Blog

  • UK specialist looking to give TVR Tuscan a second life as Chevy-powered Titan

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Classic World Racing TVR Titan – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Might the quintessential British muscle car soon be blessed with the quintessential American muscle car powerplant? If UK-based racing specialist Classic World Racing gets its way, the answer is yes. The car is the TVR Tuscan – and we’re talking about the beautiful 1968 version, for what it’s worth – and the engine is none other than General Motors‘ undeniably excellent LS3 V8.

    CWR has somehow managed to obtain the original molds for the old TVR Tuscan that had been sitting unused for decades in an old barn, after which the company built a race car using the molds for a client in Malaysia. Shortly thereafter, demand for a roadgoing version was deemed strong enough to make the necessary modifications to make it street legal. In this new form, CWR chose to call the machine the Titan.

    Power figures for the Yankee-sourced 5.7-liter V8 engine start at 480 horsepower and go from there, and those ponies will be sent to a limited-slip differential at the rear wheels through a five-speed manual transmission. Couple that prodigious output with a weight of just 2,160 pounds (980 kilograms) and you’ve got a recipe for formidable performance. Price? Around £42,500 (plus VAT) in the UK – that’s about $65,500 dollars. Check out our high-res image gallery below and read the press release after the break.

    [Source: Classic World Racing via Piston Heads]

    Continue reading UK specialist looking to give TVR Tuscan a second life as Chevy-powered Titan

    UK specialist looking to give TVR Tuscan a second life as Chevy-powered Titan originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 16 Apr 2010 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Rebirth of a Salesman: Winnebago Man Documentary Reviewed – Movie Review

    Documentary film tracks down YouTube’s favorite expletive-spewing Winnebago pitchman.

    If you haven’t already, go to YouTube and search “Winnebago man” to join the million-plus others who’ve LOL’d watching outtakes of Jack Rebney—shilling for the 1989 Winnebago lineup—curse his way through missed lines, sweltering heat, swarming flies, and the ineptitude of  his unpaid intern, Tony.

    But who is this guy? Where did he get his way with words? And why is he so mad? Those are the questions that filmmaker Ben Steinbauer set out to answer after the YouTube video surfaced in 2005. His documentary film, Winnebago Man, is the result. It goes into limited release this spring, with video sales to follow.

    Keep Reading: Rebirth of a Salesman: Winnebago Man Documentary Reviewed

    No related posts.

  • Followers of the tea-party movement

    Me, myself and I

    Editor, The Times:

    After reading the article on the tea-party followers [“Poll tells us who tea-party backers really are,” page one, April 15], the thing that jumped out at me the most about their beliefs were: “Me, myself and I.”

    And why not. They love Sarah Palin and that is what she is all about. Nothing about caring about America, other people in America or the welfare of all states. Just themselves. Kind of the nobility get it all and the rest of the country — well that’s just too bad, huh.

    They can’t stand President Obama because he is a “socialist,” who in my mind passed a Republican health-care plan.

    And they can’t stand Obama because he is a “Muslim” because he hasn’t found a church to go to in the year he has been in office. I have news for them. I haven’t found a church to go to in more than 15 years, and believe me, I am not a Muslim.

    The president is spending too much money on things they don’t like. Well I have not been too happy spending money on two wars their hero George W. Bush got us into. Oh, and by the way, I am also well-educated and in the upper levels of income. Not rich but far from poor.

    Sorry tea-partyers. You are just another bunch of self-centered, spoiled-rotten brats.

    — Lucy M. Oaks, Redmond

    Brainwashed hypocrites

    There is one statistic that was left out from your tea-party article Thursday: the percentage of tea-partyers who are hypocrites. How many denounce Social Security and Medicare yet receive benefits from those programs?

    It is clear that the tea-party group is really just those who still are brainwashed by the Bush administration. They probably still think there are WMDs in Iraq.

    — Page Russell, Burien

    A cynical cabal

    There is nothing patriotic or grass-roots about the so-called tea-party “patriots.”

