Sunday, September 30, 2012

Frat house alcohol enema case worries experts

Before an unruly Tennessee party ended with a student hospitalized for a dangerously high blood alcohol level, most people had probably never heard of alcohol enemas.

Thanks to the drunken exploits of a fraternity at the University of Tennessee, the bizarre way of getting drunk is giving parents, administrators and health care workers a new fear.

When Alexander "Xander" Broughton, 20, was delivered to the hospital after midnight on Sept. 22, his blood alcohol level was measured at 0.448 percent ? nearly six times the intoxication that defines drunken driving in the state. Injuries to his rectum led hospital officials to fear he had been sodomized.

Police documents show that when an officer interviewed a fellow fraternity member about what happened, the student said the injuries had been caused by an alcohol enema.

"It is believed that members of the fraternity were utilizing rubber tubing inserted into their rectums as a conduit for alcohol," according to a police report.

While Broughton told police he remembered participating in a drinking game with fellow members of the Pi Kappa Alpha chapter, he denied having an alcohol enema. Police concluded otherwise from evidence they found at the frat house, including boxes of Franzia Sunset Blush wine.

"He also had no recollection of losing control of his bowels and defecating on himself," according to a university police report that includes photos of the mess left behind in the fraternity house after the party.

Broughton did not respond to a cellphone message seeking comment on Friday.

The university responded with swift investigation and a decision Friday to shutter the fraternity until at least 2015. The national Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity organization also accepted the withdrawal of the campus charter.

Alcohol enemas have been the punch lines of YouTube videos, a stunt in a "Jackass" movie and a song by the punk band NOFX called "Party Enema." But Corey Slovis, chairman of department of emergency medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said actually going through with the deed can have severe consequences.

"It's something that offers no advantages, while at the same time risking someone's life," he said.

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    5. If you think we're fat now, wait till 2030

The procedure bypasses the stomach, accelerating the absorption rate, Slovis said. Pouring the alcohol through a funnel can increase the amount of alcohol consumed because it's hard to gauge how much is going in.

"When you're dumping it into your rectum, often via a funnel, one or two ounces seems like such a minuscule amount," he said. Ingesting more can create unconsciousness quite quickly, he explained.

The effects have been fatal in at least one case. An autopsy performed after the death of a 58-year-old Texas man in 2004 showed he had been given an enema with enough sherry to have a blood alcohol level of 0.47 percent. Negligent homicide charges were later dropped against his wife, who said she gave him the enema.

Students walking across campus this week generally responded with sighs and eye rolls when asked about the allegations.

"It's like a big joke," said Erica Davis, a freshman from Hendersonville. "Because who does that?"

Gordon Ray, a senior from Morristown, said the details of the case caught him off guard, but not the fact that fraternity members would be overdoing it with alcohol.

"It is definitely over the top," said Ray. "But it doesn't surprise me, I don't guess."

The harm the news has done to the university's national reputation was on the mind of several students.

"If someone wants to be stupid, then they should do it where it won't affect anyone else," said Marlon Alessandra, freshman from Independence, Va.

James E. Lange, who coordinates alcohol and drug abuse prevention strategies at San Diego State University, said alcohol enemas aren't a common occurrence on campuses, though normal consumption still contributes to hundreds of student deaths annually. And many of those can be attributed to reckless attitudes about the consequences of heavy drinking, he said.

"It's not unusual to hear that students are drinking to get drunk," he said.

Lange said he hopes students don't draw the wrong lessons from the University of Tennessee incident.

"Students and people in general are pretty good at denying that they are at risk for whatever happened to someone else," he said. "So they can look at something like this and say 'I'm OK because I would never do that.'

"However, they may be drinking heavily, or doing things like mixing alcohol with prescription meds that is putting them at serious risk," he said.

To Tennessee freshman Cody Privett of Sevierville, there's nothing appealing about the incident on his campus.

"It's stupid, it's an unfortunate situation," said Privett, of Sevierville. "I mean there's partying, and then there's other things."

More top health news:

'Smiles": New street drug tied to actor's death

Woman loses arm to flesh-eating bacteria from bath salts

FDA warns of risks from online pharmacies

Follow NBC News Health on Twitterand Facebook

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49228851/ns/health/

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Video: The Plot Thickens, Part 6

Dateline NBC

'Dateline NBC,' the signature broadcast for NBC News in primetime, premiered in 1992. Since then, it has been pioneering a new approach to primetime news programming. The multi-night franchise, supplemented by frequent specials, allows NBC to consistently and comprehensively present the highest-quality reporting, investigative features, breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032600/vp/49219469#49219469

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16 Scary Probes That You Don't Want Inside of You [Probes]

The worst part of going to the doctor's is being poked and prodded with any number of terrifying probes and needles, but you probably haven't seen many of the really scary implements that are out there. Here are 16 crazy ones you probably don't want anywhere near you. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/0lO0KykGA8o/16-scary-probes-that-you-dont-want-inside-of-you

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

The Advantageous Side Effect Of Borrowing A Personal Loan

When it comes to solving immediate needs requiring financial intervention, personal loan or unsecured loan is arguably one of the most trusted borrowings. Because of the banks like HDFC, ICICI, bank of India and others offering loans at incredibly lower interest rate, the finance has ensured maximum benefits to the people for their day to day needs.

One of the greatest traits of the finance is that it is offered without yours spending days long time at bank. No doubt, less requirement of the documents is one of the most conspicuous reasons behind this. However there are also many other things that makes this finance worth obtaining.

With the unsecured finance, you can purchase consumable items such as computer system, refrigerator and many other things of your choice. The amount of finance you need will be approved by your lender.

The finance is also great when it comes to solving urgency like situation. For example, the loan is useful to give you assistance so that you can sort out wedding expenses, holidaying expenses and other expenses.

One of the other beautiful features of the finance is that it is used to purchase car as well. Hence, if you don?t want to experience time consuming procedures to borrow car loan for your dream vehicle, then personal finance can be of the greatest use.

