Farmer jailed in Hong Kong for burning flag

A man has been jailed in Hong Kong for burning the national flag, in the first sentence of its kind.

S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

Burma begins swap scheme for cars over 40 years old

Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

Polio has spread to China for the first time since 1999 after being imported from Pakistan, the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed.

Showing posts with label House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label House. Show all posts

Sunday, March 10, 2013

The House collapsed due to the blast, 10 people were killed in Viet Nam

Hanoi (Reuters)-three houses in a small loronbg in District 3, Ho Chi Minh, Viet Nam South, collapsed as a result of two explosions on Sunday morning, causing at least 10 people were killed and many people were still trapped under the rubble.

One family of seven people were among those killed in the blast, and some people injured were taken to a local hospital, such as quoted from Xinhua.

According to the official news agency VNA, Viet Nam, the explosion happened in a crowded area in the Centre of Ho Chi Minh City, where many private homes are located.

Preliminary information indicates the locals who live in the hallway on the way Nam Ky Khoi Nghia Vinh Nghiem Pagoda outside, heard two bursts of sound with an interval of five minutes.

They then saw three houses burned to the ground and its walls collapsed, according to Tuoi Tre news website, based in Ho Chi Minh City.

Local residents said the explosion occurred at around 00.15 local time Sunday.

According to Tuoi Tre report, after being told about the events, hundreds of firefighters using trucks over 12 firemen were deployed to succour.

The explosion caused a wave that shook houses within a radius of several hundred metres and even broke the window glass.

As quoted in Tuoi Tre, a woman named Nguyen Thi Phuong--who was sleeping in his house when the explosion occurred--said, "my family, as many as four people, hear the sound of loud explosions that shook the whole House. We feel panic at the time, and later the smell the smoke that we think comes from Fireworks. We left our House to a safer place. "

(C003)



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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

White House denies alien contact

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8 November 2011 Last updated at 11:05 GMT Allen Telescope Array Astronomers are listening to the cosmos; but no evidence exists yet for alien life The US government has formally denied that it has any knowledge of contact with extraterrestrial life.

The announcement came as a response to submissions to the We The People website, which promises to address any petition that gains 5,000 signatories.

Two petitions called for disclosure of government information on ETs and an acknowledgement of any contact.

The White House responded that there was "no evidence that any life exists outside our planet".

More than 17,000 citizens joined the two petitions, and the White House has since amended the requirements for response to a minimum of 25,000 signatories.

"The US government has no evidence that any life exists outside our planet, or that an extraterrestrial presence has contacted or engaged any member of the human race," wrote space policy expert Phil Larson of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

"In addition, there is no credible information to suggest that any evidence is being hidden from the public's eye."

The post went on to outline the efforts that are underway that may add evidence to the debate, namely the space missions Kepler and the Mars Science Laboratory.

Kepler is searching for Earth-like planets around far-flung stars, and the Mars Science Laboratory will sample the Red Planet's geology looking for the building blocks of life - though it will not explicitly look for life itself.

Perhaps the most famous effort in the hunt for alien life is the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (Seti), once funded in part by US space agency Nasa, which continues to listen to and look around the cosmos for signs of intelligent civilisations elsewhere.

Mr Larson summarised the numbers game that a hunt for ETs necessarily entails.

"Many scientists and mathematicians have looked... at the question of whether life likely exists beyond Earth, and have come to the conclusion that the odds are pretty high that somewhere among the trillions and trillions of stars in the Universe there is a planet other than ours that is home to life," he wrote.

"Many have also noted, however, that the odds of us making contact with any of them - especially any intelligent ones - are extremely small, given the distances involved."



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Monday, October 24, 2011

Longtime CBS White House correspondent dead at 86

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NEW YORK | Sun Oct 23, 2011 4:52pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Journalist Robert Pierpoint, 86, a former White House correspondent for CBS News who covered six presidents, has died, CBS News said on Sunday.

