Category: News

  • Delft researchers improve bioethanol production from agricultural waste

    With the introduction of a single bacterial gene into yeast, researchers from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands achieved three improvements in bioethanol production from agricultural waste material: more ethanol, less acetate, and elimination of the byproduct glycerol. Bioethanol is produced by the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae from sugars obtained from plant biomass. The same microorganism converts such sugars into ethanol, or alcohol, in beer and wine. The production of bioethanol is increasing rapidly due to its growing use as a car fuel. With an annual world production of 65 billion liters, bioethanol is already the largest product of the fermentation industry. Ideally, bioethanol should be produced from resources that do not compete with food production, so efforts are made to produce second-generation bioethanol using agricultural residues such as wheat straw and corn stover. However, the sugars released from these raw materials form significant quantities of acetate, which can slow or even halt bioethanol production by yeast. Conventional bioethanol production also loses about 4% of sugar to formation of the byproduct glycerol — long considered an inevitable consequence of bioethanol production conditions.

    TU Delft researchers solved these issues by introducing a single gene from the bacterium Escherichia coli into the yeast, enabling the conversion of harmful acetate to ethanol. This process replaced the normal role of glycerol so efficiently that key genes in glycerol production could be removed, thus preventing glycerol production as well. “In the laboratory, this simple genetic modification kills three birds with one stone: no glycerol formation, higher ethanol yields, and consumption of toxic acetate,” explains principal researcher Jack Pronk, professor and leader of the Industrial Microbiology Group in TU Delft’s department of biotechnology. A paper describing the invention was published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology. The researchers have applied for a patent on their invention and hope to collaborate with industrial partners to accelerate its industrial implementation.

    Source: Bio-Medicine


  • Massive Selling Before The Dubai Debacle Means Inside Information Was Leaked

    Dubai Fog

    The evidence of foul play ahead of Dubai’s debt announcement last week appears overwhelming.

    A whopping 75% of debt owners might have sold ahead of time.

    Which means that whoever was left holding Nakheel bonds was truly out of the loop.

    WSJ: According to Data Explorers, a company that tracks how much of a company’s stock or bonds are out on loan, about 75% of institutions holding the sukuk sold their position between the end of August and the end of November.

    “It’s an extraordinary sell-off in a bond so close to maturity, when there was no indication of a problem refinancing. The data suggests they had some information that it was a good time to sell,” said Data Explorers managing director Julian Pittam.

    Read more here.

    See here why Dubai was the most obvious bubble ever (in retrospect) >>

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  • Book Review: If You Love This Planet

    So who doesn’t love this planet?

    Unless you have a few screws loose (or living in extreme poverty or managing to survive in a war zone or some similar predicament), at some basic level, you gotta love living on Earth – for its beauty, sustenance, and mystery. But how are we taking the responsibility to protect, preserve or restore our increasingly degraded planet?

    That’s what Dr. Helen Caldicott sets out for her readers of If You Love This Planet: A plan to save the Earth (a revised and updated second edition from W.W. Norton). Climate change, ecological collapse and the damage wrought by the ever expanding global, economic system dominated by big corporations and big government demanded an update of her first edition in 1992.

    If You Love This Planet sounds a compelling alarm to the damage one species has managed to cause to the fundamental life-sustaining biological processes on Earth – along with our placid, if not direct, exploitation of our own species for economic gain, power grab, or as a result of omitted (or outright deceptive) information. That species is, of course, homo sapiens. Caldicott’s hard-hitting book dives into the diagnosis and causes, followed by a practical prescription and offers a few simply stated cures.

    Dr. Caldicott, a pediatrician, knows her stuff, as the founding president of Physicians for Social Responsibility and a widely recognized champion for nuclear disarmament. She explains how the planet, like a human body, is an organism with “a natural system of interacting homeostatic mechanisms.” If one is diseased, others start to fail.

