Author: Serkadis

  • Haitian judge poised to release US missionaries

    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The 10 U.S. missionaries facing trial for trying to take a busload of children out of Haiti should be released from jail while an investigation continues, a Haitian judge said Thursday, giving the Americans their best news since their arrests nearly two weeks ago.

    Judge Bernard Saint-Vil has the final word on whether to free the missionaries, though he gave the prosecutor-general the opportunity to raise objections.

    He said he was accepting defense attorneys’ request to provisionally free the Americans while an investigation of the case continues.

    It is unclear when the missionaries, most from an Idaho Baptist church group, might be released, and Saint-Vil said it was too early to say whether they would be able to leave this earthquake-crippled Caribbean nation if granted provisional freedom.

    It is also unclear what bearing releasing the missionaries might have on whether they go to trial.

    Saint-Vil on Thursday privately questioned the last of a group of parents who said they willingly gave their children to the Baptist missionaries, believing the Americans would educate and care for them.

    “After listening to the families, I see the possibility that they can all be released,” Saint-Vil told The Associated Press. “I am recommending that all 10 Americans be released.”

    It wasn’t known late Thursday whether the prosecutor had received Saint-Vil’s formal recommendation. The prosecutor couldn’t be reached for comment.

    The Americans were charged last week with child kidnapping and criminal association after being arrested Jan. 29 while trying to take 33 children, ages 2 to 12, across the border to an orphanage they were trying to set up in the Dominican Republic.

    The following day, group leader Laura Silsby of Meridian, Idaho, told the AP the children were obtained either from orphanages or from distant relatives.

    She said only children who were found not to have living parents or relatives who could care for them might be put up for adoption.

    However, at least 20 of the children are from a single village and have living parents. Some of the parents told the AP they willingly turned over their children to the missionaries because they could no longer feed or otherwise care for them – the children’s school and many of their homes collapsed in the quake.

    State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said Thursday that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had not personally intervened in the case, as the U.S.-based legal team for one of the missionaries, Jim Allen of Amarillo, Texas, requested in a Tuesday letter.

    “We have been very careful not to intervene specifically in this case,” Crowley said. “This is a matter for Haitian authorities to resolve.”

    Crowley added that Washington was “satisfied with the overall conduct of this case.”

    The pastor of the Meridian, Idaho, church attended by several of the detainees said he had yet to receive any official word on their release.

    “Our confidence continues to remain, both in our faith and in our attorneys that represent our people,” said Pastor Clint Henry, of Central Valley Baptist Church. “Now we wait and pray, believing that in the coming hours we will receive the news we have waited for.”

    On Wednesday, from behind cell bars in the stuffy, grimy jail where they have been held, the missionaries refused to be interviewed.

    “We’ve said all we’re going to say for now. We don’t want to talk now,” Silsby said. The women were held separately from the men, who shared their cell with nine Haitian men, some of whom played checkers on the cell floor.

    “We will not talk unless our lawyer is present,” said Paul Thompson, pastor of the Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho.

    Silsby decided last summer to create an orphanage in the Dominican Republic and in November registered the nonprofit New Life Children’s Refuge Inc. in Idaho.

    After Haiti’s catastrophic Jan. 12 earthquake, she accelerated the plan and recruited her fellow missionaries. Silsby told the AP she was interested only in saving suffering children.

    However, she did not have the Haitian papers required to take the children out of the country, and a Dominican diplomat told the AP he warned her the day the missionaries were arrested that without those papers she could be arrested.

    Haitian government officials view the case both as a distraction to the greater issues of earthquake relief and as a matter of national sovereignty.

    The prospect of child trafficking is taken seriously here, and the Americans’ case has provided a government widely criticized at home for its response to the quake an opportunity to show it is functioning.

    The case has tapped into fears in Haiti that traffickers would take advantage of the chaos immediately after the quake to abduct children.

    It also has irritated Haitian government officials conducting business out of the same police station used to jail the Americans. Nearly every government building was destroyed in the quake.

    Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive has lamented the fact that journalists are paying more attention to 10 Americans than the 3 million Haitians in need of help.

    Before the quake, prospective parents crowded every day outside the U.S. Embassy, waiting to apply for visas for the children they wanted to adopt. About 1,000 children were legally adopted by foreigners in 2008 – by French parents in nearly half the cases.

    Thousands more Haitian children, orphaned and not, leave the country illicitly each year, according to the U.N. Children’s Fund.

    They are forced into domestic or agricultural labor, used as sex slaves or sold on the clandestine market for adoption.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Man gets 45 years for shooting woman

    A northwest Indiana man was sentenced to 45 years in prison Thursday for ambushing and shooting a 25-year-old woman in an attack that left a bullet lodged in the victims back.

    Donielle Steven Sims, 27, of Gary was convicted of attempted robbery, criminal confinement, aggravated battery and battery on Jan. 13 after a jury trial.

    He was sentenced Thursday to 45 years in prison for ambushing, shooting and attempting to rob the woman as she brought packages into her home, according to a release from the Lake County (Ind.) Prosecutor’s office.

    The 25-year-old victim, a security guard at the time, testified she is unable to find a job to support herself and her 4-year-old child, and is buried in medical bills, the release said.

    She told the court she completed EMT training but is unable to pass the physical. A bullet is still lodged in her back and doctors say if it moves, she may be paralyzed.

    The attack happened Dec. 17, 2008, as the woman returned home from shopping and was about to put the key in the door. Sims, wearing all black clothing and a mask, told her to open the door or he would shoot her, the release said.

    When she wasn’t quick enough, he struck her on the head near her face twice with his fist. When she unlocked the door, Sims, whose voice she recognized, pushed her inside, pushed her down on the couch and demanded her gun.

    As she handed hi the gun, Sims shot her in the stomach and right leg. She returned fire, hitting him in the stomach, the release said. Sims was arrested at a local hospital where he went for treatment.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Witness follows, helps police apprehend armed bank robbers

    Alert witness helped police apprehend suspects: FBI

    Authorities are crediting a quick-thinking onlooker for helping them quickly arrest three men who robbed a bank in the city on Wednesday.

    The masked men entered the TCF Bank branch, 6410 W. 127th St., about 5 p.m. Wednesday, and announced the robbery, according to the FBI.

    It said two stood watch at the door while a third man stuck his gun into a tellers back, ordered her to open the banks vault and also directed another teller to stuff a plastic bag with cash.

    The trio made off with about $118,000 and fled in a pickup truck, but a witness who saw them followed the truck and called police, who caught about a mile from the bank, the FBI said.

    It said police recovered three guns and some shotgun shells from the truck and found each man wearing a bulletproof vest.

    Wali Ali, 64, 4223 S. Prairie Ave., Chicago; Melvin Ratliff, 56, 1201 E. 171st St., South Holland; and James Walker, 51, 513 E. 52nd St., Phoenix, were each charged with aggravated bank robbery.

    They are being held without bail pending a hearing next week in federal court in Chicago.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Profibus in pulse encoders for extreme environments

    It is now possible for the first time to use absolute pulse encoders with a Profibus interface in extremely tough industrial environments. Leine & Linde is launching a new version of its Extreme 1000 series, in which absolute models can now be supplied with integrated Profibus compatibility.

    “Our Extreme 1000 series is designed to meet the extensive demands of the steel and mining industries for encoder robustness and performance,” explains Tobias Lindh, Product Manager at Leine & Linde.
    “This series has a very high level of encapsulation and sturdy oversize bearings to help ensure exceptional durability in applications where there are mechanical loads, vibrations and shocks that could otherwise affect the product. We have now further-developed the absolute versions of the Extreme 1000 series so that as well as supporting serial communication interfaces, such as SSI and EnDat, they also function fully with Profibus. The field bus interface Profibus is recognised globally as industry’s number one choice.”

    Works with position and speed data
    The encoders use Profibus to transfer position and speed data to the main control system. The pulse encoders for the new Extreme 1000 series were developed initially to meet the demands of the steel industry, but they are also suited to use in cranes and mining machinery. This series is ideal in demanding environments where mechanical reliability and service life are paramount, but where there is also often a risk of the encoder being treated roughly.

