Tag Archives: lake

Delaying School Start Times Benefits Teens

“Researchers delayed the start time of a single school in Rhode Island by a half hour. After the change, students got 45 minutes more snooze time on average and reported feeling less fatigued and depressed. Absences during first period and visits to the health center for fatigue also declined. However, since the study involved only one school, the results might not necessarily apply to the general population, the researchers say. The school was also not typical in that about 80 percent of students were boarding there. Nonetheless, the findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that postponing school starts can have a number of payoffs for teens. While the researchers don't advocate that all high schools across the country change their schedules, they say it is something to ponder. “Even a modest delay in school start time, a half hour, can have a very significant impact on quality of life and health and mood of adolescents,” said study researcher Dr. Judith Owens, director of the Pediatric Sleep Disorder Center at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, RI. Although such a change can be challenging in terms of coordinating a schedule shift, “I think the evidence really is mounting that it's an undertaking that's well worth at least considering,” Owens said. http://www.livescience.com/culture/school-start-time-teens-100705.html added by: DeliaTheArtist

Massive MZ-3A Blimp Expected to Arrive in the Gulf Coast to Help Track Oil Slick

Blimp expected to arrive to help track oil slick By the CNN Wire Staff July 6, 2010 3:44 a.m. EDT New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — A massive, silver-colored blimp is expected to arrive in the Gulf Coast on Tuesday to aid in oil disaster response efforts. The U.S. Navy airship will be used to detect oil, direct skimming ships and look for wildlife that may be threatened by oil, the Coast Guard said Monday. The 178-foot-long blimp, known as the MZ-3A, can carry a crew of up to 10. It will fly slowly over the region to track where the oil is flowing and how it is coming ashore. The Navy says the advantage of the blimp over current helicopter surveillance operations is that it can stay aloft longer, with lower fuel costs, and can survey a wider area. The Coast Guard has already been pinpointing traveling pools of oil from the sky. “The aircraft get on top of the oil. They can identify what type of oil it is and they can vector in the skimmer vessels right to the spot,” Coast Guard Capt. Brian Kelley said. But the problem since last Wednesday has been the ability to clean it up before it approaches land. Rough seas have hampered cleanup efforts and tests by the boat billed as the world's largest skimmer. Tests of A Whale's ability so far are “inconclusive,” meaning the massive converted oil tanker–which is 3.5 football fields long — has yet to prove its Taiwanese owner's claim that it can skim between 15,000 and 50,000 barrels of oil off the sea in a day. So far, crude oil floating in the sea has not been concentrated enough for A Whale to skim effectively, according to oil company BP, even though it appears the ship has been surrounded by pools of oil just a few miles from the gusher. “We've got oil coming up from over a mile below the surface. And it doesn't always come up in one spot. It's not always predictable. So, in fact, we need to locate the oil first, and then assign the ship to the areas of heaviest concentration,” BP spokesman Hank Garcia said. Bad weather has hindered cleanup efforts, he said. “When you've got 6-foot, 8-foot seas, it's not going to lend itself to good capture of the oil.” On Monday, authorities said tar balls linked to the crude gushing from BP's ruptured deepwater well had reached into Louisiana's Lake Pontchartrain and hit the beaches near Galveston, Texas. The Coast Guard reported over the weekend that a shift in weather patterns could send more oil toward sensitive shores in Mississippi and Louisiana, and bad weather over the past few days has significantly hampered cleanup efforts. Anne Rheams, executive director of the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation, said Monday that the pattern was expected to persist for at least three more days. The National Hurricane Center said early Tuesday morning that a low-pressure area located near the Louisiana coast was producing a few showers and thunderstorms, but was not likely to develop into a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours. Federal estimates say between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels (about 1.5 million to 2.5 million gallons) of oil have been gushing into the Gulf daily since April 22, when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig sank in the Gulf, two days after it exploded in flames. The accident left 11 workers dead and uncorked an undersea gusher that BP has been unable to cap for 11weeks. CNN's Allan Chernoff contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

BP’s Tar Balls from the Gulf Disaster Have Reached the Shores of Texas and Louisiana’s Lake Pontchartrain