    Read more of this story »

  • LA 2009: 2011 Toyota Sienna could wear a Lexus badge

    Filed under: , ,


    2011 Toyota Sienna SE – Click above for high-res image gallery

    When the new third-generation 2011 Toyota Sienna shows up in dealerships next February, parents should head straight to their closest dealer after dropping the kids at soccer. Notice we didn’t say “Moms.” We said “parents.” Although other minivan makers have attempted to butch up their people movers in the past, those efforts have been mostly lamentable. Toyota, on the other hand, has actually made a van (there’s nothing mini about this new Sienna) that arguably looks sporty enough to chip away at the undeserved mommy-mobile stigma of the class. Don’t let that purse tray dissuade you.

    And if NASCAR dads drag their feet a bit before heading over to trade in the old Previa or Chevrolet Suburban, they may choose the sportier SE in the showroom come April. While even the base Sienna will boast a design theme that looks surprisingly assertive, the SE adds an aggressive body kit and 19-inch six-spoke wheels to go with its stiffer suspension and remapped transmission programming. There’s also a different grille and clear tail lamps. Unfortunately, there won’t be a TRD supercharger underhood or even a cold air intake or freer-flowing exhaust to up the power, but on looks alone, this thing might have what it takes to broaden the appeal of minivans to the XY set.

    Debuting at the LA Auto Show today, the 2011 Sienna looks like a more macho 2009 Sienna cross-bred with Toyota’s Venza crossover. The family resemblance is striking, particularly from the rear. Nifty details are to be found all around – things like the cleverly hidden high-mounted rear wiper. Toyota promises that this third-generation Sienna will also drive more like a sedan while still swallowing people and cargo with equal ease.

    We’ve had an advanced in-person look at this model, and the seven or eight people who find themselves filling the seats inside this new Sienna figure to be impressed by the Lexus-like interior with its new three-tone color scheme, ample use of wood, and clever luxury touches. Particularly “wow” inducing are the wooden swoosh across the dash, the second row seats with their integrated retractable leg rests that slide a long way forward to grant access to the power-operated 60/40 Split & Stow third row, and the 16-inch dual view LCD screen for rear seat entertainment. Yes, sixteen.

    Built on a revised version of the outgoing platform, the 2011 Sienna has the same wheelbase but is slightly shorter, lower and wider than its predecessor. It will be available in five different trim levels: Sienna grade, LE, SE, XLE and Limited. All-wheel-drive will still be available on V6-powered LE, XLE and Limited models. That V6 is the same 3.5-liter Dual Variable Valve Timing with intelligence (VVT-i) unit available today, with 266 horsepower. The engine is stout enough to give the Sienna a 3,500-pound tow capacity while returning mileage of 18 mpg city and 24 mpg highway. Also available in Sienna and LE will be the VVT-i 2.7-liter four-cylinder engine with 187 horses and a slight bump in mileage to 19/26.

    We’ll have lots to say about this new Sienna after our first drive in a couple of weeks, but for now, you can read more about it in the press release we’ve pasted after the jump and check out high-res shots in our gallery below.

    [Source: Toyota]

    Continue reading LA 2009: 2011 Toyota Sienna could wear a Lexus badge

    LA 2009: 2011 Toyota Sienna could wear a Lexus badge originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 02 Dec 2009 13:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dennis Gartman Cries Foul On The Guardian’s Tar Sands Hit Job

    oil sands tbi

    Yesterday, we reported on an article written by George Monbiot regarding the effects of Canada’s tar sands on the environment.

    Today, Dennis Gartman points out that Monbiot flew to Toronto despite a self-imposed flying ban.

    Normally, no big deal.

    But Gartman points out that there aren’t any tar sands in Toronto:

    The Gartman Letter: What we found fascinating by Mr. Monbiot’s most recent editorial is that he found it necessary to “fly to Toronto” to find out about the supposed devastating effect of the Tar Sands upon the environment. Telling the world that he broke his “self-imposed ban on flying,” Mr. Monbiot flew from London to Toronto to find out for himself what is going on.

