Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Under Obama, coal country fights for its way of life

BEALLSVILLE, Ohio (Reuters) - Leon Lieser has been a coal miner 49 years, his bent fingers testament to his first job, loading coal by hand into a bucket. Mining also led to a hip replacement and a knee replacement. He loves his job and his industry, despite what it has done to his body.

"It's a way of life. It's a proud life," said Lieser, 66.

It may also be doomed. Lieser's boss, Robert Murray, chief executive of Murray Energy Corp, said he fears for the end of coal, prodded by a U.S. president who has promoted wind and solar power while cracking down on emissions from coal-fired power plants.

"There are no coal-fired plants being built. Mr. Obama took care of that. I think we're totally eliminated by 2035," said Murray, 73, a prominent advocate for his industry and a fund-raiser for Republican Party causes.

Despite Murray's protestations, the decline of the coal industry is being driven by the free market. U.S. natural gas production rose 16 percent from November 2008 to November 2012, creating a cheap supply that has made gas-generated electricity more competitive than that from coal.

Murray, too, decided to spend his life in the industry, even with the dangers readily apparent. His father was paralyzed from the neck down in a mining accident when Murray was 9 years old, and Murray broke his neck twice in mining accidents during the 16 years he worked underground, before he built the country's largest privately held coal company.

"I've got a birdcage of titanium and vanadium between (vertebrae) C2 and C8," said Murray, pulling back his collar to show a scar running down the back of his neck, the trace of a past surgery.

While cities such as Pittsburgh, about 75 miles to the north, have recovered from the decline of coal and steel, rural areas such as the Ohio Valley have been largely left behind. Four or five mines operate in an area that once had 25, veteran miners say.

Today, Murray works in a gleaming new office building in St. Clairsville, Ohio, though he periodically drops in on the Century Mine, tucked behind rolling hills near Beallsville in eastern Ohio, where he hosted Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney for an August campaign event.

He can be affable one moment and erupt with fury the next over what he called President Barack Obama's attempt to shut down the coal industry; the president's failure to understand business; his pandering to environmental radicals; and his promoting the "hoax" of global warming. The president, he says, is "destroying America."

"In his inaugural address, which is supposed to be bipartisan and unite the country, what did he do? He demeaned and he demonized anyone he thought was his enemy, including all Republicans," Murray said. "This president does not understand what he's doing to the lives of these people. I live it every day. He does not see what he's doing to an entire segment of the United States economy."

WAR ON COAL?

Coal mining pride is on display in the Ohio Valley now more than ever, especially since Obama rededicated himself to wind and solar power in his second inaugural address on January 21. "Fire Obama" signs still stand in front yards three months after the election. Miners attach "Stop Obama's war on coal" stickers to their helmets.

Obama and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency see coal-fired power plants as a dangerous source of emissions. (Electricity generation accounts for about 40 percent of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions, the EPA says, with coal-fired plants polluting the most.)

To Lieser and Murray, coal brought jobs and wealth to the Ohio Valley, and they fear Washington will regulate them out of business. Natural gas was a "threat," Murray said, but he predicted that would change should gas prices rise.

Murray is lobbying Congress to stop rules including one from the Office of Surface Mining (OSM) aimed at protecting streams from the adverse effects of coal mining; a Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) proposal for stricter requirements on the dust levels allowed in mines; and EPA rules to reduce sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions.

Energy industry experts expect Obama will sidestep Congress and use executive power to enact his second-term environmental agenda. By April, they say, the EPA could issue carbon emission standards for new plants that would effectively prevent new coal-fired generators from being built. Next would come a more controversial effort, setting standards for existing plants, a measure sure to provoke industry lawsuits.

The White House declined to comment for this article, though Obama outlined his vision on the campaign trail and in the inaugural address, in which he devoted eight sentences to the future of green energy.

"The path toward sustainable energy sources will be long and sometimes difficult. But America cannot resist this transition, we must lead it," he said.

NEAR-MYTHIC STATUS

Coal mining has captured imaginations at least since the Industrial Revolution.

Charles Dickens gave voice to the coal miner in his 1850 magazine article "A Coal Miner's Evidence." In modern America, country music star Loretta Lynn gained fame as "A Coal Miner's Daughter" through her song and book, later made into a 1980 Hollywood movie.

"Coal miners remember coal mining as a great economic blessing, but it's hard to think of a more difficult way to make a living," said Jennifer Haigh, a novelist whose fictional town of Bakerton, Pennsylvania, was the setting for a novel and a just-released collection of short stories called "News From Heaven."

"It seems a little crazy that people remember it so wistfully," she said. "I suppose the reason is that in a lot of these places, nothing (else) has come along. A lot of them are towns that are just sort of frozen."

In the United States, miners represent the fiercely independent white working class that today is largely Republican and resentful of government interference in an industry that brought wealth and development to Appalachia.

"I'm so proud to be part of a tradition of waking at dawn and working till dark. That pride of being self-reliant," said Mitch Miracle, 56, a foreman at the Century Mine. "I feel fortunate to have been part of that for four generations in the Ohio Valley. It's absolutely heartbreaking to see it taken away."

A Reuters survey found that almost 100 coal-fired power plants have closed since 2010. Some 150 others have announced plans to close before the decade ends.

