Saturday, December 31, 2011

Arlington Community Food Bank serves holiday cheer to families | SLIDESHOW

By KIRK BOXLEITNER
Arlington Times Reporter
December 28, 2011 ? Updated 1:15 PM?

ARLINGTON ? The Arlington Community Food Bank?s first Christmas basket distribution at its new location met expectations and exceeded last year?s demand, according to food bank volunteers who served an estimated 400 families or more on Thursday, Dec. 22.

?That?s what we planned for and it looks like we?ll meet those plans,? said Barbara Wood, a data entry specialist and board member for the Arlington Community Food Bank. ?We had an additional 100 family food boxes ?adopted? by a number of individuals and agencies, including Rotary, which donates a lot to us each year.?

The Angel of the Winds Casino followed its donation of turkeys to the food bank for Thanksgiving by dropping off 80 hams while food bank volunteers distributed Christmas baskets on the afternoon of Dec. 22.

?They?re always so generous,? Wood said. ?We?ve also got about 20 area churches that have donated stuffing mix, cornmeal mix, celery, carrots, apples and other fruits and vegetables.?

For the rest of their supplies the Arlington Community Food Bank works with buying services used by other food banks, that allow them to buy food and other supplies in bulk much cheaper than what regular customers would pay.

?That?s why money is one of the best donations we can get,? Wood said. ?We can get the basics without spending as much money as individuals would have to.?

These finances and supplies are much needed since the Arlington Community Food Bank is serving more clients all the time. Last year?s holiday food basket distributions served only 325-350 families each, whereas this year, even non-holiday distribution days have attracted between 75-90 families each.

?We know it?s tough out there,? Wood said on Dec. 22. ?By tonight, all these boxes of food will be cleared out.?

Cindy Moe, treasurer and fellow board member of the Arlington Community Food Bank, praised the food bank?s temporary new location at the Arlington Municipal Airport for allowing them to gather all their food items for distribution in one area, rather than storing them in separate rooms due to a lack of space.

?It?s a safe environment,? Moe said. ?We can even park our delivery truck inside of the facility, to prevent it from being vandalized like it has been in the past.?

Moe noted that the food bank?s new location is even on the bus line, although she added that she?d like to see those bus routes? hours changed to make them more convenient for the food bank?s clients.

In downtown Arlington, food bank clients with children were once again able to shop at the Arlington American Legion ?Toys for Kids? event that same afternoon.

Arlington Legion Lounge Manager Debbie Jackson explained that this year?s fundraising activities yielded $16,000, which was then augmented with another $5,000 worth of toys from other donors, plus? contributions from the Arlington Fire Department and the Helping Hands thrift store, the latter of which chipped in $500.

?The Kmart in Marysville even let 20 of our shoppers come in at 6 a.m. one day, and local Boys Scout Troop 92 carried our purchases out to our cars for us.?

Not only did ?Toys for Kids? have close to 1,100 toy items available for food bank families, but it?s already raised $2,000 toward next year.

?

Contact Arlington Times Reporter Kirk Boxleitner at kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com or 360-659-1300 Ext. 5052.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/arlall/~3/bp-g25ZL9Xo/136324843.html

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Make Grooves in Your Cutting Board to Make Cleanup Easier [DIY]

Make Grooves in Your Cutting Board to Make Cleanup EasierDo you always end up with crumbs or meat juices all over your counter when you use your cutting board? If so, try this clever hack: Make channels in the wood using a router table or other woodworking tools.

Duane Davis offers this tip on IKEA Hackers for cutting bread or cake. He cut 1/2 inch channels spaced 1/2 inch apart, sanded, and applied food-safe oil to the boards in the end. I have a (bought) version that has just one big groove running along the edges of the cutting board, for the same purpose, so you could also do that design instead if you wish. Either way, now you can keep your counters a little more crumb-free.

Cutting Board for Crumbs | IKEA Hackers

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/t8cczMPq-LQ/make-grooves-in-your-cutting-board-to-make-cleanup-easier

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Argentina's President Has Cancer

Death leaves current president Cristina Fernandez a widow

(NEWSER) - Nestor Kirchner, Argentina's former and probable future president, and husband of current President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, has died today of a heart attack. He was 60. Kirchner, widely expected to run for the presidency next year, had undergone two heart procedures earlier this year, reports Reuters. Kirchner was his wife's closest adviser and a political force of nature in Argentina, having been the architect of his country's emergence from economic crisis during his 2003-2007 tenure. More?

Source: http://www.newser.com/story/136289/argentinas-president-cristina-fernandez-kirchner-has-cancer.html

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Oil price falls as Saudis trump Iran threat

(AP) ? Oil prices fell on Wednesday, after Saudi Arabia said it will offset any loss of oil from a threatened Iranian blockade of a crucial tanker route in the Middle East.

The U.S. Navy warned that any disruption of traffic through the vital Strait of Hormuz "will not be tolerated."

In New York, benchmark crude fell $1.98, or about 2 percent, to finish at $99.36 a barrel.

Brent crude fell $1.71 to end at $107.56 a barrel in London.

On Tuesday Iran's vice president said that his country was ready to close the Strait of Hormuz ? a vital waterway through which a third of the world's tanker traffic flows ? if western nations embargo the country's oil because of Iran's ongoing nuclear program. The head of the country's navy added on Wednesday that his fleet can block the strait if need be. His comments came as Iran held a 10-day drill in international waters near the strategic route, which is 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.

A Saudi oil ministry official told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers are ready to provide more oil if Iran tries to block the strait. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue. He didn't specify other routes that could be used to transport oil, although they would likely be longer and more expensive for getting crude to the region's customers.

"Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations; any disruption will not be tolerated," said Lt. Rebecca Rebarich, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for naval operations in the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea.

Some analysts think the Iranian threats are more rhetoric than reality. "We doubt political posturing will turn into action," energy consultant and trader Stephen Schork said in a report.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran is the fourth largest oil exporter in the world, according to the Energy Department. Most of its crude goes to Asia, with China its biggest customer. Oil provides half of Iran's revenue. Last year that amounted to about $73 billion.

Oil prices were also undercut on Wednesday by persistent worries about Europe and future demand for oil as the region's economy weakens. The European Central Bank said the continent's banks parked a record $590.72 billion overnight with the ECB, reflecting distrust in the European banking system.

In other energy futures trading, heating oil fell 2 cents to finish at $2.89 a gallon, gasoline fell 4 cents to end at $2.65 a gallon and natural gas fell 3 cents to finish the day at $3.08 per 1,000 cubic feet.