Pierpoint, a resident of Santa Barbara, Calif., who retired in 1990 after four decades with CBS News, died on Saturday after complications from hip surgery, the network said in a news release.

He reported -- on television and radio -- on the Korean War, and he was a White House correspondent from the Dwight Eisenhower administration in 1957 through the Jimmy Carter administration in 1980.

His favorite president to cover was John F. Kennedy, CBS News said, and he was in Dallas the day Kennedy was killed there.

Pierpoint, who wrote a 1981 book called "At the White House" about covering presidents, reported on Watergate and the Pentagon Papers and, later as a State Department correspondent, the Iran hostage crisis.

"Bob was a great friend to me and he taught me many a lesson on how to develop sources," CBS News' chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer said on Face the Nation on Sunday.

Schieffer, that show's host, told viewers that Pierpoint got many stories while playing tennis.

"One Saturday, he came directly from the court to film a report on the White House lawn," Schieffer said. "Viewers saw him only from the waist up -- but those who saw him full frame figured out quickly where he got the story."

Pierpoint, a native of Redondo Beach, Calif., is survived by his wife of 52 years, Patricia, as well as a sister, four children and five grandchildren.

(Reporting by Corrie MacLaggan in Austin, Texas, editing by Ellen Wulfhorst)



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Sunday, October 23, 2011

House Could Spend $1.5M Defending Marriage Act, Congressman Fights Back

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The cost to defend the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, could balloon to $1.5 million, and Democratic Rep. Mike Honda of California wants none of it. Honda is calling for a hearing to address what he said is an "irresponsible, backdoor use of taxpayer money" on the part of House Republicans, who have agreed to increase the pay cap for an outside firm defending the law, as first reported by LGBTQ Nation.

"The speaker of the House has been on the job for 288 days and has not created a single job for the American people," Honda said in a statement Thursday. "Instead, the House Republican leadership wastes precious resources by putting the American taxpayers on the hook for a $1.5 million legal tab in defense of discrimination."

After a February announcement by the Obama administration that it would no longer defend DOMA—which defines marriage as between a man and a woman—in court, Republican leaders decided the House would take up the case itself. So the House general counsel hired lawyer Paul Clement, who served as solicitor general under President George W. Bush, to do what the Department of Justice would normally have done: defend the law.

[See a collection of political cartoons on gay marriage.]

Clement and his firm, Bancroft PLLC, were first given a $500,000 cap, but they are now authorized to charge the legislative branch "a sum not to exceed $750,000.00," but that the "cap may be raised from time to time up to, but not exceeding $1.5 million, upon written notice of the General Counsel to the Contractor." This means the costs could now triple, and the contract also leaves room for future increases, if the parties come to a written agreement.

"How long are we going to let this Republican political exercise go on, and at what cost to the American tax payers?" Honda asked, adding that GOP leaders have not been clear about where the money would come from.

[Vote now: Should gay marriage be legal nationwide?]

Other House Democrats have also called the price tag "unconscionable" in such tough economic times, suggesting the taxpayer funds and congressional energy should be spent creating American jobs instead.

But Michael Steel, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, counters that the House is defending the law because "the Justice Department chose to shirk its constitutional duty to do so," he said in an E-mail. "As we have always said, the entire cost should be borne by that department."

A House GOP aide added that the effort is not detracting from Republican efforts to improve the economy. "Despite Democrats' feeble attempts to demagogue this issue, the House's lawyer is doing his job," the aide says, "and House Republicans remain entirely focused on jobs."

Honda said he is hopeful his Appropriations subcommittee's chairman, Florida Republican Rep. Ander Crenshaw, will call for a hearing, but indicated he lays more of the responsibility on top House Republicans. "I recognize the tough spot [Chairman Crenshaw]'s in with his leadership on this issue," Honda said.



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Saturday, October 15, 2011

House Leader Tells Off-Color China Joke

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Who hasn't told a Charlie Chan broken English joke once or twice? But when a leading House member tells one in public, it can get quite a reaction.

