Sunday, September 30, 2012

Explosive attack on Kenya church kills 1 child

(AP) ? The acting police chief in Kenya's capital says an explosive device set off in a Sunday school class killed one child and seriously wounded three.

Moses Ombati said he suspects sympathizers with the Somali militant group al-Shabab were behind the attack at an Anglican church in Nairobi.

Kenya has seen a series of attacks on churches ever since Kenyan forces moved into Somalia to fight al-Shabab last year. Kenyan forces kicked the rebels out of their last stronghold, Kismayo, on Friday.

Grenades are often used in the attacks; Ombati is describing the cause of Sunday's attack as an explosive device.

One church member, Julius Macharia Maina, brought four children to the hospital. One child's head was cut open; the others had bruises. Maina described the attack "emotional and very scary."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-30-Kenya-Church%20Attack/id-a54f9b585ec642ce8a54496fe07ee4c4

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JPMorgan case shows why energy trading schemes are chronic problem

We all know what corporate law firms are for, right? To represent their clients' interest fairly and professionally, of course. To obfuscate, obstruct, delay, misdirect ? sometimes that too.

So the saga of JPMorgan Ventures Energy Corp. and a slick little two-step it engaged in with its two law firms to fend off the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission bears exceptional interest, not least because its outcome may hint at a new approach to enforcement by that long-overmatched agency.

To put things in a nutshell, JPMorgan's electricity trading operation was accused of bid-rigging by the California Independent System Operator, which manages much of the state's wholesale power market through regular auctions. We explained in an earlier column how the alleged scheme in 2010 and 2011 may have cost California ratepayers as much as $200 million.

FERC duly launched an investigation of JPMorgan's trading, which will take months at least and could cost the firm a maximum of $1 million for every day it's found to have violated trading rules. Given that revenue of $14 billion a year flows into the JPMorgan division that houses the energy trading unit, that fine wouldn't count for much more than a rounding error.

That may be why manipulation seems to be a chronic disease of the California wholesale electricity market ? and of those in other regions. For example, FERC has accused Deutsche Bank's energy trading arm of bogus bidding in the California market and threatened it with a $1.5-million penalty. Deutsche Bank has until Oct. 19 to respond to the allegations.

JPMorgan, which doesn't own a power plant in California but has trading rights to the output of 10 Southern California generating stations, keeps FERC and the California ISO on their toes all by itself. In 2011, days after ISO closed the original loophole it says Morgan exploited, the firm found another one, according to ISO filings. That chicanery cost ratepayers $5.3 million over just five days, ISO said.

Just last month, JPMorgan was alleged to have exploited yet two more loopholes in the trading rules, which may have garnered the firm nearly $10 million in possibly excessive payments. The California ISO is currently withholding $3.7 million from the firm, apparently to cover its losses. FERC hasn't launched an investigation of that trading, and Morgan has said it has done nothing wrong.

This month FERC opened a new front in this battle. The commission charged that JPMorgan, with the assistance of its lawyers, gave it the runaround when it asked for financial information in connection with its investigation. According to FERC public documents, JPMorgan dodged the request for months and then provided misleading and incomplete information.

How ticked off is FERC? It's proposing not to fine JPMorgan over the information exchanges, but to suspend its right to participate in the California auction. To an electricity trading firm, that's a nuclear attack. The last electricity wholesaler that got its trading rights revoked was Enron ? after it went bankrupt.

If FERC follows through, JPMorgan would still be allowed to sell electricity in California, but would be allowed only to collect its costs plus a nominal profit. That's likely to be a fraction of what it could make by bidding in the open auction, and it could drive JPMorgan out of the market.

"When a company is faced with significant sanctions, not just a financial slap on the wrist, it's going to take it seriously," says Tyson Slocum, director of the energy program at the Washington public interest group Public Citizen. "No longer is a violation just a calculated risk, and a cost of doing business if they get caught."

JPMorgan will have until mid-October to respond to FERC's show-cause order, which asks why the firm's bidding rights shouldn't be suspended. So let's take a closer look at its alleged subterfuge.

The case began May 4, 2011, when the California ISO, as part of the investigation into the bidding allegations, asked JPMorgan for trading and other financial data related to its trading in the California wholesale market. Morgan was to comply by May 18. On deadline day, Morgan's lawyers wrote back, telling ISO in essence to stuff it. They pointed to a regulation stating that once ISO referred its accusations against Morgan to FERC, ISO lost its right to demand any data from Morgan. The lawyers repeated that position in two letters in June.

JPMorgan did provide ISO with some of the data it requested, but waited until as long as 162 days after the deadline. (It said it was doing so "voluntarily.") In February, the fed-up ISO fined Morgan $486,000 for the delay.