Coal generated 50 percent of the United States' electricity in 2005, a figure that fell to 38 percent in 2012, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Less-polluting natural gas, more abundant since the gas drilling boom of recent years, has grown from 19 percent to 30 percent in the same period.

Murray exported almost 13 percent of his 2012 production but considers exporting a last resort, given its expenses.

"THE EPA'S ON STEROIDS"

Lieser, the longtime coal miner, remembers another regulatory campaign in the 1980s, when concerns over acid rain eventually led to a meaty section of Clean Air Act of 1990. Burning coal releases toxins such as mercury, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, the latter two contributing to acid rain.

"They shut down mines and people lost their jobs, houses," Lieser said, speaking in a conference room at the Century Mine. "But this time the EPA's on steroids. This will be Death Valley if we lose the coal mines here. We won't have anything."

The next day, Lieser was back underground, taking the Century Mine elevator some 250 feet beneath the surface. He was overseeing a continuous miner, or CM, the tunnel-digging piece of heavy equipment that mainly carves out passageways but also harvests coal.

Modern coal mining has been mechanized for decades, rendering obsolete the image of soot-smeared miners wielding picks and shovels (though miners still bear the unmistakable helmets with lanterns) Today, miners operate computer-driven hydraulic machinery costing hundreds of millions of dollars.

At the "longwall" area of main production, shearers slice off the 1,300-foot-wide (400-meter-wide) face, digging about 30 inches deep with each pass, dumping crumbled coal onto conveyer belts that zip through miles of underground tunnels before heading up a slope toward the surface.

The miners' lanterns reveal the inside to be not black but a pale gray. Miners cover every surface with a powder called rock dust, a fire retardant in case of an explosion.

Coal mining is still dangerous. There were 48 U.S. coal-mining fatalities in 2010, the year 29 died in an explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia. Twenty-one died in 2011 and 19 last year, according to MSHA.

In a 2007 accident at Utah's Crandall Canyon Mine, half-owned Murray subsidiaries, six miners and three rescue workers died.

"There's a certain amount of people who like danger in their lives, and coal mining's dangerous," Lieser said. "It's not an occupation for the timid and the weak."

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Prudence Crowther, Douglas Royalty and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/under-obama-coal-country-fights-way-life-080405169.html

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Parcells, Sapp, Carter among 7 Hall of Fame inductees

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Bill Parcells was a winner everywhere he coached. Time and time again, he took over struggling franchises and showed them what it takes to be a success, including a pair of Super Bowl titles with the New York Giants.

Parcells pulled off another victory Saturday - election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Getting in on his fourth try, Parcells led an induction class that also included mouthy defensive lineman Warren Sapp, prolific receiver Cris Carter and a pair of stalwarts from the trenches, offensive linemen Jonathan Ogden and Larry Allen.

The class of 2013 also included a pair of senior selections, Curley Culp and Dave Robinson. The announcement was made in New Orleans, site of Sunday's Super Bowl.

Almost as noteworthy were the finalists who didn't get in, including running back Jerome Bettis and owners Art Modell and Edward DeBartolo Jr. Players and coaches from the Baltimore Ravens, who will face the San Francisco 49ers in the Super Bowl, spent all week lobbying for Modell, their former owner who died last year, to claim a place in the hall.

It didn't work out, no doubt pleasing fans in Cleveland who remain bitter about Modell moving the original Browns to Baltimore.

Parcells had to wait a while, earning a bust in Canton on his fourth try. He thought he might get in the previous year in tandem with one of his former players, Curtis Martin.

''It was a little less stressful than last year,'' Parcells said in a telephone interview from Florida. ''I was kind of hoping we could do it together, but as fate would have it, it didn't work out.''

Giants president and CEO John Mara said Parcells' selection for the hall was ''long overdue,'' but his candidacy stirred plenty of debate - a one-hour discussion among the selection committee members, by far the longest amount of time dedicated to any finalist.

''He's one of the best coaches in NFL history,'' Mara said. ''He turned our franchise around. We went through a long period in the 1960's and 70's when we were a laughingstock. When Bill took over in 1983, he survived a very difficult first year, but then turned us into a perennial playoff contender and won two Super Bowls for us. He coached three other teams and everywhere he went, he had great success.''

No one was more emotional than Carter, who took six years to get in despite putting up some of the best receiving numbers in NFL history. He broke down in tears but quickly pointed out ''it's not because I'm sad.''

''This is the happiest day of my life,'' he said. ''When people said, 'Aw, you know, it really doesn't matter, you're a Hall of Famer in my eyes,' I said, 'It's more important that I'm a Hall of Famer in the Hall's eyes.' And I really, really wanted this. ''

Sapp said his stomach was churning all day.

He doesn't have to fret anymore. Next stop, Canton.

''My feet haven't touched the ground in about 30 minutes,'' Sapp said. ''This is unbelievable.''

In addition to Bettis, four other players failed to get in on the final vote: Charles Haley, Andre Reed, Michael Strahan and Aeneas Williams. Earlier in the day, the selection committee eliminated DeBartolo and Modell, as well as ex-players Tim Brown, Kevin Greene and Will Shields.

