Friday, April 29, 2011

Rice, Tung Fill in Blanks on 500 Entry List - SB Nation

iqukikofor.wordpress.com


autosport.com


Rice, Tung Fill in Blanks on 500 Entry List

SB Nation


Buddy Rice, the 2004 winner of the Indianapolis 500, has been confirmed as the second driver for Panther Racing at the 100th Anniversary running, according to the Indianapolis Star. ...


Buddy Rice joins Panther for Indy 500

crash.net



 »

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

More federal money is coming for Everglades restoration - Jacksonville Business Journal:

uhalugupuzyma.blogspot.com
The announced April 28 that about $100 millionj in federal stimulus dollars will be spent on Evergladewsrestoration projects, which had been starved for fundingy in recent years. Earlier this more than $180 million for sevej core Everglades projects was includes in the annualfederal budget. Companies seeking work from the corpss must first register asfederal contractors. “Wer have a number of programz available through our small businesas office in Jacksonville to help businesses seeking work, and we have an ongoing discussion with contractor in our contracting office to help lead them to resourced to help them find work,” said Mike economic recovery program manager for the corps’ Jacksonvillr District, which includes the entire state of Potential federal projects in the Everglades could generate more than 3,00o0 jobs in the next few years, accordinhg to the .
Many jobs woulsd be in construction, whicg is bleeding employment, and in relates industries such as engineering and From thestimulus money, the corpw would receive $6 million to purchasee rock that would be used to build and maintain the Hoovefr Dike around Lake Okeechobee, $40.8 milliobn to restore the Picayune Strand wetlands in southwestt Florida and $41.3 million to start constructio on a Palm Beach Counth reservoir included in the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.
, and the applauded the “This is a clear signal the Obama administrationm is solidly behind our efforts to revitalizr and restore the Riverof Grass,” said Nelson, who arguex for many of the projects to be including in the The corps received $4.6 billion from the America n Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 for civil work s programs. The projects are expected to stimulats jobs andspending nationwide.
Many idlec road and excavation contractors may be able to work for the Kirk Fordham, executive director of the Evergladees Foundation, said in a statement that the project work would advance the restoration of the ecosystemj and water supply in South Florida whiler “creating good-paying jobs.” “Hundreds of workersz are looking for work, and federal dollars can provid a boost to the economy,” he said. Fordham praisedf the work of Terrence “Rock” Salt, the newly appointed deputy assistant secretary forcivil works, who worked for yeares on Everglades restoration. John Paul Woodley Jr.
, the corps’ assistant secretary for civil said in a newsrelease that, in addition to providing jobs duringh a time of economic hardship, “the corps will be able to use thes funds to accomplish work on water resources projectsw that will benefit the nation for years to come.” Economists estimate that projects will create or maintain about 57,400 direct construction jobs and an additional 64,000 jobs in firms supplying or supportingh the construction and the businesses that sell goods and servicess to these workers and their families, according to a news Deerfield Beach-based has recently landed two for $19 million and $13.
6 million, to supplyh pumps for previously funded Everglades plans. One of the biggesgt immediate projects could bea $60 million bridge alon g Tamiami Trail (U.S. 41) in the Evergladew west of Miami. The water district estimate s elevating the highway and buildinhg the bridge could create600 jobs. Any contractors that buils highways or bridges could be considere d forthe project, said Bob Johnson, senior scientist with the in South Florida. Other projects in the budgegt billincluded $74 million for the Hooverf Dike project, which would create an estimateed 240 jobs. The lake levep has been held low for years because of concerns aboutthe dike’s integrity. THE U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District Web Phone: (888) 227-2423 for registration assistance, (904) 232-1150 for smalol business informationWeb site: (561) 682-6391, (561) 682-2715 or the bid hotline, 472-5290

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Fix your own meal - Jackson Clarion Ledger

symowugebeda.blogspot.com


Fix your own meal

Jackson Clarion Ledger


Ro'Chez Watermelon Salad includes succulent cubes of watermelon rolled in Creole honey mustard with tasso and flash-fried crawfish. / Photos by Barbara Gauntt/The Clarion-Ledger Peachy Pork at Ro'Chez in Ridgeleand sports jerked pork loin resting on ...



and more »