JPMorgan then filed its own complaint with FERC, stating in essence that it was being harassed by ISO. It noted that the rule clearly states that once a matter is in FERC's hands, ISO "shall not undertake any investigative steps," which include issuing demands for information. Morgan asked FERC to overrule the "unreasonable" $486,000 penalty.

Here's the punch line. Morgan flagrantly misrepresented the rule, which says, in its totality, that ISO can't "undertake any investigative steps except at the express direction of FERC."

Moreover, FERC indeed had given ISO that "express direction." The commission had notified JPMorgan in writing that it had done so, via two separate emails to JPMorgan's lawyers at the Washington firm of Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan. And Sutherland had acknowledged receiving them, also in writing.

All this was laid out in a filing by FERC's enforcement staff June 19. The staff accused JPMorgan of misleading the commission about the "express direction" rule, and called the firm's claim that it never knew ISO was acting at FERC's direction a lie.

Within days after the staff blew the whistle, JPMorgan fessed up. It admitted that there was "a factual error" in its original complaint and swore that it hadn't intended to mislead FERC. It explained that the attorneys at Sutherland had forgotten all about the emails they'd received from the commission in 2011, so they hadn't mentioned them to attorneys at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, who had drafted JPMorgan's complaint to FERC.

Morgan also pledged to withdraw its complaint posthaste. "We hope this ? shows that we acted in good faith at all times with no intent to mislead anyone," the Skadden Arps lawyers told the commission, as if to plead no harm, no foul.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hiltzik-20120930,0,2080850.column?track=rss

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Wall St marks best third quarter since 2010

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street closed its best third quarter since 2010 after a wave of central bank actions sparked a dramatic reversal in equity markets, but signs of weakness in the economy drove stocks lower on Friday.

The S&P 500 climbed 5.9 percent over the past three months as central banks geared up to boost liquidity to markets and kick-start their flagging economies. The move has lifted the benchmark index as much as 17 percent this year, recently pushing the S&P to its best level in five years.

But on Friday, investors grappled with more disappointing U.S. economic data as business activity in the U.S. Midwest contracted for the first time since 2009. The news came on the heels of other weak regional manufacturing reports and a sharp drop in U.S. durable goods orders last month.

"The reality is that the fundamentals of the market certainly don't support a 17-plus-percent run-up year to date, but with all the QE (quantitative easing) action, that has had a huge, huge impact," said Oliver Pursche, president of Gary Goldberg Financial Services in Suffern, New York.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 48.84 points, or 0.36 percent, to close at 13,437.13. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 6.48 points, or 0.45 percent, to finish at 1,440.67. The Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 20.37 points, or 0.65 percent, to close at 3,116.23.

For the third quarter, the Dow rose 4.3 percent and the Nasdaq climbed 6.2 percent.

For the month of September alone, the Dow gained 2.6 percent and the S&P 500 rose 2.4 percent, while the Nasdaq advanced 1.6 percent.

In contrast, the trend for the week was down, with the Dow off 1.1 percent, while the S&P 500 shed 1.3 percent and the Nasdaq dropped 2 percent.

In Friday's session, stocks came off their lows after Spanish bank stress tests were released, and were mostly within expectations. The independent audit showed banks will need 59.3 billion euros in extra capital to ride out a serious downturn.

But Spain still remains mired in difficulties. Moody's review of the country's credit rating, due later in the day, could add to its challenges. On Thursday, ratings agency Egan-Jones cut Spain's sovereign rating further into junk status, citing the country's faltering banks and struggling regional governments.

The euro fell against the dollar on Friday, declining for a second straight week, as uncertainty persisted about Spain's prospects for receiving a bailout to prop up its ailing banks.

Recent protests in Spain and Greece against austerity plans have also heightened investors' concerns as the turmoil could impede political maneuvering.

On the earnings front, U.S.-listed shares of Research in Motion jumped 5 percent to $7.50 a day after a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.

Pledges by the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan to buy government bonds helped cement a summer rally in stocks and commodities.

But markets have lost some of their luster after the announcements from the central banks in the first half of September. After pulling back 1.7 percent over the last two weeks, the S&P 500 is now up 14.6 percent so far this year. The S&P 500's drop of 1.3 percent this week is its worst weekly decline since the start of June.

The coming months hold a series of difficult challenges for markets, including third-quarter earnings season, which is expected to show the first drop in earnings since 2009, and the U.S. presidential election in November.

Reflecting Friday's defensive tone, nine of the 10 S&P sectors fell. Only the S&P utilities index was positive, up just 0.5 percent.