    Reduces costs and makes installation easier
    In addition to the benefits provided by Profibus, which include diagnostic functions and transfer performance in real time with DPV2, using an Extreme 1000 series encoder with integrated Profibus interface can make commissioning easier.

    “Depending on the bus topology and how all the cabling is connected in the application, we can use our integrated solution to help reduce the overall amount of cable. Everyone knows that lengthy cables mean an increased risk of disruption and they can be very expensive. By optimising cabling and choosing an integrated encoder solution, our customers will be able to keep costs down,” concludes Tobias.

    For more information please contact Magnus Johnson, Tel. +46 (0)152-265 53, E-mail [email protected]. You can find out more at www.leinelinde.com

  • The highest resolution in our history

    Technological progress has meant that the boundaries previously limiting resolution for absolute position encoders are nothing but a memory. Swedish encoder manufacturer Leine & Linde is currently launching a further development of its robust 600 series.

    “This new technology means that resolution within one rotation of our new encoders can reach 25 bits, i.e. more than 33 million positions per rotation. Despite this extremely high resolution, the absolute positions can still be delivered with an accuracy better than 20 arc seconds,” Leine & Linde Product Manager Tobias Lindh proudly explains.

    The technology opens the way to new areas of application
    The highest resolution is naturally not intended for positioning purposes, but primarily allows accurate speed calculations to be carried out. The fact that the customer also receives an absolute position value into the bargain naturally contributes to the widening areas of application for the product within automation and for engine manufacturers.

    Serial signal transmission via PROFINET and CAN
    The first stage is that position data is transmitted from the encoder using the serial EnDat interface. Since EnDat can be simply converted to PROFIBUS, CANopen or other field bus interfaces through Gateways, there are a number of areas for which the new product is suitable. “We can naturally manufacture variants of this product for different types of mechanical mounting, such as versions with a solid shaft or with a hollow shaft design. In certain applications, the customer requires the encoder to position a multirotational movement absolutely, which is also possible, of course,” concludes Tobias Lindh.

    For more information please contact Magnus Johnson, Tel. +46 (0)152-265 53;
    E-mail [email protected]. You can find out more at www.leinelinde.com

  • New JOFRA Handheld Pressure Calibrator Features Built-In Electric Pump System

    Multifunction Tool Designed for High-Accuracy Pressure Calibration

    The new JOFRA handheld pressure calibrator from AMETEK Calibration Instruments offers electrical generation of pressure or vacuum with the touch of a key. The calibrator features a unique built-in electrical pump system. No manual pump required!

    The versatile HPC600 is a true multifunction solution offering features and functions that make it ideal for a wide range of high-accuracy pressure calibration applications from simple tool type jobs to complex custody transfer systems.

    The multifunctional HPC600 is designed to work as a pressure indicator, pressure calibrator, a complete mA loop calibrator (including 24-volt supply), a voltmeter, thermometer and pressure/vacuum generator. All are in a single ruggedized housing with an easy intuitive operating system that fits in the palm of the hand.

    The HPC600 features a user configurable information display, 15 different pressure units, transmitter supply, mA input/output, % error calculation, voltage measurement, serial communications and an external pressure module capability. The accuracy of the HPC is specified in % of reading to ensure an even better accuracy and more applicable pressure range.

    The HPC600 is a superior pressure calibrator for field use that brings laboratory accuracy into the field. The calibrator is delivered as a ready-to-test system, complete with hose, fittings and soft case equipped to meet any need for pressure calibration. An international traceable calibration certificate, including vacuum and electrical parameters, comes standard, and each unit is temperature compensated from -10°C to 50°C (14°F to 122°F) for on-site operations.

    More than 60 different JOFRA APM pressure modules extend the application base of the HPC600 by allowing calibrations in additional ranges. The APM modules are engineered for on-site or laboratory use and are compatible with several other JOFRA calibrators.