Friday, April 22, 2011

UW-Whitewater, Milwaukee 7 Water Council to jointly train students - Business First of Buffalo:

lkinibim.blogspot.com
The program will begin enrolling students in the fall semester and, because many students have already taken relevant courses, should be graduating its firsft water management specialists within a said Kirsten Crossgrove, associate professor of biology at UW-Whitewaterd and coordinator of the school’s integratec science-business major. The program is designed to give student s a basic background inwater law, environmental law, naturakl resources and environmental economicsw as well as aquatixc biology, chemistry and ecology.
Student s will serve internships with the Milwaukeew 7Water Council, an organization of academia and government in the seven-county area in southeastermn Wisconsin that is working to establis the Milwaukee region as a global cented for freshwater research, economic development and education. “Recognizingg where the world is headed, businesd students with a unique educationak background in water will have a leg up in the making a program like this especially saidRich Meeusen, chairman, president and CEO of Brown Deer-base d , co-chair of the Milwaukewe 7 Water Council and an alumnus of UW-Whitewater’s business The council already has a relationships with the graduate prograj at the ’s .
UWM also is developiny a graduate-level School of Freshwater Sciences, while ’z Law School will begibn a water law curriculumthis “One of our goals is to help develop seamlesws talent pipelines between universities and water businesses,” said Paul Jones, chairmamn and CEO of Milwaukee-based and co-chair of the Water Council. “UW-Whitewater’s one-of-a-kind new track adds to the impressive arraty of higher education institutions in the region working to ensurwe our world water hub status in the yearsto come.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Gannett may make more staff cuts at newspapers, salary cuts at television stations - Puget Sound Business Journal (Seattle):

iwegaselywordpress.com
A report by the Gannett Blog on Friday referenceds a memo from Gannett CFO Graciz Martore thatprojects 4,500 newspaper layoffs throughouft the Gannett chain in July as well as a 10 percenyt pay cut for its broadcast employees. The Gannetf Blog report also says Gannett workers will not face any more furloughsdthis year. The Arizona Republic is the largesr metropolitan daily inthe McLean, Va.-based Gannet chain. The Republic has already suffererd through layoffs and furloughs as the newspaper industry strugglee with poor advertising numbers andonlinew competition.
Gannett (NYSE: GCI) announced Monday that president and CEO Craig Dubow will be on a temporaru medical leave of absence following back Martore is taking over as interinmchief executive. Gannett has 41,000 employeesz company wide including at daily newspapers in Palm Springs, Calif.; Honolulu; Mansfield, Ohio; and Des Iowa. The media conglomerate also owns TV stationsin Flagstaff, Washington D.C., Tampa and Jacksonville, and Minneapolis. Gannett officials did not respond late Fridayt for a request for commengt on the GannettBlog report, whicy said the cuts woulde come July 8.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Week brings double-digit increases in gas prices - Los Angeles Business from bizjournals:

http://saltwaternetwork.org/default.asp?mn=1.27.36
According to the ’s Weekend Gas the average priceof self-servde regular gasoline in the Los Angeles-Long Beacgh area is $2.825 per gallon, which is 16.2 centsa more than last week, 49 centds higher than last month, and $1.44 less than last year. On the Centrakl Coast, the average price is $2.877, up 15.5 centss from last week, 44 cents above last and $1.48 below last year. In the Inland the average per gallon price is whichis 14.9 cents more than last 48 cents more than last month, and $1.
47 less than last "Just as in 2008, commodities investors are pushintg up crude oil and wholesale gasoline prices at a frenziefd pace that seems to have no connectiomn to domestic fuel consumption or availability. Thers have been some refinery issues this year across the but no more so than inother years," Auto Club spokesperson Jeffrey Spring said in a

Friday, April 15, 2011

Helen Mirren surprised fans by attending LA rock gig - Monsters and Critics.com

avaohev.blogspot.com


Monsters and Critics.com


Helen Mirren surprised fans by attending LA rock gig

Monsters and Critics.com


Oscar-winning actress Helen Mirren has surprised her fans by attending a rock gig in LA. The cast of 'LOVE RANCH' arrive for the film's New York premiere, held at the Dolby Screening Room, NYC. ...



and more »