    The problem is, if we can be allowed to speak in the vernacular: There ain’t no tar sands in Toronto, Mr. Monbiot! Last we heard, they’re all out West somewhere… someplace called Alberta, and some in Saskatchewan… places your wine & cheese eating, Birkenstock and dirndle- dress wearing, poetry reading and oh-so-politically- correct friends have likely never been… nor would ever go to! Sorry, Mr. Monbiot, but you’ve got another plane trip, and a helicopter ride, and a jeep drive ahead of you if you want to see the Tar Sands. Better get a move on, my friend. ‘tis a long, long way from Toronto.

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  • What Exactly Is Sushi?

    The word “sushi” is often ambiguous for non-native Japanese. We think of it as being interchangeable with raw fish. Sushi is vinegared rice topped with other ingredients. Sashimi, which is slices of raw fish alone, is not sushi because it isn’t accompanied with rice. Originally, sushi was fermented fish with rice preserved in salt, and this was a staple dish in Japan for a thousand years until the Edo Period (1603 to 1868) when contemporary sushi was developed. The word “sushi” means “it’s sour,” which reflects back to sushi’s origins of being preserved in salt.

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  • Super Monkey Ball 2 hits the iPhone and iPod touch

    Super Monkey Ball 2 iPhone

    Sega has just launched Super Monkey Ball 2 for the iPhone and iPod touch, aiming to follow up on the original that took the App Store by storm. The new version includes over 115 levels, as well as 2-, 3-, and 4-player Wi-Fi play. One of the biggest gripes with the original Super Monkey Ball was that the accelerometer didn’t seem to cooperate as well as the player expected it to, making for a frustrating experience. Having played the sequel, it appears that Sega has taken care of those problems, as Super Monkey Ball 2 for iPhone and iPod touch seems a lot more responsive and fluid.

    In case you aren’t familiar, Super Monkey Ball games feature monkeys that are encased in balls. You tilt the iPhone to roll the ball towards a goal, and as you progress through the game, that goal is increasingly more challenging to get to without falling off of the level. It’s a good time. You can pick up Super Monkey Ball 2 for $9.99.


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    Super Monkey Ball 2 hits the iPhone and iPod touch originally appeared on AppTapper on Wed, December 02, 2009 – 10:35:45


  • Diamond Pet Foods Recalls Cat Food

    Diamond Pet Foods are recalling some of their bagged Premium Edge dry cat food after 21 cases of health problems and deaths have been reported in cats who have been fed the products.

    premiumedge

    Select batches of Premium Edge Finicky Adult Cat and Premium Edge Hairball do not contain enough thiamine, which is an essential nutrient for cats. Without it, they could develop thiamine deficiency which causes gastrointestinal or neurological problems. If untreated, this disorder could result in death.

    Initial symptoms of thiamine deficiency include decreased appetite, salivation, vomiting and weight loss. Later, neurological problems could develop including, bending the neck toward the floor, wobbly walking, circling, falling and seizures.

    So far, the recalled food has only been known to have been distributed in the eastern part of the U.S.

    Residents in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida are urged to check the labeling on their bags for the following codes: RAF0501A22X, RAF0501A2X, RAH0501A22X, and RAH0501A2X. Affected bags can be returned to the retailer they were purchased from.

    [images: premiumedgepetfood.com]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Diamond Pet Foods Recalls Cat Food

  • Fiat’s 500C the Makings of an Apple iCar

    Back in 2007, the Mac web rumor mill was abuzz for a while about a reported September meeting in California between Steve Jobs and Volkswagen CEO Winterkorn over possibly integrating the iPod, iPhone, and other Apple products into an automobile — with blogosphere speculation about possibly even an Apple/VW joint venture “iCar” project.

    However, by late November, the German site Capital was reporting (Google translation) that Apple/VW discussions, although confirmed by Volkswagen, had ground to a halt.