Parcells reversed the fortunes of four teams, also coaching the New England Patriots, New York Jets and Dallas Cowboys, during 19 years as a head coach. He finished with a record of 172-130-1, most notably leading the Giants to Super Bowl titles in 1987 and 1991. He led the Patriots to the Super Bowl after the 1996 season.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft saluted Parcells' election.

''It is well deserved,'' he said in a statement released by the team. ''As a Patriots fan, I will always appreciate the credibility he brought to our franchise as a two-time Super Bowl champion. We had never had a head coach with those credentials. I am very happy for Bill and look forward to his enshrinement ceremonies.''

Jets owner Woody Johnson echoed Kraft.

''Bill Parcells infused new life into this franchise on many levels,'' he said. ''From acquiring players like Curtis Martin to bringing back a winning culture, we will always be grateful to Bill for his contributions to the New York Jets.''

Sapp got in on his first year of eligibility after playing 13 seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Oakland Raiders. He amassed 96 1/2 career sacks despite playing on the interior of the defensive line, including double-digit sack totals in four seasons. He was the 1999 NFL Defensive Player of the Year after helping Tampa Bay claim its first division title in 18 years.

Carter played 16 seasons, becoming only the second player in NFL history to reach 1,000 receptions in a career. He caught at least 70 passes in 10 seasons, and totaled 130 touchdown receptions from 13 passers.

Allen played 203 games over 14 seasons, spending the bulk of his career with the Cowboys. He played every position on the offensive line except center and was a first-team All-Pro seven straight seasons.

Ogden played a dozen seasons with the Ravens, a lineman who led the way for Jamal Lewis to become just the fifth running back in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season. Ogden was a six-time All-Pro and was voted to 11 Pro Bowls.

Like Sapp, Allen and Ogden were first-year selections.

Ogden shared the moment with his family. He called his mother ''first thing,'' and also told his 7-year-old son.

''He's real proud of his dad,'' Ogden said.

He watched nervously as the announcement was made on the Class of 2013.

''It's like going to the hospital with your wife to have a baby. You can't do anything about it,'' Ogden said. ''You hear everybody say you're a first ballot for sure, but you never really know. A lot of good well deserving guys didn't get in on the first ballot.''

''When I got drafted (by Dallas), they'd just won a Super Bowl,'' Allen said. ''When they threw me in, I just didn't want to be the one to mess it up.''

His philosophy never changed over his long career: make the guy across from him ''quit ... tap out.'' He joins three other players from that great Cowboys offense of the 1990s in the hall, following Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith and Michael Irvin.

''All those guys - Troy and Mike, Emmitt - they were kind of like big brothers,'' Allen said. ''I looked up to them. They came to work every day and showed me how to do it. They all wanted to be the best.''

Culp was a defensive stalwart for the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1960s and '70s, and also played for the Houston Oilers and Detroit Lions. He started at tackle in Kansas City's Super Bowl win over Vikings in 1970 and was selected to six Pro Bowls.

''Curley was a dominating force on the defensive line for the Super Bowl IV championship team and one of many great players that helped build the tradition and foundation of the Kansas City Chiefs,'' the team's chairman and CEO, Clark Hunt, said in a statement. ''We look forward to seeing him take his rightful place in Canton.''

Robinson played on the powerhouse Green Bay teams of the 1960s, starting at outside linebacker on coach Vince Lombardi's two Super Bowl champions. He closed his 12-year career with the Washington Redskins.

''He was such a vital part of those great defenses in the 1960s,'' said Packers President and CEO Mark Murphy. ''Dave's contributions to the Packers have not been limited to the field, as he has also been a great ambassador for the organization over the years. We are thrilled that he received this honor.''

Robinson was the 22nd member of the Packers to be election to the Hall of Fame.

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Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

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Online: http://pro32.ap.org/super-bowl-watch and http://twitter.com/AP-NFL

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=12qfjhrga/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/news/modell-debartolo-eliminated-hall-vote-223610220--nfl.html

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New Android apps worth downloading: Evzdrop, Minecraft - Pocket Edition and Angry Birds Star Wars updates

If you?re wondering what to do and where to go this week, you might want to start by downloading Evzdrop. The app funnels social networking updates about the places around you, allowing you to create a feed of locations rather than people. We?ve also got two impressive game updates: Minecraft ? Pocket Edition, which now includes baby animals, and Angry Birds Star Wars, which has 20 new levels based on the ?Escape from Hoth.?

What?s it about? Evzdrop is a social networking app that lets you ?listen? to what?s going on in certain places, like restaurants or sports stadiums, through updates from people who are there.

What?s cool? Evzdrop finds trending or otherwise interesting places for you. Next, you can see what?s happening there by checking out the ?drops? of people in those places, through status updates. Businesses can also use their drops to share information about their location to potential visitors.

Who?s it for? This app is for those who want to track down awesome hangouts nearby.

What?s it like? Both Foursquare and Yelp can help you find out what?s going on around you and show where your friends are hanging out.

What?s it about? The mobile version of the super-popular creative indie game Minecraft continues to add features found in its PC counterpart, making the game more like the survival and building game players love.