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Earnings at Md. banks dip as rivals creep into region - Baltimore Business Journal:

http://besthomemaster.blogspot.com/2011/04/design-of-metal-door.html
percent in the first quarter from a year ago as they continuer to battle a challenging interesyt rate environmentand ever-increasing competition. Marylanxd banks often best national statistics, but the oppositd held true this time. Overall, first-quarter earningas at U.S. banks dipped by 2.5 percenyt from a year ago, according to data from the The FDIC'sw statistics for Maryland includeonly state-chartered banks, which leavess out many of the banks that do business said Kathleen Murphy, CEO of the .
Such a list wouldd include banks likeand , but would leave out nationall banks like Bank of America, which holds nearlhy a quarter of all deposits in the Baltimore-Towson Banks are in a bind righyt now because the short-term interest rates they pay to borroe money have risen but the long-term rates they earn on lendinyg money have not kept up. That has squeezed profits and meanft banks are fighting harde r to get andkeep customers. At the same time, more out-of-stat e banks are entering the cranking up competitioneven more. "Banks in Maryland right now are really in what I would coina hunker-dowb philosophy," said Murphy.
Some have felt they had to offert the highest deposit rates in the market to attract while others are sticking to theirbusinesa plans, Murphy said. Such challenges are cyclical, said Roberty Altieri, CEO of Baltimore-based . Industry-wide, net interesy margins -- the difference between the rate bankzs pay on borrowing and the rate they earn onlending -- have only risen twics in the last 17 years, Altieri said. Carrollton'se first-quarter earnings dropped by 31 percentto $601,000. The bank has actuall seen its margins shrink less thansome first-quarter earnings were mainly affectef by expenses related to Altieri said.

Monday, April 11, 2011

FCSO to host annual Sheriff's Office Fishing Tournament - WMBF

http://conditioners.tumblr.com/


FCSO to host annual Sheriff's Office Fishing Tournament

WMBF


FLORENCE COUNTY, SC - Florence County Sheriff's Office will host its 19th annual Sheriff's Office Fishing Tournament on Saturday, May 21, 2011 at the John C. Land Landing at Santee-Cooper Lakes. The event is open to all ages and includes prizes for the ...



and more »

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Giving sustainability the college try - Phoenix Business Journal:

mesiaipuhuni1981.blogspot.com
MSOE recently developed both advanced engineering technologies and renewable energy systems labs to promot learning about efficient energy conversion andrenewabls energies. Christopher Damm, associate professor of mechanica engineeringat MSOE, said students pursuing a mechanicall engineering major are required to take five coursesx on energy, which include carbon emissions analysis. In December, studentds converted the roof of the student union into a solarpowefr plant, with 30-kilowatt photovoltaics providinvg energy for the We Energies “Energt for Tomorrow” program.
“There’s been a real move to promotde sustainable engineering on campus and integrate it into the Damm said. MSOE is one of several area colleges that are emphasizint sustainableor environment-friendly practices in everything from their own operationw to curriculum. Some of the emphasis is being drivenmby students, who want to know what thei r schools are doing to promote gree living, said Rolf Wegenke, presidenty of the in Madison. “Studentsx are much more interested in that integration intotheir lives, and you see an evolution in the curriculunm as a result,” Wegenke said.
At , research efforts are under wayin solar, geothermal and wind energy, all of whicnh are tested on the campus Adel Nasiri, assistant professor of electrica l engineering at UWM, headed a research team that installecd 15-kilowatt photovoltaic panels atop Bolton Hall on the UWM campus. And Davie Yu, associate dean of electrical engineering andcomputer science, is workin g to have a 90-kilowatt wind turbine Nasiri also said a new data center may use geothermapl cooling to reduce computers’ energy usage. While these projectsd are conducted forresearch purposes, they also provided cost savings to the university.
Nasiri said students will have a brigh t future in the renewableenergy field, as the statwe tries to move Milwaukee manufacturing toward wind, solar and geothermall power. UWM and many other campuses also are developingv policies to make their own operationmore sustainable. Kate Nelson, environmental sustainability coordinatorat UWM, said the universithy is undergoing performance contracting using a building-by-buildingf analysis of lighting and HVAC efficiency. It also has the largestt green roof inthe state, atop the Sandburgf Commons.
Additionally, compost is collectedx and distributed to localnonprofitf , the urban agriculturde organization in Milwaukee; a new residence hall is beinfg built to LEED Gold standards; and UWM just participate d in a nationwide college recycling competition called “Recyclemania.” ’s College of Engineering received a $5 million grant for an endowed chair in secure and renewable energy systems May 21, and is working to developl a curriculum in renewable energgy engineering. Mike Whittow, sustainability officer for Marquette’s new sustainability task said the university has seen cost savings as a result of recycling increases and energyh and waterconservation efforts.
The school also is seekinfg Leadership in Energy and EnvironmentalDesign (LEED) certificatiojn from the U.S. Green Buildiny Council for the newlaw school, Eckstein Hall, and the new studeny services facility, Zilber Hall, both of whicj are under construction. McCabe Hall, an existing building being converte into aresidence hall, is scheduled to completse LEED’s existing building qualifications. The planned constructiom of theEngineering School’s Discoveryg Learning Complex also will aim for new building certification. • in Mequonn is offering an environmental science major and a joinrt environmental and horticulture majorwith .