    Steve Jobs as Auto Exec.?

    Fast-forward two years. It’s an understatement to say that the automobile industry has been turned on its head by the global recession. Apple, however, is doing considerably better, which has led to speculation as to what Steve Jobs would do were he running an auto-making firm — say beleaguered General Motors. Last fall the New York Times’ Thomas Friedman mused, “Somebody ought to call Steve Jobs, who doesn’t need to be bribed to do innovation, and ask him if he’d like to do national service and run a car company for a year. I’d bet it wouldn’t take him much longer than that to come up with the G.M. iCar.”

    Fiat Chrysler a More Logical iCar Partner

    Steve Jobs of course has had other challenges to contend with over the past year, but the ideal of an Apple iCar still tantalizes some of us crossover auto-buff Mac and gadget fans. I think a rather more promising candidate for an Apple automotive venture joint partner would be Chrysler, rather than GM or VW.

    Why? Well for one thing, Chrysler is now controlled by Italy’s Fiat S.p.A., currently in the hunt to re-enter the U.S. automobile market after a nearly two-decade absence, building the brand from the ground up, as it were, and the CEO of both companies, Sergio Marchionne, is reportedly a big fan of the Apple business model.

    Last June, TIME magazine noted that, “Since he took over as chief executive of Italy’s Fiat in 2004, the chain-smoking Canadian-Italian has used Apple as a model, focusing on the way Steve Jobs transformed it from an also-ran computer company into a global icon of cool. He encourages Fiat managers to take a close look at Apple’s branding prowess and even asks them to benchmark their activities against the company.”

    The TIME piece also cited Carlo Alberto Carnevale, professor of strategic management at Milan’s Bocconi University’s business school, observing, “The challenge for Fiat Chrysler is to move away from popular products and into ‘pop’ products, full of cool environmental technology and on the right side of history. In that sense, it’s the same bet as Steve Jobs’. That’s why Marchionne uses that metaphor.”

    Why Not an iCar Version Too?

    But what if it became more than a metaphor? I say this because the iconic Fiat 500C (“Cinquecento”), which has been a rip-roaring sales hit in Europe and elsewhere (currently sold in 59 markets), is expected to anchor the brand’s re-entry into the North American car market, with Road & Track magazine reporting that at least four Fiat 500 versions will be gracing showrooms here for the 2011 model year, including hatchback, convertible, wagon, and sporty-hatch versions. Why not a fifth, “iCar” version?

    The Fiat 500 seems to me an ideal base for an iCar treatment. Unveiled at the 2009 Geneva Motor Show, the new Fiat 500C version is like the VW New Beetle, the BMW Mini, and arguably even the Ford Mustang, a retro-interpretation of an automotive icon from the ’50s or ’60s, in this instance the original 1957 fabric roof Fiat 500, but with thoroughly modern mechanicals and engineering under the classic-appearing skin. Fiat notes that the new Cinquecento was developed by the Centro Stile Fiat design center using an IT industry-esque “open-source approach,” continually evolving on the basis of input from users and enthusiasts.

    Environmentally Friendly and Uber-Cool

    The Fiat 500, available with a variety of what the company says are “environmentally friendly engines,” has reconfirmed its status as an Italian style icon, winning more than 30 awards, and with upwards of 11 million internet users visiting its website. Fiat affirms that is sees the Cinquecento to be a “platform upon which Fiat Automobiles is building a whole family of cars with advanced technology and high attention to detail.” It’s not at all an extravagant stretch to imagine that an iCar version of the Fiat 500C could quite harmoniously be included in that vision.

    A Cinquecento-based, Apple co-branded iCar would have both the timely characteristics of small size and light environmental footprint, which, combined with the uber-cool Apple “i-factor” that could at least conceivably make it the iPhone/iPod/iMac of the automobile world. Perhaps I’m wildly fantasizing, but it sounds like a workable plan to me.