____

AP writers Ali Akbar Dareini in Teheran, Tarek El-Tablawy in Cairo, Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Adam Schreck in Dubai and Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-28-Oil%20Prices/id-12bae80c08584e60ab97174fa7ad59ac

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Economic Cycles and Investing | The Big Picture

Comments

Please use the comments to demonstrate your own ignorance, unfamiliarity with empirical data, ability to repeat discredited memes, and lack of respect for scientific knowledge. Also, be sure to create straw men and argue against things I have neither said nor even implied. Any irrelevancies you can mention will also be appreciated. Lastly, kindly forgo all civility in your discourse . . . you are, after all, anonymous.

2 Responses to ?Economic Cycles and Investing?

  1. KJMClark Says:

    Now you need one for long (demographic) waves. As in, Generation A grows up during a crash, saves strongly, creates conditions for growth. Generation B thinks their parents are foolish Scrooges, spends, increasing growth but building up debt. Generation C sees grows up during debt-fueled growth, enjoys the good times, but then has to deal with the crash. Repeat.

  2. B_Lev Says:

    A number of the cycle charts show ?rising inflation? as a characteristic of an economy slowing/ entering a recession. At the same time, the charts suggest stocks and commodity prices start falling. Is this contradiction apparent?

    Why are prices increasing during a recession when (presumably) velocity slows? Outside of the 70?s stagflation or Volcker ?ringing out? inflation by inducing a recession (contractionary monetary) in the early 80?s, why would we associate a recession with increasing prices? Text Book. Inflation is expansionary. Right?

    Gen C! woop!

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Source: http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/12/economic-cycles-and-investing/

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Police name Texas Christmas shooting suspect (Reuters)

GRAPEVINE, Texas (Reuters) ? Dressed in a Santa suit, Aziz Yazdanapah showed up at his estranged wife's home near Dallas during a Christmas celebration with her sister's family, and killed everyone before turning the gun on himself, police believe.

The seven bodies were discovered strewn in the living room area of the Grapevine apartment, amid opened presents and near a Christmas tree.

Police identified the dead on Tuesday as two families connected through a pair of sisters.

Suspected shooter Aziz Yazdanpanah, 58, had been estranged from his wife and two teenage children when they moved out of the family's upscale home in nearby Colleyville earlier this year.

His wife, Fatemeh Rahmati, 56, who was a licensed manicurist at a local salon, as well as their daughter, Nona Yazdanpanah, 19, and their son, Ali Yazdanpanah, 14, were also killed.

In the other family, who were visiting Rahmati's apartment on Christmas morning, were her sister, Zohreh Rahmaty, 58, Hossein Zarei, 59, and daughter Sahra Zarei, 22.

"Aziz is the one that was dressed in the Santa suit, and whom we believe ... to be the shooter at this time," Grapevine Police Lieutenant Todd Dearing told Reuters late on Tuesday.

"It was a family incident, they were all related by marriage or blood," he added.

The dead were found by police answering a voiceless 911 emergency call, authorities said.

Evidence released by police on Tuesday narrowed the time of the shooting down to an 18-minute window between 11:16 a.m. when one of the victims sent an "innocuous" text message and 11:34 when the 911 call was received, Dearing said.

The text message "said something along the lines of 'I'm here, Aziz is here dressed as Santa, trying to be the Dad of the Year,'" Dearing said.

It was not immediately clear who sent or received the message.

'QUIET BUT VERY NICE'

Dearing said investigators do not yet know whether Yazdanpanah arrived at the apartment with the intention of killing his family and in-laws.

"We can't possibly know his full intent," Dearing told Reuters. "We don't know whether he was invited or not invited. It could be that Fatemeh told him he could stop by and drop off presents."

Yazdanpanah's family, Iranian immigrants who had settled in the Dallas-Fort Worth area decades ago, had been fighting foreclosure and had declared bankruptcy on their home, a 3,000-square foot house built in 1990 and recently valued near $350,000, according to public records.

Neighbors said that while bankruptcy and foreclosure proceedings moved through the courts, Yazdanpanah had continued to live in the home on Sycamore Court in Colleyville, which borders Grapevine, known for its upscale suburban lifestyle and situated just a few miles away from the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

He was a friendly man who loved his children, neighbors said.

"They were very good neighbors," said Fred Ditmars, who lived across the street from the family for more than four years. "Quiet but very nice."

Ditmars said Yazdanpanah would watch his house when he and his family were away.

The killings rocked the quiet, festive Dallas suburb dubbed the "Christmas Capital of Texas" and known more for its tourism, Christmas season events, festivals and vineyards than for violence. It was the worst outburst of gun violence in the history of the town, which hadn't seen a homicide since June 2010.

Two pistols were recovered from the home, said Sergeant Robert Eberling of the Grapevine police department, who called it a "gruesome crime scene."

No one was found alive by police arriving at the home, he said.

A memorial organized by Nona Yazdanpanah's best friend is scheduled to take place at Parr Park in Grapevine on Wednesday at 5:30 p.m.

(Additional reporting by Karen Brooks and Tim Gaynor; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/us_nm/us_bodies_texas

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Football Daily Dose: Turner the Decliner

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Remember when Michael Turner was known as ?The Burner?? That?s almost comical now.

At age 29, Turner is a shell of himself. He?s slow in the open field, can?t cut quick enough and almost always gets taken down by the first defender. Frankly, Turner appears chubby. Tack that on to his annual issue of catching no passes and coming off the field on all third-down plays, and what we have is a typical aging running back situation.

Turner isn?t going to turn his career path around at this point. He?s about to go over 300 carries for the third time in four seasons and his offense will only get better through the air. The artist formerly known as the Burner will be on all my ?do not draft? lists once again next year. In fact, he?ll be on my ?never draft again? list.

Here are some others running backs on that list as we begin to look to 2012:
* LeGarrette Blount - Runs to contact, can?t catch passes, has fumbling problem and doesn?t play on third downs or when his team is behind.

* Frank Gore - Will be 29 in May, asked to be an exclusive blocker in the pass offense now and quarterback?s limitations creates stacked boxes.

* Maurice Jones-Drew - His unbelievable 2011 campaign defies all logic. He came into the year with a knee injury, plays with the worst passing offense in football, sees eight men in box on every play and is still the league?s leading rusher. The price tag will not be worth the risk going forward. MJD is over 330 touches for the third straight season.