That happened Wednesday night at Mt. Vernon where House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers was receiving an award from the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States for "his extraordinary service to and leadership of his state and country."

The folksy Kentucky lawmaker opened with a tale about how people pronounce the home city of the Kentucky Derby, Louisville. "There's a lot of debate on how you pronounce, how locals pronounce the biggest city in Kentucky. Some say Louie-ville. Some say Louis-ville, some say Loy-ville, some say Loueee-ville," he said. [Read about a Congressional bill aimed at making China raise the value of its currency.]

Well one different version, Rogers told the crowd, came years ago from a Chinese ambassador to the United States who spoke broken English. As Rogers tells it, he had just visited China and when he returned he had dinner with the unnamed ambassador. During dinner, and in his broken English, the ambassador tried to impress staffers on how much he knew about the United States and Kentucky. [Read how the debt downgrade affected U.S.-China relations.]

"He had been to the Kentucky Derby and he said, 'you know, the Kentucky Derby, this and that, is located in a city and you need to know how to pronounce the name of.' He said, 'it's not Rouee-ville, it's Roo-i-ville."

Listen to it here.

Our pal Nikki Schwab, at the Washington Examiner, said she tried to chase Rogers down for a quick comment, but he had left the dinner.



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The Grand Tradition of the White House State Dinner

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White House state dinners are Washington's quintessential social events and a way to practice classy diplomacy. The dinners can honor a good relationship with a foreign leader, like Thursday's dinner for South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and first lady Kim Yoon-Ok, or they can be an attempt to patch over a bad one.

[Check out this slide show of state dinners throughout history.]

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle's fifth official state dinner followed Congress's approval of free-trade agreements with Korea, Columbia, and Panama, which had been languishing since they were introduced in 2007 under President George W. Bush.

The visit also apparently inspired Republican Sen. John Kyl to, at the last minute, stop blocking the nomination of the new U.S. ambassador to South Korea, Sung Kim. The Senate confirmed Kim­­—who will be the first Korean-American ambassador to Seoul—minutes before President Lee addressed a joint session of Congress.

Past dinners have also been a way to further U.S. foreign policy. In September 2001, for example, Mexico's President Vicente Fox marked his growing relationship with Bush during a state visit. The two were looking for ways to cooperate on the fight against drug trafficking and find a solution to illegal immigration from Mexico to the United States. Experts close to the issue believe some kind of path to citizenship was imminent, but the 9/11 attacks changed everything, pushing the immigration discussion immediately to enforcement.

During the Cold War, there were a few visits by Soviet leaders, which kept up the delicate diplomatic dance the two countries practiced. In 1990, just months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and his wife Raisa visited with President George H.W. Bush. Gorbachev disregarded the black-tie dress code and wore a business suit, as he had done during his previous state dinner with Reagan in 1987.

[Read: After 9/11, immigration became about enforcement.]

In 1959, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was the first Soviet leader to visit the United States. During the state dinner, he and President Dwight D. Eisenhower talked openly about the tricky relationship between the two nuclear powers. Eisenhower said, "Because of our importance in the world, it is vital that we understand each other better."

Khrushchev agreed, acknowledging the need "to come to an agreement on the improvement of our relations, because our two countries are much too strong and we cannot quarrel with each other. ... If we quarrel, then not only our countries can suffer colossal damage but the other countries of the world will also be involved in a world shambles."

The dinners have also marked cultural events close to the heart of the American people, like the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Kennedys had scheduled a state dinner for West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, but after Kennedy was shot a month before the dinner, the responsibility fell to President Lyndon Johnson. Since the nation was still mourning Kennedy's death, Johnson moved the state dinner to his Texas ranch for a less formal barbecue.



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Friday, October 14, 2011

House Democrats Recruiting Coups

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Despite bad polls and a depressed political base, House Democrats have scored a remarkable victory already: Officials say they've recruited top-notch candidates for 60 key House races three months ahead of schedule.