More so, unsecured finance is greatly used to bear the cost of home improvement. There are many people who have used this finance to foot the expense of home improvement. Consulting a bank regarding this is useful to avail required amount of finance in this regard. Hence if you experience financial problem then the finance could be of the greatest use.

However, this unsecured finance should be borrowed after considering some negative points of it.

Firstly, the loan is unsecured and so is very expensive in terms of interest rate. The rate of interest on the finance is charged very expensively making it difficult for any borrower to take it. However, the rate of interest rate is remitted if the borrower secures the loan amount with collateral.

Second this to understand is that the loan should be taken only when there is no other alternative available to fund your needs. If you have enough cash to answer your small and short term needs, then don?t take this finance. This is because that the rate of interest of the finance is hugely charged by the lender.

Borrowing personal loan is one of the most effective ways to sort out any personal needs. The finance can be obtained from any lender. There are many personal loan banks in India. To have this finance approved, there are some important things to follow.

Related Topics >



  1. Crucial Pointers In Personal Loan

  2. Some Important Pointers In Home Loan

  3. Home Loan Comparison: Pointers To Look Out For

Source: http://rupeetalk.mywebdunia.com/2012/09/28/the_advantageous_side_effect_of_borrowing_a_personal_loan.html

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Digitimes says ASUS says Digitimes doesn't know what the hell it's talking about

Nexus 7

Because if you can't trust the source of yesterday's anonymously sourced $99 Nexus rumor to accurately report the denial of a $99 Nexus 7, who can you trust in this crazy world?

Never mind that the actual quote Digitimes has today doesn't actually refute anything. Here 'tis:

With Nexus 7's strong sales, rumor have circulated that Google is looking to push forward and will cooperate with Asustek to release a US$99 entry-level model and a US$199 ultra-thin upgraded model to counter Amazon and Apple's new tablet devices.

So, yeah. There's that. Ain't nothing official till it's official, folks.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/rQjAMEqpeeo/story01.htm

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EKNL ? HUGE News just out, teaming up with the Meyer Institute ...

Ticker: EKNL

Last traded: $0.122 +15.09%

Year-to-date High: $0.35

TARGET: $0.50

?

EKNL released another MONSTER press release announcing an agreement with Meyers Institute ? this is insane. With the Meyers institute now on board, this will open the doors to numerous other clinics to join forces with EKNL and FREMS technology. Can you say cha ching $$$!

We are definitely stoked for our SPECIAL REPORT THIS?WEEKEND and with this news just released definitely upped the stakes on price valuations.?

MAJOR SPECIAL?REPORT?TO?BE?RELEASED?THIS?WEEKEND ? STAY TUNED

Members need to take note of several key information from today?s press release ? key to EKNL success

Dr Perry Meyer MD is an International lecturer on limb care and a proponent of research into new technologies to better serve patients and save limbs. FREMS provide an FDA and Health Canada approved clinic based treatment that acts to increase vascularity and nerve function in diabetic patients who suffer from neuropathy.

Definitely a solid combination with high profile doctor now on board. With close ties to clinics across the country, EKNL is well on its way to installing their machines in numourous clinics!

Neurovasc is in the process of completing the clinic installation which it anticipates will have 5 machines operating when fully completed with a capacity to treat 50 patients a day. Further news will be released as the clinic nears completion in the next month.

Services to bu up and running within the month starts the revenue engines rolling for EKNL ? now this is where the money is!

EKNL released already 3 solid pre-releases and looks like they are just starting to warm up. With EKNL?being out ?core? pick we will be featuring it for at least a month, and definitely scooping any shares on every and all opportunities!

EKO International Corp.
EKNL is in super breakout mode lat traded at $0.1161 up 9.52% and with super low float of 8 millions shares, prices can move quick and sky high!

EKNL?breached through several key technical levels and well on its way for a major breakout. These are the levels to jump on board for a monster ride to MEGA gains.


http://charts.stockscores.com/chart.asp?TickerSymbol=EKNL&TimeRange=180&Interval=d&Volume=1&ChartType=CandleStick&Stockscores=1&ChartWidth=830&ChartHeight=500&LogScale=None&Band=None&avgType1=SMA&movAvg1=20&avgType2=SMA&movAvg2=50&Indicator1=None&Indicator2=RSI&Indicator3=None&Indicator4=None&endDate=2012-9-28&CompareWith=&entryPrice=&stopLossPrice=&candles=redgreen

Our last 5 picks, CMGO, USEI, AERS, SUTI, and SDSS gave members a potential 3,243%+ gains, EKNL?is on the direct path to supersede these gains in a hurry.?

CMGO ?? 900%
USEI 1,000%
AERS ?? 900%
SUTI ?? 300%
SDSS ?? 143%
Total Gains 3,243%
Average Gains ?650% per pick

?

?


FREMS is becoming one of the most sought after product that not only meets rigorous standards safety, but is approved as ?safe and effective? by the FDA!!!

?

So what is FREMS?

FREMS (Frequency Rhythmic Electrical Modulation System) delivers computer-controlled varied frequencies of electricity through electrodes placed on your skin to stimulate your nerves and blood vessels.? Quality research studies have shown that not only are the nerves stimulated to work better (making you feel better), but the small blood vessels so often affected in diabetes, improve their circulation (making you safer and healthier!).

ABOUT EKO INTERNATIONAL

EKO International Corp. is a holding company focused on growth through acquisition. Each acquisition must have substantial growth potential and is expected to add assets and/or cash-flow to the consolidated financial statements of the Company. The Company? is willing to examine a variety of proposed target businesses and if interested, will negotiate terms and conditions of purchase favorable to itself.

Compensation: Ourhotstockpicks has not been compensated for the profile of EKNL.

Ourhotstockpicks.com profiles are not a solicitation or recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities and is not offering securities for sale.? An offer to buy or sell can be made only with accompanying disclosure documents and only in the states and provinces for which they are approved. Ourhotstockpicks may be buyers of features in the open market. Click here to view the full disclaimer

from your own site.

