Saturday, December 31, 2011

Ryan sells Two MarketPointe for $60 million-plus - Finance ...

Posted: 7:45 am Fri, December 30, 2011
By Burl?Gilyard
Tags: Artis REIT, Dan Levitt, Ryan Watts, Steve Buss, Tom Holtz, Two MarketPointe

The Ryan Cos. developed Two MarketPointe in Bloomington, which was completed in 2008. The office building earned LEED gold certification. (File photo: Bill Klotz)

The Minneapolis-based Ryan Cos. US Inc. has sold the Two MarketPointe office building in Bloomington to a Canadian real estate investment trust, Artis REIT, for approximately $60.6 million. The sale closed Dec. 22.

Dan Levitt, senior vice president of capital markets for Ryan Cos., said that it is common for Ryan to sell projects it has developed once the buildings are leased up.

?It?s pretty much our typical process,? Levitt said. ?We think the capital markets are pretty attractive for real estate right now.?

Ryan tapped the local investment sales team of CBRE Group Inc. including brokers Tom Holtz, Steve Buss and Ryan Watts to sell Two MarketPointe, but Levitt acknowledged that the building was being marketed quietly.

Ryan has done previous deals with Artis, a REIT based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Last year Artis paid $17.9 million for an office building that Ryan developed in New Brighton. Earlier this year, Artis paid $28.3 million for a collection of five local retail properties from Ryan.

A representative of Artis REIT could not be reached for comment on Thursday.

The deal included the Two MarketPointe office building at 4400 78th St. W. in Bloomington and an adjacent 5.75-acre site at 4300 78th St. W. The parcels were owned by separate entities: Two MarketPointe was owned by Two MarketPointe LLC, and the land was owned by Bloomington Associates 2005 II LLC. The sites are near the intersection of Interstate 494 and France Avenue South.

Ryan once had plans to develop a third building, Three MarketPointe, on the additional land.

Ryan previously sold the nearby One MarketPointe, completed in 1999, at 4300 Market Pointe Drive in Bloomington for $47.15 million in September 2007.

The Ryan Cos. developed the 240,000-square-foot Two MarketPointe office building. It was completed in September 2008 as the office market was beginning to take a turn.

Tenants at Two MarketPointe include the local office of Los Angeles-based CBRE Group Inc., the world?s largest commercial real estate services company. Other tenants include Rasmussen College and Apogee Enterprises Inc. A midyear market report from Bloomington-based Cushman & Wakefield/NorthMarq Real Estate Services showed that Two MarketPointe is 90 percent occupied.

Two MarketPointe is certified LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) gold by the U.S. Green Building Council.

There seems to be a flurry of investment sales deals closing before the end of the year. Finance & Commerce reported earlier this week that a New York buyer paid about $52 million last week for the Colonnade office tower and adjacent land in Golden Valley.

Many market watchers have noted that in today?s market, investment properties seem to fall into two categories: top shelf, well-leased properties and, at the other end of the spectrum, distressed deals for foreclosed or otherwise troubled assets.

?I think it?s a very bifurcated market. For quality property that?s leased, I think people are excited to buy it,? Levitt said.

The certificate of real estate value for the transaction is available here.

Source: http://finance-commerce.com/2011/12/ryan-sells-two-marketpointe-for-60-million-plus/

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Amazing Benefits of Pets on Human Health

Cat Dog

The benefits that pets can have on our health is amazing. I first learned some of the facts a few years ago when I read the Physical & Medical Health Benefits of Pets article on PetEducation.com

The Dr. Oz Show recently had a segment on the benefits that pets can play on our health. Makes me happy that pets are getting the attention that they deserve! Dr. Oz and his guest, Betty White, talked about how elderly people who live alone but have a pet have to get up in the morning to take care of their pet. When they have a pet, they have to think about someone other than themselves. Here are the benefits of pet ownership that were shared on The Dr. Oz Show.

Health Benefits of Dogs

Dogs: Best pet to increase your overall health.
Dogs increase your overall survival. You walk them, so that gives you both exercise. Also, dog owners who have had a heart attack are 8 times more likely to live a year compared to non-dog owners.

Cats: Best pet to prevent heart attacks and strokes.
Cats dramatically help to reduce your blood pressure. Cat owners have a:

  • 30% less chance of having a heart attack.
  • 40% less chance of having a stroke.

Dr. Oz made the comment, ?if drugs could do this, we?d prescribe pets!?

Birds: Best pet for detecting a diabetic attack.
Birds are so sensitive that they can actually identify when a person has diabetic problems, and birds can warn them of such. There are very subtle changes in body chemistry when you have diabetes, and birds pick up on it.

Betta Fish Aquarium Kit

Fish: Best pet to reduce stress.
Just staring at fish is very meditative, and for that reason, they reduce stress.

Rabbits: Best pet for fighting allergies.
When young kids are exposed to rabbits, they build a tolerance and are less likely to have allergies from that. Rabbits are really allergenic because they lick themselves all the time and get the dander off. This fact was new to me. Many years ago, my allergist warned me that the bedding used with rabbits and other small pets can cause havoc with allergies for some people.

Elderly with pets

To learn more about the health benefits pets have on people, click the link mentioned at the beginning of this post. The PetEducation.com article has different information such as how pets:

  • Have a positive impact cholesterol and triglycerides levels
  • Predict seizures
  • Diagnose cancer
  • Alert to hypoglycemia
  • Control ?freezing? in Parkinson?s Disease

Click here to see a video clip of this episode about pets on The Dr. Oz Show.