BREES SETS THE RECORD
With a 9-yard touchdown pass to Darren Sproles in the fourth quarter Monday night, Drew Brees set the NFL record for most passing yards in a single season. He passed Dan Marino?s mark of 5,084 yards, set in 1984.

Here?s a crazy thing to think about on Brees: He?s averaging 339.1 passing yards per game this season and has thrown 41 touchdowns. But he?s still fantasy?s No. 3 quarterback, well behind Aaron Rodgers and just back of Cam Newton.

FALCONS at SAINTS RANDOM THOUGHTS
Lance Moore aggravated his hamstring injury in the second quarter and called it a night. ? Love the way Julio Jones is willing to go over the middle. He?s explosive and will be better than Roddy White next year. ? I don?t know how Tony Gonzalez keeps doing it, but I wouldn?t bet on him doing it again next year. ? The Saints figure to be playing to win next week. If they win and the Rams somehow beat the Niners, the Saints will get a first-round bye.

INJURY QUICK SLANTS: QUARTERBACKS, WIDE RECEIVERS AND TIGHT ENDS ?
Tony Romo (hand) is going to be fine. ? Andre Johnson (hamstring) plans on playing in Week 17. ? Mario Manningham (knee) is questionable for Sunday night?s showdown with the Cowboys. ? Jake Ballard (knee) admitted he wouldn?t be able to play if the game was Monday. ? Anthony Fasano (concussion) still hasn?t been cleared.
?
INJURY CHART QUICK SLANTS: RUNNING BACKS
Kevin Smith (ankle) appears likely to rest in Week 17. ? Chris Johnson (ankle) took an injection to play in Week 16 and figures to do the same Week 17. ? James Starks aggravated his ankle. He?ll sit in the season finale. ? LeSean McCoy (ankle) is in doubt for the finale.

DEPTH CHART QUICK SLANTS? ?
The Lions are expected to play to win in Week 17. They don?t want to go to New Orleans in the first round. ? The Lions signed Joique Bell, who would serve as an emergency back if Kevin Smith (ankle) sits Sunday. ? Adrian Peterson is a good bet to start the 2012 season on the PUP list after testing revealed ACL, MCL, medial and lateral meniscus damage. ? Brandon Saine could be the Packers? featured back in Week 17 with the Packers resting players. ? Stevan Ridley has led the Patriots in carries for two straight weeks. ?

WAIVERS
DEFENSIVE SPOT STARTS
Adding a different defense/special teams each week based on matchups is a fine strategy. Here are units that might be on waivers to consider this week for streaming purposes:

1. BRONCOS vs. Chiefs - It?s do-or-die time for the Broncos, who get their old friend Kyle Orton at Mile High. Denver figures to play very aggressively in this one. ?

2. TITANS at Texans - Houston is locked into the No. 3 seed. They figure to rest most of their plays while the Titans need a win to keep their hopes alive.

3. FALCONS vs. Bucs - The Bucs gave up on their season about a month ago. Going through the motions against this Atlanta defense isn?t going to cut it.

Remember when Michael Turner was known as ?The Burner?? That?s almost comical now.

At age 29, Turner is a shell of himself. He?s slow in the open field, can?t cut quick enough and almost always gets taken down by the first defender. Frankly, Turner appears chubby. Tack that on to his annual issue of catching no passes and coming off the field on all third-down plays, and what we have is a typical aging running back situation.

Turner isn?t going to turn his career path around at this point. He?s about to go over 300 carries for the third time in four seasons and his offense will only get better through the air. The artist formerly known as the Burner will be on all my ?do not draft? lists once again next year. In fact, he?ll be on my ?never draft again? list.

Here are some others running backs on that list as we begin to look to 2012:
* LeGarrette Blount - Runs to contact, can?t catch passes, has fumbling problem and doesn?t play on third downs or when his team is behind.

* Frank Gore - Will be 29 in May, asked to be an exclusive blocker in the pass offense now and quarterback?s limitations creates stacked boxes.

* Maurice Jones-Drew - His unbelievable 2011 campaign defies all logic. He came into the year with a knee injury, plays with the worst passing offense in football, sees eight men in box on every play and is still the league?s leading rusher. The price tag will not be worth the risk going forward. MJD is over 330 touches for the third straight season.

BREES SETS THE RECORD
With a 9-yard touchdown pass to Darren Sproles in the fourth quarter Monday night, Drew Brees set the NFL record for most passing yards in a single season. He passed Dan Marino?s mark of 5,084 yards, set in 1984.

Here?s a crazy thing to think about on Brees: He?s averaging 339.1 passing yards per game this season and has thrown 41 touchdowns. But he?s still fantasy?s No. 3 quarterback, well behind Aaron Rodgers and just back of Cam Newton.

FALCONS at SAINTS RANDOM THOUGHTS
Lance Moore aggravated his hamstring injury in the second quarter and called it a night. ? Love the way Julio Jones is willing to go over the middle. He?s explosive and will be better than Roddy White next year. ? I don?t know how Tony Gonzalez keeps doing it, but I wouldn?t bet on him doing it again next year. ? The Saints figure to be playing to win next week. If they win and the Rams somehow beat the Niners, the Saints will get a first-round bye.

INJURY QUICK SLANTS: QUARTERBACKS, WIDE RECEIVERS AND TIGHT ENDS ?
Tony Romo (hand) is going to be fine. ? Andre Johnson (hamstring) plans on playing in Week 17. ? Mario Manningham (knee) is questionable for Sunday night?s showdown with the Cowboys. ? Jake Ballard (knee) admitted he wouldn?t be able to play if the game was Monday. ? Anthony Fasano (concussion) still hasn?t been cleared.
?
INJURY CHART QUICK SLANTS: RUNNING BACKS
Kevin Smith (ankle) appears likely to rest in Week 17. ? Chris Johnson (ankle) took an injection to play in Week 16 and figures to do the same Week 17. ? James Starks aggravated his ankle. He?ll sit in the season finale. ? LeSean McCoy (ankle) is in doubt for the finale.

DEPTH CHART QUICK SLANTS? ?
The Lions are expected to play to win in Week 17. They don?t want to go to New Orleans in the first round. ? The Lions signed Joique Bell, who would serve as an emergency back if Kevin Smith (ankle) sits Sunday. ? Adrian Peterson is a good bet to start the 2012 season on the PUP list after testing revealed ACL, MCL, medial and lateral meniscus damage. ? Brandon Saine could be the Packers? featured back in Week 17 with the Packers resting players. ? Stevan Ridley has led the Patriots in carries for two straight weeks. ?