Source: http://www.ourhotstockpicks.com/eknl-huge-news-just-out-teaming-up-with-the-meyers-institute/

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Fashion shows travel continents and eras in Paris

A model wears a creation from British fashion designer Peter Copping for Nina Ricci ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013 collection, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

A model wears a creation from British fashion designer Peter Copping for Nina Ricci ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013 collection, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

EDS NOTE NUDITY - A model wears a creation from British fashion designer Peter Copping for Nina Ricci ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013 collection, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

A model wears a creation from British fashion designer Peter Copping for Nina Ricci ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013 collection, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

EDS NOTE NUDITY A model wears a creation from British fashion designer Peter Copping for Nina Ricci ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013 collection, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

A model wears a creation for U.S fashion designer Rick Owens' ready to wear Spring-Summer 2013, presented in Paris, Thursday, Sept.27, 2012. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

(AP) ? Paris fashion has no boundaries and no borders.

Thursday's cultural melting pot of spring-summer 2013 shows was proof enough.

Curious designers, thirsty for new inspiration, ventured across the globe to bring new ideas and exotic cultures back to the catwalk.

Manish Arora traveled to northwestern India's Rajasthan to bring Paris a vibrant infusion of traditional Indian dress and lavish regal jewelry.

Balmain's creative nomad Olivier Rousteing, meanwhile, replaced last season's muse ? the Russian Empire's Faberge Egg ? to travel to the artisanal wicker-weavers of Cuba to give his in-vogue summer black collection a unique panache.

Barbara Bui, who also channeled black, joined the expedition with geometric American Indian prints and tribal-looking dresses and foulards.

Taking another tack, Nina Ricci, forever a romantic Parisian gamine, traveled decades back in time to produce a nostalgic show with a modern twist.

Friday's collections include Roland Mouret and Issey Miyake, as well as the debut ready-to-wear show for new Christian Dior designer Raf Simons.

BALMAIN

To welcome in next spring, some designers in Paris have said it with flowers. Balmain said it with wicker.

Never one to travel with the crowd, 27-year-old designer Olivier Rousteing used artisanal Cuban wicker-weaving as a vehicle for his signature graphic silhouettes.

Rousteing ? who on Thursday completed a full year at the helm of the iconic French fashion house ? possesses a roving eye for cultural artifacts. Strong shouldered, highly structured looks came with cropped tops, lashings of jewel and slices of torso at his Paris Fashion Week show.

Yet the high point was the wicker-embellished cropped jackets that growled like a fierce, feminine exoskeleton.

Rousteing's 3-D woven straw evoked a baroque mood, a feeling that was echoed by lavish diamond checkerboard patterns ? a replica of the polished marble flooring of the Versailles Palace.

No doubt Rousteing will pass his annual job review.

MANISH ARORA

India ? home to over a billion people and one of the most colorful cultures in the world ? is a limitless creative touchstone for designers. So it's surprising that Mumbai-born Manish Arora ? perhaps the subcontinent's most famous designer ? has not delved into its rich fashion encyclopedia before.

That is until now.

Arora presented a spicy and bohemian homage to his homeland for spring-summer 2013 at Paris Fashion Week.

But why now?

"Luckily, this year I was very attracted toward jewelry: Is there a better place to draw inspiration?" said Arora, dressed in a flamboyant gold top.

Arora took us by the bejeweled hand down a goldmine of revamped traditional Indian dress. Angrakha dresses with orange patterns were set of boldly with a shiny chainmail pant, alongside geometric prints of tigers, panthers and antelope.

However, the show was really about the jewelry, as sublime ornamentation reigned in some of the collection's more garish looks. At one point there were gasps as the Maharaja's daughter came down the catwalk: Resplendent in a standout gold face-band that circled the bottom of the eyes.

NINA RICCI

There's been nostalgia in the air at Nina Ricci of late.

This was certainly the case in Peter Copping's deceptively complex spring-summer 2013 show at Paris Fashion Week, which floated ethereally by and matched the vintage feeling of last season's show.

Perhaps the mood was set by the millions of falling cherry blossoms ? which mark the end of spring ? that opened the presentation.

Or perhaps it was the floaty chiffon tops, the gentle pleated skirts, the halter necks, the flowing fringing or the soft silhouettes that harked to bygone days of the 20's and 30's.

Although the show opened with black designs, it melted like winter into spring, shifting into dusty colors of silver gray, blush pink, red and pale lavender.

Touches like zippers kept it modern for an accomplished, commanding show ? the most feminine display so far this season in Paris.

But Copping needn't be feeling nostalgic himself ? this collection shows he has a bright future with the fashion house.

BARBARA BUI

"Black is back for summer," declared Barbara Bui, following her saleable, and typically feminine collection for spring-summer 2013.

The French-Vietnamese designer opened the show true to her word, with a series of sexy-looking black nappa ensembles.

Bui, known to have an eye on her youthful clientele, ticked the on-trend box with her gentle masculine tailored-jackets, which led the eye down provocatively to skintight pants or inches of leg.

Singing the spirit of spring's first bloom, Bui then let float by a diaphanous series of sheer organza blouses.

Fluttering layers and contrasting pockets endowed the cornflower blue and flesh colored looks an interesting textural play.

Unfortunately, the message of harmony got lost by the end ? diluted by a confusing series of geometric American Indian patterns with conflicting silhouettes.

____

Thomas Adamson can be followed at http:/ /Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-27-France-Fashion-Day%203%20Wrap/id-5eab851319c84436abae2772f0bdb8d8

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Friday, September 28, 2012

VW, Audi, Porsche Lay Out Plug-In Hybrid Plans: Paris Auto Show

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Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo Concept live photos, 2012 Paris Auto Show

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After a brisk run-through of new models from all of its many brands, Volkswagen Group closed last night's preview event before the Paris Auto Show with a few words on its plans for plug-in hybrids.

"Many companies are reducing their plans for electric vehicles," said VW Group chief Martin Winterkorn.

"We at Volkswagen don't have to do that; we have always looked rationally at this transition."

"The new powertrain taking shape as very promising," he said, "is the best of electric and engine power: the plug-in hybrid."

VW Group believes this gives the best flexibilities for drivers and families who need the range of gasoline vehicles to drive on holiday, but want zero-emission capability for a range up to 50 kilometers (31 miles).