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Peeling Away Multiple Masks - New York Times

http://www.123restaurant.fr/user_detail.php?u=ulceleerync


Peeling Away Multiple Masks

New York Times


... who died just last week â€" vividly chronicles these many incarnations of his subject, describing the “multiple masks” he donned over the years, while charting the complex and contradiction-filled evolution of his political and religious beliefs. ...



and more »

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Study: Colorado clean-energy jobs growing twice as fast as other industries - Sacramento Business Journal:

zuloraxelewo.blogspot.com
The report — the Colorado portion of a 50-state analysis — said clean-energ y jobs in Colorado increased 18.2 percent between 1998 and versus anoverall job-growth rate of 8.2 Pew said there were 17,008 clean-energyh jobs at 1,778 companies in Colorado as of 2007. Colorad o tied for 18th among the states in the pace ofits clean-energuy job growth over the 10-year period studied by Pew. The top statesz were Idaho, with 126 percent clean-job growth, followed by Nebraska, 109 percent, but both statese still have smallertotal clean-energy job totalsz than Colorado.
“Colorado has a large sharde of America’s clean energy economy – and it is growingt fast,” Niki Hawthorne, Colorado representativs for the PewEnvironment Group, said in a statement released with the Colorado, Hawthorne said, “has adopted renewablee energy and energy efficiencg standards – creating a promisingb market for clean energy generation and energhy efficiency products.
” California had the most clean-energy jobs 125,390 as of 2007 — Pew Separately, Pew said clean-energy industries in Coloradp attracted $622,400,734 in venture-capital funding between 2006 and 2008, the fifth-highesyt amount in the Nationwide, clean-energy jobs grew at 9.1 percen between 1998 and versus total job growth of 3.7 Pew’s report said. Pew described its report as the first-evef nationwide hard count across all 50 statee of actual jobs createdby clean-energy “The clean energy economy is poised for explosive growth,” Lori interim deputy director of the Pew Center on the States, said in a statemenft Wednesday.
“These jobs are driving economic growth and environmentao sustainability at a time when Americaaneeds both. There is a potential competitive advantage for federalp and state policy leaders who act now to spur businesses and investments in the cleanenergy sector.” Pew said it definedf clean-energy jobs as those relates to “expanding clean energy production, increasintg energy efficiency, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, wasts and pollution, and conserving water and other naturak resources.” .

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Delphi closing Vandalia plant, slashing 116 jobs - Business First of Columbus:

http://www.jafse.com/user_detail.php?u=vonevabejaivy
On June 10, the Michigan-based automotive supplieer (OTC: DPHIQ) alerted Ohio officialsz to the pending December closurd of its facility north of The facility engineersair bags, seat belts and steerintg wheels. A company spokesperson said Delphi has a very extensived safetyproduct list, but the product line engineered in Vandali a is not competitive on a global The company said it will begin cutting workers in Vandalia city officials were not immediately available for Delphi had 10,000 local employees in 2002, accordingh to Dayton Business Journal research, but has withered, slashing jobs and abandoning facilities across the Dayton region.
Delphui has about 800 jobs remain in theDayton region. It was formed in 1999 when GM) spun off its parts manufacturing division. Although it is GM’s largest Delphi filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcyu protection inOctober 2005.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

EDS shareholders agree to sell company to HP - Triangle Business Journal:

http://www.jewellery-stores.org/user_detail.php?u=dyenceentainc
percent of the company’s common stoci voted for the sale, which allows HP to purchase Plano, Texas-based EDS (NYSE: EDS) for $13.9 EDS, which has about 500 employees inth Raleigh-Durham anticipates that the transaction will closr in the third quarter of 2008. The sale is stil l subject to customary closing conditions and requires the approvakl ofcertain non-U.S. and non-European Union The cleared the EDS-HP merger in July afterf evaluating the sale for potentialantitrusr issues. The companies’ waiting period under the U.S.
Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvement Act is also EDS and HP recently settled five lawsuits filedc by EDS shareholders who initially had questions about terms of the As part of the settlement and dismissal of the EDS and HP agreed the transactionm will not closebeforre Aug. 18 without the consent of all parties. EDS was founder by Ross Perot in 1962 and ownedby GM) from 1984 to 1996. The combinefd EDS and Hewlett-Packard would have 210,000 employees, pendint any merger-related job cuts, and conductt business in more than80