Friday, February 29, 2008

Man in Critical Condition in Ricin Case

A man who stayed in a Las Vegas hotel room where ricin was discovered on Thursday has been hospitalized in critical condition since Feb. 14 with symptoms consistent with exposure to the deadly toxin, Las Vegas police said Friday.

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The man’s identity, age and hometown were being withheld on Friday as investigators tried to determine why ricin, as well as castor beans from which is it derived, were found in a room at an Extended Stay America hotel one mile west of the Las Vegas Strip.

Deputy Chief Kathleen Suey said the man had been staying in the room where the ricin was found for an unknown length of time and was leasing the room when the substance was discovered. A man, said to be a relative or friend of the sick man, had gone into the room to retrieve the patient’s belongings when he found the vials of white powder and showed it to the hotel’s manager, Deputy Chief Suey said.

Police were called by the hotel. The man had been hospitalized on Feb. 14 with respiratory distress but did not indicate to doctors that he may have been exposed to ricin, so the health district and police were not notified of the prospect, she said.

An evacuation ensued and seven people were taken to local hospitals for treatment, though they were released when they showed no signs of exposure, Deputy Chief Suey said. The hotel was reopened early Friday after public health officials determined they had found and removed all the ricin.

The patient has not yet been questioned and is believed to be unconscious, she said.

F.B.I. national spokesman Richard Kolko said the incident did not appear to be related to terrorism “based on the information gathered so far.”

Still, Deputy Chief Suey said police could not explain why the ricin was present or what its intent might have been.

Strip resort executives were watching the developments carefully. A weekly scheduled conference call between police and heads of casino security was coincidentally held on Friday morning and included a statement from officials that the ricin incident was “very contained and isolated,” said Harrah’s Entertainment spokesman Gary Thompson, whose company owns the Rio All-Suites Casino-Resort and Caesars Palace. Both are within a mile of the Extended Stay America hotel involved.

Laboratory tests conducted on Friday confirmed Thursday’s initial tests that found the substance was ricin, a deadly poison derived from beans of the common weed castor.

“Ricin has no medical uses other than cancer research,” said Captain Joseph Lombardo, head of the Homeland Security unit for Las Vegas police. “An individual citizen, other than being involved in cancer research or cancer prevention, would not have any legal means or proper means of having that.”

Dr. Nicholas J. Vogelzang, director of the Nevada Cancer Institute, said none of his researchers use the substance and nobody involved with the institute has stayed at the hotel in recent months, if ever.

“We’re not doing anything here with it,” Dr. Vogelzang said. “It’s not a currently active treatment,” he said, explaining that most cancer researchers have abandoned experimenting with ricin because it is so dangerous to people.

That the incident occurred off the Strip was a slight relief for resort owners.

“Yeah, I suppose you could say that, but I think it’s a shame that it happened at all,” Mr. Thompson said. “It’s alarming that this material is out there and somebody is ill.”

Ricin can be extremely lethal. As little as 500 micrograms, or about the size of the head of a pin, can kill a human, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site.

This is the second major public health scare in Las Vegas this week. On Wednesday, the Southern Nevada Health District sent out as many as 40,000 letters to people who may have been exposed to hepatitis C at a local clinic after it was discovered the clinic was reusing dirty syringes as standard procedure since May 2004.

The scale of the potential problem prompted the nation’s largest public notification on the matter in U.S. history.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/29/us/31cnd-ricin.html?_r=1&ref=health&oref=slogin

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Google transforms JotSpot into Web-site-building tool

Google Sites' ease-of-use, tight integration with Google services strengthens company's position in Web-app race

Google Sites infoworldGoogle today unveiled a powerful new weapon in its arsenal of lightweight Web-based productivity applications: a tool for easily and collaboratively creating and editing Web sites. Dubbed Google Sites, it's built around JotSpot, the wiki platform that Google acquired in October of 2006 -- and whose previously unclear fate has been cause for quite a bit of hand-wringing.

The search behemoth appears to have a broad range of applications in mind for the freely available tool, from building a private company intranet, accessible and customizable by users on a permissions basis, to developing a public-facing Web site for all the world to see.

Google has aimed to make the Google Sites easy enough for a beginner yet feature-rich enough for a power user. For example, building a Google Site requires no HTML, according to the company: It's "as easy as editing a document," the company says. There's also a "growing list" of page templates to get users started, including "Web page, announcements, file cabinet, dashboard, and list," according to Google.

At the same time, Google Sites lets page creators easily insert content such as videos, docs, spreadsheets, presentations, photo slide shows, and calendars -- thanks in part to its integration with other Google apps and offering.

Ah yes, Google's collection of shining Web gems: Google Docs, Google Calendar, YouTube, and Picasa. By integrating Google Sites with those aforementioned services, Google boosts the value of the entire array significantly. "This is a key last hole in the Google Apps suite," Matt Glotzbach, product management director for Google Enterprise, told CNET. "It is the nucleus for other pieces to fit into for online collaboration."

Moreover, the unveiling of Google Sites further fortifies Google's enviable position in the increasingly important Web services space -- a point that Microsoft clearly can't ignore. (I say that as someone who buys into the theory that Redmond's bid for Yahoo had a lot to do with having an eye on extending its own Web-app reach.)

http://weblog.infoworld.com/techwatch/archives/016122.html

Pete Seeger: "I Feel Optimistic"

The 88-year-old spiritual godfather of American folk music discusses Dylan, Springsteen, Bush and Obama

This week PBS will debut Pete Seeger: The Power of Song (watch a clip below), which traces the eighty-eight year-old folk legend's life from his time with the Weavers through the Joe McCarthy witch hunts to his days as elder statesmen of the folk community. It's loaded with archival footage of Seeger singing such classics as "Turn, Turn, Turn" and "If I Had A Hammer" and interviews with fans such as Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and Natalie Maines from the Dixie Chicks. Seeger called into Rolling Stone recently to chat about the documentary, his memories of Bob Dylan and Lead Belly — as well his thoughts on the presidential election.

What do you think of the new documentary? Well, it's too much a eulogy if you ask me. It didn't tell all the stupid things I've done. I've done hundreds of stupid things.

Tell me one. Not realizing that I had an extraordinarily talented wife, and there were things that she wanted to do sometimes. But she put them aside to help me do the things that I wanted to do. She was an artist and projects that she undertook ended up having to put aside because my projects took precedent.

The film also has the nice things that I've done. I've had some good songs if I say so myself. The best songwriting I did was to think of three new words for an old gospel song, "We Are Climbing Jacob's Ladder." The old song used to end "Soldiers of the cross," and I wanted to sing it for all sorts of people, whether they were Christians or Jews or Atheists or what. And now I simply sing 'Brothers, sisters, all,' and then after a couple of verses, I say, 'Sisters, brothers, all.' It sings well, and they have a nice shot in the movie of the whole crowd joining in with me on it.

Were you opposed to the idea of a documentary when they first approached you?