"On holiday, there is no alternative to the internal combustion engine," Winterkorn said.

To provide green vehicles that are "economical, refined, comfortable, and flexible," the plug-in hybrid system offers the best blend of capabilities.

"This technology is not pie in the sky," Winterkorn said confidently. "It will soon become a reality on our roads," and he promised that the executives and reporters in the audience would soon be driving them.

Then he dove into a detailed listing of the plug-in cars that would emerge from the group's Volkswagen, Audi, and Porsche brands over the next few years.

The list he gave consists of cars that will be introduced in European markets; VW Group's U.S. operations will have to decide which, if any, of them to offer.

Indeed, the first hybrid in a volume segment will be the 2013 Volkswagen Jetta Hybrid, which will arrive in U.S. dealerships later this year.

For Europe, the Audi R8 e-tron and Volkswagen e-Up and e-Golf are already in the works and will hit the roads this year or next, Winterkorn said.

Next year, he continued, will come a Porsche Panamera plug-in hybrid--using the system shown in the Panamerica Sport Turismo Concept first unveiled at his event--and also the limited-edition Porsche 918 Spyder plug-in hybrid sports car.

Then for 2014, the group will show plug-in hybrid versions of the following vehicles:

And the Audi A5 and A6 will follow shortly thereafter, plus "numerous other derivatives" to fill out the rest of the decade.

"We will take this pioneering technology out of its niche," Winterkorn concluded, "and make it accessible to as many people as possible."

As for the U.S. market, further details emerged during a technical roundtable this morning with Ulrich Hackenberg, head of development for the Volkswagen brand.

The one plug-in vehicle already confirmed is the Volkswagen e-Golf, a battery electric version of the new Golf that was just introduced this month.

Prototypes of the e-Golf have been tested, using the current generation of Golf, for several years now.

The Volkswagen e-Golf will arrive in the U.S. in 2014, most likely as a 2015 model-year car to comply with an expanded set of California Zero-Emission Vehicle requirements.

Asked whether VW would attempt to sell high volumes of the e-Golf in the States--or whether it was merely a "compliance car" to meet the California rules--Hackenberg said, in effect, "Well, we'll see if people want to buy them."

The Audi A3 e-tron, a plug-in hybrid version of the same hybrid system to be used in the upcoming Jetta Hybrid, may be Audi's first foray into selling plug-in vehicles in the States.

No firm plans for that vehicle have been announced, although dozens of prototypes are now being tested by Audi employees across the country.

The group's MQB architecture--which underlies the new VW Golf, the new Audi A3, and a large number of vehicles to come--has been designed to accommodate a wide range of different energy sources and motive power.

Those include gasoline, diesel, hybrid, and plug-in hybrid models, as well as battery electric and, perhaps surprisingly, even hydrogen fuel-cell powertrains.

+++++++++++

Follow GreenCarReports on Facebook and Twitter.


Source: http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1079446_vw-audi-porsche-lay-out-plug-in-hybrid-plans-paris-auto-show

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Questions About Today's Real Estate? - Crescenta Valley Weekly ...

Advice for first time
home buyers
Dear Phyllis,
I have been back and forth about buying a home for the last three years. I hear that prices have dropped, but I don?t see much evidence of that. Each time I make an offer on a home, someone else?s offer is better, it?s either cash or they offered more money than me. I am becoming discouraged and hope you have some advice for me.
Avo

Dear Avo,
The current market is extremely confusing. Most listings are selling quickly, in multiple offer situations and many for over asking price.? Certain price ranges are much more competitive than others.? The first time buyer market is especially difficult to penetrate.

The first thing I would suggest is to be patient. I know that is easier said than done, but it?s the best advice I can offer any first time home buyer.

The second suggestion is to work with an experienced real estate agent. Not one who has been selling real estate for 30 years and is semi-retired or one who is newly licensed.

The third suggestion is to work with a local real estate agent with an excellent reputation. As a buyer in today?s competitive market, your choice of Realtor? is crucial. There are certain real estate agents known for creating unnecessary conflict. In a multiple offer situation, your choice of real estate agent can kill your offer. All things being equal, the seller?s agent is not going to want to work with them/you and will guide their client (home seller) to a Realtor? who has a track record of closing escrows.

There are a couple of things you and your real estate agent should consider:

1)?? ?With your lender?s
prequalification (which should be current/within 30 days and mention your stellar FICO scores) you should also include evidence of your down payment and reserves (cross out your account number/address/etc. to prevent identity theft).

2)?? ?Have your real estate agent discuss with the seller?s agent specifics: preferred close of escrow date, preferred services (escrow and title companies, etc). What is the seller?s motivation? Is a quick escrow a benefit or hindrance? Tailor your offer to meet a seller?s preferences; it?s not just about the purchase price.

3)?? ?When you see a home you like, act quickly ? try your best to avoid a multiple offer situation. After writing your offer, be prepared for a counter offer and again, don?t drag your feet, know ahead of time how much you are willing to increase your offered price.

In more affordable price ranges, it is not uncommon for buyers to write more than half a dozen purchase offers. Best of luck to you, good things come to those who wait!

Phyllis HARB 2012 WEB

Please visit http://www.losangelesreblog.com/
Phyllis Harb is a Realtor? with Prudential California Realty.
She may be contacted at (818) 790-7325 or by email AskPhyllis@RealtorHarb.com.

Source: http://www.crescentavalleyweekly.com/between-friends/09/27/2012/questions-about-todays-real-estate-7/

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Never Too Late To Retake Your A Levels

If you received your A level results last August only to find that you fell short of the grades you needed or wanted, you might feel so disappointed that you want to give up and instead enter the job market without any idea of what kind of work you are interested in.

However, before you make such a rash decision, why not try taking you?re a levels again? It might be too late to retake you?re a levels for this upcoming academic year but that doesn?t mean you can?t try again next year. The opportunity to go back is never closed to you as you can return to education at age you wish. Besides, taking an unexpected gap year can actually have unforeseen benefits. Over the course of the upcoming year you can use your time to work a full time job which will allow you to save a tidy sum of money so that you won?t have to rely so greatly on government funding if you choose to attend university after gaining your A levels.