  • REPORT: Cadillac CTS Coupe won’t spawn convertible variant

    Filed under: ,

    2011 Cadillac CTS Coupe – Click above for high-res image gallery

    If you’re nostalgic, the first car that may come to mind when you think about a droptop Cadillac is the old tail-finned Fifties Eldorado. A pink one especially. But since then, the American luxury marque hasn’t had a whole lot of convertibles. There was the Pininfarina-styled Allante and the recently discontinued XLR, both roadsters, but if you think the General’s luxury division is eager to get back into the open-air business, think again, as new reports indicate that there are no such plans on the horizon.

    At least not based on the CTS, anyway. The series has spawned a sedan – including the all-conquering CTS-V – a wagon and even a coupe, but the guys over at Inside Line say they’ve got the inside line that no convertible version of one of Cadillac’s most prolific models is in the works. Which is a bit of a shame, when you think about it. But you never know what’s coming around the corner…

    [Source: Inside Line]

    REPORT: Cadillac CTS Coupe won’t spawn convertible variant originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 02 Dec 2009 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Peter Schiff: I’ve Been Bullish On Gold Since It Was At $300

    On CNBC this morning, Peter Schiff defended his call of gold $5,000 against Lou Grasso, who says the metal has run well beyond its course. Schiff noted that he’s been a gold bull since before it was cool (since gold $300!).

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  • Author Sherman Alexie’s Rants On Colbert Against Ebooks, Piracy And ‘Open Source Culture’

    On last night’s Colbert Report, author Sherman Alexie spent most of the interview ranting against digital books and how “piracy” was destroying the book business. The whole thing was odd not just because of how uninformed it was, but also because he seemed to contradict himself multiple times. I haven’t read any of Alexie’s books, but if his logic is so twisted, it’s difficult to think that his books are worth reading:




    He starts out by insisting that he won’t put his book on the Kindle or any digital book format because he’s afraid of piracy — but that makes no sense at all. By not giving readers what they want, he’s actually encouraging more piracy. There are probably plenty of people actively willing to buy ebook versions of his book, and his response is that because of piracy, he won’t offer it to them. How does this help? Those people now have more incentive to actually go and download an unauthorized copy of the book (and Alexie is fooling himself if he thinks they don’t exist). How can not giving people what they’re asking for and are willing to pay for be a smart business model?

    He compares the book business to the music business, saying:


    “When the music industry went digital, somewhere between 75 and 95% of music is pirated. Nobody makes money off their music any more. Everything is about live shows now.”

    First of all, it wasn’t the industry that went digital. Music went online way before the industry even realized it, and one of the main reasons that the piracy rates are as high as they are (and his numbers are industry figures that aren’t reliable at all) was because the industry held back for so long in giving people what they wanted: which is exactly what Alexie is now doing!

    As for his claim that no one makes money off their music any more, that’s obviously silly. He admits that they now make their money from live shows (which is making money off their music). And then later in the interview, he points out that one of the parts he enjoyed most about being a published author was doing live performances and readings of his works. In other words, he already does what he claims happened to the music industry. So why is he so worried about piracy? That’s not clear at all.

    He also seems rather uninformed about how file sharing has helped some authors.


    I’d be really worried if I were Stephen King or James Patterson or a really big best seller that when their books become completely digitized, how easy it’s going to be to pirate them.

    Where to start….? First, Alexie doesn’t seem to understand how book file sharing happens. It’s not because the industry digitizes the books, but because others digitize those books, and, yes, they’re most likely already available on file sharing networks, whether those authors released them in ebook form or not. It’s not the official ebook they’re sharing in most cases anyway.