    Cleverly bandying the word “elite,” the real force behind the movement is, as your Thursday article points out, the worst kind of elite: a small, educated and supremely cynical cabal of superrich who use frustrated demonstrators as pawns in their ongoing bid to eviscerate the middle class and destroy America’s proudest achievements.

    Their “patriotic” goal: to keep as much of their money as they can for themselves. Offshore bank account, anyone?

    — Kurt E. Armbruster, Seattle

    Tell us your plan

    As they cross the country on their crusade of fiscal responsibility, riddle me this: Where were they the entire eight years of the previous administration?

    And their Republican cheerleaders, where will they be should they regain a congressional majority and/or the White House?

    The possible answers to those questions lend a hollow ring to the vociferous protests of the tea party.

    Everyone who insists they have legitimate concerns to raise might do us the service of at least a detailed accounting of the origins, demographics of, and possible future of the tea party in these regards.

    — Mike Moore, Kent

  • Quick update on 2010 Brain Fitness Innovation Awards

    We have received 40 excellent entries to the inaugural Brain Fitness Innovation Awards describing pioneering initiatives to apply neuroplasticity-based findings and tools to a variety of purposes/ age groups through the lifespan: academic performance, sports performance, professional performance, healthy aging, clinical and mental health purposes. Most came from organizations based in North America, but we were glad to see also a good number coming from Europe and Asia Pacific.

    More information here: Brain Fitness Innovation Awards.

    Winners will be announced on May 24th at the State of Brain Fitness Innovation Webinar. Registration ($25) is open now, and participants with also be able to access the Executive Summary of our 2010 market report, and the LinkedIn private group SharpBrains Network for Brain Fitness Innovation.

  • Scanning for Controversy in the Lincoln Proposal

    Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) has released her language for the derivatives portion of the bill overhauling financial regulation. I’ve gone through the section-by-section report, and am now digging into the language more deeply. Bills are complicated things, and I’ll be looking more closely this afternoon. But here are some provisional impressions of major aspects of the regulatory reform.

    Swap desks spin-out?

    Among the more controversial provisions reportedly in the act was a proposal to make investment banks spin out their swap desks (a swap desk being the department of the bank that sets up the kind of derivatives contract, a swap — like a credit default swap — that is currently mostly unregulated and not traded on exchanges). Why? To make sure that banks would not speculate on the other side of their clients’ bets. The problem is, investors agree to make trade derivatives with banks because they believe the bank is stable and profitable enough to pay out, if need be — a tiny swap entity might not be, and it might discourage investors from making the deals at all. But I can’t find any language clearly stating that swap desks need to be spun out from financial institutions, lest they lose access to the Federal Reserve’s discount window or F.D.I.C. deposit insurance. I’ll keep looking.

    The end user exemption

    The bill does keep an “end user exemption,” meaning that non-financial companies — say, Caterpillar — looking to use derivatives to hedge against changes to prices or interest rates do not need to put derivatives deals through a clearinghouse. They can continue to make the deals over the counter with their investment banks, as before, if they choose.

    Commercial end users are exempted from mandatory swap clearing. Such end users are defined by nature of their primary business activity. Financial entities may not claim this exemption. These end users can opt out of the clearing requirement for the swaps only if they are hedging commercial risk…

    High capital and margin requirements for OTC deals — for financial firms, but not end users

    The bill calls for “capital and margin” — that is, the money an investor needs to post in a kind of escrow fund, just in case the derivative contract starts making losses — to be “significantly higher” for over-the-counter derivatives deals than for ones moving through clearinghouses. It seems to exempt non-financial firms from posing those higher rates of collateral.

    Capital and margin must be set to ensure the safety and soundness of the Swap Dealer or Major Swap Participant and be set significantly higher for uncleared swaps as opposed to cleared swaps. Transactions are exempt from initial and variation margin requirements if one of the counterparties is not a Swap Dealer or Major Swap Participant.