Needing 25 seats to take back control lost to Republicans in 2010, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had hoped to find enough candidates by the end of the year, believing that the odds would be with them if they ran strong candidates in 60 districts where either President Obama did well in 2008 or where a Democrat has last held the seat. The DCCC calls its effort the "Drive to 25."

But what happened took them by surprise. Not only did candidates sign up earlier than expected, but many came with impressive stories and resumes showing jobs as mayors, astronauts, generals, and prosecutors. [Check out our roundup of this month's political cartoons.]

"With the wind now at our backs, we have strong Democratic candidates running in 60 Republican and open districts across the country, putting twice as many seats in play as Democrats need to take the House," said DCCC Chairman Steve Israel.

The surge in candidates came in the past three to six months when polls started to shift in the Democrat's favor. A new Reuters/Ipsos poll gives House Democrats an eight-point advantage, 48-40, and an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll shows voters prefer Democrats 45 percent to 41 percent.

"We're seeing a lot of interest and energy," said a Democratic official. [Check out our editorial cartoons on President Obama.]

Israel in a statement said that the change is due to voter concerns about the direction of the House Republican majority. "Buyer's remorse has set in with independent voters across the country who are rejecting the Republican agenda that ends Medicare and fails to create jobs while protecting special interests and the ultra wealthy at the expense of the middle class and seniors," he said. [Read about how Jimmy Carter think Obama leaves too much to Congress.]

Still, it's an uphill battle in a political climate where Obama suffers from a low job approval rating and only 58 percent of Democrats think he will be reelected.

Follow this link to see all of the new Democratic candidates.



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Race on to house Minot flood-displaced before winter

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By David Bailey

MINOT, North Dakota | Fri Oct 14, 2011 5:41pm EDT

MINOT, North Dakota (Reuters) - The snow has not yet begun to fly in Minot, a good thing for exhausted North Dakota residents in a race to house thousands of people displaced by a massive flood before the harsh winter sets in.

Four months after a record flood on the Souris River left about 11,000 people -- more than a quarter of Minot's population -- effectively homeless, the temperature is beginning to drop and many of the displaced remain staying with friends, family, in hotels or other shelter.

"We have gone from a shortage, to a critical situation to what I would consider today nearly a crisis situation," said Mike Anderson, executive director of the North Dakota Housing Finance Authority that serves affordable housing.

The state's booming oil sector created a critical housing shortage in the region even before the Souris, or Mouse River as it is known in the United States, roared over its banks and forced the evacuation of 4,100 houses in Minot and 1,000 in nearby developments and cities such as Burlington.

Federal officials hope to have everyone who needs temporary housing into it by late October or early November, up to 2,400 units grouped in community sites or on private property.

As of Wednesday night, about 45 units were occupied and more than 110 in place and being readied at community sites out of a planned 950. More than 780 units were occupied on private property out of more than 1,000 that had been placed.

Kristi Bertsch, who moved into a unit this week with her husband Jon, three children aged 4 to 11 and two small dogs, said it would help to have their things closer at hand, but was concerned about how well it would hold up over the winter.

"The doors, you can see the daylight coming through so that is not a good sign," Bertsch said. "You can have 80 mile-per-hour winds here in the winter time and as cold as it gets that is going to be a lot of cold coming in."

The first freeze in the area this year was in mid September and the average low temperature by November 1 is in the 20s.

RUNNING AT FULL STEAM FOR MONTHS

The housing is "rated for northern climates," FEMA said.

The rectangular units stand up off the ground surrounded by aprons with wooden steps, white siding and shingled roofs. They have bedrooms, living and kitchen spaces and bathrooms.

"We are concerned about how they will hold up, especially how the water and sewer is going to hold up," Minot Mayor Curt Zimbelman said.

Ward County Commissioner Jerome Gruenberg warned federal officials the units could have freezing problems and workers had gone back to reinsulate skirting, water piping and other sections. He also said the housing process could go faster.

"It is going to get pretty nasty around here, it normally does," Gruenberg said. "We are used to it. We live with it, but people are getting anxious to get in before that hits."