Well, it's created problems that I never foresaw. I usually joke that I was protected all my life by my left wing reputation. Now, the telephone rings every five minutes and the mail comes in by a half bushel a day. "Mr. Seeger, will you please sign autographs for these pictures? Will you come to our school and speak to the children? Will you accept this award?" Just answering the mail takes up most of the free time I used to have.

http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/18911374/pete_seeger_i_feel_optimistic

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Airline: Pilot Fired for Buzzing Airport

A Cathay Pacific Airways pilot was fired after he swooped down and buzzed a Seattle-area airfield without permission while taking delivery of a Boeing 777-300ER passenger jet, the airline said Wednesday.

The Hong Kong carrier — which would not identify the pilot — said it was still investigating the Jan. 30 fly-by event at Paine Field, 30 miles north of downtown Seattle and home to a Boeing plant.

Cathay spokeswoman Carolyn Leung said the pilot was dismissed last week because he did not seek or obtain approval for the fly-by, which has been done several times before at air shows with the airline's permission.

An airline statement said another pilot on the plane has been subject to disciplinary proceedings, but Leung would not elaborate on the case or other details.

Hong Kong's South China Morning Post reported Sunday that the airline's chairman, Christopher Pratt, was on the plane when the pilot swooped back over the Boeing plant shortly after taking off.

Images of the stunt were posted on YouTube and the Web site of a Seattle-area plane spotter, Matt Cawby.

The 777-300ER is 242 feet long, weighs about 350 tons and is listed at $264 million.

A Federal Aviation Administration spokesman, Mike Fergus, told The Seattle Times the flyby was under investigation.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jWkJ315JoCDLGmGvwVfXikeO8WugD8V2NQO80

Nokia opens satellite design studio in Rio de Janeiro

Move reflects growing influence of Latin American design and culture on global design trends

Nokia has opened a satellite design studio in Rio de Janeiro reflecting the increasing impact Latin American style and culture is expected to have on the future design of mobile devices and services. Based at the Design School of UniverCidade, it will bring together Nokia designers, students and established local designers to explore new trends and ideas that will influence products for the Latin American and global markets.

The satellite studio is the second in a series Nokia is establishing in the world's hottest new design capitals. The first was opened in Bangalore, India, last year. Set up in partnership with leading design schools in each country, the fixed term studios bring Nokia designers directly into contact with local cultures and influences that will help inspire new design ideas and provide local students with hands on experience of working with a world class global design team.

Alastair Curtis, Nokia's Chief Designer, said, "Brazil is an incredibly vibrant and diverse place and one that is constantly transforming and developing itself in new ways. This makes it a perfect place to inspire designers. It also has a wealth of emerging new design talent that will play a key role in shaping many of the global design trends we will see in the next few years. Combining the experience of our global design team with the local creativity and perspective of the students is a very exciting and creative way to explore new ideas in this important market for Nokia."

Over the next two years, the Rio satellite studio will be involved in a range of research projects exploring new cultural, social and design influences across Brazil. Nokia designers from around the world will visit the studio to take part in the research and work directly with the students.

One of the first projects will be to study graphical design trends in Rio, looking at a range of influences from street art and graffitti through to more formal billboard advertising and promotion. Insights from this work may influence visual elements in mobile devices such as wallpapers or screen savers, or areas like packaging and marketing.

The designers will also look beyond the city to consider how mobile devices or services could be designed to meet the needs of more rural communities in Brazil and other countries around the world.

João Lutz, Design Manager of UniverCidade, said "This is an incredible opportunity for design students to work alongside one of the world's leading design teams and gain valuable new experiences and insight. We welcome this investment by Nokia in the design talent of the future and look forwarding to participating in some really creative and stimulating projects."

In addition to the the development of the new satellite studio, Nokia's design team has been working on a number of projects exploring Latin American culture and trends. In 2003 Nokia extended its student program to Latin America and has worked with design schools in Argentina, Brazil and Chile.

Nokia has more than 300 designers in its global team representing 34 different nationalities. This team includes a range of specialists including industrial designers, psychologists, researchers, colors and material designers, graphics experts, anthropologists, and user interface specialists. They are based in many different locations around the world including studios at Nokia's corporate headquarters at Espoo in Finland, London, Beijing, Copenhagen, Calabassas in Los Angeles, and Dallas.

About Nokia

Nokia is the world leader in mobility, driving the transformation and growth of the converging Internet and communications industries. Nokia makes a wide range of mobile devices and provides people with experiences in music, navigation, video, television, imaging, games and business mobility through these devices. Nokia also provides equipment, solutions and services for communications networks.

http://www.newsdesk.se/view/pressrelease/nokia-opens-satellite-design-studio-in-rio-de-janeiro-198516

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Ohio Debate Between Clinton and Obama

The Ohio Debate, organized by MSNBC, is on between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Below is an information summary about the Ohio Debate provided by Daily Kos.

First in the Ohio Debate Hillary denies the recent Obama photo came from her camp and Obama graciously accepts that response and is moving on to the differences in his health care plan versus hers -- and defending the health care mailer that she complained about last week.

The moderators are starting out the Ohio Debate wanting a fight, which is what you get with an MSNBC debate. In this case it's slightly more warranted than in prior debates, given that things have been somewhat more heated lately. It's still telling about the quality of moderation you get on this channel.

So far the candidates are going over the exact same health plan ground covered in the last debate, but framed around the issue of campaign tactics and negative campaigning.

Clinton and Obama ended up getting into what they got into last week - trading the exact same points about their healthcare plans. Obama says mandates are bad and Clinton doesn't cover everyone anyway, Clinton says Obama does have a mandate, Obama says "wait, let me answer that..." and the debate does not move on.

It's an important issue, but we've gotten to the point where there's no value being added in the discussion. I can't tell if it's the moderation or something about the candidates, but to this point Clinton has had to talk over the moderators a couple times to keep the healthcare debate going where Obama has not.

Clinton clearly thinks there's a moderation issue, asking specifically why she always gets the first question and referring to the SNL sketch and suggesting that maybe the moderators should ask Obama if he wants another pillow.

http://www.huliq.com/51809/msnbc-ohio-debate-between-clinton-and-obama

Global crunch 'will leave Brazil unaffected'

The effects of the global credit crunch will not impact on the economy in Brazil, according to one commentator.

Regis Abreu, an asset manager at Rio de Janeiro's Mercatto Gestao de Recursos, told Bloomberg that the country will continue to see "robust earnings growth" despite the slowdown that has been prompted by the implosion of the US's sub-prime mortgage market.

The credit crunch has also impacted on the UK's market, causing Northern Rock to run into financial difficulties and require an investment from the Bank of England to remain afloat. The bank has now been privatised by the government.

Mr Abreu's comments come as Brazil's stock market enjoyed its fourth consecutive day of growth. The share prices of a number of real estate developers - such as Gafisa SA - also rose, the news agency reports.

The news follows falling interest rates and low inflation in Brazil - two factors that could also benefit the Brazilian property market - have also been credited for the turnaround in the Brazil's furniture industry, reports the IHB website.

http://www.propertyshowrooms.com/brazil/property/news/global-crunch-will-leave-brazil-unaffected_1728.html

Monday, February 25, 2008

Tina Fey and "Bitch is the New Black" on Saturday Night Live

Talk about using your celebrity for political purposes.