    No loophole for banks

    The bill attempts to preclude banks from creating non-financial subsidiaries to act as end users, to avoid higher collateral and other requirements.

    Affiliates of commercial end users may opt out of the clearing requirement for swaps if the affiliate is using the swap to hedge risk of the parent or affiliates of the parent. Affiliates cannot use the parent’s exemption if they are themselves swap dealers, security-based swap dealers, major swap participants, major security-based swap participants, issues that would be investment companies but for certain exemptions in the Investment Company Act, a commodity pool, a bank holding company with over $50 billion in consolidated assets, or affiliates of certain of these entities.

    If the CFTC sees abuses taking place, it can write rules to end it

    The CFTC has the authority to write rules to prevent abuses of the clearing exemption.

    Collateral does not have to be cash

    Banks do not necessarily need to pose cash or stable, liquid investments like Treasuries as collateral. But the bill does not specify what counts as collateral.

    The Prudential Regulator sets capital and margin for bank Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants, and the CFTC sets capital and margin for non-bank Swap Dealers and Major Swap Participants. Capital and margin should be comparable under all regulators and set within 180 days of the date of enactment. Non-cash collateral is permitted but may be restricted by appropriate regulators.

  • Immigration reform

    Legalization process must be rigorous

    Without a doubt, the United States cannot afford to postpone immigration reform. However, Pramila Jayapal’s assertion that the first step in reform is legalizing all the undocumented immigrants, ahead of reforming the current system for legal immigration, is disingenuous. [“We can’t afford to wait on immigration reform,” Opinion, April 15.]

    Serious reform must address both, comprehensively. I have the impression that Jayapal’s vision of reform for the undocumented immigrants would be immediate and unconditional amnesty. This is repugnant.

    Any process of legalization must be rigorous — not crippling — and include fines and a requirement to acquire basic proficiency in English.

    With respect to legal immigrants, as a nation we are seriously at risk without an immigration system that makes us attractive to the talented, educated and ambitious from all corners of the globe.

    — James B. Paden, Blaine

  • Spawn Labs HD-720 Review: A Slingbox for Xbox? [Review]

    The Spawn HD-720’s promise is borderline unbelievable: It streams your Xbox 360, PS3 or Wii from any Windows PC, anywhere, in HD. And it actually works! (Sort of.) But the list of caveats is long—perhaps fatally so. More »







  • Transportation policy and bike riders

    Bicycling and walking not ‘nonsensical’

    In “Transportation’s bicycle policy hits potholes” [seattletimes.com, Business, April 14], Republicans argue that the plan to give bicycling and walking the same importance as automobiles in transportation planning is “nonsensical” because 80 percent of freight moves by truck, and it’s unfair because roads are paid for mostly by a gasoline tax.

    Funny how Republicans don’t notice the inherent unfairness in their own argument, in that car drivers — through the gas tax — are subsidizing trucking, which is responsible for most road wear and maintenance costs.

    It’s just so typical of Republican rhetoric: They think it’s fine to massively subsidize industrial and corporate interests, but the idea of funding bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure (which helps to reduce congestion, pollution, maintenance and health costs) is unfair and “nonsensical.”

    — Rick Kosterman, Seattle

  • iPad App Review: Multitasking

    Multitasking for iPad ($2.99) – by Makayama, Inc.

    iTunes Preview Link

    Pros: Split-screen view lets you monitor Twitter and Facebook accounts while surfing the Web; Toggle button allows full-screen Web view

    Cons: Web browser lacks tabbed view functionality of some competitors

    Buying Advice: It’s not full-fledged user controllable multitasking, but it is a nice way to get your ADD on until iPhone OS 4 drops this Fall

     

    One of the bigger drawbacks to Apple’s iPad tablet computer is the lack of multitasking support in its iPhone OS 3.2. While OS 4 promises to fix that – to some extent, anyway – it won’t be available for iPad until Fall. Until then, iPad users are relegated to one task at a time use of our fancy pants multitouch tablets. Save for listening to iPod library audio tracks while using other apps, that is.