    Second, as for the claim that it will harm the biggest name authors most of all, Alexie might want to talk to Paulo Coelho. Coelho is the guy who quietly set up operations to “pirate” his own book and saw the sales of his physical books increase massively. Oh, and the book he chose to offer up via BitTorrent, The Alchemist is one of the best selling books of all time. Stephen King and James Patterson, by the way, do not have any books on that list — though, to be fair, if you combine all of their books, King has sold more than Coelho, and Patterson seems to be in a similar ballpark, probably selling slightly more than Coelho, but both have published many more books.

    Then, really strangely, he attacks “open source culture”:


    With the “open source culture” on the internet, the idea of ownership — of artistic ownership — goes away.

    Now, beyond this just being flat out wrong about what “open source” means or what “open source culture” is, what’s the most bizarre thing about this statement is who it’s coming from. Alexie is most well-known for his writing about modern Native American life — and Native Americans aren’t exactly known for their strong believe in artistic ownership. In fact, much of the understanding of so-called “gift economies,” which are sometimes (though not always accurately) used to describe the open source world are actually based on Native American gift giving culture of tribes in the Pacific Northwest, which is where Alexie is from.

    Colbert actually does a good job pushing back on this, in his usual self-mocking manner, pointing out that sharing helps get the word out there, and the only reason he’s so famous is because of how easily his content is shared via TV. Without that, he notes, he’d have to just go door to door shouting at people. To which Alexie responds: “I’m a fan of door to door shouting at people.” Good luck with that.

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  • Pick of the Day – 2 incredible charts – For Subprime, is it Deja Vu all over again? – By Paul Jackson

    Bill-Coppedge original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    This is a totally different way of looking at the data (BC)  

    pj1   <  click to read

    hw1

    2 incredible chartsViewpoint: For subprime, is it deja vu all over again? – By PAUL JACKSON – great work by Paul. – hattip Ira Artman – … Because this sort of chart technique might be foreign to some readers, the zero axis point represents no change between October 2009 and November 2009 data. Any data points in positive territory reflect a percentage increase month-over-month, while data points in negative territory reflect a percentage decrease month-over-month.  Surprised? Only if you thought he subprime mess was over with. … – go read it all at  Housingwire

  • By: Tara sacchetti

    A much happier Thanksgiving this time around!!!! Your story gives hope where sometimes there is none. I am proud to be your cousin & I am very grateful to the doctors at Childrens for fighting through this with you & bringing you back from those dark days.

  • The Nikkei Is Perfectly Aligned With The S&P 500 As Measured In Gold

    You can always find weird correlations between charts, and most of the time they’re totally meaningless.

    Still, we were kind of intrigued by this chart from the ShiftCTRL Group comparing the Nikkei with the S&P500 divided by the price of gold.

    It might mean nothing, but we’re curious what you think.

    gold

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  • Food Gift We’d Love to Receive: Whipped Brandy Butter

    2009_12_02-BrandyButter.jpgWhen I saw this brandy butter in Australian Gourmet Traveller‘s roundup of homemade food gifts, my jaw dropped. Brandy butter? How have I never heard of such a thing before?

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  • Krauthammer still kicking, writing for The Times

    Canning Krauthammer? That’s so liberal

    In Northwest Voices, Daniel A. Morgan asked that The Times drop Charles Krauthammer from its editorial pages [“Krauthammer on terrorism, Islam: an inconvenient truth,” Opinion, Nov. 28].

    I assume Morgan is a liberal because the true liberal approach is if you don’t like the message, attempt to silence the messenger.

    Morgan believes Krauthammer has little of value to contribute.

    Let’s look at Morgan’s contributions: While admitting Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan uttered “Allahu akbar” during his murderous spree, Morgan makes the ridiculous statement that most Americans say the same thing in English under similar circumstances.

    I don’t recall reading about other Americans yelling “God is great,” or “Praise God,” or “Jesus is Lord” while going around shooting innocent people.

    Morgan also equates Islamic fanatics to fanatics of other religions. Again, while Islamic fanatics kill innocents almost daily, I do not know of any other religion where this happens even occasionally.