We have Oprah at one end of the spectrum and now Tina Fey jumps on the teeter-totter of pop culture political endorsement to balance things out. Her appearance on Saturday Night Live was capped by the women's news segment and the brilliant 'Bitches' commentary, a small portion which is excerpted below:

FEY: ...[P]eople say that Hillary is a bitch. Let me say something about that: Yeah, she is. And so am I and so is this one. (pointing to Amy Poehler)

POEHLER: Yeah, deal with it.

FEY: Know what? Bitches get stuff done.

http://womensissues.about.com/b/2008/02/25/tina-fey-and-bitch-is-the-new-black-on-saturday-night-live.htm

Tuned In Journal: Reality show contestant dies

Nathan Clutter, a contestant on "Paradise Hotel 2," jumped to his death from a cell phone tower after filming the new reality series.

My Network TV's "Paradise Hotel 2" (9 tonight WPMY, 1 a.m. Fox Reality Channel) may seem on the surface like just another guilty pleasure reality show about young, attractive singles who "hook up," as the kids say, in a ritzy hotel. But scratch the surface and it's revealed to be perhaps the first reality show to feature a now-deceased contestant.

Nathan Clutter, depicted on the show and described on the show's Web site as "the gentleman" of the group, killed himself by jumping from a cell phone tower just a few weeks after filming of "Paradise Hotel 2" wrapped in the fall.

This all brings up the concerns that have long existed about reality shows: Are the people who appear on them mentally stable enough? A publicist for "Paradise Hotel 2" said that before joining the cast of a production, each prospective candidate participates in an extensive and thorough physical and psychological screening process administered by licensed professionals. She said contestants also go through an exit interview and evaluation with a licensed psychologist after leaving the show and are provided with contact details for resources should they need to speak with someone once they are home.

But you have to wonder about just how good those services are if no professional picked up on Clutter's depression even though his family thought he suffered from undiagnosed bi-polar/manic depressive behavior. Maybe he was just that good at hiding it or maybe warning signs were missed or ignored. It's entirely possible that his appearance on the reality show had nothing to do with his suicide, but it does show the dangers -- to the production, to perceptions of a program and to cast members -- of using real people for TV entertainment.

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08042/854029-237.stm#

Landmark TV performances illuminate 'Raisin in the Sun'

There are dreams that never die, suns that never set, and stars that never cease to shine.

While a strike-shaken TV industry wonders what it may become, A Raisin in the Sun arrives as glorious proof of what it still can be. Reuniting the stars of the 2004 Broadway revival, this thrilling three-hour ABC movie expands and energizes Lorraine Hansberry's classic play without losing any of its power or poetry, allowing a new generation to discover a great work of American art.

As on Broadway, the audience draw here is Sean Combs, making an impressive dramatic stretch in the role originated by Sidney Poitier. But as befits a play set within an inner-city matriarchy, the heavy lifting is done by three remarkable women: Sanaa Lathan, Audra McDonald and Phylicia Rashad, who became the first African-American ever to win the Tony for best actress in a play.

Line up more awards. As widowed family-head Lena Younger, Rashad gives not just the best performance of the season so far, but one that ranks with the best of all time. Rashad's Lena is both singular and universal, completely specific and yet able to encompass every strong woman who has ever fought to hold her family together against seemingly insurmountable odds.

Skillfully adapted by Paris Qualles and sensitively directed by Kenny Leon, Raisin is set in motion by Lena's $10,000 insurance check. Her son Walter Lee (Combs) wants the money for a business deal, while her daughter (Lathan) wants it for tuition. But Walter's wife, Ruth (McDonald, a warm, shining wonder in the role created by Ruby Dee), wants to buy a home, and Lena agrees. The house she buys, though, is in an all-white suburb, which earns the family a politely threatening visit from a representative of the neighborhood association (John Stamos).

Though the play's structure may seem dated, the message is not, and it goes far beyond a call for tolerance or integration. The real and still-current battle that drives Raisin is the fight between Lena's desire for safe and secure domesticity and Walter's yearning for wealth and independence, a clash of American dreams. The tragedy is not that Walter's dream is misplaced, but that discrimination has left him ill-equipped to pursue it.

As terrific as the three women are, the movie would not have been made without Combs and would not work as well without him. He's still learning as an actor; he has a tendency to go dead in quiet moments. But his charisma and a sense of barely contained anger make the play feel even more current and may allow it to speak more clearly to young audiences.

And this is a movie that deserves to be seen and heard. Shimmering like a light in the darkness, A Raisin in the Sun is a moving reminder of the roads we've traveled and a rallying call for the journey ahead.

That's reason to be proud all around.

http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/reviews/2008-02-24-raisin-_N.htm?csp=34

Police: There's no gunman at Stony Brook University

Campus police at Stony Brook University on eastern Long Island have searched the campus and have given the "all clear" after investigating a report of a man with a handgun on campus. There were no reports of shots being fired.

An alert on the university Web site said Suffolk County Police had conducted an extensive search of the Stony Brook University campus and determined that there is no threat.

Police issued an "all-clear" at 4 p.m. to continue normal classes and activities.

About an hour earlier, the university Web site had reported that a young male "fled the Student Activity Center Cafeteria and later displayed what was reported as a handgun."

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2008/02/25/2008-02-25_police_theres_no_gunman_at_stony_brook_u.html

Sunday, February 24, 2008

First flight for coconut-powered plane

The first commercial airliner to fly using biofuel took off yesterday in what was hailed as a breakthrough in the search for alternatives to oil.

The Virgin Atlantic Jumbo jet flew from Heathrow to Amsterdam with one of its engines partly powered by a mixture of coconut oil and oil from babassu trees found in Brazilian rainforests.

Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson said the flight proved the possibility of an alternative to fossil fuel and could lead to a cut in CO2 emissions.

Environmentalists dismissed the launch as a gimmick which would do little to halt climate change. They say biofuels push up food prices and hasten deforestation.

Sir Richard said: 'This pioneering flight will enable those of us who are serious about reducing our carbon emissions to develop the fuels of the future which will power our aircraft through sustained oils, such as algae.'

He admitted coconut oil was 'not the answer' but the project would act as a catalyst to develop plant fuels which could eventually replace the kerosene used today.

Boeing, which worked with Virgin on the project, said all 15,000 of its planes could run on biofuels.

However, Greenpeace dismissed the flight as a publicity stunt and said a cap on the number of flights was the only way to cut emissions.

But will it really take off?

As oil supplies dwindle and consumption grows, the pressure is on to find a viable alternative.

The fuel which helped power the Boeing 747 came from coconut plantations in the Philippines and wild babassu trees in Brazil.

Typically, one acre of coconuts or babassu trees produces about 250 gallons of oil a year.

With the air industry using 5million barrels of oil every day, an area of land more than twice the size of France would need to be given over to coconut plantations to provide enough fuel.

http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=103576&in_page_id=34

Oscar Ballot Counters Hide Away to Tally Winners

Every year, the week of the Oscars, Brad Oltmanns and Rick Rosas, partners at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and about 12 counters go to an undisclosed location in Southern California and hand count all 6,000 ballots. It takes the team about three days to determine the Academy Award winners.