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About the author: Ellen and her husband have two grown children and two dogs who were both adopted from a local shelter. Kobe is sweet, calm lap dog, and Izzy is a cute, feisty puppy! Ellen earned a BBA from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh and works in the Internet Marketing Department at Drs. Foster and Smith. See more articles by Ellen B.

Source: http://www.dfs-pet-blog.com/2011/12/benefits-of-pets/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Muslims Upset By NYPD To Boycott Mayor's Breakfast

NEW YORK (AP) - The table is set for Mayor Michael Bloomberg's annual interfaith breakfast with some controversy added to the menu.

The breakfast set for this morning will be held without 15 Muslim leaders. They are boycotting the event to protest Bloomberg's support of the police department's surveillance of Muslim communities.

They told the mayor in a letter that they disagree with his position following a series of articles by the Associated Press exposing the police department's methods.

Rabbi Michael Weisser (WISE-er) says he'll attend the breakfast even though he signed the letter. He says Muslim community members told him they'd prefer he speak directly with the mayor.

Bloomberg's office says about two dozen Muslim community members will attend breakfast. Police spokesman Paul Browne says allegations that police spy on communities are false.

Source: http://www.newschannel6now.com/story/16417084/muslims-upset-by-nypd-to-boycott-mayors-breakfast

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Bugs may be resistant to genetically modified corn

FILE - In this Oct. 31, 2005, file photo, a harvester works through a field of genetically modified corn near Santa Rosa, Calif. So-called Bt corn, genetically engineered to make its own insecticide, may be losing its distinctive ability to kill pests _ a possible result of careless farming practices that could give rise to resistant bugs and threaten the future of one of the nation's most widely planted crops. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 31, 2005, file photo, a harvester works through a field of genetically modified corn near Santa Rosa, Calif. So-called Bt corn, genetically engineered to make its own insecticide, may be losing its distinctive ability to kill pests _ a possible result of careless farming practices that could give rise to resistant bugs and threaten the future of one of the nation's most widely planted crops. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this March 18, 2005, file photo, a developing tassel sits atop a genetically modified corn plant in a greenhouse at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. So-called Bt corn, genetically engineered to make its own insecticide, may be losing its distinctive ability to kill pests _ a possible result of careless farming practices that could give rise to resistant bugs and threaten the future of one of the nation's most widely planted crops. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

One of the nation's most widely planted crops ? a genetically engineered corn plant that makes its own insecticide ? may be losing its effectiveness because a major pest appears to be developing resistance more quickly than scientists expected.

The U.S. food supply is not in any immediate danger because the problem remains isolated. But scientists fear potentially risky farming practices could be blunting the hybrid's sophisticated weaponry.

When it was introduced in 2003, so-called Bt corn seemed like the answer to farmers' dreams: It would allow growers to bring in bountiful harvests using fewer chemicals because the corn naturally produces a toxin that poisons western corn rootworms. The hybrid was such a swift success that it and similar varieties now account for 65 percent of all U.S. corn acres ? grain that ends up in thousands of everyday foods such as cereal, sweeteners and cooking oil.

But over the last few summers, rootworms have feasted on the roots of Bt corn in parts of four Midwestern states, suggesting that some of the insects are becoming resistant to the crop's pest-fighting powers.

Scientists say the problem could be partly the result of farmers who've planted Bt corn year after year in the same fields.

Most farmers rotate corn with other crops in a practice long used to curb the spread of pests, but some have abandoned rotation because they need extra grain for livestock or because they have grain contracts with ethanol producers. Other farmers have eschewed the practice to cash in on high corn prices, which hit a record in June.

"Right now, quite frankly, it's very profitable to grow corn," said Michael Gray, a University of Illinois crop sciences professor who's tracking Bt corn damage in that state.

A scientist recently sounded an alarm throughout the biotech industry when he published findings concluding that rootworms in a handful of Bt cornfields in Iowa had evolved an ability to survive the corn's formidable defenses.

Similar crop damage has been seen in parts of Illinois, Minnesota and Nebraska, but researchers are still investigating whether rootworms capable of surviving the Bt toxin were the cause.

University of Minnesota entomologist Kenneth Ostlie said the severity of rootworm damage to Bt fields in Minnesota has eased since the problem surfaced in 2009. Yet reports of damage have become more widespread, and he fears resistance could be spreading undetected because the damage rootworms inflict often isn't apparent.

Without strong winds, wet soil or both, plants can be damaged at the roots but remain upright, concealing the problem. He said the damage he observed in Minnesota came to light only because storms in 2009 toppled corn plants with damaged roots.

"The analogy I often use with growers is that we're looking at an iceberg and all we see is the tip of the problem," Ostlie said. "And it's a little bit like looking at an iceberg through fog because the only time we know we have a problem is when we get the right weather conditions."

Seed maker Monsanto Co. created the Bt strain by splicing a gene from a common soil organism called Bacillus thuringiensis into the plant. The natural insecticide it makes is considered harmless to people and livestock.

Scientists always expected rootworms to develop some resistance to the toxin produced by that gene. But the worrisome signs of possible resistance have emerged sooner than many expected.