The flood hit mid summer and water sat for weeks, leaving a short window to set up housing and make repairs. For months many residents have worked jobs all day and at their damaged houses late into the night, running on adrenaline.

"The best way to describe this community is utter fatigue," said Lisa Clute, a state health department district executive officer who lives in Minot. "We are just tired."

In a year when tornadoes killed hundreds of people in Missouri and the southeastern United States, residents were thankful there were no reported flood deaths in Minot. They hoped, though, that the Souris flood would not be forgotten.

"It was a challenge to get evacuated, it is nothing compared to rebuilding," Clute said.

PICKING UP THE PIECES

About 61,000 tons of debris was moved to local landfills, or enough material to create a football field-sized block 10 stories high under a program overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, spokesman Patrick Moes said.

Many houses have been stripped to framing to dry out, some have visible construction and many have been left untouched.

For residents rebuilding now, skilled workers are in short supply, delaying repairs and raising the cost. Rents have begun to rise sharply in the last few weeks, local officials said.

Jaimie McMullen, a Minot State University professor, counts herself among the luckier residents. Many homes sat in water to the eaves, while water reached three feet on her first floor.

"First it was gutting, than it was cleaning, sanitizing and drying and now the rebuilding effort," said McMullen, who stayed with a neighbor's friend for weeks.

McMullen, 29, has spent her life savings and taken on a small business administration loan in addition to her mortgage, but the smelly sludge is gone and her house is nearly ready.

With repairs estimated to cost up to $80,000, McMullen leaned heavily on an uncle who worked on her house for weeks.

Across town, masked workers stripped rotted debris from Don Thomas's rental property, hauled it outside in plastic garbage barrels they lifted overhead and emptied into a dumpster.

Thomas planned to seal up the house after three weeks work and then do more restoration work next spring.

"It came about 4 inches from the living room ceiling," said Thomas, who has owned the house since the late 1970s. "The ceiling is dry -- everything else needs a lot of cleanup."

A LONG ROAD AHEAD

The next big step in the recovery is a flood control plan now in the works to lay out flood defenses and where homes might be bought out, allowing owners to decide whether to repair, rebuild or abandon properties throughout the valley.

The recovery of Grand Forks, North Dakota, from a devastating flood and fire in 1997 took about 10 years. Grand Forks incorporated park space and flood protections that left the city dry during Red River flooding this year.

"People will start to feel more relaxed the more progress we see on that," the state's flood recovery coordinator, Major General Murray Sagsveen, said of a flood control plan.

In Minot, traffic lights and street lamps remain out and sinkholes are forming in some streets, raising concerns the sewer and water systems may have more damage than thought.

Several Minot school buildings were shuttered due to flood damage, and displaced students attend classes at the city auditorium, a local church and in 65 portable classrooms. Those temporary measures may stay in place through next year.

North Dakota state lawmakers plan a special session next month that in part is expected to consider an extension of Minot sewer and water lines to address the housing shortage.

The Bertsch family gutted its Burlington home and put it up for sale, but hopes to move into a new home in the area before the end of winter, Kristi Bertsch said.

"We bought some land, we are going to build there," Bertsch said. "As long as we get our basement dug before the ground freezes ... otherwise we won't move until spring."

(Reporting by David Bailey; Editing by Jerry Norton)



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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Winery Auction Set for White House Gate Crashers

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White House gate crashers Tareq and Michaele Salahi, once drunk on the fame of crashing President Obama's first state dinner in November 2009, are hosting a very sober bankruptcy auction Saturday, a major move to bring normalcy back to their lives.

At noon at their Oasis Vineyards winery in Hume, Virginia just east of the Shenandoah Valley, auctioneers will kick off a day-long sale of wine-making equipment, some 8,000 bottles of vino, trucks, and even corks. A viewing is being held Friday. [Check out photos of Obama behind the scenes.]