    Some clever developers are out to solve our short-term multitasking ills with some iPad apps that offer stopgap multitasking, if you will, in the form of software that employs split-screen designs to offer access to more than one Web-based service at a time. Makiyama’s appropriately-named “Multitasking” is one such app I’ve had the chance to mess around with over the past few days. Multitasking offers a three-paned screen that combines Web browsing with access to your Twitter and Facebook accounts for a social networked slant on iPad multitasking.

    {Widget type=”youtube” id=”0yH8hUvi64k”}

    (Makayama promotional video)

    Multitasking worked just fine in my testing, and I like that it offers the option between full screen Web browsing and three pane mode, as the browser window does get kinda small when it makes room for the other stuff. While neither the Twitter or Facebook windows provide the full functionality of their respective services, they do offer quite a bit of utility; Multitasking’s Twitter app is actually more robust than many stand-alone clients I’ve tried for iPhone and Android.

    One small drawback is that Multitasking’s Web browser doesn’t offer tabbed windows like some of its competitors; instead, it uses the same multiple-window format as iPad’s native Safari browser. Still, the WebKit-based browser renders pages faithfully, and if you’re a Twitter and/or Facebook addict, Multitasking offers an easy way to keep tabs on your networks while getting other stuff done. So long as that other stuff can be gotten done in a (Flash-less) Web browser.

    Makayama told me that they’re working on integrating an Email client into the next release of Multitasking. Stay tuned … 

    See Also: MultiTask ($0.99)


  • Washington state budget

    Too little, too late

    The Legislature is finally done passing the budget, with lots of tax hikes on the working folks [“Lawmakers OK budget with taxes and service cuts,” NWTuesday, April 13]. Too bad when things were going well they spent all the state income, and when times slowed they dipped into the reserves and now they can’t cut back on what they’ve done or want to save.

    I agree with The Times position that the Legislature made a poor showing with this budget [“Legislature missed a chance to lead,” editorial, April 15], but if Gov. Chris Gregoire were a real leader she should have set the tone for fiscal responsibility at the beginning of her term in office.

    With the United States government increase in taxes and the state increase in taxes, we are in for a long time of economic recovery. And with average leadership, we are not going to see a turnaround for Washington so long as the pols protect their interest.

    — Robert E. Karns, Bellevue

  • Slurs on Capitol Hill

    The truth is not ‘elusive’

    Consider The Seattle Times headline for The Associated Press article on claims that the N-epithet was hurled: “Did spit, slurs fly on the Hill? The truth has been elusive” [CloseUp, April 14].

    One of the congressmen was the hero John Lewis, whose courage and integrity are beyond dispute; the claims were backed up by another congressmen who wasn’t a target; a reporter and a congressional aide, who saw the three as they entered the Capitol, described them as trembling, agitated and wanting documentation; and the claim that there is anything to dispute is based on an irrelevant video and sponsored by Andrew Breitbart, who has been exposed as a liar in his representations about the Acorn videos.

    Would The Times cast the headline as a question, and describe the truth as “elusive,” if the testimony of four policemen was disputed by someone with a criminal record who wasn’t even there when an event occurred?

    — David Lovell, Seattle

  • Dam operations and salmon runs

    Continue the spill

    Thank you for your editorial in favor of continued spill operations to help Columbia/Snake salmon [“Spill water, move salmon,” April 8].

    I cannot believe that President Barack “Good Science” Obama would support a harmful plan to eliminate the spill that has been so beneficial for the region’s salmon and fishermen. For the past few years, salmon returns have been either stable or slightly higher — largely as a result of court-ordered spill the Obama administration now wants to eliminate.

    Continuing the spill in 2010 is crucial to help keep salmon numbers from plummeting further toward extinction. Numerous scientists have weighed in supporting the spill measures and their positive impacts for getting salmon to the ocean alive and healthy.