WAIVERS
DEFENSIVE SPOT STARTS
Adding a different defense/special teams each week based on matchups is a fine strategy. Here are units that might be on waivers to consider this week for streaming purposes:

1. BRONCOS vs. Chiefs - It?s do-or-die time for the Broncos, who get their old friend Kyle Orton at Mile High. Denver figures to play very aggressively in this one. ?

2. TITANS at Texans - Houston is locked into the No. 3 seed. They figure to rest most of their plays while the Titans need a win to keep their hopes alive.

3. FALCONS vs. Bucs - The Bucs gave up on their season about a month ago. Going through the motions against this Atlanta defense isn?t going to cut it.

Adam Levitan is in his third season covering football for Rotoworld. He won the Fantasy Sports Writers Association award for Best Series in 2009 and ESPN's overall fantasy football title in 2000. Find him on Twitter .
Email :Adam Levitan

Source: http://rotoworld.com/articles/nfl/39569/77/turner-the-decliner

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Berkshire completes deal to buy Omaha World-Herald

(AP) ? Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has completed the purchase of Berkshire chairman Warren Buffett's hometown newspaper, the Omaha World-Herald.

The $200 million deal announced Nov. 30 included $50 million in debt. Under the agreement, Berkshire acquires the World-Herald and daily newspapers in Kearney, Grand Island, York, North Platte and Scottsbluff in Nebraska; the Council Bluffs Nonpareil in Iowa; a number of weekly newspapers; and World Marketing, a direct-mail company with operations in Omaha, Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta and Los Angeles.

World-Herald spokesman Joel Long said Monday that the deal closed Friday. He says World-Herald shareholders ? about 275 employees and retirees and the Peter Kiewit Foundation ? approved the sale by an overwhelming vote.

Buffett has said the World-Herald "delivers solid profits and is one of the best-run newspapers in America."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-26-US-Berkshire-Hathaway-Newspapers/id-12a63687d87e440b89a9cf4ec175696f

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Lions and tigers: Too much for the Gulf of Mexico to bear? Like 'Europeans bringing smallpox to the new world'

Lions And Tigers: Too Much For The Gulf Of Mexico To Bear? Like 'Europeans Bringing Smallpox To The New World'

by Underwatertimes.com News Service - December 14, 2011 12:49 EST

COLLEGE STATION, Texas -- There's an unseen foreign invasion going on in the Gulf of Mexico. Its stealth and speed is matched only in the uncertainty it has created among scientists and the people who make their livings from the Gulf's waters.

Lionfish and black tiger shrimp are only two of more than 40 species of non-indigenous sea life known to be spreading through the Gulf of Mexico from their native waters, but they are seen by many resource experts as the most threatening. Lionfish have been a growing problem in the South Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Oceans Sea for most of a decade, but black tiger shrimp are a relatively new phenomenon. A few were captured in the Gulf of Mexico each year beginning in 2006, but the numbers rose significantly in 2011. During this year, more than 60 of the shrimp were brought by shrimp boats to one dock alone in Louisiana and the first captures off Texas' coast were reported to the federal government. Three black tiger shrimp were caught in Aransas Bay, one was caught in Sabine Lake and one was caught in federal waters about 70 miles offshore from Freeport.

Lionfish are strikingly colored, brightly striped and venomous fish that can quickly populate an area and decrease native populations through either eating them or chasing them away. Black tigers are the largest species of shrimp in the world. Females are slightly larger than males and can grow to an average of about a foot in length and weigh close to three-fourths of a pound. Black tiger shrimp eat the same types of food as native shrimp species, but as they grow they also eat their smaller cousins.

"The biggest concern we have is what are the ecological impacts of these invasive species?" says Dr. James Morris, an ecologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) who has been working with lionfish for about 10 years and is now taking the lead in NOAA's efforts to study black tiger shrimp. "When you look across the history of invasive species, there have been some very extreme impacts that have resulted from invasions."

Invasive species often find themselves in foreign ecosystems devoid of the natural predators and diseases that kept their populations under control in their native ranges. Free of these challenges that plague native wildlife, invasive species can turn all of their energy toward feeding and reproducing. In some cases, the manner in which invasive species live can physically damage their adopted ecosystems to the point where it becomes poor habitat for native species.

Lionfish and black tiger shrimp, both native to the Indian and western Pacific Oceans, are noted for their aggressive feeding behaviors and hardiness ? they can live in a wide range of water temperatures and salinities. These traits make them perfect, and dangerous, invaders.

The Texas Sea Grant College Program's Tony Reisinger spoke to the Brownsville-Port Isabel Shrimp Producers Association in early December about the growing number of black tiger captures in the Gulf of Mexico ? perhaps as many as 1,000 this year including five that represent the first ever caught off the Texas coast.

Association members, who represent a fleet of 135 vessels that fish off Louisiana, Florida and Texas, were "extremely concerned to the point where they want to find out what the federal government will do about the black tiger shrimp," says Reisinger, Cameron County Coastal and Marine Resources Agent. "They are concerned about whether it will affect their livelihood."

Thus far, black tiger shrimp have left experts scratching their heads. No one seems to know where the shrimp came from, or what affect they will have on the three species of shrimp native to the Gulf of Mexico and, by extension, the $700 million shrimp fishing industry.

"We just don't know what the long term impacts are going to be," says Gary Graham, Texas Sea Grant's Fisheries Specialist. "I don't know whether these shrimp will establish themselves in the Gulf of Mexico or play themselves out, but I think they could become a more serious problem than anyone originally thought."

Black tiger shrimp are an aquacultured species in various places around the world, but their route to the Gulf remains uncertain pending genetic testing. There was an accidental release of black tigers from a research facility in South Carolina in 1988, but most of those animals were thought to have been caught by local fisherman by the early 1990s. No more tiger shrimp were reported caught until 2006. No aquaculture operation in the U.S. grows black tiger shrimp, but there have been reports of them being raised at sites in the Caribbean Sea. One popular theory holds that black tiger shrimp escaped into the sea from an aquaculture pond in the Caribbean that was breached by a hurricane in 2005. Others speculate that the shrimp hitched a ride from Asian to U.S. waters in the ballast tanks of ships.

Leslie Hartman, Matagorda Bay Ecosystem Leader with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, is part of a casually organized group of people from various resource management agencies around the Gulf and South Atlantic who have banded together to perform genetic testing on the black tiger shrimp being caught around the nation's coastline. She says the group has genetic material from the population of animals that escaped from the South Carolina facility in 1988 and will use it to determine if the growing U.S. population owes its lineage to the South Carolina escapees.