What?s cool? Minecraft is a game where you explore a world, dig into the earth for building materials, and fight off monsters while constructing homes and castles. Minecraft ? Pocket Edition has slowly evolved and is reminiscent of the PC version. The game started with ?creation mode? (which allowed users to build things in the game world but not fight monsters or interact with animals) and has expanded to include more survival elements like the need to eat food. The latest update adds more signs, craftable armor, improved sky graphics, and baby animals.

Who?s it for? If you like Minecraft or are interested in checking out a randomly generated game world that?s all about surviving and building cool things, you definitely want to try Minecraft ? Pocket Edition.

What?s it like? Check out Survivalcraft for something pretty similar to the Minecraft formula, and Delver for a dungeon-crawling experience with a similar art style.

What?s it about? Rovio Mobile keeps winking at the original Star Wars trilogy by way of Angry Birds, and the latest update to Angry Birds Star Wars adds 20 new levels.

What?s cool? When last we left Angry Birds Star Wars, Rovio had just dropped the Hoth update, which included levels crafted after the famous battle. The latest levels, dubbed ?Escape From Hoth,? are modeled after that sequence, and also include two bonus levels and a boss fight to round things out.

Who?s it for? Star Wars fans, Angry Birds fans, and fans of fun ? everyone should check out Rovio?s smart update to their uber-popular formula.

What?s it like? For another great take on the Angry Birds mechanics, you have to try Angry Birds Space.

Download the Appolicious Android app

Source: http://www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/13189-new-android-apps-worth-downloading-evzdrop-minecraft-pocket-edition-and-angry-birds-star-wars-updates

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How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me?

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? Dear Lifehacker,
I've been trying to get my city council to pay attention to some issues in my neighborhood that have been going on for a while now. We have a dangerous intersection that desperately needs a four-way stop, and the trees and bushes at the intersection make it really had to see oncoming traffic. We've written letters, but all they say is "we'll look into it." How can I get them to sit up and listen to us?

Sincerely,
Upstanding Citizen

Dear Upstanding Citizen,
It's frustrating, isn't it? The people you're writing to probably mean well, but the massive engine of bureaucracy, even at the local level, can be difficult to weave your way through. That doesn't mean it's not possible though, and it doesn't mean there's nothing you can do to make your local officials pay attention and address your concerns. We've discussed how to cut through corporate bureaucracy before, the principles here aren't that different. Remember, these people ultimately work for you. Here's how to remind them and get something done:

Do Your Homework

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? Bureaucratic red tape is a nightmare to navigate, but avoid the temptation to just call a general information number and rant at someone who has no control over your issue. The same applies if you're sending letters to a general mailing address. A few things to remember:

  • Make sure you're actually dealing with the right office or appropriate official for the issue you want addressed. In theory, sending all of your mail to the mayor or calling the mayor's office should get your complaint to the right department, but it rarely does. If you have a problem with, for example, needing a stop sign at a nearby intersection, your local government probably has a transportation or safety official responsible for that. You may have to do some digging to get their name or contact information, but you'll have better luck dealing with their office directly. Photo by Videowokart (Shutterstock).
  • Make sure you're dealing with the appropriate level of government. This is a big one: too often people assume that an issue they have is a state problem when it's really a county problem. Transportation issues are notorious for this: depending on the road in question and who funded its construction, your stop sign could be a state issue, not a city one. Once you get a hold of the right office or official that handles your issue, the first question to ask is whether or not this is in their purview, and if it isn't, who's responsibility it is.
  • Document your issue impeccably. Whether you're cynical or jaded about government at all should be irrelevant here. Rely on facts, letters, photographs, laws, and examples, not opinions and grandstanding statements. Remember, you have a problem you want solved. Focus on the problem and gather as much supporting proof and as many tools as you can to help get the problem solved. Just like when you deal with a company, you'll be in a better position if you leave your personal feelings about the entity or organization out of it?at least until the problem's solved.

Be Professional and Understanding

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? The fastest way to find yourself at the back of a bureaucratic maze is to go in guns blazing, ranting about the inefficiencies of a government office, or making a show of your political opinions. You'll get polite, curt responses, and your issue will never get resolved. We're not saying you need to lick boots here. You should walk the middle path and approach the conversation as a negotiation. Be professional, honest, and above-board. Offer your documentation, make sure you're talking to the right people, and make it clear you're looking to the office or official for their help resolving the issue. Photo by George Miller.

That said, don't be afraid to press to get what you need. Let them know that if they can't help you, you'd like them to direct you to a department that can. Get follow-up dates and commitments. Write down the names of the people you speak to and when you spoke to them. Get commitments in writing if at all possible. As with any large organization, it's easy to get smiles and promises from one person on Monday only to be told on Wednesday that no one remembers your name or that you ever called.

Go Visit In Person

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? Almost every public official, from county executives and councilmembers to Congressional representatives, have offices and local office hours where they set aside time to meet with their constituents. Call their offices, let them know that you have an issue you'd like to discuss with them, and get on their calendar. How easy this is depends on the level of government you're dealing with and the arm of the bureaucracy you have to talk to, but it's doable, even for offices like your County Undersecretary or Pothole Repair. Keep calling and keep checking for openings on their calendar. Photo by Daniel X. O'Neil.