    — Amy Grondin, Port Townsend

  • Targeted Genetics Cuts 3 Directors

    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Targeted Genetics, the Seattle-based developer of gene therapies, said today that three of the six members of its board of directors have stepped down. They departures aren’t because of a boardroom disagreement, but are intended to help save costs, Targeted said in a statement. Joseph Davie, Roger Hawley, and Nelson Levy have left the board, while Jeremy Curnock Cook, Michael Perry, and CEO Susan Robinson are keeping their board seats. The company has also made layoffs, and de-listed from the NASDAQ as part of its efforts to save cash.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Thousand Battle in Robotics Competition

    It’s a fight to the death for hundreds of robots at the Georgia Dome this weekend!

    More than 10,000 students from around the world have descended upon Atlanta for the 19th annual FIRST National Competition. FIRST is a non-profit organization founded almost 20 years ago to get kids interested in science and technology.

    Gina Triolo is a high school senior who traveled from Pennsylvania to compete. This is her fourth and final competition before she picks where she’ll go to college. She’s hoping for Princeton or MIT.

    “We are trying to get our kids excited about this and other people too who are just coming to visit the competition,” Triolo said.

    FIRST matches teams of kids aged six to 18 years old with mentors. The mentors are engineers and other technology professionals who work with the students building massive robots to compete in various soccer competitions for scholarships and world recognition. 

    More than 30 countries — ranging from Australia to Brazil — are represented this weekend to put their robots to the test. The qualifying robots have to be built in six weeks and can’t weigh more than 120 lbs.

    Simrat Sodhi traveled from Canada. She says the weekend gives her a chance to see what other teams are doing. As much fun as it is, it’s also a great chance to network and learn. Many leave the competition with new contacts from universities and potential employers.

    Sodhi, like other students, gain problem-solving experience with their mentors. The kids made the trip to Atlanta with their own funds.  They’ve built websites, designed t-shirts and even courted corporate sponsors — all to get a little face time.

    The national winners will be announced later this weekend.

  • White BlackBerry Bold 9700 headed to T-Mobile May 5th

    BlackBerry Bold 9700

    So, a few days ago I mentioned that T-Mobile and Vodafone UK were releasing the BlackBerry 9700 in white. As fast as this device has been spreading, we were all hoping it would eventually make it to the United States. Yesterday, a screen capture of T-Mobile internal systems revealing a white 9700 popped up. In the picture it states that the projected release date is May 5th. Nothing has been said about the pricing of this device but I don’t see why it would be different than the black version.

    Does anyone on T-Mobile plan on picking it up?  Sound off in the comments section!

    Via BBerryDog, TmoNews


  • Nova familia de motores da Fiat se chamarão E.TorQ


    A Fiat definiu o nome de sua nova família de motores, que utiliza como base os antigos motores BMW Tritec de 1.6 litros: Se chamarão E.TorQ e serão produzidos no Brasil equipando os veículos Siena, Linea, Punto e o Bravo que serão comercializados na América do Sul.

    A denominação E.TorQ ressalta uma das qualidades do propulsor: o seu alto torque já disponível em baixas rotações. Contudo, a Fiat ainda não revelou quais as novas motorizações e suas respectivas informações técnicas. As especulações é de que teremos os motores de 1.6L 16V com uma potencia de 115 cv a gasolina e 117com o álcool e o 1.8L 16V de 130 cavalos de potencia andando a gasolina e de 132 cavalos no álcool.

    Os novos motores Fiat E.TorQ substituirão o 1.8L 8V fornecido pela GM através de uma parceria com a Fiat. Sua produção já foi inciada na unidade da Tritec localizada na cidade de Campo Largo-PR. Além de seu maior torque, outras qualidades do novos motores será sua economia de combustível e a redução da emissão de poluentes.

    Fonte: ArgentinaAutoBlog


  • Capitol Report for April 16, 2010

    Capitol Buzz…

    The deed is done.

    On Wednesday, the Governor signed into law SB 1946 (Public Act 96-0889), the most draconian pension revision bill in the country. While the bill’s passage was applauded by the Governor and the members of the General Assembly as an historic reform, the reality is that the bill will have a detrimental impact on education for years to come.