The decline in the S&P technology sector index <.gspt> was limited, as Accenture PLC climbed 7.1 percent to $70.03. Accenture's gain followed its forecast of full-year earnings higher than analysts' estimates as the company bolsters its outsourcing business.

Nike Inc warned of slowing orders in China, becoming the latest company to sound a note of caution about how economic weakness in the world's second-largest economy was affecting its business. Nike's stock fell 1.1 percent to $94.91.

Trading was light on the quarter's last day, when money managers reposition their portfolios. About 6.15 billion shares changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange, Amex and Nasdaq, compared with the average daily volume of 6.38 billion.

Decliners outnumbered advancers on the NYSE by a ratio of 3 to 2, while on the Nasdaq, nearly two stocks fell for every one that rose.

(Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-st-marks-best-third-quarter-since-2010-034432516--finance.html

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Cause test could end up in court

Proving the cause of something is notoriously difficult. A new test claims to be able to find such causes, and it might end up in the courtroom very quickly

JUST because two events happen together does not mean one caused the other. That inconvenient truth is drummed into every aspiring scientist (and science journalist) right at the start of their education. No matter how suggestive the correlation between two variables may be, it does not add up to proof of causation. That only comes with controlled experiments, and in real-world situations these are often impossible.

This distinction affords plenty of opportunity to obfuscate. For example, tobacco companies successfully argued for decades that the mass of evidence linking their product with cancer was merely correlational. Smoking could not be said to cause cancer, and thus there was no justification for, say, putting health warnings on packs of cigarettes. Experiments eventually proved the link existed - but not before many smokers had gone to an early death.

A new statistical test could cut through all that (see "Causality test could help preserve the natural world"). George Sugihara says his CCM test can identify connections that would otherwise remain obscure.

CCM is at an early stage, and already has its detractors. It clearly needs to be tested further before we can tell how robust its predictions are. But some people may not wait for such validation.

What if, for example, a causal link could be shown between some set of greenhouse gas emissions and a particular manifestation of climate change? Or within the complex interactions of banking and world economies?

These areas are already the subject of protests and litigation, frequently based on correlations and expert testimony. Lobbyists and lawyers are likely to seize upon a statistical test that can be used to back up their claims, even if its interpretation remains ambiguous, seeing it as a way to nail organisations that seem to have thus far evaded being called to account for their actions.

This idea is enticing but dangerous. Until the detailed ramifications of this test are well understood, using it to allocate blame risks a miscarriage of justice. For the law, as for science, the acid test should remain that something must be proved beyond reasonable doubt.

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

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New Release Video Games: September 30th - October 6th, 2012 ...

The biggest game this week is Resident Evil 6, launching?with both a regular edition on Xbox 360 and PS3, and?Resident Evil 6 Archives and Resident Evil 6 Anthology launching alongside the game as well.

?

Xbox 360

Carrier Command: Gaea Mission

NBA 2K13

Remington?s Super Slam Hunting Ultimate Sportsman Challenge

Resident Evil 6

Resident Evil 6 Archives

Nights: Into Dreams (XBLA)

Sonic Adventure 2 (XBLA)

?

PlayStation 3

NBA 2K13 (Retail and PSN)

Remington?s Super Slam Hunting Ultimate Sportsman Challenge

Resident Evil 6 (Retail and PSN)

Resident Evil 6 Anthology

Nights: Into Dreams (PSN)

Sonic Adventure 2 (PSN)

Lego Harry Potter: Years 5-7 (PSN)

Innocent Life: A Futuristic Harvest Moon (PS2 Classic)

Ruff Trigger: The Vanocore Conspiracy (PS2 Classic)

?

PC

Carrier Command: Gaea Mission

Command and Conquer: Ultimate Collection

Hegemony Gold: Wars of Ancient Greece

NBA 2K13

RAW: Realms of Ancient War

Remington?s Super Slam Hunting Ultimate Sportsman Challenge

?

PlayStation Vita

New Little King?s Story (PSN)

PlayStation Vita 3G/Wi-Fi System Bundle (Canada Only)

Over 40 PS1 Classics Added To The Vita Store?- Includes FF8, FF9, Chrono Cross, Parasite Eve 1, Parasite Eve 2, More

?

Nintendo 3DS

Art Academy: Lessons For Everyone! (Retail and eShop)

Crosswords Plus (Retail and eShop)

Academy: Chess Puzzles (eShop)

Cave Story (eShop)

Samurai G (eShop)

?

Nintendo DS

Academy: Chess Puzzles (DSiWare)

?

PlayStation Portable

NBA 2K13

?