    If Morgan wants to ignore the worldwide scourge of radical, militant Islam, and use the typical liberal tactic of moral relativism, then I submit that it is he who is contributing absolutely nothing of value to the discussion.

    — Jack Hurley, Bellevue

    Krauthammer never resorts to personal insults?

    Editor’s note: This letter originally said Charles Krauthammer is a lawyer. He is not.

    Not satisfied that the majority of columnists for The Seattle Times are left-wing writers, Daniel A. Morgan wants Charles Krauthammer dropped from The Times.

    Krauthammer is on Fox News. He is an M.D. and is paralyzed from the neck down. He is a brilliant intellectual, seasoned and articulate.

    He is forthright and careful in his analysis, and never resorts to emotions or personal insults. He is neither a fearmonger nor an extremist in his comments and views. He has received a Pulitzer Prize for writing and writes weekly for The Washington Post.

    Morgan writes of Christian and Jewish fanatics. Can Morgan tell us where are the Christian and Jewish fanatics blowing themselves up, killing innocent women and children? We have heard of Krauthammer’s background, what is Morgan’s?

    — Bob West, Des Moines

    Hearing from both sides

    I see The Times is getting some flak for running Charles Krauthammer columns, not surprising in a town that skews as liberal as Seattle.

    Personally, I am a political independent, and I enjoy Krauthammer’s column. I also like Thomas Friedman and Paul Krugman.

    I don’t always agree with Krauthammer’s columns on Middle Eastern questions — though often I do — but I think he provides a well-reasoned-out viewpoint that is worth stating.

    I am glad to see The Times is running his column to balance out some of the other viewpoints we see. In order to form a sound point of view on any issue, we need to hear from several sides.

    — Dan Hochberg, Seattle

    Seconding the motion of Krauthammer’s resignation

    I second the motion by Daniel A. Morgan that The Seattle Times should drop columns written by Charles Krauthammer.

    Krauthammer’s suggestion that the health-care bill be scrapped is typical of his work and is laden with half-truths and outright lies. He so frequently resorts to obvious distortions of the truth that nothing he writes can be trusted to be accurate.

    The only thing he got right in his most recent column “Kill the current messy bills and do health care right” [Opinion, syndicated column, Nov. 28], is that the health-care bill is a disaster, not for the reasons that he lists but because special-interest lobbyists have succeeded in blocking the needed reforms.

    The current version of the bill, which will make billions for the health-insurance industry, fails to slow the rise of health-care costs, and still leaves large numbers of people with no health-care coverage. The American people deserve better.

    — Gary Maxwell, Lynnwood

  • PixelJunk Shooter blasts onto PSN next week

    Good news, PixelJunk fans. You won’t have to wait too long until you get your hands on PixelJunk Shooter, the fourth entry in Q-Games’ PixelJunk serie…

  • Director, UAA Center for Community Engagement & Learning

    The University of Alaska Anchorage seeks applications for a Director of the Center for Community Engagement and Learning (CCEL). The University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA) is an innovative and dynamic institution with national distinction in community engagement, holding a Carnegie classification for both Curricular Engagement and Outreach and Partnerships. UAA is Alaska’s largest regional university with an enrollment of 20,000 students studying in over 190 degree programs.

    The Center for Community Engagement and Learning (CCEL)
    The Center is the primary entity promoting and supporting service-learning and community-engaged research at UAA. The CCEL enables the university to effectively carry out its community engagement mission to connect academic programs with community need, and use scholarship and action for the mutual benefit of the University and the State, its communities, and its diverse peoples. It mentors faculty as they develop courses and projects incorporating engagement between academia and the community, and evaluates the community engagement activities at UAA. The Center also provides the development and support for UAA’s Certificate in Civic Engagement, The Center for Community Engagement & Learning was established by the University of Alaska Board of Regents in 2000. It resides within the UAA Office of Academic Affairs and is accountable to the Senior Vice Provost.