The bankruptcy auction ends a long battle over ownership of the vineyard that got tangled in their fame,  capped recently when the blonde Michaele appeared on Bravo's Real Housewives of D.C. But Tareq has said it might mark the beginning of a new stage of their lives that could actually begin by making wine again at the vineyard, which is not up for auction.

The equipment to be sold off by N.T. Arrington Auctions is mostly wine, wine-making equipment and catering goods. The Salahis have suggested that it is in bad condition, but most of it looks fine in the auction house's photos.

Wine makers and booze sellers are expected to flock to the sale. To buy wine, a special ABC license will be required. The auctioneer has also issued a demand that nobody can make bid over $3,000 without first charging their credit card.

[See editorial cartoons about President Obama.]

As proof the couple plans to make a comeback, the Oasis website reveals that they are planning to renovate the facility and renting it out for weddings. "Now taking wedding reservations for 2012 Season," says the site.

They are also using the website to shoot down rumors that the whole winery has gone belly up and is being auctioned off. [See cartoons about the Democrats.]

At one point, the winery was popular and highly ranked, offering sparkling wine for up to $300 a bottle. According to the winery:

"Oasis Winery is a premium boutique winery, rated top 10 in the world, and can be found in select premium locations, such as Relais & Chateuax properties, 5 star hotels, as well as your local wine merchant—and in most instances exclusively available at the winery. The Oasis setting is majestic and breathtaking—the visitors center and vineyards overlook the US National Park/Skyline Drive. Oasis is one of the oldest vineyards in the state, offering visitors both a romantic and comfortable retreat, in addition to facilities to host meetings, lunches, dinners, and special events. The view from the winery is like a mural painted by Mother Nature; its vista sets row after row of vineyards atop gently rolling hills, with a beautiful water fountain centering out of the lake. The entire scene is framed by the majestic mountains towering behind, offering the cool gentle breezes required in Oasis' award-winning viticultural practices."



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Thursday, October 6, 2011

University of Maryland Wins Solar House Competition

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Nineteen university teams from around the world turned West Potomac Park on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., into a futuristic neighborhood last week at the U.S. Department of Energy's fifth biennial Solar Decathlon competition.

The only guidelines? Design, raise money for, build, and live in a self-sufficient house that runs on solar energy. Houses were judged on 10 criteria, including affordability, market appeal, comfort level, architecture, and, of course, energy efficiency. The wide-open guidelines led to a wide variety of houses. Students from the Southern California Institute of Architecture and the California Institute of Technology built something they call CHIP—a hyper-insulated, roomless structure that looks more like a tennis bubble than a house.

"We wanted to create what tomorrow looks like," says project engineer Fei Yang. "We want people to know that this isn't a house you stick a [solar] panel onto—it was designed from the ground up to be like this."

Other teams, such as second-place finisher Purdue University, went more traditional. Their white house looked like it could be on any midwestern street, complete with a one-car garage and an American flag on the porch. More entries fell somewhere in the middle—a team from Appalachian State University designed a "homestead" made up of a series of smaller buildings. But it was a Chesapeake Bay-inspired house made by a team from the University of Maryland that won the competition, narrowly edging Purdue.

The contest was close because the Washington area was rainy and overcast for most of the nine-day competition, giving teams little energy to work with. David Lee, communications director of the Appalachian State team, says it came down to energy management. "Five dollars of electricity is going to determine who wins this competition," he says. "It's a two-and-a-half year, $900,000 project and it comes down to $5 of electricity. It's a little mind-boggling and stressful."

Still, most houses generated enough electricity to be lived in for the week. Andrew Gong, electrical engineering lead for the CalTech team, says team engineers studied historical weather data for the past 50 years. They designed their house to compete in the worst historical weather conditions; their house barely outpaced that.

"If it was sunny, we'd be way over that target," he says.

Most teams had more than a hundred students working on the house, from engineers and architects to communications directors and business managers. Contest director Richard King says students who entered the competition are well-positioned to enter the job market.

"This group [of students] is going to get hired above others. To supplement their classroom education, they're doing this hands-on project," he says. "It's like starting a small business to form a team and put it all together."