    Most significantly, the bill eliminated the 3 percent annually-compounded cost-of-living rate increase and replaces it with a simple interest raise of half of the consumer price index or 3 percent, whichever is lower.  What public employees should find troubling about this is that a similar bill, which applies to General Assembly members and judges, kept the 3 percent compounded cost of living increase. The bill has an effective date of Jan. 1 and will apply to anyone hired after that date.  So much for parity.

    Other key provisions in the bill cap pensionable salary at $106,800 and raise the retirement age for full benefits to 67 with 10 years of service. How would you like to be a recruiter trying to sell that package to an education major graduate?

    For some, that doesn’t seem like quite enough to stifle jobs and economic development. Some are calling for changes that would impact current members. We have already begun an analysis of a proposal and have found substantial support for our belief that any proposal that would seek to diminish the benefits of current members would face a stiff constitutional challenge.

    Pension trailer bill

    After rushing pension changes for our future members through the legislature, lawmakers are now deliberating whether or not to make “technical” changes to SB 1946, the legislation just signed by the Governor on WednesdayA fact sheet of the law can be found here. IEA is aware of many of the discussions going on within the legislature around the trailer bill and is under the belief that HB 6368 (Cullerton-D, Chicago) will be the bill that carries these “technical” changes.  The term “technical” means that currently, there does not seem to be a will to change any of the major benefit reductions recently legislated but that there is an understanding by those that supported these pension cuts that they passed flawed legislation that needs to be modified for it to be implemented.

    SOS Rally Day

    SOS Rally Day is April 21.  IEA has partnered with several other organizations and rally day is proving to be a fairly large event. We’re encouraging everyone to wear pink to the rally in support of those who have been RIF’d.  Click here for a list of things to keep in mind as you’re planning your trip:

    The tentative schedule of events for the day, which is subject to change:

    9 to 11 a.m.                Buses arrive at IEA HQ-visit legislators (time permitting)
    11 to 11:30 a.m.            Walk to rally staging point at 2nd and Capitol
    11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.    SOS rally speakers at 2nd and Capitol
    12:15 p.m.                  Beginning of march
    1 p.m.                      Visit legislators (time permitting)

    (Lunch will be available at noon and served throughout the day. Members may eat at their leisure.)

    Access to the Capitol will be limited at some point during the day due to the large number of people attending the SOS Rally Day.

    Vouchers

    SB 2494 (Meeks, D-Calumet City) creates the Illinois School Choice Program. The proposal would allow parents to obtain public vouchers to cover the cost of private schooling. Under SB 2494, a pilot program will be created in Chicago that would allow children from the worst-performing schools to use the vouchers.

    The bill has been assigned to the House Executive Committee and will be heard on Thursday. We will testify in opposition to the bill citing several national studies that have evaluated similar voucher programs. The findings of those studies conclude that 1) there was no statistical difference in test scores in general between students who were offered the voucher and those who were not; 2) while the program had an overall positive impact on parents, the students did not report a positive impact on satisfaction or safety; and 3) even after being in the program for two years, the results were still the same.

    Four-day school week

    HB 4886 (Black, R-Danville) allows a school district, by resolution of its board, to operate on a four-day school week plan approved by the Illinois State Board of Education. The plan provides that the district must ensure a minimum of 880 hours of student contact in addition to required institute days (instead of requiring a minimum term of 185 days). This bill is in response to a superintendent from Jamaica, Ill., a rural school district that is interested in curbing the of rising transportation and fuel costs while servicing large geographic districts. This bill is scheduled to be heard in the Senate Education Committee this week. The IEA opposes this bill.