    The JOFRA HPC600 family of handheld pressure calibrators is part of a comprehensive line of pressure, temperature, and force-measurement and calibration products marketed by AMETEK Calibration Instruments.

    Please find more information at www.jofra.com

  • Welding table

    These extraction tables have especially been developed for the handling of smaller metal workpieces. The ergonomical adapted stable sheet steel construction and the robust material support enable a comfortable and safe functioning.

    A dust collecting drawer allows a safe cleaning of the table. The welding tables, which are available in different sizes, can be connected to fans or to a central extraction and filter system. Welding table Stable welded steel table with multi layerd paint, grating, dust collection drawer.

  • Fixed table travelling column milling machines – SL Model

    – X Axis: 2500 – 10500 mm
    – Y Axis: 1600 mm
    – Z Axis: 1000 mm
    – Automatic indexing head 32 kW

    BASIC MACHINE CONFIGURATION :
    – Heidenhain iTNC 530 Digital control with TFT flat screen
    – Heidenhain HR 410 handwheel
    – A.C. Digital drive amplifiers
    – Thermal expansion compensation ram/head
    – Direct linear measuring scales
    – Automatic Indexing Head 5ºx5º / 28kW / 535Nm / 3.000 rpm
    – Automatic centralised lubrication
    – Hydraulic counterweight on the vertical axis
    – Coolant tank 350l / 3bar
    – Electric cabinet cooling system
    – Electromagnetic compatibility
    – Operator’s platform

  • Temperature Transmitter

    Transmitters provide a convenient and economical way to send a signal from a sensor to a datalogger, controller or the control room of a processing plant. The transmitter converts the sensor’s small voltage signal into a current output signal that runs on copper electrical wires. This method is more economical than running long lengths of multi-conductor shielded cables for RTDs or specially compensated, shielded extension-grade wire for thermocouples. In addition, the output is less subject to distortion/interference from external electrical noise, RFI and EMI.

    Conax offers a variety of temperature transmitters to meet customer application requirements and configuartions. For more information on any individual type of transmitter, or to request a transmitter data sheet visit our website at www.conaxtechnologies.com or call the factory directly 716-684-4500.

  • HV Tan delta Integrated test system for HT Motor/Generator testing

    PE-MCDF-SP15/500
    Capacitance & Dissipation Factor (Tan-Delta) test system
    15kV / 500mA

    15kV/500mA test sets, in conjunction with tuned reactors are specifically designed to test Generator windings at 13.8kV, either individually, or all the 3 phases together. Add the Tuned Reactors to it, and no equipment, however higher the capacitance may be, will remain out of the measurement ambit of this test system. Nor does the cost of such a necessary equipment remain a conflict anymore!

    Electrical properties of insulating systems change due to age and continuous electrical stress. By measuring electrical properties such as Capacitance and Tan¬-Delta regularly it is possible to ensure the operational reliability of H.V. insulating systems and to avoid costly breakdowns. This is particularly important for HV bushings, Power Transformers, Generators, Power Capacitors, H.T. cables etc.

  • Zero-molding with SE-DUZ, SE-HSZ and SE-HDZ

    High precision and high process stability are becoming more and more important. Thanks to direct servo-motor drive and intelligent servo-motor control, the machines of the SE-DUZ machine range meet the increasing demands of the molders in an ideal manner.

    A powerful and quick-acting injection unit and an absolutely reliable, accurate and quick-acting clamping mechanism bring the SE-DUZmachine range into the top class of all-electric machines.

    The SE-DUZ machine range with clamping forces ranging from 180 kN to 1,800 kN is based on the latest technology and feature a high degree of performance and precision. The machine range SE-HSZ (High Speed) covers clamping forces from 2,200 kN up to 3,500 kN. The range SE-HDZ (Heavy Duty) covers clamping forces up to 4,500 kN.

    All machine ranges are equipped with the revolutionary Zero-Molding technology, which helps to avoids scrap and defects during the production process.