The Environmental Protection Agency recently chided Monsanto, declaring in a Nov. 22 report that it wasn't doing enough to monitor suspected resistance among rootworm populations. The report urged a tougher approach, including expanding monitoring efforts to a total of seven states, including Colorado, South Dakota and Wisconsin. The agency also wanted to ensure farmers in areas of concern begin using insecticides and other methods to combat possible resistance.

Monsanto insists there's no conclusive proof that rootworms have become immune to the crop, but the company said it regards the situation seriously and has been taking steps that are "directly in line" with federal recommendations.

Some scientists fear it could already be too late to prevent the rise of resistance, in large part because of the way some farmers have been planting the crop.

They point to two factors: farmers who have abandoned crop rotation and others have neglected to plant non-Bt corn within Bt fields or in surrounding fields as a way to create a "refuge" for non-resistant rootworms in the hope they will mate with resistant rootworms and dilute their genes.

Experts worry that the actions of a few farmers could jeopardize an innovation that has significantly reduced pesticide use and saved growers billions of dollars in lost yields and chemical-control costs.

"This is a public good that should be protected for future generations and not squandered too quickly," said Gregory Jaffe, biotechnology director at the Center for Science and Public Policy.

Iowa State University entomologist Aaron Gassmann published research in July concluding that resistance had arisen among rootworms he collected in four Iowa fields. Those fields had been planted for three to six straight years with Bt corn ? a practice that ensured any resistant rootworms could lay their eggs in an area that would offer plenty of food for the next generation.

For now, the rootworm resistance in Iowa appears isolated, but Gassmann said that could change if farmers don't quickly take action. For one, the rootworm larvae grow into adult beetles that can fly, meaning resistant beetles could easily spread to new areas.

"I think this provides an important early warning," Gassmann said.

Besides rotating crops, farmers can also fight resistance by switching between Bt corn varieties, which produce different toxins, or planting newer varieties with multiple toxins. They can also treat damaged fields with insecticides to kill any resistant rootworms ? or employ a combination of all those approaches.

The EPA requires growers to devote 20 percent of their fields to non-Bt corn. After the crop was released in 2003, nine out of 10 farmers met that standard. Now it's only seven or eight, Jaffe said.

Seed companies are supposed to cut off farmers with a record of violating the planting rules, which are specified in seed-purchasing contracts. To improve compliance, companies are now introducing blends that have ordinary seed premixed with Bt seed.

Brian Schaumburg, who farms 1,400 acres near the north-central Illinois town of Chenoa, plants as much Bt corn as he can every spring.

But Schaumburg said he shifts his planting strategies every year ? varying which Bt corn hybrids he plants and using pesticides when needed ? to reduce the chances rootworm resistance might emerge in his fields.

Schaumburg said he always plants the required refuge fields and believes very few farmers defy the rule. Those who do put the valuable crop at risk, he said.

"If we don't do it right, we could lose these good tools," Schaumberg said.

If rootworms do become resistant to Bt corn, it "could become the most economically damaging example of insect resistance to a genetically modified crop in the U.S.," said Bruce Tabashnik, an entomologist at the University of Arizona. "It's a pest of great economic significance ? a billion-dollar pest."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-12-28-Biotech%20Corn%20At%20Risk/id-0b9570f9e5924fe6bcfa71fd679e59fe

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

NBA Commissioner Stern Hears Boos In Dallas

DALLAS (AP) - NBA Commissioner David Stern opened his lockout-delayed season by hearing boos from Mavericks fans.

Stern was in Dallas for the NBA finals rematch between the Mavericks and Heat, and he was on the court for the start of the Mavs? banner-raising ceremony honoring their first championship. The jeers came as soon as he started speaking, but he quickly turned them into cheers by offering his congratulations to team owner Mark Cuban.

Cuban?s often contentious relationship with Stern could?ve been as much of a reason for the boos as the lockout, which pushed the opener from Nov. 1 to Christmas and cut the season by 16 games.

Cuban and Miami?s Micky Arison were among five owners who voted against the labor deal. Stern said ?it doesn?t send any signal whatsoever? that the two owners in the most recent finals were against the agreement.

Stern said Arison only objected to the revenue sharing. He also pointed out that Cuban was part of the labor relations committee and the planning committee.

?(Cuban) might not have been enamored with the final outcome because it takes away the advantage that overspending can give you,? Stern said.

Stern also said he could have done a better job of explaining his reasons for blocking a proposed trade of Chris Paul from the league-owned Hornets to the Lakers, only to later agree to a deal that sent Paul to the Clippers. He said that ?lost in the frenzy? over his action was the fact he quashed the deal in his role as the owners? representative looking out for the best interests of the Hornets ? not as the commissioner looking out for the best interests of the league as a whole.

?Our view was that the best thing was for New Orleans to be a young team,? he said.

Stern blamed himself for not clarifying that sooner.

?I don?t think it affected the integrity of the league,? he said. ?I do think I could have done a better communications job. ? It?s a job that, as the owners? representative, I was stuck with. But I think that it was better to have me do it than a group of owners do it because I have the singular focus of doing what?s best.?

The booing Mavs fans may not have realized they had Stern to thank for getting Lamar Odom to Dallas. Odom was supposed to have been in the Lakers-Hornets deal; when he wasn?t, he was so upset that the club didn?t want him that he asked to be traded.

