Tag Archives: state

Goh Keng Swee funeral picture

Dr Goh Keng Swee passed away on May 14. He was 91. The government has released details about tomorrow#39;s state funeral service and procession for the late Dr Goh Keng Swee. SOME roads will be closed for the state funeral service of the late Dr Goh Keng Swee, which will be held at the SIngapore Conference Hall on Sunday, May 23. To facilitate movement from Parliament House to the Singapore Conference Hall, the following roads will be closed from 1.30pm – 2.30pm: 1. North Bridge Road betw

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Goh Keng Swee funeral picture

Disputed Arrangement Puts the "Yellowstone 87" Bison on Ted Turner’s Montana Range – Turner Can Use Bison for Breeding or Sale

Photo: Bison wander out of Yellowstone National Park in Montana to give birth or find fresh grazing. May 21, 2010 Disputed Deal Puts Yellowstone Bison on Ted Turner’s Range By KIRK JOHNSON BOZEMAN, Mont. — When dozens of wild American bison wandered out of Yellowstone National Park in search of greener grass and wound up five years later sheltered on a giant ranch owned by Ted Turner, media mogul and bison meat kingpin, the species reached what many believe could be a turning point. Mr. Turner, under an unusual custodial contract with the state of Montana, offered to shepherd the animals for the next five years as part of an experimental program. It will grant him a sizable portion of their offspring in exchange, much to the chagrin of environmentalists who sued the state, saying the bison belong to the public. Mr. Turner is not restrained from using the bison for commercial breeding or sale. The “Yellowstone 87” are a kind of Noah’s ark of their kind. Genetically, these bison still carry the shaggy swagger of their Ice Age forebears that lived alongside saber-toothed cats and woolly mammoths. Montana wildlife managers hope they will be the fount for establishing new free-roaming populations elsewhere in the state or around the West — if the animals prove, through the five years of testing, to be free of diseases that can infect cattle, especially brucellosis. At the heart of the controversy is the human intervention that has shaped the animal’s history, from the brink of extinction around 1900 to their strange modern status. They are now raised for meat by the hundreds of thousands on private ranches, or left to roam free in Yellowstone. On Friday, with the snow-capped Big Belt Mountains in the distance, the animals on Mr. Turner’s ranch looked straight out of Frederic Remington — calves frolicked and cows dozed while a giant bull stood his ground, staring down a group of would-be intruders on his realm. A lawsuit by a coalition of environmentalists argues that the state, by facilitating the bison’s passage from wild to owned — and by the biggest purveyor of bison meat in the nation, no less, through Mr. Turner’s vast ranches and restaurant chain, Ted’s Montana Grill — violates its duty to manage wildlife, like water or air, for the good of all. In court papers filed this month, state officials said that they were working for the benefit of the species, and that the plight of individual animals — by their calculation, about 188 bison will be born over the next five years and remain in Mr. Turner’s possession — did not cancel out the higher goal. They also say that Mr. Turner filled an urgent need: The 87 animals spent more than four years in quarantine for a round of disease testing and needed a bigger home on the range, and Mr. Turner’s ranch and expertise were unmatched. The cattle industry remains a powerful cultural force in Montana, and is generally no big fan of Mr. Turner’s, given his openly expressed disdain for cattle. It has opposed the establishment of free-roaming bison populations that could compete with cattle for grass on federal grazing lands or endanger herds with disease. And so this week, as they do every spring in a process called hazing, state workers and livestock agents used helicopters, horses and trucks to chase back the wild bison that had wandered out of Yellowstone to give birth or find fresh grass. About five miles from the park boundary, an odd dynamic was in play. In a residential area of vacation and retirement homes, a group of 15 animals sauntered and grazed. Frisky calves a week or two old gallumphed about, butting against their stolid mothers. But a few miles a way, a hazing operation, with helicopter overhead, was chasing another herd back in as volunteers from the Buffalo Field Campaign, a group that opposes the forced removal of the animals from lands on park borders, monitored and photographed on the ground. (“Buffalo” and “bison” are used interchangeably.) “Every year is different, and the animals are always incredible, so I keep coming back,” said Cindy Rosin, 33, an elementary school art teacher from Queens, who was in her fifth season as a hazing monitor. But the tangled web of bison life here, and the new chapter of its history beginning on Mr. Turner’s Flying D Ranch, raise major questions for environmentalists, ranchers and bison chefs, too — most notably perhaps, what does it mean to be wild? Are bison like the 3,000 or so inside Yellowstone, confined and accustomed to gawking tourists, truly wilder than their ranch-raised cousins? And should one group of animals have the right to roam free — with environmentalists and lawyers as allies, ready to file lawsuits — while the other group is just burgers on the hoof? About 70,000 ranch bison go to slaughter each year according to the National Bison Association, a ranchers’ trade group, about one-fifth of them from Mr. Turner’s herd of about 55,000 animals. A biological wrinkle further compounds those questions. Most ranch-raised bison, unlike their Yellowstone cousins, carry a few cattle genes, wildlife biologists say, mostly from cross-breeding experiments early in the 20th century. But Yellowstone bison, marooned in the park during the decades of widespread slaughter elsewhere, are considered genetically pure. Mr. Turner would not be interviewed, but in application documents with the state he said that the offspring he kept would be used to “increase the genetic diversity” in a bison herd on another Turner ranch in New Mexico. His company, Turner Enterprises, specifically said it could make no guarantees about the animals’ ultimate use or fate. In the past, bison from the New Mexico herd, which the filing said originated from Yellowstone breeding stock in the 1930s, have been sold to private parties. On Friday, Turner Enterprises allowed journalists a first look at the Yellowstone 87 now roaming on 12,000 acres at the Flying D Ranch, about a half-hour from Bozeman. In the three months since their arrival, and the onset of calving season, their number has grown to 94, with eight new calves (one of the original herd died). Six, under the formula, will stay behind as Turner property. “This may sound simplistic, but we are doing this to help,” said Russell Miller, the general manager of Turner Enterprises, explaining that the idea of giving the animals ample room and board without taking any cash for their services came from the Turner side. “We knew the state was cash-strapped and we thought it would be a palatable solution,” he said. One expert on environmental law and the public trust, Prof. Mary C. Wood, said the Turner arrangement, whether proven illegal or not in court, had put the state in an awkward position. The potential trouble comes not from having a management deal to shelter and test the bison, she said, but from making it a cashless transaction, with payment in a sort of barter of live, presumably state-protected animals. “Under public trust doctrine, the state has a 100 percent obligation to protect the species,” said Professor Wood, the director of the Environmental and Natural Resources Law program at the University of Oregon Law School. “When it starts walking the line of contracting out its essential sovereign functions and bartering the yield that comes out of that, it raises very serious questions.” added by: EthicalVegan