While you can always go back and retake A Levels in the traditional pattern of attending college, there are a number of other options you can choose to explore, such as boarding school options that allow you to retake A levels away from home at a boarding college in an environment with students of your own age who are in a similar position to yourself. Situated on a campus you will learn life skills that will prepare you greatly for when you do get to university, an advantage over those who haven?t had such experience. A boarding college experience is altogether similar to the kind of life you will experience at university.

In addition to having excellent facilities of all educational subjects, Independent boarding colleges offer wonderful recreational areas too, such as cinemas, sporting grounds, and art rooms. The beautiful part about retaking your A levels here is that you don?t have to study the exact same subjects again, especially if it was those subjects that previously caused you problems.

Retaking A levels is something that thousands of students of all ages do every year. There can be a number of reasons for this, maybe personal circumstances forced you to perform below the level of your actual ability, or perhaps you just couldn?t reach your full potential in a school atmosphere.

Whatever your situation, it is never too late to return to A level education and next September is the perfect time to reassess your mistakes and begin again.

If you want to retake your A levels in a UK boarding school environment, look no further than Rochester Independent College. Rochester has outstanding facilities for A level retakes that cater for both learning and recreation.

Source: http://toddsblogs.com/referenceandeducation/2012/09/27/never-too-late-to-retake-your-a-levels/

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Reference Frame: Fifty years after Silent Spring

Conservationism or environmentalism as an ideology has its roots in Nazi Germany and one could probably go even further.

But the Western environmentalism in the form we are familiar with today was born exactly 50 years when Rachel Carson began to release her book Silent Spring. It's such an inconvenient anniversary that most of the articles about the anniversary listed by Google News have been written by the critics of environmentalism.

-->

Some good articles were penned by Ronald Bailey, Roger Meiners, Matt Ridley, John Tierney, and Charlie Stenholm with John Block. Links via Benny Peiser.

Let me add a few words. Centuries ago, people were living in Nature and they understood it was cruel. So they had no romantic feelings about Nature: they had to hunt if they didn't want to starve to death (or become vegetarians), they had to be ready for other predators, cruel weather, and so on, and so on.

Sometime in the 19th century, the industrial Western civilization became advanced enough so that most people were "stronger" than the usual natural foes. With great power comes great responsibility, Voltaire wrote in a different context. It makes sense that people started to be looking at themselves ? whether they weren't doing something that was wrong or harmful. We could find examples in which the answer was Yes. Examples in which people changed their behavior because they just didn't want to destroy Nature, they just didn't want to destroy their own environment or health.

In the 19th century, our cities were already industrialized and the pollution was probably much higher than in recent decades. For example, the picture below shows what Emil ?koda's major factory in my hometown of Pilsen looked like in the 1880s:

There were already lots of chimneys and there were probably lots of pollutants. People didn't care much. We may be shocked what they found tolerable because various emissions over there wouldn't be considered tolerable today. However, those 19th century people could have actually been more reasonable than we are. Our worries and policies inspired by these worries may actually be causing more harm than improvement ? they harm our psychology, optimism, creativity, and through the bad policies, they harm our industries and prosperity in general.

Nevertheless, I said that it is right for humans to look critically at themselves, to have feedback mechanisms. But what Rachel Carson did was something else and almost entirely negative. She introduced all the basic pernicious features of environmentalism as an ideology that we're still witnessing and struggling against today. I would summarize these features by the following list. She has introduced the following bad habits and beliefs:

  1. A small effect, usually a hypothetical one, may be taken out of the context and inflated.
  2. The industrial activity (and human activity in general) may always be assumed to be bad for Nature.
  3. Claims that are compatible with the previous point may be claimed to be scientific even though there is no actual scientific evidence supporting such claims or if there is even evidence showing that these claims are wrong.
  4. When a particular threat is no longer fashionable or powerful enough, when it "loses steam", the main problem with the human activity must be "continuously redefined" even though nothing has actually changed about the human activity or the scientific evidence.
Her particular book claimed that pesticides and DDT in particular would cause many diseases you may imagine, including cancer, and they would also lead to extinction of many bird species. Some of her claims ? not those about cancer ? may have had a true core but the vast majority of her statements were rubbish, as we can easily see with the hindsight of 50 years we have acquired by today.

As some of the articles mention, we are using 2 times greater an amount of pesticides than people were using 50 years ago. Still, the cancer rates went down in the last 20 years and the reason is that the actual main contributors to cancer ? which are not really pesticides ? went down. (Carson herself had breast cancer, had to be treated, got weaker, caught a respiratory virus, but she died of heart attack aged 56: so she's no recipe for longevity according to the best rules of Nature.)

Her particular concerns about the pesticides were mostly wrong and they are no longer relevant. No one talks about them anymore. Compare this irrelevance of all the details she wrote with the relevance of other texts written in the early 1960s, e.g. the papers about the Higgs boson. All the papers still matter and we (and a committee in Stockholm) still care about their details. While she has contributed to the death of tens of millions of people in Africa that resulted from the ban of DDT, everyone knows that pesticides as a principle couldn't have been abandoned. The planet today only feeds 7 billion people because the agriculture largely relies on genetically modified crops, pesticides, and other things. Without those modern technologies, billions of people would have to starve to death.

So I don't want to talk about the particular topics she was hyping: they don't deserve it.

Instead, I want to say that she was a pioneer of an ideologically driven pseudoscience pretending to be science. When she talked about the life of birds and their interactions with the environment, it sounded like a science ? ecology. When she talked about pesticides, it sounded like a science, too ? some kind of biochemistry. So by the choice of words, she could have pretended she was speaking as a scientist. A problem is that the claims she was making were actually never scientifically justified, at least not with good enough standards. They were ideological slogans. And she was one of the first people in the West who intensely insisted that the compatibility of a proposition with her ideology may replace the scientific rigor that was normally needed to establish scientific claims.