After the Dallas-Miami game, Stern went to Oklahoma City for the opener between the Thunder and Orlando. Magic star Dwight Howard is trying to force his way to the team of his preference, just like Paul did. Asked if that was bad for the league, Stern said it?s always happened, using Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain as examples.

?That?s the beauty of the soap opera,? Stern said. ?It will play out like it plays out.?

Stern had compliments for another superstar he was about to watch, LeBron James.

?I see a level of acceptance and maturity,? Stern said. ?He?s clearly saying he might?ve said a few things differently, etcetera, and he?s going to let his talent do the talking. I think that?s pretty exciting because he?s got some pretty exciting talent. So we?re happy for him and we?re looking forward to how the season winds up.?

So, how does he expect the season to wind up?

?I said to Mark, `It?s ironic, the most underrated team in the league is the NBA champion,?? Stern said. ?I think Dallas has a pretty good roster. ? I said before last season, `I think we?re going to have to play the season. We?re not mailing the trophy to Miami.? It turns out, we mailed it to Dallas. We?ll see what happens this year ? but Miami really seems formidable with those three superstars.?

(? Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Source: http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2011/12/26/nba-commissioner-stern-hears-boos-in-dallas/

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Mayor of Earlville charged with DWI

Read?more: Local, News, DWI, Mayor of Earlville, Madison County, Chenango County, Mark Doeberl, State Route 12B, Town of Eaton, Driving with a BAC over .08, Consuming Alcoholic Beverages in a Vehicle

TOWN OF EATON -- The mayor of Earlville is facing a DWI charge after he was stopped at a police checkpoint.

It happened Friday afternoon around 3:30, according to State Police.

Mark Doeberl, 50, was driving on State Route 12B in the Town of Eaton when a trooper spotted an open can of beer in the arm rest of the vehicle, according to a press release from State Police.

Doeberl was given field sobriety tests at the scene. An officer reported smelling alcohol on Doeberl's breath and found an empty beer can in the back seat.

Doeberl had a blood alcohol content of .10%, according to investigators.

He was issued traffic tickets for DWI, Driving with a BAC over .08% and Consuming Alcoholic Beverages in a Vehicle.

He is scheduled to appear in the Town of Eaton Court on January 25th.

Earlville is on the border of Madison and Chenango Counties.

Source: http://www.cnycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=700913

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

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Military Wives Set To Beat X Factor To Top Spot

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8:25am UK, Sunday December 25, 2011

Amy Hitchcock, Sky News Entertainment

One of the wives, Sarah Clarke, said: "We're so proud of our men now they've got something to be proud of us for."

Gareth Malone told Sky News he is shocked but it's a very timely release.

"This single comes at a time when we're thinking about Afghanistan and the feeling is - realising sacrifices they've made - and not just fatalities but the small sacrifices these women make on a daily basis."

Their charity song Wherever You Are became the fastest selling single in six years.

They sold more in two days than the X Factor winners sold in a week and are tipped to sell a million by Christmas Day.

Leona Lewis

Leona Lewis topped the Xmas chart in 2006

Another of the wives Jo Millthorpe is astonished. She said: "This time a few months ago we couldn't have imagined it. It just keeps getting better."

Mrs Clarke added: "When the choir started the lads had just gone away so we were really low, we needed a pick me up to take out minds off the situation.

"But to end up contender for number one is just way and above anything anyone could have expected."

For five of the last six years the X Factor winners, Matt Cardle, Leona Lewis, Alexandra Burke, Leon Jackson and Shayne Ward hogged the number one spot.

But this year it looks highly unlikely Little Mix will manage to hold onto number one for another week to top the festive chart.

In 2009, Rage Against The Machine beat Joe McElderry to number one, and this year Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit was hoping to be the anti-X Factor bid, but the campaign gained little momentum.

Bob The Builder

Bob The Builder enjoyed his success in 2000

Other contenders hoping to make the top spot this Christmas included the cast of the Only Way Is Essex, but they are unlikely to do it - not even with Nanny Pat and their Christmas vajazzle.

The Wombles threw their hats in for novelty value, but they don't stand a chance against the Military Wives.

Gennaro Castaldo from HMV says that at Christmas anything can happen in the charts.

"You've got the party season and feeling nostalgia, it's the one time of the year that anything can happen in the charts."

From the sublime with Band Aid's Do They Know It's Christmas Christmas number one in 1984, 1989 and 2004, to the ridiculous Mr Blobby in 1993, the plain stupid Bob the Builder in 2000 to the sentimental Cliff Richard in 1988 with his Misteltow And Wine, we seem to like nostalgia and the novelty from our Christmas chart.

If the Military Wives do it, they will also win The Official Singles Chart Number 1 Award to mark the 60th anniversary of the UK's Official Singles Chart.

Source: http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Showbiz-News/Military-Wives-Choir-Set-To-Be-Christmas-Number-One-With-Charity-Song-Wherever-You-Are/Article/201112416137082?f=rss

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Pantry gets food to pets of needy seniors | Boise, Garden City ...

Bobbie Gardner is an animal lover who is allergic to dogs and cats. She no longer owns pets, but she knows firsthand that they are cherished companions for many.

The Boise grandma is part of a group of volunteers trying to prevent homebound seniors in the Treasure Valley from losing their pets because they can?t afford to feed them. Once a month, she loads up her Suzuki with bags of donated pet food and delivers it to a half-dozen or more residents in Boise and Meridian.