If you can't get a private audience and you want to talk to someone in person, go to the next public meeting, council session, town hall meeting, or open forum for your community. You may not even know they have them, but a search of your local government's web site should turn up a calendar of events and the next meeting or event that's open to the public. You may have the opportunity for an informal conversation with a specific individual, but depending on the forum you may be in for a formal discussion that you should be prepared for. If you're going to speak in front of a city or county council, bring whatever supporting documents you want to show off (and copies to give away), and get ready in advance.

It's important to note that these public meetings?and even many private conversations?are rarely the final step in getting a real problem solved. You'll need to follow up, reference your conversation, check on the status of your issue, and see if there's anything you can do to push the process along or anyone you can bring into the conversation.

Organize Your Neighbors and Amplify Your Voice

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? Perhaps one of the most powerful things you can do to make sure the right arm of government listens to your concerns is to organize your friends and neighbors. We're not talking about internet petitions (they're largely useless and ineffective at getting real issues addressed) here. Here are a couple of ways you can get your neighbors involved:

  • Old-fashioned paper petitions with real signatures still carry a lot of weight, especially with local or state officials. As long as you're asking for something specific and actionable that's relevant to a community, and as long as that community is represented in the petition, you have a strong case and an even stronger platform you can use to nag a government office or official into doing what you need done. Photo by National Assembly for Wales.
  • Use your neighbors as leverage to schedule an in-person meeting or town-hall. Sometimes the fastest way to get face time with an official is to say you have a dozen people who want to talk to them about the same issue, and you'd love it if they'd come to meet everyone. You can even organize the event yourself?beg the after-hours use of a school gym or classroom in your community, or find a public space specifically for large meetings and book it. Invite the official to come and hear everyone's concerns. If they're reluctant to commit to a meeting, take the voices to them and ask to book time on their calendar. I've seen groups as small as six or seven manage to get office time with US Senators just by asking nicely.
  • Do the work yourself. Sometimes the most effective way to call attention to a slow moving government agency is to get your community involved and do the work yourself. In this case, put up a sign at the intersection warning drivers that this is a blind turn and that they should stop. It's not an official stop sign, and you should be careful it doesn't do more harm than good (as in, it doesn't further obscure the view) but a neighborhood-endorsed sign and a few calls to the local paper or news media about your struggle will definitely turn some heads.

You'll notice we didn't suggest that you and your neighbors protest or march on City Hall. Part of it is that protests are often a last-resort sledgehammer when many community issues call for a scalpel. The rest is that there are so many legal hurdles around protesting that you really need know what you're getting into. Long gone are the days where you and your neighbors could just converge on the mayor's office and refuse to leave until they hear you. Depending on where you live, that tactic could work or it could end with all of you in prison. Make no mistake, peaceful protest is both effective and your civil right, but it's not one to exercise lightly.

Take Their Job

How Can I Get My Local Government to Pay Attention to Me? One of the best things about getting involved in local politics is that most people don't. While most people think state or national-level politics as an intractable mess that's impossible to push through, local and regional governments are much more malleable. In many cases, the only reason someone holds a particular office is because no one else wants it, or because no one else has challenged the current officeholder. Consider running for office if the current officeholder isn't willing to help you, or get familiar with whomever is the official responsible for appointing that officeholder and express your interest in the job. Photo by Will Merydith.

Neighborhood commissioners, county council seats, even mayorships or state-level representatives are often one-person races, and in some cases go unfilled because no one wants the office. In most communities, these offices are part-time and voluntary, so it's not like you have to quit your day job to represent your community's interests in a larger body?you just have to commit to a meeting or two each month. Get familiar with the requirements to run for office in your community (often you need to raise signatures to support your candidacy and file some paperwork) and debate whether or not you're willing to commit to the job. We wouldn't suggest you run for office just to get a stop sign at your intersection, but if you're so fed up with your local official or the office in question, there's no reason you can't do a better job.


Hopefully these tips and suggestions will help you get the attention of your local or regional government officials, and get the issues you and your neighbors have resolved quickly. Remember, when it comes to citizen activism and dealing with government, your best weapons are documentation, patience, and tenacity. Understand that what you want may take time, but don't act like you have it?press, document, and hold your officials' feet to the fire. In some cases, they may even appreciate it!

Good luck,
Lifehacker

Illustration by Tina Mailhot-Roberge.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/2-WaJX3keuY/how-can-i-get-my-local-government-to-pay-attention-to-me

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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Milestone of cancer research: Arresting cancers rather than killing them

Feb. 1, 2013 ? The research team of Prof. Dr. Martin R?cken from the Department of Dermatology of the University Medical Center T?bingen has shown for the first time that the immune system is able to drive tumours and tumour cells into a form of permanent dormancy (1). The resulting growth arrest allows tumour control in the absence of cancer cell destruction. This permanent dormancy -- scientifically known as senescence (2, 3) -- may persist for the whole life of the organism. Thus, immunotherapy can prevent tumour development without destroying the cells (1, 4).

