study "the real deal." "People probably will be looking at the data for years to come," he said. On Friday, DOE spokesman David Anna added that while nothing of concern has been found thus far, "the results are far too preliminary to make any firm claims."? (Associated Press)

This Is What Fracking Really Looks Like ? ?Photographer?Nina Berman?had just started focusing on climate and environmental issues when she read an article about fracking and its connection to the possible contamination of New York City?s drinking water. Berman resides in New York and knew very little about how the controversial process of drilling for natural gas via hydraulic fracturing worked and decided to head to Pennsylvania for Gov. Thomas Corbett?s inauguration in 2011. ?I knew there would be demonstrators (opposed to his support of natural gas drilling), and I wanted to learn what they were screaming about,? Berman said. After researching the issues, she then had to figure out how to document them in a visual way. ?It?s a very hard subject to photograph,? Berman explained. ?You see a drill, and you don?t know what that means, and then it disappears. What does that mean? It took me a while to figure out how to approach it.? To do that, she spent time in part of Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale region, a hotbed of fracking controversy, producing a series titled ?Fractured: The Shale Play.? Berman began calling activists, hoping to get a sense of the communities and knowing the people who feel they have been violated are those ?interested in having their story told.? ?What struck me very personally as an outsider was how any kind of industrial activity feels like an enormous intrusion, almost like a creature from outer space; these drills at night are almost supernatural,? Berman said. ?I looked for points where the industrial activity impacted these quiet rural landscapes, and I found at night was when things came alive, so I combined those pictures with more conventional documentary [style of ]subject-driven photography about people who were having serious health impacts.? Fracking?s health impact, specifically its impact on water, is one of many controversies surrounding the process of drilling into rock in order to release gas. ?While some argue it is an alternative to dependence on oil, the methods of drilling involving water, sand, and chemicals to break up the rock has also been argued as the culprit for contaminated water. ?Those of us who are used to clean water have no concept of what that feels like when your water coming from your well on your land is destroyed and you can?t do anything about it,? Berman said. Part of the way Berman is sharing her experience is through the??Marcellus Shale Documentary Project.??Started in November 2011, Berman and five other photographers documented how communities in the Pennsylvania Marcellus Shale region have been affected by natural gas drilling. With a nod to the Farm Security Administration?s program assigning photographers to document communities during the Great Depression or the?Documerica project?during the 1970s that looked at how environmental concerns were impacting Americans, the ?Marcellus Shale Documentary Project? ?focused on the impact of fracking on the lives of Pennsylvanians. The exhibition is currently on view at the?Center for Photography at Woodstock?in New York through Aug. 18. Berman said for now she has done as much as possible in Pennsylvania but would be interested in documenting areas around the country that have also been affected by fracking. Until then, she has been exhibiting and touring with the ?Marcellus Shale Documentary Project? and feels the impact has been positive. ?That is how I like to work in many ways, to be a part of bigger things,? she said.?? (Slate Magazine)

House GOP bill would thwart Interior?s ?fracking? regs ? ?House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings (R-Wash.) and other GOP lawmakers are pushing legislation to block looming Interior Department regulations that govern the oil-and-gas ?fracking? on public lands. The bill is highly unlikely to become law but it signals ongoing GOP political pushback against the rules, which critics say are not needed and will create costly red tape. The measure introduced Thursday by Rep. Bill Flores (R-Texas), Hastings and three others will be the subject of a July 25 House Natural Resources Committee hearing. It?s called the ?Protecting States? Rights to Promote American Energy Security Act.? It would prevent Interior from enforcing regulations on hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? in states that that already have their own rules or permit requirements. The bill explicitly says Interior must defer to state rules even if they are less restrictive than federal mandates. GOP lawmakers and oil-and-gas industry groups say that state-level oversight of fracking ? the method enabling the U.S. oil-and-gas production boom ? protects the environment and public health. But Interior officials, noting that some states have tougher oversight than others,?say baseline federal standards are needed?to oversee fracking in order to protect groundwater and other resources. The federal rules, which are not yet final, would require disclosure of chemicals used in the fracking process, and also create standards around well integrity and management of so-called flowback water. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, at a House hearing Wednesday, said Interior?s rule defers to states that have equal or more stringent oversight than the federal standards.?? (The Hill)