?They?re very appreciative,? said Gardner, a nurse who works part time. ?They say it?s so important to them to keep their animals with them, and if we didn?t help them they wouldn?t be able to.?

The pet food delivery service ? run through the Idaho Humane Society ? is done in collaboration with Elks Meals on Wheels. Volunteers with Meals on Wheels deliver meals each day to 800 seniors in Ada County, including 400 homebound seniors and 400 at dining centers.

?For many of these people who receive Meals on Wheels, it is their only daily source of nutrition,? said Grant Jones, development director for Elks Meals on Wheels. ?It?s very critical that they eat all of that and that they don?t have to make a choice between themselves and their pet.?

The Idaho Humane Society has been assisting with pet food donation for needy seniors for years. In late 2008, the nonprofit launched a separate delivery service to ease the burden on Meals on Wheels volunteers.

?It was just asking them to do a lot extra. In some cases, that pet food is very heavy, very bulky,? Jones said. ?It just made it easier.?

At about the same time, shelter officials began to notice that many families were giving up their pets due to financial hardship.

?We determined that people were using food stamps to buy food for their pets ? tuna for their cats, little wieners for their dogs,? said Christine Wiersema, development director at the Idaho Humane Society. ?That?s taking food away from the family, so that?s not good.

?We reassessed things because we want to keep these families together,? Wiersema said. That?s when the shelter?s Pet Food Pantry was launched.

The pantry, housed in a construction trailer, is also a collection site for the Meals on Wheels pet food delivery service. They collect and distribute about 7,000 pounds of pet food a month.

?This could be my whole job,? Wiersema said. All of the food is donated by the community or purchased with cash donations.

There are pet food donation drop-offs at 60 locations in the Valley, including Zamzows stores and veterinary offices.

Some businesses hold food drives to help out. The Idaho Athletic Club held four drives this year and donated 10,000 pounds of pet food. Hewlett-Packard employees contributed 640 pounds and $780 in cash.

Twice a month, about 100 families pick up food to feed for up to four pets. They may receive the donated pet food for up to six months.

The Meals on Wheels pet food delivery service is separate from the food pickup operation. It currently provides food to 225 animals at residences throughout Ada County.

About 10 to 15 volunteers gather the first week of the month to pack the pet food into their vehicles. They spend an hour or two delivering it over the next day or so.

Wiersema said many of the seniors in the delivery program have older and/or special-needs pets. Grants from two foundations allow the shelter to offer medical treatment and other care for those animals.

While talking to one pet owner, volunteer Gardner discovered that he was living in frigid temperatures due to a broken furnace. She called local agencies and businesses until she found one that would work with him on a payment plan for a new furnace.

In that way, the pet food delivery service is about so much more than pets, Wiersema said.

?It?s just one more touch from the community ? that sense we can all take care of each other,? she said.

Katy Moeller: 377-6413

Source: http://www.idahostatesman.com/2011/12/26/1929828/pantry-gets-food-to-pets-of-needy.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Japan PM tells China's Wen both want stable Korean peninsula


BEIJING | Sun Dec 25, 2011 4:03pm IST

BEIJING (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda told his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao on Sunday their two nations share an interest in preserving stability on the Korean peninsula after the death of Kim Jong-il, North Korea's long-time leader.

"Peace and stability of the Korean peninsula is in a common interest for both Japan and China," Noda told Wen at the start of talks in Beijing, where Noda is on a two-day visit.

Noda is the first regional leader to visit Beijing since Kim Jong-il's death was announced on Monday, leaving his youngest son Kim Jong-un as leader of the reclusive, communist state. Kim's death rattled the region, with fears of nuclear tests and military confrontation.

China is North Korea's sole major economic and diplomatic partner, and the United States and its regional allies have long pressed Beijing to use its influence to rein in Pyongyang.

Constraining North Korea is especially important for Japan, which is well within range of the North's long-range missiles and wants Pyongyang to resolve the emotive issue of the fate of Japanese citizens kidnapped to help train spies decades ago.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Paul Tait)

Source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/12/25/korea-north-china-japan-idINDEE7BO03D20111225?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews

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Video: The Drive: All eyes on Iowa caucuses (cbsnews)

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

923NowFM: Merry Christmas Eve! (Or, Merry Chinese Food & Movie Day Eve!)

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Video: Obama Congratulates Congress on Deal

President Obama releases a statement congratulating Congress for ending the partisan stalemate on the tax cut extention, with CNBC's Eamon Javers.

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45770263/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Doomsday in 1 Year? Why the World Won't End on Dec. 21, 2012 (LiveScience.com)

A year from today the world will come to an end, according to some who cite the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar as evidence of a Dec. 21, 2012, apocalypse. But both astronomers and experts on Mesoamerican history say the Mayan apocalypse is likely to be another in a long line of failed doomsdays.

According to the Maya Long Count calendar, the winter solstice of 2012 ? Dec. 21, 2012 ?is the end of a b'ak'tun, a 144,000-day cycle that has repeated 12 times since the mythical Maya creation date. The b'ak'tun that will end in 2012 is the 13th, supposedly a full 5,200-year cycle of creation.