Prof. Martin R?cken, Director of the Department of Dermatology of the University Medical Center T?bingen, outlines the current state of tumour therapy as follows: "About 50 years ago the former President of the United States of America Richard Nixon declared the "War on cancer." Strong financial and logistic efforts were undertaken and thought to overcome this devastating disease in relatively short time. At this time, researchers and clinicians learned to use chemotherapeutics or natural killer cells to directly attack the tumour cells and to destroy cancers including their environment. This led to several very important, partly brilliant achievements in the understanding of tumour development and to improved cancer diagnostics. What's more, the treatment of several different cancers was markedly improved by new and innovative operation techniques, radiation, chemo- and immunotherapy. However, the main goal, ie. the decisive victory on cancer, remained absent." "[For some time]," Prof. R?cken explains further, "doubts were raised about the strategy of the "War on cancer" which exclusively focussed on cancer destruction, as for example published in an essay in the journal The Lancet and other recent publications (5, 6, 7)."

Importantly, the work of the R?cken group revealed that immune responses also drive tumours of human origin into senescence. The human body apparently defends itself from cancer by inducing the senescence program in tumour cells thereby inhibiting tumour growth (1).

In this line, two well known signalling molecules of cancer therapy and immunology of infectious diseases move again in the center of attention: the interferons and tumor necrosis factor. Repeatedly, a bulk of researchers and clinicians tried to use these molecules and other techniques to destroy the tumour cells and their supplying blood vessels, and so did the scientists from T?bingen. Surprisingly, however, the R?cken group found that a combination of both signalling molecules, interferon and tumor necrosis factor, stopped the tumour growth in vivo without any signs of tumour or tissue destruction.

In animal experiments, the efficacy of immunotherapy-induced senescence proved to be much better than any other therapy based on "cancer destruction" (4). Most importantly, the common action of both signalling molecules, interferon and tumor necrosis factor, also stopped the growth of human tumours (1).

In the course of a natural immune response, the research team even detected senescence induction in regressing malignant tumours of cancer patients . Seven years ago, it was shown in principle that cancer cells can be shifted towards permanent dormancy or senescence (2, 3). Those theoretical insights were now successfully transferred into a therapeutic approach, here an immunotherapeutic regimen (1, 4).

The new therapeutic option will enable clinicians to approach their goal of a life-prolonging, mainly adverse effect-free cancer therapy. "It is very likely that we can't win the "War on cancer" by exclusive military means.," Prof. R?cken resumes. "Instead, it will be an important milestone to restore the bodies? immune control of malignant tumours."

Notes:

1. Braum?ller et al. M. T-helper-1-cell cytokines drive cancer into senescence. Nature, in press (2013).

2. Michaloglou, C. et al. BRAFE600-associated senescence-like cell cycle arrest of human naevi. Nature 436, 720-724 (2005).

3. Braig, M. et al. Oncogene-induced senescence as an initial barrier in lymphoma development. Nature 436, 660-665 (2005).

4. M?ller-Hermelink, N. et al. TNFR1 signaling and IFN-gamma signaling determine whether T cells induce tumor dormancy or promote multistage carcinogenesis. Cancer Cell 13, 507-518 (2008).

5. Sporn, MB. The war on cancer. The Lancet 347, 1377-1381 (1996).

6. Gatenby, RA. A change of strategy in the war on cancer. Nature 459, 508-509 (2009).

7. R?cken, M. Early tumor dissemination, but late metastasis: insights into tumor dormancy. J. Clin. Invest. 120, 1800-1803 (2010).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Universitaet T?bingen, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Heidi Braum?ller, Thomas Wieder, Ellen Brenner, Sonja A?mann, Matthias Hahn, Mohammed Alkhaled, Karin Schilbach, Frank Essmann, Manfred Kneilling, Christoph Griessinger, Felicia Ranta, Susanne Ullrich, Ralph Mocikat, Kilian Braungart, Tarun Mehra, Birgit Fehrenbacher, Julia Berdel, Heike Niessner, Friedegund Meier, Maries van den Broek, Hans-Ulrich H?ring, Rupert Handgretinger, Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez, Falko Fend, Marina Pesic, J?rgen Bauer, Lars Zender, Martin Schaller, Klaus Schulze-Osthoff, Martin R?cken. T-helper-1-cell cytokines drive cancer into senescence. Nature, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nature11824

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/cxjxvUM8tbk/130203212411.htm

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Source: http://forums.ferra.ru/index.php?showtopic=54347

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Strike at Sabic Dutch chemical plant hits output

KHOBAR, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) - A strike by workers at the SABIC Europe Chemicals Geleen plant in the Netherlands has cut production, the company's Saudi Arabian owner said on Saturday.

Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) said in a bourse statement that talks with a union over working conditions had not yet been successful and that it did not know what impact the strike would have on profits or production.

"The decrease in production begins 31/1/2013 due to the proactive measure taken by the union workforce as a consequence of no finalized agreement regarding work conditions," it said in the statement.

In Geleen, SABIC has two naphtha crackers and several polymerization plants to produce polyethylene and polypropylene. Geleen produces 1.25 million tones per year of ethylene, 725,000 tones per year of propylene, 940,000 tones per year of polyethylene, and 620,000 tones per year of polypropylene.

"It is not possible to determine the financial effect or the effect on production capacity, at this time, because the affected plants are not yet known," SABIC added in the statement.

A Sabic spokesman in Europe said the disagreement was over payments to staff who might become redundant in the future.