So What's the Matter With Shale Gas, Anyway? ? ?Sometimes it seems as if the environmental movement has been left behind by the sheer speed of America's shale energy revolution. That may be because a resource?natural gas?that environmental groups once saw as part of the solution has become part of the problem, at least as they see it. Shale gas and oil are widely viewed as one of the biggest forces to hit the U.S. economy in modern history. Total U.S. gas production has rocketed 33% since 2008 and oil 46%, driving down energy costs. The expanding shale industry supported 1.7 million jobs in 2012 and produced $62 billion in state and federal tax revenue, according to IHS/CERA, the energy consultancy. "The new narrative about shale gas is about jobs, economic growth, global competitiveness, and a U.S. manufacturing renaissance," says Dan Yergin, the energy expert and author of "The Quest." The public gets the narrative. A Pew Research poll found 48% of respondents favor increased use of hydraulic fracking of shale; 38% are opposed. Where does this leave the environmental movement? Trying to change the conversation about shale gas. For years, environmental groups saw gas as something of an ally in the cause. Gas has half the carbon footprint of coal. It was the ideal substitute for coal and a "bridge" to greater use of renewable energy such as wind and solar. But as shale gas production soared, the price of natural gas plummeted. Environmental groups now worry that gas is moving in to stay, taking the momentum out of the shift to nonpolluting renewables, slowing conservation, and creating new environmental problems. "To the extent that we're locking in new gas power plants, it's not the best way to build a cleaner society," says Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund. "The pace of development caught everyone by surprise, and environmental groups and our laws and regulators are playing catch-up," says Dan Lashof of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "In a lot of cases, the gas industry has run roughshod over local communities." Gas, adds Michael Brune, head of the Sierra Club, "should be used as little as possible for as short a time as possible." Renewables are the answer. The broader environmental argument now goes like this: There's an under-appreciation of how much methane leaks into the atmosphere when natural gas is fracked, piped and stored. Methane, the chief component of natural gas, is many times more damaging to the environment than carbon. Sloppy production can erase the advantage gas has over coal. (The Environmental Protection Agency, however, recently found that industry pollution controls have reduced production-related gas leaks by 20% from previous estimates, even though more gas is being drilled.) Meanwhile, the cost of energy produced from renewables is falling. States such as California and Colorado are expanding their targets for energy generated by renewable sources, and policy makers should do more to encourage this trend nationally, environmental groups say. Communities, they add, are increasingly bristling over pollution at drilling sites and the chemicals pumped underground to extract the gas. And there's the matter of climate change. Global limits on emissions, environmentalists contend, will inevitably crimp use of fossil fuels. Best to constrain the expanding use of gas now. "The fundamentals of the industry are bad," says the Sierra Club's Mr. Brune. "You have a resource that's becoming less competitive and more controversial over time." That said, "The reality now is that, for better or worse, gas is here," says Mr. Krupp of the EDF. "It's hard to imagine that Texas, Oklahoma, or Pennsylvania is going to stop pumping gas." So his organization has joined with?Chevron,?CVX?+0.72%?Shell,?Consol Energy,CNX?-2.00%?and other environmental groups to construct voluntary best practices for shale development. "There is a big opportunity now for more of the companies to step up and lead," he says. Narratives do change. It may not be wishful thinking for environmental groups to contend that a comprehensive shift to renewable energy is not only necessary but inevitable. But for the moment at least, it's also tough to argue with the transformative power of price.?Dow Chemical?DOW?-0.15%?and other big manufacturers are adding to operations in the U.S. to take advantage of the new low cost of gas energy. That trend is speeding up, not slowing.?? (Wall Street Journal)