Lee says that several of the Appalachian State team members had already received job offers. "The Solar Decathlon attracts a lot of industries," he says. "It's not just solar panel manufacturers that come here."

King says every two years the competition gets more fierce.

"They keep learning from each other. They're learning how to design it better over time. Each time, the bar gets raised and these houses are better and better," he says. "It's wonderful workforce development."

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House Bill Could Cut Federal STEM Spending

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Home > Politics & Policy > STEM Education > House Bill Could Cut Federal STEM Spending

September 30, 2011 Print

A budget bill introduced today by the House Appropriations Committee would cut $175 million in federal math and science spending.

The $153.4 billion Labor, Health and Human Services Funding Bill would cut overall spending in those areas by $4 billion.

"The bill takes decisive action to cut duplicative, inefficient, and wasteful spending," House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers said in a statement. Overall, the bill would cut education spending by $2.4 billion.

Among the cuts: the $175 million Mathematics and Science Partnerships program, which is designed to improve the quality of math and science teachers by partnering them with working scientists to improve content knowledge.

Currently, about 30 percent of chemistry and physics teachers in public high schools don't have majors in those fields and don't have a certificate to teach those subjects.

Have something to share? Send news and submissions to stem@usnews.com.

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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

White House Confident of Supreme Court Win on Healthcare

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The Obama administration's quick appeal to the Supreme Court in defense of its signature healthcare law clearly displays White House confidence that it will ultimately prevail in the case, experts say. Whether that confidence is well-placed, though, remains a matter of opinion.

Yesterday, the Department of Justice and the White House announced that the government is asking the Supreme Court to take up the case from the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled in August that the Affordable Care Act's mandate requiring all Americans to buy insurance or face a fee is unconstitutional, though could be separated from the overall law. Earlier Wednesday, the government's adversaries in the case—a coalition of 26 states as well as the National Federation of Independent Business—also filed with the high court, asking for a complete invalidation of the law. But the administration is determined the law will survive. "We know the Affordable Care Act is constitutional," White House senior adviser Stephanie Cutter blogged Wednesday. "We are confident the Supreme Court will agree."

[Check out a roundup of political cartoons on healthcare policy.]

The government could have dragged its feet in appealing to the Supreme Court—the final deadline to file was actually November, and it also could have asked for a full court review from the 11th Circuit since the case was decided by a three-judge panel (though the conservative court was unlikely to return a better verdict)—but experts say filing now displays the administration's assurance, and any delay tactics might have been exploited by Republicans as cowardly. "If you don't think you have a winning hand, then sometimes it makes sense to see if the landscape changes," says Ian Millhiser, a constitutional and judiciary analyst with the left-leaning Center for American Progress. "They clearly think, if they are going to pull the trigger now, that they stand to gain from pulling the trigger."

Tom Goldstein, the publisher of SCOTUSblog who has argued 22 cases before the Supreme Court, says filing now indicates the administration wants the case heard this term. "The technical deadline to file the petition was November, but the practical deadline if you want to get a case heard this term was much sooner," he says, adding that he believes the Supreme Court will announce sometime around Thanksgiving that it will hear the case. "The point wasn't that they had a deadline to ask the Supreme Court; they had a deadline to ask the Supreme Court if they were going to get a ruling."

[See a slide show of 10 ways the GOP can take down Obamacare.]

Goldstein adds that the main reason for pursuing quick action is most likely a common-sense one: The government needs an answer. "Delay was just going to make it too hard as a practical matter," he says. "They just need an answer so [the Department of Health and Human Services] in particular knows whether it should be issuing regulations, and whether people should be getting ready or not."