PART ONE… http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/07/05/gulf.oil.disaster/index.html?hpt=T1 By the CNN Wire Staff July 5, 2010 6:52 p.m. EDT New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — Tar balls linked to the worst oil spill in U.S. history have reached into Louisiana's Lake Pontchartrain and hit the beaches near Galveston, Texas, authorities in those states reported on day 77 of the disaster. Easterly winds and high waves that hindered skimmers drove blobs of weathered oil up into the eastern end of the lake, which sits north of New Orleans, said Anne Rheams, executive director of the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation. She estimated the amount of oil that has reached the lake at less than 100 barrels, with no hydrocarbon smell. “They are about the size of a silver dollar, maybe a little bigger, kind of dispersed in long intervals. It's not as dense as it could be, so we're thankful for that,” she said. The Coast Guard reported over the weekend that a shift in weather patterns could send more oil toward sensitive shores in Mississippi and Louisiana, and bad weather over the past few days has significantly hampered cleanup efforts. Rheams said that pattern was expected to persist for at least three more days. Rear Adm. Paul Zukunft said Friday that the prospect of oil reaching up into Lake Pontchartrain “is where I'm losing the most sleep right now.” “I'm going to look, and if I see even sheen, I'm going to push to make sure that we're moving every and all available resources to respond to this particular area,” he said. Tar balls had previously been spotted in Rigolets Pass, which connects the lake with Mississippi Sound. Officials in Orleans and St. Tammany parishes have been using heavy booms, barges and skimmers to defend Pontchartrain since the early days of the disaster, but Rheams said high waves and strong easterly and southeasterly winds have complicated the effort. “The main thing is that they are an indicator that it could be coming more so this way,” she said. State officials closed a swath of the southern part of the 630-square-mile lake to fishing following the discovery, but there was no sign of an impact on wildlife as of Monday, Rheams said. And in Texas, about 400 miles west of the ruptured offshore well at the heart of the spill, Coast Guard Capt. Marcus Woodring said the total volume of tar balls found over the weekend amounted to about five gallons. And while authorities weren't sure how they made it that far, tests confirmed that at least the first batch collected came from the Deepwater Horizon spill off Louisiana, he said. None were found Monday, and the area's beaches and waterways remained open, Woodring said. The tar balls were less weathered than researchers would expect, leading to suspicions that the oil was either stuck to the side of a ship's hull or mixed in with ballast water from a passing vessel, Woodring said. Tar balls are fairly common along the Texas coast, in part because of seepage from undersea oil deposits or from sunken vessels, he said. CONTINUED… http://media.nola.com/2010_gulf_oil_spill/photo/barges-rigoletsjpg-a6271db372480… added by: EthicalVegan

Did Ed Schultz’s Construction Company Get Stimulus Money?