"We're trying to figure out where these animals came from," says Hartman. "If these are all genetically related back to the South Carolina shrimp, that tells us something about invasive species ? that they will go into sort of a hiatus and then can re-surge. If the genetics show they are from different and unrelated populations, that tells us something else, like there was a second or third or fourth introduction. The more we understand about how invasive species spread, the more likely we are to intervene appropriately the next time."

Black tiger shrimp are a paradox among invasive species. On one hand they present the same problems as any other non-indigenous species. One of the biggest problems they pose is that they are susceptible to about 16 diseases ? not all of them fatal ? that can be transmitted to native shrimp and crabs, says Hartman.

"The potential impact is roughly similar to We just don't know what the long term impacts," she says. "They can put a hurt on the domestic shrimping and crabbing industries."

On the flip side, black tiger shrimp are susceptible to catching diseases carried by native shrimp. "Tiger shrimp are also active predators," she continues. "Our native shrimp are active scavengers. As an active predator that is twice the size of its compatriots, its favorite foods are shrimp, crab and small bivalves. The most commonly collected small bivalve in Texas waters is the oyster. So between the diseases it carries and it being an active predator, the black tiger prawn can be a big issue."

On the other hand, black tiger shrimp are a highly valuable commodity, although Reisinger said he has heard anecdotal reports that some shrimpers have thrown captured black tiger shrimp back into the Gulf of Mexico because they did not think they were a marketable species. The shrimp fetch a market price similar to native white shrimp and slightly more than native brown shrimp. As of early December, the largest black tiger shrimp were going for about $8.35 per pound on the New York Market.

One of the five black tiger shrimp caught in Texas waters was found in the net of a boat operated by Western Seafood fishing near the Clay Pile Bank, about 70 miles east southeast of Freeport, in about 180 feet of water in mid-November.

Western Seafood's general manager, Patrick Riley, says it appears black tiger shrimp are poised to become a fourth harvestable species in the Gulf, but he is not counting on them becoming a cash crop any time soon.

"I don't know how long it will take before the population grows enough to be economically viable," Riley says. "Picking up one to two shrimp a year on a couple of boats will not help."

Lionfish, too, are a marketable fish, but on a much smaller scale. They are best caught using traps or by spear gun and are considered a delicacy in Asia, but they have yet to gain popularity in the U.S.

Harvesting lionfish for the restaurant trade appears to be to be an effective method for controlling local population densities in the South Atlantic and Mexico, says Morris.

Lionfish were most likely introduced to the Gulf through the aquarium trade ? either as an accidental or intentional release from an aquarium. They have established themselves in the south Atlantic and Caribbean, and they were reported for the first time near Texas in mid-2011 at the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary, located about 100 miles off the Texas-Louisiana border. Another was reported about 19 miles off South Padre Island in September 2011.

Although they are known for pillaging coral reefs, lionfish can live just about anywhere except where there is barren sand beneath them.

"The Gulf of Mexico comprises a wide array of habitats and anywhere you find structure you will find lionfish," says Morris. "Oil rigs provide high relief piling structures and I believe lionfish will recruit to these habitats in high densities. We have already seen high densities of lionfish around bridge pilings along the East Coast."

People visiting the coast generally play in the surf zones, which usually have barren sandy bottom, so lionfish-human interactions are not likely. Most interaction happen when people snorkel or dive around reefs or other structures. There are some reports that lionfish have acted aggressively toward humans, but Morris downplays these stories saying they are isolated. Lionfish are "curious animals," he says. The lionfish carries an impressive arsenal of venomous spines but uses them almost exclusively as defensive weapons. In humans, a lionfish sting can cause vomiting, fever, sweating and, in a few cases, even death.

Lionfish, which can grow to the size of a small football, are relentless predators that feed on recreationally and economically important reef fish like juvenile red snapper and grouper, and algae-eating species like parrotfish that keep reefs clean and healthy.

"This is an example of a cascading impact," explains Morris. "Some people think this is happening in the Bahamas. An increase in algae leads to a decrease in coral biomass."

Lionfish are not the sole reason coral reefs are declining, adds Morris. The lionfish invasion comes on the heels of coral bleaching, increased pollution, overfishing and climate change, he says.

"The difference is the lionfish invasion is happening much more quickly than the other stressors," says Morris. " In less than a decade, we've had a fish that has colonized basically the entire temperate and tropical Atlantic."

Once invasive species establish themselves, they are very difficult if not impossible to eradicate. As Hartman notes, "Prevention is the first defense to invasive species. Early detection is the second defense, and then you have to go into control and maintenance mode."

Anyone who encounters a black tiger prawn or lionfish can report it to a Texas Sea Grant Extension Program (TXSGE) agent or specialist. A list of TXSGE agents and specialists is available online at http://texas-sea-grant.tamu.edu/Outreach/extension.html, or by calling Texas Sea Grant at (979) 862-3773.

The Texas Sea Grant College Program is a partnership of university, government and industry focusing on marine research, education and outreach. It is administered through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and is one of 32 university-based Sea Grant Programs around the country. Texas Sea Grant is based at Texas A&M University.

TXSGE is a joint outreach program of Texas Sea Grant, Texas AgriLife Extension and the Commissioners Courts in participating counties.

Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of UnderwaterTimes.com, its staff or its advertisers.

Source: http://www.underwatertimes.com/news.php?article_id=10286537491

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Huge rally supports Pakistani cricketer's politics (AP)

KARACHI, Pakistan ? Tens of thousands of people have rallied in support of Pakistani cricket legend and opposition politician Imran Khan in the southern city of Karachi.

Sunday's rally further cemented Khan's status as a rising force in Pakistani politics. The turnout was impressive because the event was held outside his traditional support base, Punjab province.

Karachi is Pakistan's largest city and the capital of Sindh province.

Khan entered politics 15 years ago when he founded Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or the Movement for Justice Party, but he long struggled to attract support.

That changed when he drew over 100,000 people to a rally in the Punjabi capital of Lahore in October.

He has attracted several prominent politicians to his party since then.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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Registration starts for Iran's parliamentary poll (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? Iran on Saturday started registering potential candidates for the country's March parliamentary elections, a vote that will be fought between supporters and opponents of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The country's major reformist groups are staying out of the race, saying they won't field any candidates because basic requirements for free and fair elections have not been met.

In their absence, the poll for the 290-seat assembly is likely to pit hard-line candidates who remain staunchly loyal to the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei against conservatives who support Ahmadinejad.