  • Dedusting unit effectively removes dust from product stream

    THE MOBILE DEDUSTING UNIT

    The XP360 DeDuster closed-loop compact cyclonic dedusting (CCD) system can remove angel hair and dust particles as small as 1.6 micron from a product stream without impacting the loading capacity. The customized unit’s low height profile allows it to be easily moved under the company’s silos using a forklift. A telescopic pipe connects the unit’s inlet to a silo discharge and another connects the unit’s discharge to a truck inlet. The silo outlet flanges and the truck inlets have fast-connectors for quick assembly and disassembly. The unit is easily cleaned with compressed air or water between product changeovers to prevent cross-contamination, and a standard clear polycarbonate panel (hardened glass is available on request) allows an operator or camera to monitor the dedusting process. The dedusting unit is partitioned into three cleaning zones—the upper wash zone, the venturi zone, and the lower wash zone — that are separated by wash decks. During operation, the resin pellets discharge from a silo by gravity via the telescopic pipe to the dedusting unit. As the pellets pass through the unit’s inlet, a primary flux field generator creates a magnetic field that interrupts the electrostatic charges that bond the dust to the pellet surfaces, allowing the dust to detach from the pellets. After passing through the inlet, an adjustable inlet deflector distributes the pellets proportionally onto the first wash deck in the unit’s upper wash zone, where upward-flowing pressurized air further separates the dust particles from the pellets. A wash deck has slots and holes that are located and designed to enhance the air-wash effect to effectively move the dust up and away from the pellets. The pellets move off the wash deck to the unit’s venturi zone, where regulated high-velocity updraft air moves the dust particles and any angel hair away from the pellets and into a vacuum airflow that pulls them out of the unit to a dust collector. The airflow in the venturi zone can be increased or decreased, depending on the dust particle size to be removed. The pellets continue moving by gravity to the second wash deck in the unit’s lower wash zone, where any remaining dust particles are removed from the pellets to ensure complete cleaning. The virtually dust-free pellets discharge from the unit via the telescopic pipe into a truck that transports them to the designated facility for processing.

  • Chicago 2010: Women of the Windy City

    Filed under: , ,

    Spokesmodels of the Chicago Auto Show – Click above for high-res image gallery

    This year’s 2010 Chicago Auto Show is just about over, at least for us media types, and while a couple of significant vehicles were unveiled here, it’s basically a repeat of Detroit – the industry has definitely scaled back. Although Chicago hasn’t always been one of the pre-eminent events on the calendar, we usually get a lot out of our trip to the Windy City, and while that’s generally new car debuts, there’s plenty else to occupy our time here.

    Thankfully one area where automakers seemingly didn’t skimp again is booth professionals. Lots of models are positioned by the vehicles, quick with a smile or an answer to any question we had. As the auto show season marches along, the gals just seem to get prettier and friendlier at every event.

    And as we pointed out in our booth babe post from Detroit, we’re not being sexist, but rather consumers of a valuable service according to Sirens of Chrome, an entire book celebrating the culture of car models and their history on the auto show circuit. Check out the gallery below to keep the economy going.

    Live photos copyright (C)2010 Frank Filipponio/Weblogs, Inc.

    Chicago 2010: Women of the Windy City originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 11 Feb 2010 19:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Judge finds infomercial pitchman Kevin Trudeau in contempt

    A federal judge in Chicago today found author-infomercial king Kevin Trudeau in criminal contempt of court.

    Trudeau, who for years has claimed to offer miracle health cures, was ordered to post a $50,000 bail and give up his passport.

    And U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman told him to expect to spend some time in custody in the future for urging his customers to flood the judge with e-mails.

    After being called on the carpet by the judge today, Trudeau sent a follow-up e-mail to his listeners and supporters telling them he’d erred in telling them to write to the judge about his pending civil case.

    “I don’t have confidence in your client,” Gettleman told Trudeau’s lawyer. “I do insist that, if he is to avoid custody today, he post bond.”

    Gettleman, whos overseeing a civil case involving Trudeau, was clearly unhappy at Trudeaus latest antics urging his followers via his Web site to flood the judge with e-mails. They listened.