Michele Norris talks with Oltmanns and Rosas before they go into hiding.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=19174561

The three trillion dollar war

The cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts have grown to staggering proportions

The Bush Administration was wrong about the benefits of the war and it was wrong about the costs of the war. The president and his advisers expected a quick, inexpensive conflict. Instead, we have a war that is costing more than anyone could have imagined.

The cost of direct US military operations - not even including long-term costs such as taking care of wounded veterans - already exceeds the cost of the 12-year war in Vietnam and is more than double the cost of the Korean War.

And, even in the best case scenario, these costs are projected to be almost ten times the cost of the first Gulf War, almost a third more than the cost of the Vietnam War, and twice that of the First World War. The only war in our history which cost more was the Second World War, when 16.3 million U.S. troops fought in a campaign lasting four years, at a total cost (in 2007 dollars, after adjusting for inflation) of about $5 trillion (that's $5 million million, or £2.5 million million). With virtually the entire armed forces committed to fighting the Germans and Japanese, the cost per troop (in today's dollars) was less than $100,000 in 2007 dollars. By contrast, the Iraq war is costing upward of $400,000 per troop.

Most Americans have yet to feel these costs. The price in blood has been paid by our voluntary military and by hired contractors. The price in treasure has, in a sense, been financed entirely by borrowing. Taxes have not been raised to pay for it - in fact, taxes on the rich have actually fallen. Deficit spending gives the illusion that the laws of economics can be repealed, that we can have both guns and butter. But of course the laws are not repealed. The costs of the war are real even if they have been deferred, possibly to another generation.

On the eve of war, there were discussions of the likely costs. Larry Lindsey, President Bush's economic adviser and head of the National Economic Council, suggested that they might reach $200 billion. But this estimate was dismissed as “baloney” by the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld. His deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, suggested that postwar reconstruction could pay for itself through increased oil revenues. Mitch Daniels, the Office of Management and Budget director, and Secretary Rumsfeld estimated the costs in the range of $50 to $60 billion, a portion of which they believed would be financed by other countries. (Adjusting for inflation, in 2007 dollars, they were projecting costs of between $57 and $69 billion.) The tone of the entire administration was cavalier, as if the sums involved were minimal.

Even Lindsey, after noting that the war could cost $200 billion, went on to say: “The successful prosecution of the war would be good for the economy.” In retrospect, Lindsey grossly underestimated both the costs of the war itself and the costs to the economy. Assuming that Congress approves the rest of the $200 billion war supplemental requested for fiscal year 2008, as this book goes to press Congress will have appropriated a total of over $845 billion for military operations, reconstruction, embassy costs, enhanced security at US bases, and foreign aid programmes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

As the fifth year of the war draws to a close, operating costs (spending on the war itself, what you might call “running expenses”) for 2008 are projected to exceed $12.5 billion a month for Iraq alone, up from $4.4 billion in 2003, and with Afghanistan the total is $16 billion a month. Sixteen billion dollars is equal to the annual budget of the United Nations, or of all but 13 of the US states. Even so, it does not include the $500 billion we already spend per year on the regular expenses of the Defence Department. Nor does it include other hidden expenditures, such as intelligence gathering, or funds mixed in with the budgets of other departments.

Because there are so many costs that the Administration does not count, the total cost of the war is higher than the official number. For example, government officials frequently talk about the lives of our soldiers as priceless. But from a cost perspective, these “priceless” lives show up on the Pentagon ledger simply as $500,000 - the amount paid out to survivors in death benefits and life insurance. After the war began, these were increased from $12,240 to $100,000 (death benefit) and from $250,000 to $400,000 (life insurance). Even these increased amounts are a fraction of what the survivors might have received had these individuals lost their lives in a senseless automobile accident. In areas such as health and safety regulation, the US Government values a life of a young man at the peak of his future earnings capacity in excess of

$7 million - far greater than the amount that the military pays in death benefits. Using this figure, the cost of the nearly 4,000 American troops killed in Iraq adds up to some $28 billion.

The costs to society are obviously far larger than the numbers that show up on the government's budget. Another example of hidden costs is the understating of US military casualties. The Defence Department's casualty statistics focus on casualties that result from hostile (combat) action - as determined by the military. Yet if a soldier is injured or dies in a night-time vehicle accident, this is officially dubbed “non combat related” - even though it may be too unsafe for soldiers to travel during daytime.

In fact, the Pentagon keeps two sets of books. The first is the official casualty list posted on the DOD website. The second, hard-to-find, set of data is available only on a different website and can be obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. This data shows that the total number of soldiers who have been wounded, injured, or suffered from disease is double the number wounded in combat. Some will argue that a percentage of these non-combat injuries might have happened even if the soldiers were not in Iraq. Our new research shows that the majority of these injuries and illnesses can be tied directly to service in the war.

From the unhealthy brew of emergency funding, multiple sets of books, and chronic underestimates of the resources required to prosecute the war, we have attempted to identify how much we have been spending - and how much we will, in the end, likely have to spend. The figure we arrive at is more than $3 trillion. Our calculations are based on conservative assumptions. They are conceptually simple, even if occasionally technically complicated. A $3 trillion figure for the total cost strikes us as judicious, and probably errs on the low side. Needless to say, this number represents the cost only to the United States. It does not reflect the enormous cost to the rest of the world, or to Iraq.

From the beginning, the United Kingdom has played a pivotal role - strategic, military, and political - in the Iraq conflict. Militarily, the UK contributed 46,000 troops, 10 per cent of the total. Unsurprisingly, then, the British experience in Iraq has paralleled that of America: rising casualties, increasing operating costs, poor transparency over where the money is going, overstretched military resources, and scandals over the squalid conditions and inadequate medical care for some severely wounded veterans.

Before the war, Gordon Brown set aside £1 billion for war spending. As of late 2007, the UK had spent an estimated £7 billion in direct operating expenditures in Iraq and Afghanistan (76 per cent of it in Iraq). This includes money from a supplemental “special reserve”, plus additional spending from the Ministry of Defence.

The special reserve comes on top of the UK's regular defence budget. The British system is particularly opaque: funds from the special reserve are “drawn down” by the Ministry of Defence when required, without specific approval by Parliament. As a result, British citizens have little clarity about how much is actually being spent.

In addition, the social costs in the UK are similar to those in the US - families who leave jobs to care for wounded soldiers, and diminished quality of life for those thousands left with disabilities.

By the same token, there are macroeconomic costs to the UK as there have been to America, though the long-term costs may be less, for two reasons. First, Britain did not have the same policy of fiscal profligacy; and second, until 2005, the United Kingdom was a net oil exporter.

We have assumed that British forces in Iraq are reduced to 2,500 this year and remain at that level until 2010. We expect that British forces in Afghanistan will increase slightly, from 7,000 to 8,000 in 2008, and remain stable for three years. The House of Commons Defence Committee has recently found that despite the cut in troop levels, Iraq war costs will increase by 2 per cent this year and personnel costs will decrease by only 5 per cent. Meanwhile, the cost of military operations in Afghanistan is due to rise by 39 per cent. The estimates in our model may be significantly too low if these patterns continue.