To prove her predetermined conclusion that the industrial activity was wrong, she picked a random technicality ? some possible yet mostly hypothetical bad side effects of pesticides ? and she inflated them out of proportion and added lots of accusations that weren't really true. At some moment, it became obvious that her scaremongering was indefensible (well, the population of birds was actually growing even when her very book was published) so the particular pesticide hysteria ended. However, what didn't end was her copyrighted dishonesty. It's been recycled many times.

While pesticides are pretty important to feed the whole mankind today, as I have mentioned, they're not really an essential and omnipresent part of the civilization. If we banned all pesticides, a fraction of the humanity would die but the rest could continue their lives in pretty much the same way. Unlimited fear of pesticides was replaced by fear of population bomb, ozone hole everywhere, acid rains, radioactivity from nuclear power plants killing all life on Earth, new ice age, and ? finally ? global warming. Some of the worries had a justifiable core; most of them didn't.

What the newest fearmongering wants to ban ? carbon dioxide emissions ? is much more universal and crucial for the civilization than pesticides (and vastly more omnipresent than e.g. freons that may have been genuinely harming the ozone layer ? and even than the sulfur oxides that were certainly causing acid rains). We couldn't do most things if carbon dioxide emissions were "illegal".

Fifty years ago, the tiny "scientific" effect that was inflated out of proportion was some hypothetical lethal effect of pesticides on birds. These days, it's the greenhouse effect ? an effect that is said to destroy the very climate, and therefore everything else with it. In both cases, they are rank-and-file, weak enough effects among millions of other effects that science may study and does study. But in both cases (and many other cases), the environmental movement promoted these phenomena to the most important processes that are taking place on Earth. Everything (at least in the modern agriculture) was about the lethal impact of the evil pesticides 50 years ago; everything is about global warming, Carson's posthumous children claim today.

The environmental movement loves to "worship" something as the "Devil" ? sometimes it's the pesticides, sometimes it's the carbon dioxide. In reality, these "Devils" may sometimes cause a negative thing but most of the things they're causing are positive and it's surely scientifically indefensible to consider them "purely bad".

So the "principles" coined by Rachel Carson ? which include the ability to mutate, see the last one ? may be viewed as a dangerous infection that started to plague the mankind. An increasing number of people have been affected by this infection; and ever larger and more important technologies and industries were becoming potential victims of the proposed policies. These things have been happening ? and are still happening ? not because science would demonstrate some actual fatal threat but because it has become normal to promote exaggerations, pseudoscience, and downright lies as long as they are compatible with the ideology that the environmental movement holds dear.

As Carson's infection grew and started to threaten all industries that emit carbon dioxide ? and most of the crucial ones do ? we are in trouble. Aside from tens of millions of people that Carson helped to kill, this threat for the industrial civilization as we have known it ? and the accompanying threat for the scientific method that was increasingly squeezed by something that only pretends to be science ? may be, to a rather large extent, blamed on Rachel Carson herself. That's why you shouldn't forget to spit on her grave if you ever visit Maryland.

And that's the memo.

Source: http://motls.blogspot.com/2012/09/fifty-years-after-silent-spring.html

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Such Good People (talking-points-memo)

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Arizona Immigration Law: 9th U.S. Circuit Court Of Appeals Denies ...

Arizona Immigration Law

TAMPA, FL - AUGUST 28: Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer attends the Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on August 28, 2012 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

PHOENIX -- A federals appeals court has turned back the latest effort by a civil rights coalition to bar police from enforcing the most contentious part of Arizona's immigration law.

Opponents of part of the law requiring police to question some people they contact about their immigration status wanted the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to block its enforcement.

That provision survived a U.S. Supreme Court review and it went into effect Sept. 18 after a federal judge in Phoenix said it could be enforced.

In a ruling Tuesday, the appeals court in San Francisco denied the coalition's emergency motion for an injunction pending appeal and their request for certification to the Arizona Supreme Court.

An attorney with the National Immigration Law Center says the coalition is assessing its next step.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/25/arizona-immigration-law_n_1914549.html

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Video: Former British PM Rings NYSE Opening Bell

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49164645/

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Yemen needs a US reset, not a retreat

Last week's violent anti-US protests underscore the need for greater US engagement in Yemen.?The country's economic, political, and security future hinges on alleviating humanitarian needs, addressing their root causes, and fostering an inclusive political transition.

By Kari Jorgensen Diener and Victoria Stanski / September 25, 2012

Yemeni demonstrators break a window of the US Embassy during a protest about a film ridiculing Islam's prophet Muhammad, in Sanaa, Yemen, Sept. 13. Op-ed contributors Kari Jorgensen Diener and Victoria Stanski agree with experts who say that 'unless Yemenis believe that their government can provide them with access to food, water, electricity, health care, and education, they will feel disenfranchised, and this in turn could further fuel extremism.'

Hani Mohammed/AP/File

Enlarge

Sanaa, Yemen and Washington

Spurred by reports of an anti-Islam film originating in the United States ? The Innocence of Muslims ? that mocks the prophet Muhammad, tragic violence continued across the Middle East much of last week. The aggressive anti-US protests that have followed attacks at the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya starkly illustrate the challenges of engaging with a changing Middle East.

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Some American lawmakers have called for the Obama administration to respond to this violence by cutting off US assistance to some of those countries where violent protests have broken out. While this frustration is understandable, US disengagement would almost certainly undermine these fragile states at a critical moment in their transitions. This, in turn, would harm US interests in supporting stable democratic transitions, while undermining moderate and constructive local actors who are key change agents in the region.

The importance of continued US engagement is perhaps clearest in Yemen, where protesters stormed the US embassy in Sanaa on Sept. 13. Such violence underscores the turmoil already gripping that country as it grapples with the dual challenges of a major humanitarian crisis and a difficult political transition after decades of dictatorship.

As one of the major international aid organizations working in the country, our nonprofit charitable organization, Mercy Corps is actively responding to humanitarian needs there. From a humanitarian perspective, we can attest that what is needed is a US reset, rather than a retreat.

The US and other international donors will gather later this month in New York for the ?Friends of Yemen? donor conference with an important opportunity to recalibrate the world?s support for Yemen. The US approach to Yemen to date has focused primarily on addressing symptoms ? humanitarian needs, political violence, and extremism. It has done little to address the root causes these challenges.