    Gettleman said Trudeaus actions violated a previous order in the case to not communicate with the judge.

    The judge said some of the e-mails were “harassing, threatening and interfering.”

    “This is direct contempt that’s how I view it,” Gettleman said. “He interfered with the direct process of the court.”

    Gettleman said he initially wanted to take Trudeau into custody this afternoon, but decided he didn’t want to act “hastily.”

    “I do believe a future penalty will include some custody and a fine,” Gettleman said.

    At that, Trudeau briefly looked down. He did not speak in court.

    The Federal Trade Commission has labeled Trudeau a fraud and got a court order in 2004 to curtail his business.

    Trudeau has sold millions of books, in part with the pitch that the government is trying to keep him from telling dieters the truth with his The Weight-Loss Cure They Dont Want You to Know About, which has become a best-seller.

    Gettleman previously has fined Trudeau more than $5 million, then raised that fine to more than $37 million the amount the FTC figured Trudeau made on the book via his infomercials.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Dolton man fatally shot in Altgeld Gardens

    A Dolton man was fatally shot while entering an Altgeld Gardens residence early Wednesday on the far South Side.

    The man, identified by the Cook County medical examiners office as Christopher Neal, 24, was shot once in the back as he entered a residence in the 300 block of East 131st Place, police News Affairs Officer Daniel OBrien said.

    An autopsy today concluded that Neal died of a gunshot wound to the back, and his death was ruled a homicide, the medical examiner’s office said.

    The shooting happened just south of Golden Gate Park, 13000 S. Eberhart Ave., in the Altgeld Gardens public housing complex.

    OBrien said responding officers found the man on the porch of the home and he was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center of Oak Lawn. Neal, of 15515 University Ave. in Dolton, was pronounced dead at 5:18 a.m., according to the medical examiners office.

    A description of the gunman was not immediately available Wednesday night, police said.

    Calumet Area detectives are investigating, but nobody was in custody this afternoon, police said.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • One hurt when two pickups, two semis collide on I-80

    A motorist was injured after losing control of his pick-up truck and smashing into a guardrail on eastbound Interstate 80 in Joliet this morning, causing two semi trucks and another truck to collide.

    The pick-up crashed at 5:23 a.m. on eastbound I-80, just east of Center Street and west of the Des Plaines River Bridge, Illinois State Police said.

    After the pick-up crashed, two semis and another pick-up collided, a state police dispatcher said. State police Sgt. Scott Angus said one of the semis involved was a UPS vehicle.

    The driver of the first pick-up truck to crash was taken to Provena St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet with non-life-threatening injures, Angus said, adding that no one else was hospitalized after the crash.

    I-80 was closed in both directions for about a half-hour. The eastbound lanes were fully reopened by 7:40 a.m., Angus said.

    No citations had been issued as of 11 a.m. and the cause of the crash remained under investigation.

    Angus did not know if citations would be issued.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Videos: GM engineers provide details on the 2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD

    Yesterday at the 2010 Chicago Auto Show, General Motors unveiled the new 2011 Chevrolet Silverado heavy-duty. Chevy has now released a bunch of videos with the designers and engineers providing technical details on GM’s new heavy-duty pickup.

    With a launch title of “11 WAYS THE NEW 2011 CHEVROLET SILVERADO HEAVY-DUTY TRUCKS PROVE THEY’RE READY FOR ANY JOB OR COMPETITOR,” it seems like Chevy’s new heavy-duty is basically ready to take on whatever comes in its way – even a Ford F-350 Super Duty.

    Check out the videos after the jump to learn more.

    Click here for our original post on the 2011 Chevrolet Silverado Heavy-Duty.

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado Heavy Duty:

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD – Overview:

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD – Stronger:

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD – Sturdier:

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD – More Secure:

    2011 Chevrolet Silverado Heavy Duty:

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Snow Storms Hit East Coast; Make Some Policymakers Lose Their Clean Energy Bearings

    The record-breaking blizzards that engulfed Washington, DC, the past two weeks have prompted climate change deniers to argue that if it’s snowing on the East Coast, then climate change must not exist. Those who want climate action could just as easily argue that the dearth of snow in Vancouver, where the 2010 Winter Olympics are about to kick off, means climate change is already hitting us right in our backyard.