    Illinois State Board of Education Blue Ribbon Committee on Mandates

    The Blue Ribbon Committee on Mandates was established through HJR 74 with the charge to make recommendations to the General Assembly on unnecessary and costly mandates in the School Code and the Administrative Code. The committee convened for the first time this Tuesday and Daryl Morrison, Education Policy and Agency Relations Director attended the meeting as the IEA’s representative on the committee.  The state board received 104 emails with more than 500 suggestions for changes to the law or regulations that impose mandates for school districts. The committee started to review the tabulations and posted the “Elimination of Mandates: Summary of Suggestions” report on its website.  Below are excerpts from the document:

    • Health/life safety issues: 122 suggestions, of which 66 addressed laws regarding environmental issues and 43 addressed the requirements to have automated external defibrillators at indoor and outdoor athletic facilities.
    • Curriculum: 80 suggestions, with 30 citing the requirement that physical education classes be provided daily. The remaining suggestions addressed instructional mandates generally or made specific references to units of instruction required under laws enacted in the last 10 years.
    • Transportation: 59 suggestions, most of which addressed the requirement to have a two-way radio system in each bus (22) and for the use of biofuels (19).
    • Employee issues: 49 suggestions. Twelve addressed requirements for staff training (in-service sessions, teacher institutes), while 10 cited teacher and principal mentoring programs and six pertained to criminal background checks.
    • Special education: 48 suggestions. Among these suggestions, 17 were general comments, and 27 addressed the administrative rules regarding the proportion of special education students in a general education classroom (14) and response to intervention requirements (13).
    • Driver education: 33 suggestions with all but two citing the requirements for the provision of behind-the-wheel instruction, which as of January 1, 2008, cannot be provided by methods other than on-the-road practice driving.

    The committee did not have time to go through all of the suggested categories. The next Blue Ribbon Committee on Mandates will be held on April 27.  For more information regarding the Blue Ribbon Committee on Mandates, please visit the Illinois State Board of Education website.

    What’s Next?

    The General Assembly will be in session from Tuesday, April 20-Friday, April 23 of next week.  The committee deadline for substantive bills to pass out of committee is Friday, April 23 in both the House and the Senate.

  • 140 groups & scientists urge Senate to oppose GM clause in Global Food Security Act

    See below for the press release for the Global Food Security Act, of which CAGJ signed onto!

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – 13 April 2010
    CONTACTS:
    Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD, Pesticide Action Network North America, 415-981-6205, ext.325; [email protected]
     
    Annie Shattuck, Food First/Institute for Food & Development Policy, 510-654-4400, ext.223; [email protected]

    Kathy Ozer, National Family Farm Coalition, 202-543-5675, [email protected]

    Mariam Mayet, African Center for Biosafety, cell +27 83 269 4309; land +27 11 646 0699, [email protected]
     
    100+ Groups Join Scientists and Development Experts in Urging Senate to “Strip the GM Mandate” from the Global Food Security Act

    Controversial language said more likely to feed biotech corporations than the world’s poor

    SAN FRANCISCO and JOHANNESBURG — Experts, scientists and advocates from around the world petitioned the U.S. Senate today in a concerted attempt to strip what they term a “stealth corporate giveaway” embedded in a foreign aid bill which is expected to hit the Senate floor soon. The “Global Food Security Act” (S.384), sponsored by Senators Casey (D-PA) and Lugar (R-IN), is intended to reform aid programs to focus on longer-term agricultural development, and restructure aid agencies to better respond to crises. While lauding the bill’s intentions, the petitioners object to a clause effectively earmarking one agricultural technology (genetically modified – GM crops) for potentially billions of dollars in federal funding. $7.7 billion in U.S. funds are associated with the bill and no other farming methods or technologies are mentioned.

    Monsanto has lobbied more than any other interest in support of this bill. The company is one of two or three dominant corporations in the increasingly concentrated biotechnology industry likely to benefit from the new research funding stream as well as from future profits from their patented products (both seeds and pesticides).

    Today, scientists, development experts spanning a dozen countries, and 100+ groups representing anti-hunger, family farm, farmworker, consumer and sustainable agriculture delivered a letter urging the Senate to reject the “Global Food Security Act” until the bill is made technology-neutral. Their specific concern: language in the bill that would amend the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 to read “Agricultural research carried out under this Act shall . . . include research on biotechnological advances appropriate to local ecological conditions, including gm technology.”