Whatever the outcome, the vote is unlikely to change Iran's course. The country is a theocracy and Khamenei has final say on all state matters.

The March 2 elections will be the first nationwide balloting since Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election in 2009, which the opposition said was heavily rigged. That vote set off months of near-daily protests, when hundreds of thousands took to the streets in support of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi who they claimed was the rightful winner.

The wave of protests was the biggest challenge to Iran's clerical leadership since it came to power in the 1979 Islamic Revolution. But a heavy crackdown suppressed the protests, and many in the opposition ? from midlevel political figures to street activists, journalists and human rights workers ? were arrested. The opposition has not been able to hold a major protest since December 2009.

For the March elections, the Interior Ministry is in charge of the weeklong registration process, which started Saturday. All Iranian nationals between 30 and 75 years of age who have "proven themselves to be loyal" to Khamenei are allowed to run. Once submitted, candidacies have to be approved by the hard-line constitutional watchdog, the Guardian Council.

The council's chief, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, has earlier said the reformists, whom he called traitors, need not participate. His position was widely seen as an indication the hard-line body would disqualify anyone perceived as a reformist from running.

In the previous, 2008 parliamentary elections, the council disqualified thousands of reformist candidates.

Recently, Iran's former reformist President Mohammad Khatami demanded that political prisoners be freed and that Mousavi and another opposition leader, Mahdi Karroubi, be released from house arrest. Khatami said those were preconditions for reformists participating in the March polling. None have so far been met.

Ali Mohammad Gharibani, a prominent reformist leader, confirmed last week that the reformists will stay out of the race.

"Despite efforts ... to create an appropriate election climate, unfortunately more restrictions have been imposed," said Gharibani, who runs the Reformist Front Coordination Council. "Therefore, the council has decided that it won't issue any election list and won't support anyone."

Hard-liners say the threat to the ruling system now comes from Ahmadinejad's supporters. The president has been the target of a backlash since April for trying to impose too much autonomy in how the government is run, including defying Khamenei on his choice for the powerful post of intelligence minister.

Dozens of Ahmadinejad's allies have been detained over the past months ? including four senior government officials last week ? in the evolving power struggle.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_elections

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Beebe seeks partnership for health insurance exchange | Arkansas ...

By John Lyon
Arkansas News Bureau

LITTLE ROCK ? Gov. Mike Beebe said today he has endorsed Arkansas? involvement in a partnership with the federal government to implement a federally mandated health insurance exchange in the state.

The announcement was hailed by a coalition that had supported a state-run health care exchange and criticized by the state Republican Party, which said the state should not spend tax dollars on an insurance exchange while the federal health care overhaul is being challenged in court.

In his weekly column and radio address, Beebe said that this week he advised the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that he supports implementing the exchange through a state-federal partnership.

?This partnership will allow us to apply for federal money that will permit us to meet our legal requirements using as little state funding as possible,? Beebe said. ?It will also help to ensure that, as more Arkansans sign up for health insurance programs, the premium taxes collected on those policies remain in Arkansas and don?t go to Washington.?

The exchange is mandated under the federal health care overhaul that Congress passed and President Obama signed into law in 2009. Beebe has chosen not to set up a state-run exchange because of opposition from Republican legislators, so the exchange will be run by the federal government.

Because a large number of states have similarly opted not to embrace state-run exchanges, the Obama administration recently announced the creation of a new option in which states can partner with the federal government and retain some decision-making authority.

?Insurance options are best modeled with local needs and perspectives in mind, and this partnership program will give Arkansas a voice in that process, even with the federal government in control of this exchange,? Beebe said.

State Insurance Commissioner Jay Bradford said the state is seeking a grant expected to be roughly $7.5 million. The money would be used to gather and analyze data, educate the public about how the exchange works and train ?navigators? who would help clients navigate the new system and obtain coverage through the exchange, if they choose to do so.

The grant would save about $2.5 million that otherwise would have to come from state coffers, Bradford said. He said that if Arkansas is approved for the grant and for the partnership, it will ?be able to tailor these coverages to Arkansas needs, which is a lot better than losing all of this to the federal government.?

A coalition of Arkansas organizations that had supported a state-run health care exchange issued a statement today praising the governor?s action.

?Going forward, the federal partnership model is the best way to maintain some state regulatory oversight, protect consumers and save the state money,? said Lynn Zeno, executive vice president of the Independent Insurance Agents of Arkansas.

The insurance agents? group is part of a coalition that also includes the Arkansas Hospital Association, Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield, the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce/Associated Industries of Arkansas and Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, among others.

Katherine Vasilos, spokeswoman for the state Republican Party, said in a statement today, ?Until the Supreme Court rules this summer on the constitutionality of the law, we should not spend tax dollars to fund planning for an Obamacare exchange in Arkansas.?

Vasilos accused Beebe of giving himself ?political cover? when he cited Republican opposition as the reason for not pursuing a state-run exchange, even though legislative approval was not required.

State Democratic Party spokeswoman Candace Martin responded, ?Republicans in Arkansas are still advocating for the federal government to implement the health care exchange in our state, and that?s just wrong. This solution will at least allow for some state oversight.?

State Rep. John Burris, R-Harrison, the House majority leader, said in an interview he believes the Beebe administration has not kept legislators adequately informed about its actions.

?I haven?t had any information on the partnership exchange,? Burris said. ?I think the real problem is a lack of leadership from the administration in communicating what they want with the Arkansas Legislature. I?d rather see them communicating with Arkansas legislators than (Health and Human Services Secretary) Kathleen Sebelius.?

Bradford said that if the state receives the grant, legislators will have the final say because it will be up to them to appropriate the money.

As for the decision to pursue the grant and the partnership, Bradford said the governor ?thought it was in the best interests of the citizens, and I certainly agree with that decision.?

Source: http://arkansasnews.com/2011/12/22/beebe-seeks-partnership-for-health-insurance-exchange/

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Beyond the Light Switch Wins 2012 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award

Beyond the Light Switch, a Detroit Public Television two-part documentary hosted by Scientific American Associate Editor David Biello, has been awarded?a Silver Baton 2012 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award, it was announced today. Biello and the production team of Ed Moore, Bill Kubota, Paul Dzendzel, Genevieve Savage and Jordan Wingrove spent more than a year working on the series which examines where Americans get their energy today and where it might come from tomorrow.