Because of this end date, a number of predictions have attached themselves to Dec. 21, from the end of the world via collision with a rogue planet, to the ushering in of a new world era. But neither historians nor astronomers put much credence in these predictions. [End of the World? Top Doomsday Fears]

Deciphering the Mayan calendar

In fact, according to archaeologists, it wasn't the Mayans who linked the end of the 13th b'ak'tun with the end of the world. According to Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History, when Judeo-Christians began to decipher Mayan writings, their preconceived notions of apocalypse and the end of the world led them to link Mayan calendar cycles with doomsday.

"A lot of the end-of-the-world mythologies are the result of Christian eschatology introduced by Franciscan missionaries," John Hoopes, a scholar of Maya history at the University of Kansas, told Livescience, referring to missionaries just entering the New World andcoming into contact with native people.

Maya scholars disagree on exactly how the Maya people would have interpreted the end of their calendar cycle, Hoopes said, though many say they would have seen it as a new beginning.

Astronomy anomalies

Many of the supposed 2012 doomsday scenarios involve astronomical phenomena: A rogue planet, solar storms or a planetary alignment. But NASA scientists say these aren't real threats.

One theory holds that a rogue body called "Planet X" or "Nibiru" will collide with Earth in 2012, snuffing out our planet. The only problem with this theory? Nibiru is made up.

"There's no evidence whatsoever that Nibiru exists," said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA's Near-Earth Object program office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., at a public talk?Dec. 8. Yeomans said theories that Nibiru is lurking behind our sun make no sense.

"We would have seen it years ago," he said.

Likewise, Yeomans said, there are no planetary alignments or other astronomical anomalies set for Dec. 21, 2012.

Our stormy sun

One doomsday theory based on perhaps a pinch of science involves the sun. After years of relative peace, the electromagnetic activity on the surface of the sun is heating up, according to NASA. Some fear that an enormous solar flare will engulf Earth or otherwise destroy us.

But this ramping up of activity is typical of our home star, explained Daniel Baker, the director of the laboratory for atmospheric and space physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder, in a talk at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union this month. [Gallery: Our Amazing Sun]

"The sun undergoes an approximately 11-year period of activity," Baker said. "It goes from very weak conditions, the solar minimum, to some very large solar maximum numbers."

The sun has been quiet even by solar minimum standards in recent years, Baker said. The upcoming maximum ? set to peak in 2013, not 2012 ? is expected to be average. Humans do have to watch out for solar storms, which can disrupt satellite communications and electrical grids here on Earth. Nonetheless, industries can prepare for solar storms, which is why agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) have centers whose sole job is to predict these storms' coming.

Different industries adjust in different ways, said Rodney Viereck of the NOAA Space Environment Center. Airlines that rely on satellite communications will fly at latitudes where alternative forms of communication are possible. Industries dependent on Global Positioning System (GPS) technology will delay crucial activities. Power grids will adjust voltages to handle electromagnetic fluctuations.

2012: Just another year

Finally, theories abound online about one more scientific phenomenon and the 2012 apocalypse: a magnetic pole reversal on Earth. Believers worry that a flip-flop of the Earth's magnetic field will throw civilization back into the Stone Age, or perhaps destroy all life on the planet, by temporarily dropping the magnetic-field barrier to radiation from space. NASA scientists, however, say Earthlings can rest easy.

According to NASA, the planet's magnetic field reverses every 200,000 to 300,000 years, though we've currently gone more than twice that without a swap.

But these flips don't happen in an instant, according to the space agency. They occur over hundreds of thousands of years. The last reversal happened 780,000 years ago, according to NASA, and the fossil record shows no sign of any disruption in life.

You can follow LiveScience?senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience?and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111221/sc_livescience/doomsdayin1yearwhytheworldwontendondec212012

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Strikeforce weigh-in: With title fights official, is Masvidal focused?

Strikeforce weigh-in: With title fights official, is Masvidal focused?

The craziest weight class miss in recent memory was the only notable highlight of the Strikeforce weigh-in earlier today.

Jerron Peoples knew he was nowhere close to welterweight limit of? 170 pounds, so his camp negotiated with Roger Bowling's to meet at 179. Incredibly enough, Peoples still missed the super high catchweight. He weighed 180.5 and couldn't get down to 179.

There were no such issues with pros like Gilbert Melendez (155) and Jorge Masvidal (155) along with the females fighting for the 145-pound title. Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos and Hiroko Yamanaka both came in on point.

After reading Kevin Iole's excellent piece on Masvidal's weird diet and nightlife habits, it's a surprise the challenger didn't come in weighing 200 pounds.

Masvidal is a self-proclaimed fast food junkie.

He spends a lot of time in the nation's fast food restaurants. He said, "I'm a humungous fan of McDonald's," putting a significant emphasis on the word "humungous." "I can't tell you how much I love that place. Taco Bell. Rally's. Checker's. I don't know if you have one of those where you are, but let me tell you, that place is awesome."

One of life's pleasures, he says, is a grilled burrito at Taco Bell. But he has so many favorites, it's difficult to remember all of them.

"Wow, that is one of the toughest questions ever," he said, asked his favorite fast-food meals. "There are so many great ones."

He also loves night clubs and strip clubs.

[...] Give him four hours and he's a happy man. He's often out prowling after midnight, hanging in night clubs, stopping in strip joints, just looking for a place to spend some time and have some fun.

"I just can't sleep a lot," he says. "I'm not out partying. I don't drink; I don't smoke. I'm just out hanging with my friends. I only need about four or five hours a sleep a night at most. So if I can't sleep, I might as well be out doing something."