While defending the Obama administration as a champion for small business owners, MSNBC host Ed Schultz revealed that his construction company more than doubled its number of employees in the past year – thanks to the stimulus bill. “We’ve gone from eight employees to twenty employees in the past year, because of the stimulus package,” he said of his construction company. “We’ve put some people back to work. There is some growth.” Schultz made that revelation as a guest on C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal” Wednesday morning. In a segment of the show where he was discussing corporations shipping jobs overseas and skimping on benefits to regular workers and labor union members, Schultz stepped up and defended President Obama. “This President, and this administration, has done more for small business than any other President has in the last thirty years,” he claimed. “There’s more tax incentives on the table right now, there’s more incentives for small businesses to go out and do things, to hire – we never saw this under any other President.” Schultz whined that tax incentives for big corporations hurt the American middle class by providing opportunities for them to send jobs overseas. He credited President Obama with providing opportunities for small businesses to thrive in the United States. However, Schultz also lamented that certain Obama administration policies, such as increasing taxes on foreign earnings, ending secret ballots in union elections, EPA regulation of greenhouse gasses and restrictions on oil are “pro-corporate and anti-worker.” With corporations attacking labor, cutting wages, and going after pensions, Schultz claimed that age discrimination is taking place in the business world, and that “we’ve now developed this culture that it’s not good to pay anybody.”         The transcript of the segment, which aired on June 23 at 9:30 a.m. EDT, is as follows: ED SCHULTZ: Now we’re at a crossroads in this country. We have to make a determination if we believe that having 10 percent unemployment for a long period of time is the direction that we want to go. Do we understand that the social pressure and the economic pressure that that’s going to put on the country? I don’t think that’s where Americans want to go. And I think that we’re going to see a real surge of buy American, a loyalty to American products, because I think the middle class folks in this country have seen exactly what has happened, this attack on labor that has taken place, that all of a sudden it’s okay to reduce wages, or attack people’s pensions. And we’re also seeing in this country right now age discrimination. Because there’s a race to the bottom line. We’ve now developed this culture that it’s not good to pay anybody. And we have to have somewhat of a push for economic patriotism, in reinvestment in people. We have to understand that people make the difference. And if we don’t value that at every level, we’re not going to be the country that we can be. We’re not going to be the country that we were at one time. We still can achieve greatness, but we gotta get the big money out of politics, we’ve gotta get what is destroying the middle class in this country, and reinvigorate this country with breaks for the middle class, and a real focus on job creation. And I think the President’s trying to do that, but — of course the way the Congress is right now, all the bickering that’s going on, and there’s really no bipartisanship to speak of that addresses any of this — I think we’re in for a long struggle here, a real long struggle. (…) HOST: Mr. Schultz, the Wall Street Journal echoes that caller’s sentiment. They have a headline that echoes the caller’s sentiment that business groups say the Obama administration is hostile toward jobs. And they have a list of grievances: Increased taxes on foreign earnings, stalled free trade agreements, shareholder rights to nominate directors, end to secret ballots in union elections, expanded damages for pay discrimination, EPA regulation of greenhouse gasses, and restrictions on oil. ED SCHULTZ: Those were all pro-corporate, and anti-worker. This President, and this administration, has done more for small business than any other President has in the last thirty years. There’s more tax incentives on the table right now, there’s more incentives for small businesses to go out and do things, to hire – we never saw this under any other President. He’s doing anything he possibly can. But the money is tight. The money is very tight. And until we loosen up the lending practices in this country, we’re not going to have – and until small businesses have access to capital, we’re not going to see this turn around. The President is doing everything he possibly can. In fact, the Republicans aren’t even matching him on any of this stuff. They think it’s all about the corporations and all about the top two percent. In the book, I document – and I want this lady to read this book, and come back and tell me if I’m wrong. The number of foreign countries that are operating in this country that don’t pay tax – does she think that’s a good thing? Is it a good thing for corporations not to pay their fair share? Now I’m not here to say that all corporations are bad. They do hire people. But they’ve also shipped a lot of jobs overseas, because we have set the table for them to do that with tax incentives that have come back to hurt the great American middle class which built this country. So when does the little guy get a break? Now I’m a small businessman. I have my own broadcast company, and I also have a construction company. I can tell you about all the things that you have to put together to make a construction company work. We’ve gone from eight employees to twenty employees in the past year, because of the stimulus package. We’ve put some people back to work. There is some growth. There’s incentives on the table for my employees. And so, you know, I don’t have to do this. I could just go fishing at the lake. But we’ve got to have some type of leadership at every level of the economy, and those who have lived the good life, and those who have had the fortune of making a few dollars to put it back into the kids, to put it back into the youth of the country, to care about the infrastructure again. And I don’t see corporations doing that. I see them caring about the foreign countries and getting cheap labor. Well you know what cheap labor’s going to do? Cheap labor’s going to take this country down. And the disposable income is starting to rot away for Americans.   

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Did Ed Schultz’s Construction Company Get Stimulus Money?