    Climate scientists have warned for years that we can expect more frequent extreme climate events – from heavier snowstorms to increasingly strong hurricanes – as global temperatures rise. As Jeff Masters, director of meteorology for the Michigan-based forecasting service Weather Underground, said on a Thursday telephone press conference organized by the Center for American Progress, “We still will have snowstorms, and the signs of record snowstorms being evidence against global warming is just not true. In the future, we shouldn’t be surprised to find heavier precipitation events.”

    “This actually is, according to the satellite record, the warmest winter on record,” said Joseph Romm of the Center for American Progress during the teleconference. “The scientific literature predicts that you will see more intense winter storms because of global warming.” Click here to read more about what was discussed during the teleconference.

    But it’s not just that the climate change deniers are wrong about the relationship between heavy snowstorms and climate change. It’s also that they would use these arguments to derail federal climate and clean energy measures, ignoring the fact that climate change is not the only reason why we need to switch from fossil fuels to clean energy. What about national security?

    Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., who was quick to jump on the climate change denial bandwagon this week, seems to have forgotten that not only is our current energy system polluting the atmosphere with greenhouse gas emissions, it’s also keeping us hooked on foreign oil. This makes the U.S. vulnerable to terrorists who object to our presence in the Middle East and forces us into relationships with hostile or repressive governments, thus jeopardizing our national security.

    Luckily, a group of veterans and national security experts are bringing our oil dependence to the forefront of the national clean energy debate. Operation Free is an effort to draw attention to the national security threat caused both by U.S. dependence on foreign oil and by climate change. In November 2009, the Apollo Alliance interviewed a member of Operation Free, an Iraq war veteran named Alex Cornell du Houx, for a story we published about veterans green jobs training programs. At that time, Cornell du Houx said, “When I was deployed in Fallujah with the marines, we came across a line of cars, trucks and tractors that were bumper-to-bumper as far as the eye could see. They were waiting there all night and risking their lives for gasoline and diesel. It really struck me how vulnerable and dependent they were on this single source of energy. Likewise, it made me think about how dependent we are and how it puts our security at risk.”

    Operation Free recently ramped up its activities by launching a 16-state “National Veterans Tour for Clean Energy Security” and a national television advertisement. Iraq war veteran Steve Maddox narrates the advertisement: “Terrorists. They’re trying to kill Americans at home and our troops abroad. And who’s footing the bill for the attacks against us? Oil money, filtered through secret organizations in the Middle East and countries like Iran. When oil money ends up in the hands of our enemies, Americans pay the ultimate price. We’ve got to protect ourselves and do all we can to end our dependence on foreign oil. Tell Congress: Pass the Clean Energy and America Power Act NOW.”

    Click here to watch the Operation Free television advertisement.

    Read about the national veterans’ tour or find out when it’s coming to your state.

    Read the Apollo Alliance story about veterans green jobs training programs.

    And remember, come rain, sleet or snow, the need to transition to clean energy is not solely about the devastating impacts of climate change; it’s also about the need to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil and making America more secure.

    In other news …

    *On Tuesday, Feb. 16, the Apollo Alliance and St. Louis Urban League are sponsoring an event to highlight a successful weatherization assistance program that is creating jobs for St. Louis, Mo., residents with the support of funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The program has already created 39 new green jobs and is also saving money for low-income St. Louis residents whose homes are being weatherized. To learn more about the program, visit the St. Louis Urban League’s website.

    *A new report by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, the Pennsylvania Green Jobs Report, analyzes the green economy in the state, identifying the primary industry sectors where green jobs are located as well the jobs that are most closely linked to green services and processes. It differs from other state green jobs reports in that it directly connects federal and state clean energy investments to clean energy job creation. According to the report, “between 2010 and 2012, $10 billion in public and private investment in the green economy will be a catalyst for generating 115,000 jobs.” Read the report at the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry website.