U.K. plans big tax breaks for shale gas ??The U.K. government is planning to slash taxes for energy companies in a bid to stimulate a U.S.-style shale gas boom. The Treasury has proposed cutting the tax rate on production income to 30% for the fledgling?shale gas sector, compared to the typical 62% rate that most oil and gas companies pay. "Shale gas is a resource with huge potential to broaden the U.K.'s energy mix," said Chancellor George Osborne. "We want to create the right conditions for industry to explore and unlock that potential." The proposal also outlines other financial incentives for the sector. The government hopes the measures will stimulate ?14 billion ($21 billion) in shale gas investment this year and create thousands of jobs. A handful of energy companies have been granted licenses to look for shale gas opportunities in regions across the U.K. According to a recent report, it shouldn't be too difficult to find those deposits. The British Geological Survey estimates that northern England has as much as 2,281 trillion cubic feet of gas - a monumental amount given that the U.K. uses only 3 trillion cubic feet each year. However, experts say only a fraction of the available shale gas -- between 10% to 30% -- can actually be extracted from the ground, while the remainder is unreachable and uneconomical to pursue.?? (CNN Money)

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Source: http://pipeline.post-gazette.com/news/daily-headlines/25253-7-19-2013-epa-fines-xto-energy-for-lycoming-county-frack-water-spills-doe-study-fracking-chemicals-didn-t-taint-water

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Running with Racheal: What I have Complained About So Far...

Good morning,?

I am writing this on a Saturday in the hopes that most people won't read it. ?

Ha!

Even though on Thursday I said I was going to try to complain less, I still caught myself complaining within an hour of writing that darn post...

I was talking to my mom about meeting her at the gym after work, and Ina was with us, and in my "baby-voice" I said, "We can meet G at the gym on the nights that stinky daddy gets home from work late."

I immediately wanted to pull those words back into my mouth and gobble them up.

This is going to be harder than I thought.

I have been trying, really, I have, but here is a summary of the complaints that have slipped through my no-complaint filter:?

Thursday:

I am so tired.

I am so sore.

I am so tired.

Thursday was a pretty good day, but Friday was a little worse:

How do I not have time to run today?

I am so tired.

I am so sick of this client at work that makes all these ridiculous demands.

Ugh! ?Where is my phone? ?Why can I never find my phone? ?Where is my camera? Why is it that when I want to take a picture of something I can never find a picture-taking device?

Why does Dan always take Ina from me when I don't need his help? ?All day long I need his help and he is doing something else, and then when I actually want to rock her to sleep and hold her he swoops in a takes her away. ?I wish I could do that. ?It seems so easy.

OK, I got a little excessive with that last one, and was exaggerating a bit because Dan does help with plenty of other things other than just putting Ina to sleep, but I wanted to include it as an example that complaining is not only useless, but sometimes inaccurate.?

Things that I have been positive about:

- My mom is coming over this morning to help with Ina while I get our house ready for a baby shower tomorrow

- My family from Texas is coming into town this week and this weekend my ENTIRE family is going to Chicago on the train

- My CSA box is completely awesome

IMG 1206

- Ina is so close to crawling. ?So close. ?

- We had a wonderfully grilled dinner last night that included buffalo brats from Herman, MO that were AMAZING.

IMG 3382

(Ina ate that entire sweet potato in between sucking on ears of corn. ?The entire thing. That girl is a beast.)

- We busted out one of our last bottles on wine from our trip to Napa Valley last night. It was delicious. ?

- My friend Ashley made a surprise visit last night and was able to stay for dinner, Ina's bath time, and to watch the Royals game (who won!). ?

- I will get to see some ladies I miss and I haven't seen in a while at the baby shower on Sunday (so exciting!)

With that I wish you a wonderfully positive weekend! <3

Source: http://www.runningwithracheal.com/2013/07/what-i-have-complained-about-so-far.html

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