Unless this is a recent development, there's no reason to call Masvidal on his unconventional habits. He enters the fight winning two straight and 3-of-4. He destroyed KJ Noons back in June.

MAIN CARD (Showtime - courtesy MMAjunkie)

Gilbert Melendez (155) vs. Jorge Masvidal (155)
Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos (145) vs. Hiroko Yamanaka (145)
Gegard Mousasi (206) vs. Ovince St. Preux (206)
Billy Evangelista (156) vs. K.J. Noons (156)

PRELIMINARY CARD

Caros Fodor (156) vs. Justin Wilcox (156)
Roger Bowling (170) vs. Jerron Peoples (180.5)* - 179-pound catchweight fight
Devin Cole (248) vs. Gabriel Salinas-Jones (265)
Fernando Gonzalez (186) vs. Eddie Mendez (186)
Chris Brown (170) vs. Herman Terrado (170.5)

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Strikeforce-weigh-in-With-title-fights-official?urn=mma-wp10832

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Friday, December 16, 2011

It's the cable guys! Antarctic ice wired

One of the most desolate spots on Earth recently got a visit from one of the most elusive characters on Earth ? the cable guy. Four very high-tech and capable cable guys, to be specific.

A small team of scientists recently installed a fiber-optic cable in the Ross Ice Shelf, a colossal plain of floating ice larger than the state of California that clings to the edge of Antarctica, straddling a massive bay between the eastern and western halves of the continent.

The cable, more than half a mile (1 kilometer) in length, is threaded straight down through 600 feet (200 meters) of solid ice and 2,000 feet (600 m) of water to dangle above the seafloor.

The fiber-optic cable is "like the kind that goes to your television or computer," said project leader David Holland, a professor at New York University, and was set in place so that the giant ice plain can, in essence, make phone calls to his office in Manhattan, and tell him what things are like in the ocean underneath it.

Holland and three colleagues ? an NYU graduate student and researchers from Ohio State University and the University of Nevada ? spent two weeks living out on the ice, sleeping in tiny tents to complete the pilot project, which is a year-long test run for the technology.

"You can measure the temperature on a fiber-optic cable at every meter," Holland told OurAmazingPlanet. "With this technology you can 'watch' the ice shelf," he said.

It took three days of drilling to bore a tiny hole just 2 inches (3 centimeters) across into the ice to complete the installation, which was sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

Loquacious ocean
A nifty suite of instruments sits atop the ice shelf, connected to the fiber-optic cable ? a data logger, a low-power laser and a modem ? powered by solar panels, wind turbines and batteries to get through the dark winter months, Holland said.

Every three hours, a modem on the roof of Holland's NYU building calls up the modem parked on the Antarctic ice to get a full rundown of temperatures throughout the ice shelf and, far more important, the ocean below.

So who wants to talk to a chatty ice shelf about its watery nether regions? Just about anyone who studies the mechanisms driving the significant changes observed in Antarctic ice. Research has revealed that warm ocean water gnawing away at ice shelves is a key player in unprecedented losses to the West Antarctic Ice Sheet over the last two decades.

"The temperature of the water underneath the ice shelves and the rate that water circulates in the ocean cavities underneath the ice shelves are the major determinants of the mass balance at the bottom of the ice shelves ? in other words, how fast they're melting at the bottom," said Stan Jacobs, an oceanographer at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

Ice shelves act as door stops for glaciers ? which are, essentially, slow-moving rivers of ice ?? and slow glaciers' inexorable march into the sea. When ice shelves thin, or completely disappear, glaciers speed up.

"That moves more ice more rapidly into the ocean, and of course that has sea-level implications," Jacobs told OurAmazingPlanet.

Satellites have glimpsed changes in ice shelves, and even their disappearance ? the dramatic collapse of the Larsen B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula made headlines in 2002 ? yet they can't see underneath them to capture the details concerning how warm ocean water is taking a toll.

Holland said the fiber-optic cable can operate for many years at a time, delivering a steady stream of data on temperature conditions in the ocean under the ice shelf.

Jacobs, who was not associated with the project, said that getting temperature data during the winter months, when the darkness and brutal conditions make field work impossible, would be valuable.

"You'd like to have year-round measurements, and once you have year-round measurements, you'd like to have them more than one year," Jacobs said. "We already know that properties and circulation (of the water) change from one year to the next."

Testing, testing
Holland said that so far, the data indicate things are pretty stable under the Ross Ice Shelf, which is precisely what he expected. Unlike its neighbors in western Antarctica, the ice shelf doesn't appear to be suffering any losses.?

"This was not necessarily the most important place to go," Holland said, "but it's a smart idea for testing the technology." The ice shelf is next door to McMurdo Station, the largest of the United States' three research stations in Antarctica.

"If it works for one year, it will be a proven technology ? and if it's good I would ask that it be installed elsewhere," Holland said.

Jacobs said that ice shelves in the Amundsen Sea, particularly the Pine Island Glacier Ice Shelf, are of most concern to scientists, because they appear to be melting rapidly.

The glaciers in this western region of Antarctica are responsible for about 7 percent of annual global sea level rise, and of those speedy glaciers, the Pine Island Glacier is moving the fastest, at a clip of about 2.5 miles (4 km) per year.

A team of scientists is currently camping out on the Pine Island Glacier ice shelf to get some of the first precise measurements of temperature beneath it, yet they will have to pack up and go home when Antarctic winter approaches.