(Reporting by Reem Shamseddine; Editing by William Hardy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sabics-geleen-chemical-plant-drops-output-workers-strike-082714359--finance.html

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Americans would pay more to fund Social Security

By Allison Linn, TODAY

Most Americans think it?s important to preserve adequate Social Security benefits for younger generations ? and they may even be willing to pay more taxes to get that assurance, a new survey finds.

The survey, released Thursday by the nonprofit National Academy of Social Insurance, found that about eight in 10 Americans think it is critical to support Social Security even if it means that working Americans have to pay more in taxes. A slightly higher percentage of the 2,000 people surveyed said they think it?s critical to save Social Security even if wealthy people have to pay more.

But here?s the thing: Many Americans also want something in return.

The study found broad-based support among both younger and older Americans for a plan that would gradually increase the amount of payroll taxes everyone pays and also eliminate the cap on the amount of income that can be taxed for Social Security. In return, that plan would call for raising minimum benefits and increasing cost-of-living-adjustments.

The survey comes as many Americans are growing more worried about whether they will see any Social Security benefits at all. Under current government estimates, Social Security could face funding shortfalls in about two decades because the U.S. population is aging and generally living longer.

Experts say it?s not too surprising to find that older people are heavily in favor of retaining Social Security benefits even if it means paying more taxes, but it?s a little more surprising to find that younger Americans also seem to? support it generally.

Still, after five difficult years in which many people have struggled financially, many workers may see the allure of a plan that would give them some financial certainty late in life.

?Social Security wasn?t designed to be a sole major source of retirement income, but for many people who haven?t saved enough ? it certainly looks attractive,? said Alan Auerbach, director of the Robert D. Burch Center for Tax Policy and Public Finance at UC Berkeley.

Jasmine Tucker, income security research associate with the National Academy of Social Insurance, said she thinks the results show that people are willing to pay extra taxes for Social Security because they know that they will see a return on that investment later in life.

?People seem to be very resistant to raising any taxes, but I think Social Security is different,? she said.

Other studies have found support for raising taxes more narrowly on wealthy Americans to help fund Social Security. A Pew Research Center survey released in December found that 66 percent of Americans would support raising payroll taxes on high-income earners, while 55 percent would support reducing benefits for high-income seniors.

Related: Are you struggling in the suburbs? We want to hear from you.

Still, Auerbach ? who was not involved in the study ??noted that it?s one thing for people to say they would be willing to pay more taxes to help fund Social Security, and quite another for them to actually commit to a plan that would effectively shrink their current paycheck.

?Do people really know what this would mean in terms of their take-home pay? Have they really thought through what the implications are?? Auerbach asked.

Many Americans are seeing that real-world effect right now, because the end to the payroll tax holiday has resulted in an effective tax hike equal to about 2 percent of their wages. This survey was conducted in September, before the payroll tax holiday ended.

Critics also argue that it may not be feasible to fix Social Security?s funding woes just by raising taxes. Many other plans have called for a mix of raising taxes and reducing benefits either by curtailing cost-of-living adjustments or increasing the age at which people can get full benefits.

?There?s no attractive way to do this. There?s just a variety of less attractive ways,? said Andrew Biggs, resident scholar with the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute.

Biggs also argued that despite what the findings show, it would be difficult for politicians to garner support for a plan that involved raising taxes on all Americans.

?If this stuff was so popular, somebody would have proposed it by now,? he said.

It is clear that Americans are anxious for Congress and President Barack Obama to find some way to overhaul Social Security and other programs designed to help older Americans.

A Gallup poll?released just days after the 2012 presidential election found that nearly nine in 10 Americans thought it was important for? Obama to take major steps to ensure the long-term stability of Social Security and Medicare.?

Related: Yes, we can fix Social Security (but it won't be pretty)?

Would you pay more in taxes to help avoid a Social Security funding shortfall?

?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/02/01/16795417-americans-like-social-security-and-are-willing-to-pay-to-keep-it?lite

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Free weekend family fun: Native American dance and jewelry, Lunar ...

Admission is free to all events listed below. To find more events, go to oregonlive.com/events. To submit your free family event, email event information to omamas@oregonian.com.

DOWNTOWN PORTLAND

Native American Hoop Dance: Students from the Native American Youth & Family Center (NAYA) will perform a storytelling dance. 2-3 p.m. Saturday.

Powell's City of Books Kids Storytime: "Chu's Day" by Neil Gaiman. 11 a.m. Saturday.

FOREST GROVE

Early Childhood Discovery Time: Toys and books for 18 months to 6 years. This week's theme: "Me & My World." 10 a.m.-noon Saturday.

HILLSBORO

Lego My Library: Duplo blocks for kids ages 3-5 and Legos for kids ages 6+. 2:30-4 p.m. Saturday.

LONGVIEW

Salsa Saturday: For families with children ages 3 years and older. Learn Spanish while playing games and enjoying snacks, crafts and stories. 2-3:30 p.m. Saturday.

NORTH PORTLAND

BPA Regional Science Bowl: High school students from across Washington and Oregon compete in the nation's largest regional science bowl. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Saturday.

Red Fans for Lunar New Year: With artist Cindy Lommasson. 3-4 p.m. Saturday.