Based on assumptions set out in our book, the budgetary cost to the UK of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through 2010 will total more than £18 billion. If we include the social costs, the total impact on the UK will exceed £20 billion.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article3419840.ece

Friday, February 22, 2008

Brazil becomes net creditor as debt crisis ends

Brazil's debt crisis is over and the country has emerged as a net foreign creditor for the first time, the Central Bank said.

The nation's foreign cash reserves in January exceeded the entire foreign debt of Brazil's government and individual companies combined by about US$4 billion (€2.7 billion), the bank said in a report released Thursday.

"It's the first time in the history of Brazil that we are not debtors," said Finance Minister Guido Mantega.

Brazil's new status as a creditor could improve its debt rating to investment grade, which would lower Brazil's borrowing costs for future loans, Mantega said.

Brazil, which defaulted on its debt in the 1980s and declared a moratorium on debt payments, is riding a boom in demand for key exports such as beef, iron ore and soy. International reserves nearly tripled from US$64 billion (€43.1 billion) in 2003 to US$188.2 billion (€127 billion) this week, the bank said.

Brazil's trade surplus came in at US$40 billion (€27 billion) last year. Coupled with rising foreign investment and fueled by Brazil's high domestic interest rates, net currency inflows reached a record US$87.5 billion (€59 billion) in 2007.

The Central Bank credited the improvement to an aggressive policy of debt reduction in recent years — something few economists expected when President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a former labor union leader and leftist firebrand, was first elected in 2002.

Silva fully repaid Brazil's debt with the Washington-based International Monetary Fund, for years the target of leftist protests that urged Brazil to boycott debt payments.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/02/22/business/LA-FIN-Brazil-Debt.php

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Belgrade US embassy protest is 'intolerable': State Dept

The US State Department on Thursday lodged a formal complaint with the Serbian government and called the situation "intolerable" after protesters torched the US embassy in Belgrade, a spokesman said.

The State Department's third highest ranking diplomat, Nicholas Burns, called Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica and Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic to protest the storming, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

He also called security provided by Serbian forces "completely inadequate for this task."

"The message was very clear: that the situation was intolerable; they needed to act immediately to provide the adequate security forces so that our embassy compound and our personnel were not under attack," he told reporters.

McCormack confirmed that a charred body had been found inside the building but said all Americans working for the embassy were safe and accounted for.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080221/pl_afp/serbiakosovopoliticsprotestusdiplomacy_080221232302

Belgrade protests downplayed by Europe analyst

Dramatic scenes in Belgrade on Thursday, in which demonstrators attacked the U.S. Embassy to protest Kosovo's declaration of independence, belie a situation that is worse than it appears, according to one analyst.

Jon Levy, analyst for Europe and Eurasia with the Eurasia Group, wrote to investors that there is "no change in the underlying political dynamic" surrounding Kosovo's declaration. "The government in Belgrade remains intact for the moment -- though as always it is unstable and could fall at some point."

Levy said that violence in Kosovo itself is also a risk, although Serbia isn't expected to militarily intervene in Kosovo, and "despite recent strong rebukes of the E.U., Serbia remains on track to join the E.U. at some point."

Large protests held Thursday in the Serbian capital were expected and announced well in advance, he commented. A report from Radio Free Europe said that 150,000 gathered at what was termed a "people's rally" to protest Kosovo's decision to declare its independence. Waving Serbian flags, they reportedly carried flags that said "Stop U.S. Terror."

Several hundred broke into the U.S. Embassy and set part of it ablaze as night fell in Belgrade, which had closed based on expectations of violence, RFE reported. It marks the second time in a week that the embassy has come under attack, after ultranationalists attacked a McDonald's and other Western interests in Belgrade.

The Associated Press reported that the small fires at the U.S. Embassy were quickly extinguished. CNN later reported that one body was found inside the embassy, apparently that of a protestor who got caught up in the blaze.

The United States has been a strong advocate of Kosovo's independence from Serbia and among the first to recognize the new state, the New York Times reported. The Croatian embassy was reportedly attacked as well, while Bosnian and Turkish embassies also were targeted. The United States, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and most other E.U. members announced that they would recognize Kosovo as an independent state; but Russia, China, Cyprus, Greece, Romania, and Spain, among other countries, reportedly have said that they would not.

In recent days, Western leaders have been increasingly alarmed by comments from Serbia's hard-line Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, who helped lead the revolution that overthrew Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. "As long as we live, Kosovo is Serbia," Kostunica told the crowd in Belgrade, according to the New York Times. "We're not alone in our fight. President Putin is with us."

Moscow has been increasingly popular among Serbians by blocking Kosovo's integration into the international community, but many in Serbia realize the Kremlin's interest is limited and driven by self-interest, according to intellectuals in Serbia.

Earlier in the week, analysts at Goldman Sachs commented in an email that countries refusing to recognize Kosovo's independence "will presumably come around eventually, though that process may take years or even decades.

"The most important -- and most difficult -- step will be for Serbia itself to recognise Kosovo; we believe it will do so only if and when recognition is the country's final obstacle in the way of E.U. accession -- and even then, domestic misgivings about the loss of the province could delay E.U. membership by many years."

Further, the Goldman Sachs analysts said, they would expect that in time the pragmatists sharing power in Belgrade with moderate nationalists would gain ground, "as nationalist passions over the loss of Yugoslav territories subside and as more historical evidence surfaces about the atrocities committed during the wars of the 1990s."

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/analyst-downplays-protests-belgrade/story.aspx?guid=%7B1B35D147-15C3-483F-BA74-F26F94578851%7D

Rioters set fire to US Belgrade embassy over Kosovo

Rioters opposed to Kosovo's independence stormed the US embassy in Belgrade before setting it on fire on Thursday, after a massive peaceful rally in the Serbian capital.

With no police in sight, several hundred young men dressed in hooded sports tops and scarfs threw flares and broke into the premises on the main boulevard of Kneza Milosa. The embassy was unstaffed at the time.

The ground floor and a side building were burning, with smoke billowing out as anti-riot police backed up by armoured vehicles fought the young men with tear gas.

"There are a number of Serbian citizens ... on a part of the embassy compound, in the consular area," US State Department spokesman spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters in Washington.

He urged Serbian authorities to take control of the situation.

Serbian President Boris Tadic, on an official visit to Romania, appealed for an immediate stop to the violence, private news agency Beta reported.

"To all those who are participating in the unrest, I want to ask them to pull back. It only harms the defence of our integrity and sovereignty and the defence of our Kosovo," it quoted Tadic as saying.

Down the road from the US embassy, a guard house was also set alight in front of the German embassy, while a car was alight outside of the Canadian diplomatic mission.

Several thousand people were in the area during the attack, which came after rioters looted shops in several downtown areas and damaged to the Bosnian, Croatian and Turkish embassies.

Police arrived on the scene around half an hour later, and the US embassy fire was brought under control about an hour after it began.

The attack came after more than 150,000 people staged a peaceful protest in front of the old Yugoslav parliament nearby, in a government-organised rally against the independence of Kosovo.

State television switched between images of police fighting the rioters and a simultaneous church service attended by nationalist Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica and leaders of the Serbian Orthodox Church at the nearby Temple of St Sava.