‘The Karate Kid’ Filmmaker Talks Success, Sequel

‘It far exceeded my expectations,’ director Harald Zwart says of Jackie Chan/ Jaden Smith reboot’s box office performance. By Josh Wigler Jaden Smith in “The Karate Kid” Photo: Columbia Pictures Daniel LaRusso and Mr. Miyagi are nowhere to be found, but the “Karate Kid” franchise is most certainly back in business. The Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith-starring reboot arrived in theaters over the weekend and kicked its way to a first-place trophy worth $56 million, surpassing the movie’s production budget by more than $15 million. “It far exceeded my expectations,” director Harald Zwart told MTV News of the film’s success. “I’m from Scandinavia and we are in no habit of letting our dreams get the better half of us. We keep our feet on the ground and wait until we see the reality, and this time it just really exceeded what I had hoped for. It was just amazing!” Zwart caught the film in theaters opening weekend, watching it alongside complete strangers. Fortunately, these anonymous moviegoers seemed to love the martial arts adventure. “You get worried when you sit there at the premiere and go, ‘Oh, this is amazing. They love the movie.’ Obviously, they would,” the director said of his industry peers. “Going out to see it completely with an audience that you don’t know and they also cheer in the end, you know you’ve done something right,” he explained. “You live in a bubble as a filmmaker and no one can tell you the real truth, you just try to gauge it with tracking and everything. But until you’re in a random movie theater that’s packed … I tried to go into the 11:00 show and I couldn’t go! They were sold out! I was going to do the whole ‘I’m the director of the movie’ thing, but I figured they wouldn’t believe me.” With “The Karate Kid” having established itself as a box office hit, there’s already talk of a possible sequel. Zwart said that while another installment has been discussed, he and his team have only loosely tossed around the idea up until now — so as to avoid jinxing anything. “Every now and then we discussed it,” he said. “But the truth is, when you see Jackie and Jaden, they’re like a really good film couple. On and off camera, I was watching how they were pulling practical jokes on each other and throwing rocks in the lake, and you just want to keep looking at them because they have a great dynamic and great humor. We have just been playing with a few different ideas, but we haven’t landed on anything at the moment.” Zwart, speaking only for himself he said, would like to see another “Karate Kid” film explore an all-new story rather than follow in the cinematic footsteps of the ’84 flick’s two sequels. “I personally think it’s now so much on its own two feet, given the success, that it would be interesting to see where we could take it without ever thinking about the old ones.” And Zwart said he would love to be the one at the helm of a “Karate Kid” sequel. “If they think I’m appropriate for it,” Zwart added. “I think Sony has been fantastic for me. They’re the best studio to work for. They’re such a filmmaker-friendly studio. And [Will Smith’s production company] Overbrook, in my opinion, is by far the coolest company. So, yes, I would love to work with them again.” For now, the director is happy enough that his flick is resonating with moviegoers. “I’m just really happy that a really good film [was also] a success,” Zwart said. “It’s a movie where we decided to take our time to tell the story; we didn’t compromise. Both the studio and the production company gave me, the filmmaker, the support and freedom to do the movie that I believed was right.” Did you see “The Karate Kid”? Would you be excited for a sequel? Tell us in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Karate Kid” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos Jaden Smith In Will Smith’s Roles

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‘The Karate Kid’ Filmmaker Talks Success, Sequel

Solar Panels: Another breakthrough

A nano-scale solar cell inspired by the coaxial cable offers greater efficiency than any previously designed nanotech thin film solar cell by resolving the “thick & thin” challenge inherent to capturing light and extracting current for solar power, Boston College researchers report in the current online edition of the journal Physica Status Solidi. The quest for high power conversion efficiency in most thin film solar cells has been hampered by competing optical and electronic constraints. A cell must be thick enough to collect a sufficient amount of light, yet it needs to be thin enough to extract current. Physicists at Boston College found a way to resolve the “thick & thin” challenge through a nanoscale solar architecture based on the coaxial cable, a radio technology concept that dates back to the first trans-Atlantic communications lines laid in the mid 1800s. “Many groups around the world are working on nanowire-type solar cells, most using crystalline semiconductors,” said co-author Michael Naughton, a professor of physics at Boston College. “This nanocoax cell architecture, on the other hand, does not require crystalline materials, and therefore offers promise for lower-cost solar power with ultrathin absorbers. With continued optimization, efficiencies beyond anything achieved in conventional planar architectures may be possible, while using smaller quantities of less costly material.” Optically, the so-called nanocoax stands thick enough to capture light, yet its architecture makes it thin enough to allow a more efficient extraction of current, the researchers report in PSS's Rapid Research Letters. This makes the nanocoax, invented at Boston College in 2005 and patented last year, a new platform for low cost, high efficiency solar power. Constructed with amorphous silicon, the nanocoax cells yielded power conversion efficiency in excess of 8 percent, which is higher than any nanostructured thin film solar cell to date, the team reported. The ultra-thin nature of the cells reduces the Staebler-Wronski light-induced degradation effect, a major problem with conventional solar cells of this type, according to the team, which included Boston College Professors of Physics Krzysztof Kempa and Zhifeng Ren, as well as BC students and collaborators from Solasta Inc., of Newton, Mass., and