Arizona immigration law sb1070 text

Members of Mexico#39;s music band Nortec perform during a concert in protest of Arizona#39;s recently enacted SB1070 immigration enforcement law in Mexico City, Sunday, May 16, 2010. Implementation Costs of SB 1070 to One Arizona County Estimates Indicate Costs Could Rise into the Hundreds of Millions of Dollars for Entire State April 23, 2010 Today, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer may sign into law a bill that has the potential to sink her state much deeper into the red than it already is. Toutin

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Arizona immigration law sb1070 text

Dane Cook — California Made a $500,000 Mistake

Filed under: Dane Cook Dane Cook is taking on the State of California — claiming the Tax Board made a mistake that could have cost him more than half a million bucks. The State of California has issued a tax lien against Cook for

Blonde Beyonce Off To See The Obamas

Beyonce attended the White House’s annual State Dinner and the “Bootylicious” singer really knows how to glam it up! What do you think of her blonde hair?

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Blonde Beyonce Off To See The Obamas

The Winners and Losers at Tonight’s White House State Dinner [Mi Casa Su Casa]

Eva Longoria will be attending tonight’s White House state dinner honoring Mexican President Felipe Calderon . Beyonce and George Lopez will be there, too. But not Bill Clinton. State dinner snubs: a comprehensive survey of the guest list and seating chart. More

New Jersey woman must return her ‘BIOCH’ license plate

A New Jersey woman says she has to surrender her state-issued “BIOTCH” license plate she’s had on her car for more than four years because someone complained it was offensive. Kim Romano, 49, ordered the “BIOCH” plate as a joke after she received a credit for a personalized license plate from the state Motor Vehicle Commission after they misspelled her original plate. She asked for “BIG KIM,” but received “B1G KIM” instead, which she thought “looked stupid,” so she sent it back. Romano tried to register several profane words for her license plate on the MVC Web site, but all were rejected until she requested “BIOCH.” When she was notified that it was approved, she couldn’t believe her eyes. “They said, ‘Congratulations, you’re the first ‘bioch’ in New Jersey,” she said. But now, a complaint filed by a retired police officer who took offense to the plate has caused the commission to have a change of heart, and they’re demanding that she return the plate or they won’t renew her registration next month. Romano’s now handing over the recalled plate and has applied for a new one that’s a far cry from how she feels about the matter. She expects to receive replacement plate “WHAEVER” soon. http://www.tabloidprodigy.com/?p=14276 added by: knowandtell

Who to Blame? The 5 Biggest Culprits in American Idol’s Worst Season

Even if Crystal Bowersox ranks among American Idol ‘s finest talents (and I believe she does), something’s rotten in the state of Seacrest this year. Last season, Idol rejuvenated itself with a blend of personalities — from subtle craftsman Kris Allen to sparkle sorcerer Adam Lambert. This season’s Idol cast is dogged by a number of distracting elements — and worst, the Idol -consuming populace is confused over the true culprits in this fiasco. Thus, we’re ranking the five biggest contributors to Idol ‘s weakest year. Hopefully number one will start to garner the skewering it deserves. Daggers ready!

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Who to Blame? The 5 Biggest Culprits in American Idol’s Worst Season

Sibu election 2010 date time

Members of Malaysia#39;s opposition People#39;s Alliance display banners and flags during the nomination of the Sibu parliamentary by-election in Sibu, in the state of Sarawak on the Borneo island May 8, 2010. Campaigning began on Saturday for a Malaysian by-election in a government stronghold state whose outcome could boost Prime Minister Najib Razak#39;s confidence to call snap national polls as early as next year. Voters in the Sibu parliamentary by-election started to cast their votes as so

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Sibu election 2010 date time

Ohio election results 2010

Ohio Secretary of State and Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Jennifer Brunner, thanks campaign volunteers and announces current election results at the Democratic campaign headquarters Tuesday, May 4, 2010, in Columbus, Ohio. Issue 1: Third Frontier 99% OF PRECINCTS REPORTING > Yes 1,016,094 62% No 629,487 38% Issue 2: Columbus Casino 99% OF PRECINCTS REPORTING > Yes 1,117,455 68% No 515,856 32% Senate – DEM 41% OF PRECINCTS REPORTING Lee Fisher 193,341 56% Jennifer Brunner 152,

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Ohio election results 2010