Following the violence, more than 30 people were admitted to an hospital emergency centre, half of them police and two journalists from France and the Netherlands, Beta said, quoting hospital spokesman Dusan Jovanovic

The unrest was the latest in a series of violent incidents following Sunday's unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia by Kosovo's ethnic Albanian-dominated parliament -- a move vehemently opposed by Belgrade.

Earlier, several hundred former Serbian army reservists stormed a crossing post on the border with Kosovo, and Italy joined other European powers in recognising the independence of the breakaway Serbian province.

Many Serbs consider Kosovo, which has dozens of Serbian churches and monasteris, the cradle of their history, culture and religion.

In the peaceful protest, crowds chanted "Kosovo is the heart of Serbia" after they converged on the capital in convoys of trains, buses and cars from all over the Balkan country.

"We must show that we are all against this fake independence. Taking Kosovo away from Serbia is like taking away your leg, arm or even child," said Vesna Vujacic, a 54-year-old teacher.

So far, 23 of the 27 EU member states have backed Kosovo's independence, either formally recognising it or declaring their intention to do so. Cyprus, Romania and Spain have explicitly refused to do either.

The latest countries to give their nod to Kosovo on Thursday were Italy, Denmark, Estonia, Luxembourg and Slovenia, which declared its own independence from the former communist Yugoslavia in 1991.

Addressing the huge crowd, PM Kostunica promised Serbia would never accept Kosovo's independence in an emotive speech.

"Kosovo is Serbia's first name. Kosovo belongs to Serbia. Kosovo belongs to Serbian people. It has been like this forever and it will be like this forever," said Kostunica.

The rally was also addressed by Tomislav Nikolic of the ultra-nationalist Radical Party.

"Hitler could not take (Kosovo) away, nor will these ones today be able to," said Nikolic, referring to the Western powers supporting Kosovo.

"You, from the United States and the European Union, you caused huge sadness in our hearts," said Nikolic, speaking on behalf of the parliament where his party is the single strongest force.

"We tell you, we were sad for two days, on the third day Serbs burnt checkpoints, on the fourth day we gathered at the biggest rally Serbia has ever seen."

Kosovo came under UN control in mid-1999, when NATO bombing drove out forces loyal to Serbia's late autocratic president Slobodan Milosevic waging a crackdown on its separatist Albanian guerrillas and their civilian supporters.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hcIngq7viVvqg0OCyG6-9L6aAGqw

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Lunar eclipse tonight

You can howl at the moon. You can believe in all sorts of full-moon folklore -- from the advent of werewolves to a corruption of the tides.

But if you want to see the full moon aglow in a dramatic range of colors -- a shift that could be anything from bright orange to blood red to dark brown or dark gray -- then look out your window starting at 8:43 p.m. Wednesday.

Starting then and lasting for the next three hours and 26 minutes you'll be able to watch the complete saga of the last visible total eclipse of the moon in North America until 2010, according to officials at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

A lunar eclipse can only occur at full moon, NASA scientists said. And it can only occur if the moon passes through a portion of the Earth's shadow.

A full lunar eclipse occurs when, according to the official NASA Web site "Eclipse Home Page," the entire full moon is "completely immersed" in the Earth's shadow. The total phase of eclipse is called "totality," according to NASA.

Different lunar eclipses can color the moon different colors, officials said. This depends on atmospheric conditions and, according to NASA, "the color and brightness of the totally eclipsed moon can vary considerably from one eclipse to another." The NASA Web page explains that dark eclipses are often the result of volcanic dust in the atmosphere. But since there has been no recent volcanic activity, scientists expect the Wednesday-night eclipse to be a "vivid red or orange" in the total phase.

The eclipse sequence will begin with a partial eclipse starting at 8:43 p.m. and will end at 12:09 a.m. Thursday.

The total eclipse of the moon will occur at 10:01 p.m. and last until 10:51 p.m., NASA said.

Mid-eclipse is expected at 10:26 p.m.

Scientists said the this lunar eclipse is "well-placed" for viewers in North America. The eclipse will not be observable in eastern Asia or Australia.

Unlike solar eclipses, NASA scientists remind would-be viewers that lunar eclipses are "completely safe" to watch.

"Protective filters are not necessary," according to NASA, "and neither is a telescope." However, while completely visible with the naked eye, scientists suggest binoculars will enhance the view.

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-liluna0221,0,3942685.story

A Powerhouse of Nutrition

QUESTION: What weighs one gram and supplies as much Beta Carotene as 14 cups of whole eggs or 23 cups of yogurt or 14 grams of liver or 140 grains of beet greens or 70 grams of carrots?

ANSWER: Four capsules of freeze-dried Blue Green Algae.

Lab tests conducted on the algae show that I gram contains 1440 mcgs. of beta carotene. And how much do we need on a daily basis? The healthy male: 1000 micrograms daily, the female 800 mcgs. and the child 600 mcgs. We know that orange, yellow and dark green vegetables are supposed to be rich sources of beta carotene.

However, today's farming methods, food processing and storage are primarily responsible for an unfortunate change in the nutritional content from 18,500 I.U. (which they are supposed to be) all the way down to 70 I.U.!

Discover the Powerhouse of Nutrition

Health benefits from blue green algae

Many of the foods that we would normally expect to nourish us are simply images of what they should be, and the modern carrot in most cases only "looks like" a carrot. No wonder thousands of people are excited about the availability of the little blue green algae from a fresh water lake to supplement their food.

Algae are among the Earth's most ancient organisms, found in every inch of soil and in every body of water from the largest ocean to the tiniest puddles, in the hottest springs and the coldest streams. It is responsible for 90% of the world's photosynthesis thus consuming carbon dioxide and producing oxygen and food for the entire food chain.

Powerhouse of Nutrition

Without algae there would be no life in the seas and very little on land.

Although algae have been eaten by man for centuries, only recently have they been lauded by scientists as THE group of high protein containing organisms which are the most likely to provide man with sufficient amounts of nutrients for the future, and, when presented graphically, the amino acids contained in fresh water blue green algae almost overlap those of the human body. One of the reasons it is a powerhouse of nutrition.

Previously the best known species of blue green algae to be available for human consumption were spirulina and chlorella, both marketed throughout the world.

However, both spirulina and chlorella. are grown artificially in man-made ponds and fed whatever man has decided that their proper food should be, while Aphanizomenon flos-aquae, better known as Blue Green Algae, is a completely wild algae living in a fresh water lake in Southern Oregon - far from cities and their sewage, from industrial and agricultural activities. The lake is fed by 17 volcanic mountain streams and rivers shaping this high desert lake into an actual nutrient trap.

Protected by the high Cascade Mountains and fed by geothermal hot springs and 4000 square miles of melting snow, all the minerals our bodies need are contained here in this basin - in chelated form - to become food for the micro algae with the fancy name.

Blue Green Algae has a complete balance of vitamins, except for "D" (sunlight) and "E" (the algae's high chlorophyll contents help produce vitamin "E" naturally in the body), it is rich in the B vitamins, including B-12 and it has the highest known source of chlorophyll, 300% higher than alfalfa. In fact, it may be the last complete basic food source left on the planet today.

Harvested, washed and freeze-dried in a matter of minutes to preserve the algae's neuropeptides, vitamins, amino acids and enzymes this process allows one single gram of Blue Green Algae to supply 300,000,000 amino acid molecules for each individual cell in your body.