Such a reorientation could be transformative for Yemen ? and for US interests in that country and the broader region. That potential is evident in the recent progress seen in the regional capital of Taiz, which is Yemen?s third largest city and often dubbed the heart of the country?s revolution.

Taiz, like most of the country, faces a humanitarian emergency. Although markets are brimming with food, a staggering one fifth of those living there go to bed hungry, and 40 percent do not have access to safe drinking water. Unemployment is rampant, affecting 1 out of almost every 2 people.

The repercussions of these circumstances play out in the day-to-day lives of women in Taiz like Amina, a mother of six whom Mercy Corps began supporting with food vouchers after she brought her two-year-old daughter Amat ? who weighed just 12 pounds at the time ? to the local clinic for emergency treatment. Amina?s husband is unable to secure reliable employment, and the family can barely afford rice and beans for their children. Their story is emblematic of the broader challenge facing Yemen.

If children like Amat are unable to access sufficient food and clean water ? especially during the vital early years of their lives ? medical research shows they could face negative lifelong health impacts. This story, when multiplied by the tens of thousands of children who are also acutely malnourished, illustrates the seriousness and scope of the crisis for Yemen?s future.

And the crisis isn?t simply one of health and nutrition. In a letter to President Obama in June, a group of leading Yemen and foreign policy experts in the US known as the Yemen Policy Initiative warned that unless Yemenis believe that their government can provide them with access to food, water, electricity, health care, and education, they will feel disenfranchised, and this in turn could further fuel extremism.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/osfOxkUaKjk/Yemen-needs-a-US-reset-not-a-retreat

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Toepfer cuts forecast of UK wheat crop after bad weather

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Sweeping new changes expected at NKorean farms

SARIWON, North Korea (AP) ? North Korean farmers who have long been required to turn most of their crops over to the state may now be allowed to keep their surplus food to sell or barter in what could be the most significant economic change enacted by young leader Kim Jong Un since he came to power nine months ago.

The proposed directive appears aimed at boosting productivity at collective farms that have struggled for decades to provide for the country's 24 million people. By giving farmers such an incentive to grow more food, North Korea could be starting down the same path as China when it first began experimenting with a market-based economy.

Two workers at a farm south of Pyongyang told The Associated Press about the new rules on Sunday, saying they were informed of the proposed changes during meetings last month and that they should take effect with this year's upcoming fall harvest. The Ministry of Agriculture has not announced the changes, some of which have been widely rumored abroad but never previously made public outside North Korea's farms.

Farmers currently must turn everything over to the state beyond what they are allowed to keep for their families. Under the new rules, they would be able to keep any surplus after they have fulfilled state-mandated quotas ? improving morale and giving farmers more of a chance to manage their plots and use the crops as a commodity.

"We expect a good harvest this year," said O Yong Ae, who works at Migok Cooperative Farm, one of the largest and most productive farms in South Hwanghae Province in southwestern North Korea. "I'm happy because we can keep the crops we worked so hard to grow."

The outside world has been watching closely to see how Kim's rule will differ from that of his autocratic father, Kim Jong Il, who died in December, and how he will deal with the country's chronic food shortages.

The proposed changes mimic central elements of China's rural reform in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when China allowed farmers to hold onto their surplus after meeting state quotas, John Delury, an assistant professor at Yonsei University in South Korea who specializes in Chinese and North Korean affairs, said Monday.

The result for China: a significant boost both for the economy and then-leader Deng Xiaoping's popularity.

"Of course, a major difference between the two cases is that the vast majority of the Chinese population were farmers at the time," he said. North Korea has fewer farmers and less arable land, and "will have to find its own formula for successful development."

Kim Jong Un, who inherited a nation with chronic food, fuel and power shortages, has made improving the economy a hallmark of his nascent rule. In his first public speech in April, he openly acknowledged economic hardship in North Korea, and pledged to raise the standard of living.

The young leader, who is the third generation of his family to lead North Korea since his grandfather founded the communist state in 1948, has already has made some significant changes. He dismissed his father's army chief and promoted a younger general. He has also been presenting a much more accessible public persona, appearing among the masses with his wife and giving televised speeches, something his father shunned during his time in power.

However, North Korea has maintained its confrontational stance toward much of the outside world, especially wartime enemies South Korea and the United States. Pyongyang continues to build and develop its nuclear program despite outside pressure to dismantle its atomic facilities in exchange for much-needed aid and international cooperation.

North Korea has a per capita GDP of $1,800 per year, according to the U.S. State Department, far below that of its neighbors in Northeast Asia, and its rocky, mountainous terrain and history of natural disasters has long challenged the Kim regime to provide enough food.

Founder Kim Il Sung created the country's farming system in 1946 by turning farms that had been private during colonial Japanese rule into collective operations.

At cooperative farms across the country, the government doles out fuel, seeds and fertilizer, and farmers pay the government back for the supplies, said Kang Su Ik, a professor at Wonsan Agricultural University.

The farmers' crops go into the Public Distribution System, which aims to provide North Koreans with 600 to 700 grams of rice or cornmeal a day. However, a persistent shortfall of more than 400,000 tons a year in staple grains has meant lower rations all around, according to the United Nations, which has appealed for donations to help North Korea make up for the shortage.

Under the previous system, each farmer could keep as much as 360 kilos of corn or rice a year to consume or sell at the market, in addition to what they grow in their own courtyards. The rest was turned over to the state to distribute as rations, Kang said.

The proposed changes would reverse the equation, challenging farmers to meet a state quota and then allowing them to do as they wish with the rest, including saving it for themselves, selling it at the local farmer's market or bartering it for other goods.

Farmers also would have more control over tending their plots. At Migok, 1,780 farmers work in teams of about 100. In the future, sub-teams of about 20 to 30 farmers are expected to have more say in how to tend their crops, said Kim Yong Ae, who oversees the visitor's center at Migok, where a patchwork of rice paddies stretches as far as the eye can see.

The new rules could be "a very important and constructive step," if they amount to real change, Marcus Noland of the Washington, D.C.-based Peterson Institute for International Economics, said via e-mail.