Defense: seeing my clients tattoos violates his right to fair trial

SALT LAKE CITY — Defense attorneys believe that the tattoos that have become synonymous with Curtis Allgier — who is accused in the killing of a corrections officer — may put the man at risk of an unfair trial. Allgier, 30, “is covered from head to toe in tattoos,” the defense motion states. His eyes peer out in the midst of the words “Skin Head,” numerous swastikas and myriad other white supremacy and neo-Nazi symbols. Defense attorneys want to cover up his many tattoos, and defense attorney Ralph Dellapiana said they're “pretty much stuck with heavy makeup” when it comes to options. It is the tattoos on his face, neck, chest, arms and hands that the defense is concerned about, saying that allowing the tattoos to remain visible would be “prejudicial and would violate his due process right to a fair trial.” Dellapiana said the motion was filed because they want to avoid associations with Adolf Hitler, which they believe may be triggered by the swastikas. “If that's how they start off the case, thinking about Curtis Allgier like he's some monster equivalent to Adolf Hitler, then they're not going to be able to keep an open mind about the facts of the case,” he said. The defense want the jury to be able to hear the facts of the case and come to know Allgier as a person without being distracted by the tattoos. Dellapiana acknowledged, though, that there isn't a lot of guidance from similar cases and he isn't sure what the judge will do with the motion. The defense was apparently alerted to the issue by way of reader comments on Internet news stories. “Counsel for defendant have noted that since defendant was arrested on this case, numerous public comments to news stories about defendant have focused on defendant's neo-Nazi and white-supremacy tattoos and made comments that were vulgar and derogatory,” the motion states. Allgier's appearance and his white-supremacist beliefs caused a stir as recently as April after the inmate scheduled a wedding on Hitler's birthday that was later canceled. The defense then states that while covering the tattoos would “substantially change Allgier's appearance from the way he looked” on the day he allegedly shot and killed officer Stephen Anderson, 60, and potentially impact the state's case, the potential prejudice in Allgier's case would outweigh the issues a cover-up would cause the state. Allgier is charged with capital murder in the death of Anderson, and prosecutors have said they intend to seek the death penalty. He is facing a number of other charges, including aggravated escape, aggravated robbery and three counts of aggravated attempted murder — all first-degree felonies. Prosecutors contend that Allgier stole Anderson's gun, shot him, carjacked a vehicle and then led police on a chase in which he twice tried to run over a deputy who was setting up road spikes before trying to kill a restaurant worker and customer at an Arby's restaurant. No trial date has been scheduled, but his next court appearance is set for Sept. 1. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700037680/Defense-wants-Allgiers-tats-covered… added by: Stoneyroad

‘Diff’rent Strokes’ Star Gary Coleman Dies at 42‎

SALT

George Clooney’s Villa Is The Bomb

Filed under: George Clooney Bomb scare outside George Clooney ‘s villa in Italy today —

Tiger Woods’ Street on Lockdown

Filed under: Tiger Woods Tiger Woods’ street is abuzz with activity — Elin was there, security is all over the street — there’s even a jet ski patrol in the lake behind the house … sources tell TMZ.Elin showed up in the AM, took the dogs for a walk over to the bungalow … Permalink

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Tiger Woods’ Street on Lockdown