Blue Green Algae is indeed a powerhouse of nutrition; when you eat it you feel alive and energetic. You can actually sense your immune system responding to the new enzymes and your brain and mind to the neuropeptides.

When evaluating a nutritional product, always look at the laboratory results with specifications telling you what substances are actually in the product. Anecdotes and testimonials are nice, but the actual ingredients are the deciding factor.

http://www.fundednfree.com/powerhouse-of-nutrition.html


Good Nutrition

In recent years we have seen overwhelming evidence that nutrition is essential for our health.

It is also becoming increasingly clear that many conditions can be prevented with proper selection of the foods we eat.

There has been an increase in cardiovascular conditions, diabetes and obesity. Examples of conditions that can be overcome, prevented or improved with the right good nutrition.

What is nutrition? It is not the fast food we eat, the kind you pick up when you are in a hurry. Is it the orange juice you drink out of a plastic carton? Is the little pill that your doctor tells you to take to make you healthy? None of the above.

Healthy food dates back to the beginning of time. It was only after man started tampering with the natural foods by cooking, processing and creating genetically engineered foods that illness and disease became rampant.

Someone said that disease is not born, it is created. We force our bodies to break down unnatural substances that we are not designed to break down. It takes us out of equilibrium. The human body is a complex system, it must have equilibrium and balance to survive.

When herbicide, fungicide, insecticide and pesticides seep into our food supply, our bodies are exposed to an army of poisons. It is more important than ever to seek out natural organic foods that have not been altered by man, nor laced with foreign substances the body is at a loss to deal with. Give your body sound nutrition, and it will reward you with vibrant health – reversing some of the damage that may already have been done to your health.

http://www.ancientacai.com/acaiberry/goodnutrition.html

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Media scan: Flat belly diet

A peek at recent health and fitness books, magazines and Web sites

Want to make better use of your time? Easier said than done. But Self magazine's latest book, 15 Minutes To Your Best Self (Gotham Books, $25), by editor Lucy S. Danziger, will give you 573 time-saving tips to boost women's fitness, improve looks, skin and hair care, jazz up your wardrobe, enhance your mood, and improve your sex life. It contains useful exercise demonstrations and ways to clean up your diet, with complete 1,500-calorie daily diets. Some suggestions to sneak in toning during regular activities: Do 50 heel raises while waiting in line. Squeeze glutes 50 times as you brush your teeth. Sneak in 50 crunches during commercials.

If you travel and want to keep exercising, check out www.BusinessBalance.com, launched by Embassy Suites Hotels. The new Web site is designed to help business travelers stay in shape, but also maintain good balance in their lives while away from home. Part of the site, "Strength on the Road" features articles and tips on keeping a strong body, a strong mind, getting proper nutrition, looking your best and maintaining family ties. "Serenity on the Road" offers tips for business travelers to get better sleep, reduce stress and pack efficiently.

Black women and Latinas face unique cultural and genetic challenges to stay heart-healthy. Heart Smart for Black Women and Latinas (St. Martin's Griffin, $13.95) is filled with sound nutritional, fitness and stress-management advice in a complete five-week program. Authors Jennifer H. Mieres, a cardiologist at New York University School of Medicine, and Terri Ann Parnell, an award-winning cardiovascular nurse, highlight the importance of community, culture and lifestyle in making decisions about eating, exercising and health care. They give advice on how to eat a heart-healthy diet, while modifying traditional recipes so they're healthier but still taste good.

Belly fat is among the toughest weight problems to conquer, especially for women. Prevention magazine launched the Flat Belly Diet, available at www.flatbelly diet.com, in January to give women the tools and support they need to succeed. The new diet program by Liz Vaccariello, magazine editor, and Cynthia Sass, nutrition director, focuses on eating monounsaturated fatty acids. Doing so makes it easier to lose weight and specifically targets reducing both subcutaneous and visceral belly fat. A Harvard University study and a British Journal of Medicine report confirm that this diet works without any changes in calorie intake or exercise routine.

http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080219/LIVING01/802190318/1007/LIVING

Monday, February 18, 2008

Zambian conservationist wins another award

ZAMBIA’s wildlife conservationist, Hammerskjoeld Simwinga, is among 11 visionary, young trailblazers from around the world that have been named to the 2008 class of National Geographic Emerging Explorers.

Others include a zoologist, anthropologist, cultural storytellers, musician, HIV activist and marine.

This is according to a statement from National Geographic Society of the United States made available yesterday.

National Geographic’s Emerging Explorers’ Programme recognises and supports uniquely gifted and inspiring adventurers, scientists, photographers and storytellers making a significant contribution to world knowledge through exploration while still early in their careers.

The emerging explorers will each receive a US$10,000 award to assist with research and to aid further exploration.

National Geographic Emerging Explorers could be selected from virtually any field, from the society’s traditional arenas of anthropology, archaeology, photography, space exploration, earth sciences, mountaineering and cartography to the worlds of art, music and filmmaking.

“National Geographic’s mission is to inspire people to care about the planet and our emerging explorers are outstanding adventurers whose endeavours further this mission.

We are pleased to honour these exciting new leaders who are setting out on promising careers,” National Geographic’s executive vice president for Mission Programmes, Terry Garcia, said.

Vice president, sales and marketing Tony Gomez said: “A key mission of National Geographic over the past 120 years has been to chronicle achievements of explorers.”

National Geographic’s emerging explorers are part of the Society’s Explorers Programme, which includes 13 Explorers-in-Residence and four National Geographic Fellows.

Mr Simwinga is founder and executive director of the Foundation for Wildlife and Habitat Conservation in Zambia, a non-governmental organisation working to help underprivileged rural communities living near North Luangwa National Park engaged in sustainable economic activities as alternatives to poaching.

The NGO encourages the communities to take part in wildlife and habitat conservation.

The foundation was born in July, 2007, as a result of a concern to improve the livelihoods of some of the poorest people living in the area through self-help initiatives, to enhance conservation through increased participation of local people in management of wildlife resources, and to eliminate poaching.

Mr Simwinga is the former director of the North Luangwa Wildlife Conservation and Community Development programme, which helps restore wildlife, provide alternatives to poaching and improve the life of local villagers through micro-lending, education, health programmes and women’s empowerment.

He began working in the region with the United States-funded North Luangwa Conservation Project in 1994, when local economies relied heavily on income from poaching.

The project helped villagers form wildlife clubs that used small business loans to provide basic goods, services and legal jobs as alternatives to working for poachers.

The project also assisted subsistence farmers with seed loans, transportation and technical assistance to help them grow protein-rich crops with better yields so that they did not depend on meat from wild animals.

Mr Simwinga of Mpika was last year awarded a US$125,000 Goldman Environmental Prize because of his conservation efforts.

http://www.daily-mail.co.zm/media/news/viewnews.cgi?category=8&id=1203321500

Atlanta Motor Speedway To Offer Fans Lowest Tickets

As NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers strap in for the 2008 season, Atlanta Motor Speedway prepares to offer tickets to the March 9 Kobalt Tools 500 for what could be the lowest price in track history.