For his hosting, reporting and co-writing of the documentary, Biello traveled from an ARPA-e conference in Washington, D.C., to fracking fields in North Texas to provide a comprehensive view of the energy challenges our nation now faces. Beyond the Light Switch explores the current debates over hydraulic fracturing for natural gas as well as those surrounding nuclear power. The episodes allow viewers to weigh the environmental and economic costs and benefits of various energy sources in light of growing demands for electricity in the Digital Age. Scientific American Senior Editor George Musser is featured in a Beyond the Light Switch segment during which he gives viewers a tour of his home?s rooftop solar array and breaks down its real costs. (He explores this topic in detail at Solar at Home, part of the Scientific American blog network.)

For 70 years, the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards have recognized excellence in broadcast journalism. Regarded today as the most prestigious prizes in broadcast news, the equivalent of the Pulitzer Prizes, the duPont-Columbia Awards bring the best in broadcast and digital journalism to professional and public attention and honor those who produce it. The duPont-Columbia University Award judges call Beyond the Light Switch ?an ambitious and thoughtful documentary series that laid out the facts and conundrums of energy policy facing us all.?

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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=49263f1d7bb1a4c7a98365687510e3fd

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Philippine storm toll exceeds 650; 900 missing (AP)

ILIGAN, Philippines ? As a storm that killed more than 650 in the southern Philippines raged outside the store where she works, Amor Limbago worriedly called home to check on her parents, but their cellphones just kept ringing and later went dead.

Limbago, 21, rushed home as soon as the flash floods receded and confirmed her worst fear: Her parents and seven other relatives were gone, swept away from their hut by the river. They had eagerly planned a small Christmas dinner in that hut just days earlier.

"I returned and saw that our house was completely gone," a weeping Limbago told The Associated Press from Cagayan de Oro city. "There was nothing but mud all over and knee-deep floodwaters."

Tropical Storm Washi blew away Sunday after devastating a wide swath of the mountainous region on Mindanao island, which is unaccustomed to major storms. It killed at least 652 people and left more than 900 others missing, the Philippine Red Cross said.

Most of the victims were asleep Friday night when flash floods cascaded down mountain slopes with logs and uprooted trees, swelling rivers. The late-season tropical storm turned the worst-hit coastal cities of Cagayan de Oro and nearby Iligan into muddy wastelands filled with overturned cars and broken trees.

Most of the dead were children and women, Red Cross Secretary General Gwendolyn Pang said.

The government's Office of Civil Defense placed the number of dead at 516 with 274 missing and 431 others rescued. Its head, Benito Ramos, said he expected the toll to rise and added that the government count was slower because authorities try to identify each casualty by verifying it with relatives.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and top military officials flew to Cagayan de Oro and Iligan to help oversee search-and-rescue efforts and deal with about 45,000 displaced villagers. Among the items urgently needed are coffins and body bags, said Benito Ramos, who heads the government's disaster-response agency.

"It's overwhelming. We didn't expect these many dead," said Ramos, adding that authorities were continuing to find bodies floating at sea.

Although the disaster-prone Philippines is lashed by about 20 typhoons and storms annually, the devastation shocked many, coming close to Christmas ? the predominantly Roman Catholic nation's most-awaited time for family reunions. Army officials in the south said they canceled Christmas parties and would donate the food to homeless survivors.

Limbago said she and her mother, Jean, 50, and father Amancio, 63, planned to have a simple Christmas dinner of spaghetti. Those plans had evaporated Sunday as she and surviving relatives checked crowded morgues, hospitals and evacuation centers for any sign of her missing parents.

Others lost homes and belongings but were happy to have survived.

Edmund Rubio, a 44-year-old engineer, said he, his wife and two children scrambled to the second floor of their house in Iligan city as floodwaters engulfed the first floor, destroying his TV set and other appliances and washing away his car and motorcycle.

Amid the panic, he heard a loud pounding on his door as neighbors living in nearby one-story houses pleaded with him to allow them up to his second floor. He said he brought 30 neighbors to the safety of his house, which later shook when a huge floating log slammed into it.

"It's the most important thing, that all of us will still be together this Christmas," Rubio told the AP.

About a block away from Rubio's house, rescuers used a backhoe and shovels to search for 19 people in the muddy ruins of a two-story house that collapsed when it was hit by a massive log. They dug out 11 bodies from the site Saturday, witnesses said.

Army officers reported unidentified bodies piled up in morgues in Cagayan de Oro, where electricity was restored in some areas, although the city of more than 500,000 people remained without tap water.

At least 346 died in Cagayan de Oro and 206 in Iligan, the Red Cross said. The death toll was expected to rise because many isolated villages still had not been reached by overwhelmed disaster-response personnel.

"Our fear is there may have been whole families that perished so there's nobody to report what happened," Pang said.

Both Iligan, a bustling industrial center about 485 miles (780 kilometers) southeast of Manila, and Cagayan de Oro were filled with scenes of destruction and desperation.

A lone worker gingerly embalmed scores of bodies laid side by side in an Iligan city funeral parlor. Outside the embalming room, seven white coffins were placed in a corridor, surrounded by weeping relatives.

"Many mothers, fathers were walking from one funeral parlor to another, looking for their children," said army Maj. Eugenio Osias, who led a rescue effort in Cagayan de Oro.

Ramos attributed the high casualties "partly to the complacency of people because they are not in the usual path of storms" despite warnings by officials that one was approaching.

In just 12 hours, Washi dumped more than a month of average rain on Mindanao.

Thousands of soldiers and hundreds of local police, reservists, coast guard officers and civilian volunteers were mobilized for rescue efforts, but were hampered by flooded-out roads and lack of electricity. Rescuers in boats rushed offshore to save people swept out to sea.

___

Gomez reported from Manila. Associated Press writers Oliver Teves and Hrvoje Hranjski contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_re_as/as_philippines_storm

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AP-GfK Poll: More than half say Obama should lose (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Entering 2012, President Barack Obama's re-election prospects are essentially a 50-50 proposition, with a majority saying the president deserves to be voted out of office despite concerns about the Republican alternatives, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll.

Obama's overall poll numbers suggest he could be in jeopardy of losing re-election even as the public's outlook on the economy appears to be improving, the AP-GfK poll found. For the first time since spring, more said the economy got better in the past month than said it got worse. The president's approval rating on unemployment shifted upward ? from 40 percent in October to 45 percent in the latest poll ? as the jobless rate fell to 8.6 percent last month, its lowest level since March 2009.

But Obama's approval rating on his handling of the economy overall remains stagnant: 39 percent approve and 60 percent disapprove.