Tribal Jewelry Workshop: Join students from the Native American Youth & Family Center (NAYA) in learning the history of tribal jewelry and beadwork while creating pieces of your own. 2-3:30 p.m. Sunday.?

NORTHEAST PORTLAND

Lunar New Year Celebration: Chinese and Vietnamese dance, food, games and a family craft project. 1-3 p.m. Saturday.
?
Peter Pan Pajama Party: Storytime, glow-in-the-dark stars, raffle for DVD. 3-4 p.m. Sunday.?

NORTHWEST PORTLAND

Japanese Doll Festival: Artist Yuki Martin teaches everyone how to make origami boxes to hold star-shaped Japanese candies. 2-4 p.m. Saturday.?

OAK LODGE

Let's Lego: Build with other LEGO fans and then tear down your constructions. 1:30-3 p.m. Saturday.
?
RIDGEFIELD

All-breed Dog Agility Competition: More than 300 dogs compete. Please leave pet dogs at home. 8 a.m.-afternoon Saturday-Sunday.?

SOUTHEAST PORTLAND

Valentine Candle Making: Artist Kathy Karbo will show you how to create sculptural candles from sheets of beeswax and embellish them with found objects. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Saturday.?

Portland Metro Arts Winter Wonders Open House: Free classes in dance, music, theater and visual art. See website to register for the classes you want. 3-5 p.m. Saturday.

SOUTHWEST PORTLAND

Guided Nature Walk: Twig identification. 10-11:30 a.m. Saturday.

Uke Can Do It: Best for teens. Entertainer Cinda Tilgner leads this ukulele workshop for both musicians and non-musicians. 3-4 p.m. Sunday.
?
VANCOUVER

Valentine's Party Super Saturday: "Hearts & Crafts," best for ages 5 and up. 2 p.m. Saturday.?

Written Word: Hands-on activities such as pen-and-ink writing, complimentary reproduction letters and postcards, crafts, refreshments. Noon-3 p.m. Sunday.

- Amy Wang; on Twitter

Source: http://blog.oregonlive.com/themombeat/2013/02/free_weekend_family_fun_curlin.html

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Saturday, February 2, 2013

Jack R. Miles: What Marketers Can Learn From Lance Armstrong

The on-going saga involving Lance Armstrong and his use of performance enhancing drugs has been present in cycling since the turn of the century. In recent weeks it has turned into mainstream news across the globe. Like many macro-level events there is a lot businesses can learn from it. So much so, the Armstrong Affair has quintessentially been an educational master class for marketers:

Lance's Lesson #1: The Player Can Be Bigger than the Team

Armstrong's Actions: Despite being the founder and face of the Livestrong Foundation, Armstrong was asked to leave his organization in fear of the negative effect his association would have.

Marketer Learnings: An individual brand you market may have a halo effect over your entire range. As such, these 'power brands' need to be carefully managed in order to avoid them having negative effects over your entire house of brands.

Lesson in Action: Coca-Cola launched their bottled water brand, Dasani, in the UK in 2004. However, consumers discovered it was essentially tap water. This led to the brand being removed from the market and drew headlines such as 'the real sting' and was attached to the entire Coca-Cola corporate identity -- not just the brand in question.

Lance's Lesson #2: Never Forget 'The Law of Candor'

Armstrong's Actions: By taking so long to admit to doping, Armstrong greatly worsened the NET effect of the scandal to himself.

Marketer Learnings: Al Ries' classic 'Law of Candor' dictates that confessing to a negative in the first instance may result into a longer term positive.

Lesson in Action: Mouthwash brand Listerine admitted their product tasted awful to generate the strap-line "I hate it but love it." Following this campaign they overtook Scope as the existing market leader.

Lance's Lesson #3: Choose Your Channel Carefully

Armstrong's Actions: Armstrong chose to confess his sins via Oprah Winfrey -- not judge and jury. This invoked outrage that he merely sought to dramatize his confessions as oppose to answering to the authorities.

Marketer Learnings: With all the communications portals available to marketers in the modern era, it is vital to select the right one for the right message. It is also worth remembering that different consumers favor different channels -- so your message may need to span over numerous mediums.

Lesson in Action: Following the poorly received maps on their iOS 6 application, Apple CEO Tim Cook posted an open letter on Apple's website apologizing for the frustration the maps had caused and offered alternative solutions. In the process Cook showed not only did Apple listen to customers, but that he was an impassioned CEO who was capable of admitting mistakes.

Lance's Lesson #4: Reputation is Like a House of Cards

Armstrong's Actions: Since 1997 Armstrong built up his reputation as the super athlete who beat cancer to win the Tour de France seven times. This was destroyed within 60 seconds of his 'Oprah interview.'

Marketer Learnings: Just because your brand has equity which has been built up over a long period of time, this does not mean its reputation is safe. Reputation can be tarnished in the blink of an eye, often to the point of no return.

Lesson in Action: Picture-sharing outlet Instagram -- which in social media terms is middle-aged -- had built up a following of 16 million over two years. However, upon changing its T&C's to state that it could upload consumers' images for advertising purposes, this figure fell by over 50 percent -- to seven million.

For more posts like this please visit www.northstarhub.com.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jack-r-miles/what-marketers-can-learn-_1_b_2588703.html

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