    *Check out our new clean energy success stories! This month we have “Signature Stories” about model green jobs training programs in Michigan (Detroiters Working for Environmental Justice) and Wisconsin (Green Affordable Housing in Indian Country). We also have a new story about the role of small businesses in clean energy research and development (Small Businesses Leading the Way in Clean Energy Innovation).

    Photo credit: Weather Underground

  • Bill Clinton hospitalized, gets coronary stents

    Former President Bill Clinton was hospitalized today after experiencing heart discomfort and had two stents placed in a coronary artery, an adviser said.

    The adviser, Douglas Band, said Clinton was in “good spirits” after undergoing the procedure at New York Presbyterian Hospital.

    Clinton, 63, had quadruple bypass surgery in 2004 to open four blocked arteries.

    The former president has been working in recent weeks to help relief efforts in Haiti. Since leaving office, he has maintained a busy schedule working on humanitarian projects through his foundation.

    Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton left Washington and was heading to New York to be with her husband.

    Aides to Mrs. Clinton said she left the capital shortly after meeting with President Barack Obama at the White House ahead of a planned trip to the Persian Gulf that was to begin Friday.

    Aides to Mrs. Clinton said she still plans to go ahead with the trip to Qatar and Saudi Arabia, although the trip could be delayed slightly.

    Stents are tiny mesh scaffolds used to prop open an artery after it is unclogged in an angioplasty procedure.

    Doctors thread a tube through a blood vessel in the groin to a blocked artery, inflate a balloon to flatten the clog, and slide the stent into place.

    That is a different treatment from what Clinton had in 2004, when clogged arteries first landed him in the hospital. He underwent quadruple bypass surgery because of four blocked arteries, some of which had squeezed almost completely shut.

    Angioplasty, which usually includes placing stents, is one of the most common medical procedures done worldwide. More than half a million stents are placed each year in the United States.

    With bypass or angioplasty, patients often need another procedure years down the road because arteries often reclog.

    Its not unexpected for Clinton to need another procedure now, said Dr. Clyde Yancy, cardiologist at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas and president of the American Heart Association.

    The sections of arteries and veins used to create detours around the original blockages tend to develop clogs five to 10 years after a bypass, he explained. New blockages also can develop in new areas.

    This kind of disease is progressive. Its not a one-time event, so it really points out the need for constant surveillance and treating risk factors such as high cholesterol and high blood pressure, he said.

    Doctors will have to watch Clinton closely for signs of excessive bleeding from the spot in the leg where doctors inserted a catheter, said Dr. Spencer King, a cardiologist at St. Josephs Heart and Vascular Institute in Atlanta and past president of the American College of Cardiology.

    Complications are rare. The death rate from non-emergency angioplasty is well under 1 percent, King said.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Author Claims $9.99 Is Not A ‘Real Price’ For Books

    The NY Times is running an article about how publishers’ recent attempts (mostly successful) to boost the retail price of ebooks may backfire really badly as consumers revolt. Most of it is not particularly new to regular readers here, but it does talk to one author whose book received bad reviews on Amazon after his publisher decided to hold off releasing an ebook, hoping that it would “protect” hardcover sales. The author, Douglas Preston, lashes out and attacks his fans, rather than being willing to admit that his customers are telling him something:


    “The sense of entitlement of the American consumer is absolutely astonishing…. It’s the Wal-Mart mentality, which in my view is very unhealthy for our country. It’s this notion of not wanting to pay the real price of something…. It gives me pause when I get 50 e-mails saying ‘I’m never buying one of your books ever again. I’m moving on, you greedy, greedy author.’”

    So, what’s a bigger sense of entitlement? The one where your customers tell you that you’ve priced something too high and that they’re going to spend their money with others who are offering something at a price point they like? Or the one where you insist that books have to be priced high because you want them to be priced high? I’d argue it’s the latter… Along those lines, $9.99 is a real price. Just because you don’t like what the market decides a book is worth, doesn’t mean that it’s not a real price.

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