Although drilling into a giant piece of ice clinging to a continent at the bottom of the world may appear frivolous to some, Holland said, the research is important.

"It's just one element in a puzzle," he said. The ultimate goal is to hand over enough puzzle pieces to climate modelers, Holland said, because it's clear that changes in the atmosphere are driving changes in Antarctic ice, and changes in Antarctic ice drive changes in global sea level.

"If you talk to one individual, they're working on some piece of the puzzle around the change," he said. "No one piece is more important than the other, but if one piece is ignored you can't figure out this story."

Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain.Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45690009/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Bahrain police crack down on highway protest (AP)

MANAMA, Bahrain ? Bahraini security forces used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse hundreds of opposition supporters attempting to protest alongside a highway leading to the island kingdom's capital Thursday.

The clashes follow 10 months of unrest between Bahrain's Sunni monarchy and an opposition movement led by the country's majority Shiites. They came during a visit by the U.S. State Department's top human rights envoy, who expressed concern about the government's use of tear gas and other tough tactics against protesters.

Thursday's clashes erupted near the town of Diraz and other opposition stronghold villages west of the capital, Manama. Riot police were seen chasing protesters away from entrances to the key highway and back into the largely Shiite communities that line the road.

Online activists have issued calls on Twitter and other social media for protesters to occupy the highway, seeking to maintain momentum for protests in the strategically important Gulf nation that hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

Hundreds of protesters, some waving red and white Bahraini flags, were seen along the side of the highway when the clashes broke out in the afternoon.

Witnesses described a heavy police presence in the area ahead of the protest, with security forces dressed in riot gear and helicopters hovering low overhead.

The highway connects a string of largely Shiite villages west of Manama. It leads to a junction that is roughly half a kilometer (a quarter of a mile) south of Manama's Pearl Square, where this year's uprising originated. Government forces evicted protesters and tore down the pearl sculpture that marked the site in March.

The now heavily guarded square holds great symbolic value for the opposition movement, and protesters have repeatedly tried to retake it.

The clashes erupted during a visit by U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner, head of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.

In prepared remarks to reporters, he praised the king for taking steps to implement reforms recommended in a report last month that outlined human rights abuses carried out by the government. He called on both the government and protesters to refrain from violence.

Posner urged the government to do more.

He cited "the need for tangible action on several urgent issues," including reinstating workers unfairly dismissed from their jobs. He also raised concerns about court cases involving doctors and others that he said appear to be based at least in part on their criticism of the government, as well as proposed media laws that could stifle political debate.

Washington also remains concerned about the government's "excessive use of force, including tear gas, in response to ongoing street protests," he said.

More than 35 people have died in clashes and protest-related violence since February, inspired by other Arab Spring revolts. Bahrain's protests are the largest and most sustained to have hit the Arab monarchies and sheikdoms that line the Persian Gulf.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_bahrain

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Android Market hits 10 billion downloads, cheap apps offered (Digital Trends)

Google announced on Tuesday that 10 billion apps have now been downloaded from Android Market and to celebrate hitting what it considers to be a milestone (yes, it is a rather large number) it?s hooked up with some Android developers to offer a selection of apps at the dirt cheap price of 10 cents. The offer will last 10 days.

?One billion is a pretty big number by any measurement. However, when it?s describing the speed at which something is growing, it?s simply amazing,? Eric Chu, director of the Android Developer Ecosystem, wrote in a post on the Android Developers blog.

He added, ?This past weekend, thanks to Android users around the world, Android Market exceeded 10 billion app downloads ? with a growth rate of one billion app downloads per month. We can?t wait to see where this accelerating growth takes us in 2012.?

Ten billion is pretty good going seeing that the platform was only launched in 2008, but as Chu says, the growth rate is what really catches your eye. The bar chart says it all ? launched in October 2008, things got off to a slow start with it taking 21 months to reach a billion downloads. But increased sales of Android-operated phones, as well as an increase in the number of apps being added to the market, was only ever going to mean one thing.

By July this year, things were really moving for Android Market as it hit the six billion mark. In the last four months alone, four billion apps have been downloaded to mobile devices using Google?s operating system.

As a comparison, while it?s taken Android Market a shade over three years to hit 10 billion downloads, it took Apple?s App Store, which launched in July 2008, two-and-a-half years to hit the same figure.

Android Market was overhauled in May this year, making it easier for users to find and discover new apps. The revamp also addressed the concerns of developers who had been complaining that the vast majority of apps were buried deep within the store, making them hard to find.

As for the special celebration sale, apps being offered in Android Market on Tuesday include Asphalt 6 HD, Color & Draw for Kids, Endomondo Sports Tracker Pro, Fieldrunners HD, Great Little War Game, Minecraft, Paper Camera, Sketchbook Mobile, Soundhound Infinity and Swiftkey X.

?Of course, none of these apps would have existed if it weren?t for the developers who created them,? Chu wrote in his blog post. ?Every day, these developers continue to push the limits on what?s possible and delight us in the process. For that, we thank them. Please join us in this 10-day celebration and check in every day to see what new apps our developer partners are making available on Android Market ? for only a dime.?

[via Cnet]

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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HTC profits jump 68-percent, shipments 93-percent over the last year

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111206/tc_digitaltrends/androidmarkethits10billiondownloadscheapappsoffered

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