Starting at 9 a.m. next Monday, Feb. 18, fans will have the opportunity to purchase Kobalt Tools 500 tickets, normally priced at $100, for the price of the winning car number of Sunday's Daytona 500.

One thousand tickets in rows 14 through 26 of the frontstretch Winners Grandstand will be available at this special discounted price while they last. Each purchase will be limited to a maximum of 10 tickets.

After the initial 1,000 tickets are sold, fans will receive a $10 discount off each frontstretch grandstand ticket purchased Monday or Tuesday until 5 p.m. Tickets can be purchased by calling the Atlanta Motor Speedway ticket office at 877-9-AMS-TIX, (877-926-7849), 770-946-4211, or by visiting the ticket office.

"It's very simple," said AMS president and general manager Ed Clark. "If Martin Truex Jr., drives the No.1 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet to victory, fans can purchase a $100 ticket for $1.

"The last six cars to win the Daytona 500 have all carried numbers of 48 or lower," Clark continued. "This is a great opportunity for 1,000 fans to pick up one of the best seats to the Kobalt Tools 500 for a fraction of the regular price. "

http://www.huliq.com/50886/atlanta-motor-speedway-offer-fans-lowest-tickets

'Knight Rider' rolls again

The Ford Mustang stars in NBC's amped-up reboot of an '80s classic

Even in tough times, a feel-good movie can always cheer up a person -- or an automaker.

It happened to General Motors last summer when the hit flick "Transformers" put the spotlight on the company's hot vehicles, not its economic challenges.

Now it's Ford's turn to bask in a similar glow with a TV movie. Tonight's revival of "Knight Rider" on NBC stars a Mustang -- a Ford Shelby GT500KR -- as KITT, the famous talking supercar.

In marketing terms, it's a major coup for Ford. There aren't too many roles for cars bigger or better than KITT, which was played by a Pontiac Trans Am in the original 1982-86 series.

And there aren't too many TV shows with more guy appeal than "Knight Rider," the action-adventure romp that starred David Hasselhoff as Michael Knight, a justice fighter whose incredibly cool set of wheels had artificial intelligence.

Although the storylines sometimes bordered on the ridiculous, "Knight Rider" was a favorite of the young male demographic so beloved by advertisers, largely thanks to KITT.

"You always wanted to see more of the car, but you never really wanted to see Hasselhoff get out of the car," says Brian Kelly, owner of Detroit Comics in Ferndale. He remembers watching the show and describes its tone as " 'T.J. Hooker' serious."

The 2008 rebooting of "Knight Rider" has some impressive credentials. It was overseen by executive producers Doug Liman, the director who reinvented the 1980 spy novel "The Bourne Identity" as a slick hit for the new millennium, and David Bartis, his producing partner.

With the success of revamped '80s icons like "Transformers" and NBC's "American Gladiators," Hollywood is enamored of projects with a beloved place in pop-culture history.

But it's also the relationship between men and cars that resonated with Bartis, who feels there's a vacuum right now in the "cool guy, cool car franchise" that previously reigned on shows like "Dukes of Hazzard," "Magnum P.I." and "Miami Vice."

In "Knight Rider" 2.0, the cool guy is Justin Bruening, formerly of "All My Children," who plays Mike Tracer, an Iraq war vet who joins forces with an old friend (Deanna Russo), the daughter of KITT's inventor (Bruce Davison), to do battle with nefarious forces.

According to Bartis, the new version is different, but stays true to the original's spirit.

Audiences have grown to expect more character development in their TV dramas and a more sophisticated level of special effects, which dictated some of the changes. But unlike the recent "Bionic Woman" reinvention on NBC, which has a darker edge, "Knight Rider" will have a tone that's "lighter, more blue sky, action-y, maybe more escapist," Bartis says.

And this time out, the cool car is the GT500KR (the "KR" is for "king of the road," not "Knight Rider," although the people at Ford admit the letters are a nice coincidence).

'The golden apple'

The real-life version of the car was revealed at the New York auto show last year and celebrates the 40th anniversary of the 1968 Shelby Cobra GT500KR, says Alan Hall, global product and technology communications manager for Ford. It's expected to be available in the spring in a limited edition of 1,000 units. It will be produced at the AutoAlliance plant in Flat Rock and final assembly will occur at the Shelby Automobiles factory in Las Vegas. The vehicle is priced at $79,995.

The Mustang's starring role in "Knight Rider" gives Ford an opportunity for big-time brand integration, the industry term for the process of linking products to entertainment and creating a connection that goes beyond merely borrowing a car for a scene. In connection with the movie, Ford is also doing a sweepstakes where viewers will have a chance to win four Ford cars.

There's an emotional aspect to product placement that's hard to duplicate through advertisements, as anyone who remembers Reese's Pieces from "E.T." or Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses from "Top Gun" realizes.

"From where I sit at Ford, a project like 'Knight Rider' is the golden apple," says Al Uzielli, senior adviser at Ford Global Brand Entertainment, who describes Bartis and Liman as old pals and who was interested in the project from the moment he found out about it.

Bartis says they talked to many car companies, but there was an easier dialogue with Ford. "When I lined up all the options available to us in the car landscape, I had a visceral reaction to this car," he says.

From the famous 1968 Mustang that raced through San Francisco in "Bullitt" to the GT500 featured in Will Smith's "I Am Legend," Mustangs have nabbed starring roles in too many movies to count. Still, Bartis says there was much thought given to selecting the right replacement for the discontinued Trans Am.

The goal was "to find something that embodies the qualities of what the original car stood for," says Bartis. "For me, the qualities were, a) it had to be an American car, b) it had to be two-door. There's something inherently uncool about a four-door and I can say that, having kids. It had to have some muscle to it. It had to have that intangible cool factor. There's something aggressive and bold about this car."

A car buff's dreams

The new KITT is described as a gadget-packed ride of a car buff's dreams. It has a supercomputer that can hack almost any system and, thanks to nanotechnology, some pretty nifty abilities to shift shape and color.

The TV movie features three modes of KITT, including a fantasy Attack version with air-ride technology designed by Harold Belker ("Batman & Robin"), who worked with Ted Moser and his team at Picture Car Warehouse in Los Angeles.

Val Kilmer, the star of "Batman Forever," will be the voice of KITT, a job originally held by the exquisitely snippy Williams Daniels of "St. Elsewhere" fame. Kilmer has done voice work before, most notably as Moses in the animated film "The Prince of Egypt."

Comic actor Will Arnett ("Arrested Development") was supposed to be KITT's voice, but he had to drop out because he does voice-over work for GMC.

And don't hassle the Hoff -- the producers gave Hasselhoff a cameo, realizing fully how important that would be to fans. It will be revealed that Hasselhoff's character has a special bond to the new driver of KITT.

"He's very emotionally attached to the show," says Bartis, adding that Hasselhoff shared a lot of insight as to why the original series worked so well. "He's really passionate about it."

Now it's just a matter of persuading viewers to embrace the TV movie, which could become a regular series if enough viewers are drawn to it.

Bartis is counting on a time-honored formula to work its magic once again.

"To me, there's something so fundamental about the guy-car relationship," he says. "I don't really know how to rationalize it, but it's there."

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080217/ENT03/802170536