Heading into his re-election campaign, the president faces a conflicted public that does not support his steering of the economy, the most dominant issue for Americans, or his reforms to health care, one of his signature accomplishments, yet are grappling with whether to replace him with Republican contenders Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich.

The poll found an even divide on whether Americans expect Obama to be re-elected next year.

For the first time, the poll found that a majority of adults, 52 percent, said Obama should be voted out of office while 43 percent said he deserves another term. The numbers mark a reversal since last May, when 53 percent said Obama should be re-elected while 43 percent said he didn't deserve four more years.

Obama's overall job approval stands at a new low: 44 percent approve while 54 percent disapprove. The president's standing among independents is worse: 38 percent approve while 59 percent disapprove. Among Democrats, the president holds steady with an approval rating of 78 percent while only 12 percent of Republicans approve of the job he's doing.

"I think he's doing the best he can. The problem is the Congress won't help at all," said Rosario Navarro, a Democrat and a 44-year-old truck driver from Fresno, Calif., who voted for Obama in 2008 and intends to support him again.

Robin Dein, a 54-year-old homemaker from Villanova, Pa., who is an independent, said she supported Republican John McCain in 2008 and has not been impressed with Obama's economic policies. She intends to support Romney if he wins the GOP nomination.

"(Obama) spent the first part of his presidency blaming Bush for everything, not that he was innocent, and now his way of solving anything is by spending more money," she said.

Despite the soft level of support, many are uncertain whether a Republican president would be a better choice. Asked whom they would support next November, 47 percent of adults favored Obama compared with 46 percent for Romney, a former Massachusetts governor. Against Gingrich, the president holds a solid advantage, receiving 51 percent compared with 42 percent for the former House speaker.

The potential matchups paint a better picture for the president among independents. Obama receives 45 percent of non-aligned adults compared with 41 percent for Romney. Against Gingrich, Obama holds a wide lead among independents, with 54 percent supporting the president and 31 percent backing the former Georgia congressman.

Another piece of good news for Obama: people generally like him personally. Obama's personal favorability rating held steady at 53 percent, with 46 percent viewing him unfavorably. About three-quarters called him likeable.

The economy remains a source of pessimism, though the poll suggests the first positive movement in public opinion on the economy in months. One in five said the economy improved in the last month, double the share saying so in October. Still most expect it to stay the same or get worse.

"I suppose you could make some sort of argument that it's getting better, but I'm not sure I even see that," said independent voter John Bailey, a 61-year-old education consultant from East Jordan, Mich. "I think it's bad and it's gotten worse under (Obama's) policies. At best, it's going to stay bad."

Despite the high rate of joblessness, the poll found some optimism on the economy. Although 80 percent described the economy as "poor," respondents describing it "very poor" fell from 43 percent in October to 34 percent in the latest poll, the lowest since May. Twenty percent said the economy got better in the past month while 37 percent said they expected the economy to improve next year.

Yet plenty of warning signs remain for Obama. Only 26 percent said the United States is headed in the right direction while 70 percent said the country was moving in the wrong direction.

The president won a substantial number of women voters in 2008 yet there does not appear to be a significant tilt toward Obama among women now. The poll found 44 percent of women say Obama deserves a second term, down from 51 percent in October, while 43 percent of men say the president should be re-elected.

About two-thirds of white voters without college degrees say Obama should be a one-term president, while 33 percent of those voters say he should get another four years. Among white voters with a college degree, 57 percent said Obama should be voted out of office.

The poll found unpopularity for last year's health care reform bill, one of Obama's major accomplishments. About half of the respondents oppose the health care law and support for it dipped to 29 percent from 36 percent in June. Just 15 percent said the federal government should have the power to require all Americans to buy health insurance.

Even among Democrats, the health care law has tepid support. Fifty percent of Democrats supported the health care law, compared with 59 percent of Democrats last June. Only about a quarter of independents back the law.

The president has taken a more populist tone in his handling of the economy, arguing that the wealthy should pay more in taxes to help pay for the extension of a payroll tax cut that would provide about $1,000 in tax cuts to a family earning about $50,000 a year. Among those with annual household incomes of $50,000 or less, Obama's approval rating on unemployment climbed to 53 percent, from 43 percent in October.

The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted December 8-12 2011 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,000 adults nationwide and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

___

Associated Press writer Stacy A. Anderson and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_poll

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Iran demands Afghanistan cancel US drone flights (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? The official Iranian news agency says Iran's foreign minister is demanding that Afghanistan stop letting the U.S. launch drone flights over his country.

Iran has displayed a pilotless American aircraft it says was forced to land two weeks ago during a mission over Iran. The U.S. says it went down because of a malfunction.

The Thursday report by official IRNA news agency quotes Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi as saying Tehran has demanded that Kabul not to allow the U.S. use Afghanistan's land and airspace to conduct further intelligence operations.

Salehi says further operations would be seen as "unfriendly act."

The remark by Salehi is seen as a response to U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who said Wednesday in Afghanistan that the operations will continue.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_afghanistan_us_drone

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Former professor, wife donate $150 million to university

By msnbc.com staff

STONY BROOK, N.Y. -- A billionaire former professor and his wife are donating $150 million to Stonybrook University, the largest gift ever to any school in the State University of New York system.

The gift announced Wednesday comes from James Simons, a hedge fund manager who taught math at Stony Brook, and Marilyn Simons, an alumna?of the school.

?This gift represents a milestone moment ? a transformational moment ? in the history of our young institution,? Stony Brook University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr. said. ?Everyone has a reason to celebrate and an opportunity to excel. It provides Stony Brook with infinite possibilities?the financial capacity to fulfill our potential and reach unparalleled heights in the areas of research, education and discovery.?

The money is targeted at three priorities: research excellence in the School of Medicine, faculty hires through new endowed professorships and recruitment of top-level graduate and undergraduate students.

"Stony Brook gave me a wonderful chance in 1968 when I was hired as chair to build up the Department of Mathematics,? said Jim Simons in a statement. ?That worked out remarkably well, and ever since, the university has had a special place in my heart."

Added his wife: "My Stony Brook education and the friendships I developed there as an undergrad and as a graduate student opened so many possibilities to me. We're deeply grateful for all Stony Brook has given to us and very glad to be able to give back to such a great institution."

Jim Simons is founder of Renaissance Technologies, a hedge fund management company, and chair of the Simons Foundation. Marilyn Simons is president of the Simons Foundation.

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Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/14/9449230-former-professor-wife-donate-record-150-million-to-stony-brook-university

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