    “The bill’s focus on genetically modified technology simply makes no sense,” stated Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, Senior Scientist at Pesticide Action Network. “Independent science tells us that genetically modified (GM) crops have neither increased yield nor reduced hunger in the world. The most credible and comprehensive assessments of agriculture to date say that if we want to end global poverty and hunger, we’ll need to focus on increasing the biodiversity and ecological resilience of small-scale farming systems.”

    “Here in Africa, pressure to import GM crops is wreaking havoc on our local economies,” explained Mariam Mayet of the African Center for Biosafety. “In South Africa, we are now dumping GM corn into other countries, disrupting local markets and undermining the livelihoods of family farmers there.  As a result, Zimbabwe has imposed a ban on GM corn imports, and Kenya—which has a bumper crop of GM-free corn and doesn’t need any imports—is now grappling with a massive, illegal and unwanted shipment of 280,000 metric tons of GM corn from South Africa. A handful of powerful agribusinesses’ obsession with GM is pitting African countries against each other, with Monsanto and international grain traders reaping the benefits and ordinary farmers losing out. The last thing we need from the U.S. is a bill legislating yet more money for GM crops.”

    Concerned groups and individuals note that if Congress singles out one technology and attaches it to a pool of foreign aid money, the pressure on developing countries to ignore other priorities and scientifically valid options—and to open their markets to that one technology—will be substantial.

    “At the end of the day, the GM mandate has more to do with breaking open markets for American biotech corporations than fighting hunger,” explained Annie Shattuck of the Institute for Food and Development Policy. “To get at the root of the global hunger crisis, we need to tackle poverty, something no technological silver bullet can ever do.”

    Ben Burkett, National Family Farm Coalition president and Mississippi family farmer, added, “Corporate control over inputs and the free trade agenda have destroyed the livelihoods of so many farmers at home and abroad. That’s why farmers worldwide are calling for food sovereignty—the right to choose fair and sustainable farming practices that protect our local food and livelihood security. This is what works best for our farms and communities.”

    The letter delivered to senators today calls for agricultural research funding to be focused on addressing local challenges faced by small-scale farmers, instead of mandating a specific and narrow technological fix—particularly one with little prospect of success and increasingly rejected by countries around the world.

    The bill was passed through the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on March 31, 2009 and the Senate is expected to vote on it soon.

    RESOURCES:
    Letter to Senators from 140 organizations, independent scientists and development experts delivered April 13, 2010.

  • The new Doctor Who | Bad Astronomy

    doctorwhologoI just watched the series opener for the fifth season of Doctor Who, with the new guy, Matt Smith. No spoiler warnings needed here, because I won’t give away anything. I’ll just say…

    That.

    Freaking.

    Rocked.


    I wasn’t sure if Smith could fill David Tennant’s shoes, but now I think he can. Whatever it takes to play The Doctor, whatever intangible quality an actor needs, Smith has it. This looks like it’ll be a very, very good series, especially with Steven Moffat at the helm. Oh yes.

    And near the end, there is an excellent moment (one I knew was coming but still got to me) that hands the series over to Smith. Mr. Moffat, my hat’s off to you. Well done, sir.

    So, when you get a chance, watch it. BBC America premiers it tomorrow, Saturday April 17.

    In the meantime, this mathematical analysis of the ages of the actors playing The Doctor may amuse you.

    Tip o’ the Sonic Screwdriver to Derek Colanduno for the regression link! And my thanks to Devin Johnson, BBC Senior Publicity Manager, for sending me the DVD screener.


  • The Most Spectacular Sun View to Date [Space]

    Look, Hell exists, and it’s beautiful. Here’s the Sun showing its largest eruption in 15 years, according to NASA. 126 Earths fit into that plasma 500,000-mile-long tongue. Here’s the video: More »