    CCEL Director Job Description
    The Director will lead the Center in the development and expansion of its mission, provide administrative oversight of its activities, programs, and staff, and will direct activities associated with the evaluation of community engagement. Responsibilities include working with the Senior Vice Provost, faculty, and the advisory board to identify, develop, and support service-learning and community-engaged research courses, projects, and curricula; supervising personnel; managing fiscal and other resources; and working with colleagues within the university and public and private sector partners. The successful candidate will devote time to teaching, research, and service in their discipline.

    Applicants must have experience with service-learning courses and/or community-engaged research in a higher education environment, as well as demonstrated experience in (1) forging and maintaining community connections, (2) program development, management and assessment, (3) successful proposal writing for external funding, and (4) faculty development, student mentoring, interdisciplinary teaching, program and curriculum development. Competitive candidates will demonstrate successful partnerships with diverse community agencies, and possess excellent oral and written communication skills.

    Specific responsibilities include:

    • Assist faculty through consultation, mentoring, and facilitation to integrate community-engaged learning and research into existing courses and the development of new courses;
    • Develop campus awareness of principles and best practices of effective and ethical university-community partnerships and the scholarship of engagement;
    • Manage, coordinate, and monitor a network of Center relationships and partnerships;
    • Oversee, plan, and serve as primary representative for UAA’s community-engaged learning and research at local, national, and international levels;
    • Develop, write, and administer grants from public and private sources to support the advancement of community-university partnerships and community-engaged learning;
    • Allocate resources to faculty and students involved in community-engaged learning;
    • Increase campus-wide community-engaged learning and research activities;
    • Assess the impact of community-engaged activities on students, faculty, and community partners;
    • Teach and develop curriculum within the undergraduate Certificate for Civic Engagement.

    This is a ten-month appointment. Option for fixed term or tenure track faculty appointment commensurate with candidate’s qualifications.

    A master’s degree is required, with terminal degree or PhD preferred (discipline open). UAA is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. Candidates with diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds are strongly encouraged to apply.

    Information about UAA may be found at www.uaa.alaska.edu. Information about the CCEL may be found at www.uaa.alaska.edu/engage. To apply, go to http://www.uaa.alaska.edu/humanresources/employment/index.cfm

  • LA 2009: Dodge Viper enters final year with tweaks and first two limited-edition models

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    2010 Dodge Viper ACR 1:33 Edition – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The 2010 model year marks the last run of the 600-hp Dodge Viper. To keep performance (and consumer interest) high for the next 12 months, the automaker is adding new colors, enhancing performance and releasing several limited-edition models.

    Standard Viper SRT10 models receive two new exterior colors: Toxic Orange Pearl Coat and Bright Silver Metallic Clear Coat. A new shorter fifth gear ratio (changing from .74 to .80) improves high speed acceleration (the 0-200 mph run drops by 14 seconds). The track-bred ACR models get a new short-throw shifter, and new aerodynamic tweaks to the rear wing lower drag while improving downforce (top speed bumps up to 184 mph on the ACR model).

    As of today, the automaker has announced the first two special variants of the Viper, and they promise more will come. The Dodge Viper ACR 1:33 Edition, paying tribute to the record-setting run at Laguna Seca, is identified by its unique two-tone Black Clear Coat/Red Clear Coat exterior color (the opposite of the original Viper ACR color). Other cosmetic enhancements include piano black console bezels with red gauge highlights and red stitching on the seats. The Vooodoo-edition Viper ACR gets an all Black Clear Coat exterior with a Graphite stripe outlined in red. Talk about exclusivity – only 10 cars will be produced with the unique striping on both the exterior and steering wheel. You can check out both limited edition models in our live gallery below and read Dodge’s press release after the jump.

    [Source: Dodge]

    Continue reading LA 2009: Dodge Viper enters final year with tweaks and first two limited-edition models

    LA 2009: Dodge Viper enters final year with tweaks and first two limited-edition models originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 02 Dec 2009 12:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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