O, who lives with her rice farmer husband and two young sons in Migok's Apricot Village, brightened up when she said the family expects a surplus this year. Migok was unaffected by the summer rains that destroyed farmland elsewhere in the country, and their private garden is bursting with fruit trees, vegetables and marigolds.

Still, she said they would probably donate their extra rice to the state anyway ? an offering known in North Korea as "patriotic rice."

It's unclear whether the agricultural changes will be on the agenda when legislators convene Tuesday in Pyongyang for the Supreme People's Assembly. The gathering marks the parliament's second session of the year, a notable departure from the once-a-year meetings held during Kim Jong Il's rule.

The Presidium of the parliament did not announce an agenda, but Kim Song Chon, a Presidium official, told AP that legislators have been summoned to discuss domestic and foreign policy and to make personnel changes at top state bodies.

______

Follow AP's Korea bureau chief Jean H. Lee at twitter.com/newsjean.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sweeping-changes-expected-nkorean-farms-063200344--spt.html

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Spaceport is built, but who will come?

TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES, N.M. (AP) ? New Mexico Tourism Secretary Monique Jacobson says it will be New Mexico's Sydney Opera House. Virgin Galactic Chairman Richard Branson has hinted it will host the first of his new brand of lifestyle hotels. And the eclectic hot springs town of Truth or Consequences has been anxiously awaiting all the economic development the nearly quarter-of-a-billion-dollar project is supposed to bring to this largely rural part of southern New Mexico.

But as phase one of Spaceport America, the world's first commercial port built specifically for sending tourists and payloads into space, is nearing completion, the only new hotel project that has been finalized is a Holiday Inn Express here in Truth or Consequences, about 25 miles away. And three key companies with millions of dollars in payroll have passed on developing operations in the state.

The lagging development, along with competition from heavy hitters like Florida and Texas, is raising new questions about the viability of the $209 billion taxpayer-funded project ? as well as the rush by so many states to grab a piece of the commercial spaceport pie. To date, nine spaceports are planned around the United States, mostly at existing airports, and another 10 have been proposed, according to a recent report from the New Mexico Spaceport Authority.

"Right now, the industry is not there to support it," Alex Ignatiev, a University of Houston physics professor and adviser to space companies, said of the list of planned and proposed spaceports across America.

Andrew Nelson, COO of XCOR Aerospace, disagrees, saying "in the next couple to three years, there's going to be a demonstrative reduction in the cost to launch stuff ... so we are going to have a lot more people coming out of the woodwork."

Currently, the Spaceport can count on two rocket companies that send vertical payloads into space and Virgin Galactic, the Branson space tourism venture that says it has signed up more than 500 wealthy adventurers for $200,000-per-person spaceflights. Other leaders in the race to commercialize the business and send tourists into space have been passing on New Mexico.

For example, XCOR Aerospace, which manufactures reusable rocket engines for major aerospace contractors and is designing a two-person space vehicle called the Lynx, has twice passed over New Mexico in favor of Texas and Florida. Most recently, it announced plans to locate its new Commercial Space Research and Development Center Headquarters in Midland, Texas.

Another company, RocketCrafters, Inc., passed over New Mexico for Titusville, Fla. And the space tourism company of SpaceX, is looking at basing a plant with $50 million in annual salaries to Brownsville, Texas.

Locally, officials blame the lack of new businesses on the legislature's refusal to pass laws that would exempt spacecraft suppliers from liability for passengers should the spacecraft crash or blow up. When New Mexico was developing Spaceport in partnership with Virgin Galactic, it passed a law to exempt the carrier through 2018, but not parts suppliers. Colorado, Florida, Texas and Virginia have adopted permanent liability exemption laws for both carriers and suppliers. The laws, called informed consent, are much like those that exempt ski areas from lawsuits by skiers, who waive their rights for claims when they buy a ski pass. Spaceport officials emphasize the carriers and suppliers would not be exempt from damage on the ground, or in cases of gross negligence.

"The issue is informed consent legislation," said Truth or Consequences Mayor John Mulcahy. "We need to get that passed."

Companies make no secret of the fact that the liability laws have played a role in their decision to go elsewhere. But they also cite Spaceport America's remote location ?45 miles from Las Cruces and 200 miles from Albuquerque ? and a failure by the state to offer competitive incentives as factors.

"We worked with (former Gov. Bill) Richardson's people as well as (Gov. Susana) Martinez," Nelson said. "They are all fine. They have been great. But they couldn't deliver the package that was necessary to get across the goal line."

Spaceport's success is tied largely to Virgin Galactic, which signed a 20-year lease to operate its commercial space tourism business from the site. Over the next two decades, the company's lease payments and user fees are expected to generate $250 million and more. But the terms of the lease or what penalties might be imposed if Branson pulls out are not publicly known. And the facility was planned with the idea that at least one new major tenant would move in by 2016.

"We are so happy we have Virgin Galactic as anchors," said Christine Anderson, executive director of the New Mexico Space Authority, which is lobbying lawmakers to approve informed consent. "But we want to attract more tenants. ... I think this is really a critical piece of legislation that New Mexico has to have."

Nelson says his company hasn't ruled out one day flying his Lynx aircraft in New Mexico. But he says the legislature's wavering on the liability exemptions "sends a message that we cannot expect a consistent response," he said.

Meantime, Branson's estimate for a first manned flight has been pushed back until late 2013 at the earliest. And questions remain about the facility's tourism draw.

Tourism and Spaceport officials have estimated as many as 200,000 people a year would visit the futuristic center. Branson told a national hotel conference in 2011 that he might put one of his still to be developed Virgin hotels in the area. But there has been no further word on that hotel, or others that have been rumored to cater to the space crowd.

Ignatiev estimates it will be 10 years before the commercial space business really takes off, "And I don't know how many states or commercial entities can sit around for 10 years and wait for business to show up. They are going to have a problem staying viable."

___

Follow Jeri Clausing on Twitter at http://twitter.com/(hash)!/jericlausing

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spaceport-built-come-154859283--finance.html

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