This development means, however, that a ruling would come amid presidential election fever, a gamble for the administration since the controversial law will be a key political issue with plenty of media coverage, either way the high court rules. If the law—considered Obama's landmark accomplishment by supporters—is struck down, Republicans would probably consider it a huge, motivating win, potentially demoralizing the president's base. However, Republicans could suffer politically from taking away popular provisions of the law, like free preventive care and allowing kids to stay on parents' insurance plans until age 26. If the law is upheld, Obama will probably look stronger, but vehement opponents of the law might see that ruling as a rallying cry to once again push for congressional repeal—and to get out the vote for repeal-friendly Republicans running for Senate.



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Thursday, September 29, 2011

French left captures upper house

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25 September 2011 Last updated at 21:48 GMT French Socialist politicians Martine Aubry (R) and Harlem Desir (L) listening to a Socialist victory speech in the Senate The French Socialists are savouring their historic victory over the conservatives French President Nicolas Sarkozy's conservative government has lost its majority in the Senate for the first time in recent French history.

The Socialist Party and its Communist and Green allies have won enough seats to gain control of the upper house.

Their victory comes just seven months before the country's presidential election in April.

Right-wing parties have controlled the Senate since the Fifth Republic was founded in 1958.

Early results from the indirect elections showed left-wing candidates took at least 23 seats from the governing conservative party, giving them an absolute majority.

"The 25th of September, 2011, will go down in history," Jean-Pierre Bel, head of the Socialist group in the Senate, said on French television.

"The results of this Senate election represent a real comeuppance for the right."

France's conservative Prime Minister Francois Fillon has said the right had suffered from its divisions and that the left had made a "strong breakthrough".

"The moment of truth will come next spring. The battle begins tonight," he said in a statement.

Of the 170 seats up for grabs in the election, Mr Sarkozy's centre-right UMP party had 147 seats out of a total 343 to the Socialist Party's 115 before Sunday's vote.

The number of seats in the upper house is being increased to 348 to reflect an increase in population.



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Peliculas Online

Friday, September 16, 2011

Mom claims unique Wisconsin refused him the House because she was not a man of the House

By approach Edmund published September 09, 2011| FoxNews.com

A patron saint of Wisconsin had violated the fair housing act when it refused to rent a House to a single mother, because, among other things, it is not a man "to shoveling snow", the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is alleging in an action on behalf of the mother.

The name of the single mother has been blacked out in a public release of the prosecution. But HUD alleges posed a rental of a house in La Crosse County, Wisconsin, property manager Darlene Dovenberg and was informed that it would not be able to see the property because it did not have a man around the House of the woman.

HUD said that Dovenberg has admitted that a single woman would not able to manage home confinement or snow removal required, and that she did not want that the prospective tenant appeal to him to help fix things or plough him out.

Dovenberg, however, told FoxNews.com that security was his primary concern, and she was unaware at the time of the Federal law prohibiting discrimination based on sex or race.

"The woman called and said that she would like to move in with her baby", said Dovenberg. "And this home is deep in the Woods and has a perfidious alley." He would put the woman and her child in danger. »

Dovenberg, which describes itself as a senior married, said that the House is in an isolated farmhouse where the nearest neighbour is a mile and a half later. She said any potential lessee would require a four wheel drive and the wife did not. According to the Office of climatology State of Wisconsin, La Crosse County gets about 45 centimetres of snow per year

The property was eventually leased to two men, but they have moved and Dovenberg said there is currently a family living at home.

Dovenberg apparently said to a HUD investigator, that it never rents only women with children, "especially not in" the country. But Dovenberg said when she asked representatives HUD to view the House, they have never shown.

"I think just the first responsibility of an owner is the security", she said. "And I take seriously.".

She said to FoxNews.com it rent for single moms, but in others less, remote locations.

Bryan Greene, the Deputy Secretary-General of the Office of the HUD fair housing, said one cannot eliminate any potential tenants based on sex and the Dovenberg made derogatory comments on single mothers in the investigation.

"She said single mothers caused financial problems in the country and seems to have a bias," he said. "It could not determine who gets to rent a House based on their sex."

Case seeks damages for women and others who may have been discrimination by Dovenberg and a civil penalty of $16,000 for each violation.



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Peliculas Online