Nintendo Wii

NBA 2K13

Remington?s Super Slam Hunting Ultimate Sportsman Challenge

Drop Zone: Under Fire (WiiWare)

?

iOS

Stunt Star: The Hollywood Years (iOS)

?

*Keep in mind that all release dates are subject to change.

You May Also Like:

October 2012 New Releases

November 2012 New Releases

5 October 2012 Games You Have To Play (Part 1)

Nintendo Wii U Launch Line Up Detailed By Nintendo

VN:F [1.9.20_1166]

Source: http://trendygamers.com/2012/09/28/release-video-games-september-30th-october-6th-2012-resident-evil-6-nba-2k13-sonic-adventure-2/

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Eulogy For Mom ? Conservative Christian Bible Study Materials

By Lewis Willis

Not only are there a number of people here ? mourners ? but there is also a flood of memories crowding its way into this small chapel. That?s the way it is at funerals. Sometimes a family can scarcely see the people who are present, because of the memories. Go ahead and remember ? reminisce ? that?s what I intend to do in my remarks to you today, perhaps in a way that some might consider irreverently!

We Willises have been a large family of nine people. Naturally, each has his or her own thoughts today. My thoughts of the daily activities of the family are primarily of things that happened before I left home. The events in the lives of the younger children, I was not there to witness, and, therefore, I cannot speak of those things. Forgive me if there is something I should have included in these comments; I either do not know of them, or, more than likely, I have simply forgotten them. That?s the way it is with us old men!

I thought for some time for a word or expression that would somewhat sum up the life of Mom. I finally settled on ?family?; I think her family was the essence and substance of her life. Make absolutely no mistake about it, her first interest was God and the Church. But after that came her family. Anyone who knew her soon learned that her heart was centered on her children and grandchildren. Thus, I call to remembrance some memories about the Family.

Of course, the beginning of a family is the marriage. Mom and Dad had been happily married for 68 years when he died exactly one year ago to the day that Mom died, August 2. What an irony! She was never the same after Dad?s death. It is inevitable that such is the case. Two people who have been together so long do not function normally when one has gone. Theirs was a good marriage. If it experienced any major problems, I was never aware of them. Oh, there were the usual fusses and disagreements, but never did Dad abuse Mom in anyway, nor she him. She was the reason for his life! She loved and respected him, and they stood beside each other until the ravages of age separated them with his death. Mom?s failing health concerned him greatly and the changes brought by her decline he was never able to understand or accept. I am convinced that his confusion over nursing home living accelerated his death. You will remember he was hospitalized for the last time when, left alone the first night at a nursing home in Ft. Worth, he tried to get to Mom to comfort her in her distress. We would all have been surprised had he been indifferent toward her plight. But he never recovered from his anxiety over her condition.

And, Mom never recovered over her loss of Dad. She often spoke of her feelings of despair that she had not mourned his death as she thought she should. With Alzheimer?s disease, I?m not certain she had the capacity to mourn as she normally would have. If she was in possession of normal capacities, however, she knew Dad was much better off in death than he could possibly have been living in his condition. How do you mourn when someone goes to Heaven?s rest? So, death separated them. That?s what happens to us all sooner or later. Such is burdensome to observe, especially when one?s parents are going through that crisis. Sadly, we watched the ravages of age on them and their marriage. Personally, I am grateful they have now been delivered from that trauma.

I want to now speak to you of Mom. She and her kids are quite another story. There were always a number of children around. Alone, we were a crowd. But, she wanted our friends to come to our house to play, ?so she could keep an eye on? her kids; she insisted on knowing what we were doing. I?m not certain there was much comfort to her in that knowledge. Some of the things she saw looking out the windows watching her kids had to be less than comforting.

She saw Cecil and Don painting Grandma?s house next door. They got to the end of the job, except the gable of the wall next to our house. Unfortunately, they didn?t have a ladder long enough to reach the top so they had to make some provision to enable them to finish the job. They took two step-ladders, with a 2?12 extended between them, then placed a straight ladder in the middle. Don held the feet of the ladder on the 2?12 while Cecil climbed to the very top, with paint can and brush, and finished the painting work. With the job finally done, it was time for some fun. Cecil asked Don what he?d do if he sprinkled him with paint. Don said he?d just turn loose of the ladder he was holding. Whereupon Cecil came crashing to the ground from the top, landing on his back and catching the falling paint can just before it landed in his face. The paint sloshed out right into Cecil?s face and hair ? and folks, that was the days before water-based paint! Mom not only had to witness this debacle, she also had to clean the paint off Cecil?s head. She probably should have let him just wear it off!

Out that same window she saw Cecil and Billy light a possum on fire with kerosene. The possum, with flames leaping up higher than a man?s waist, headed straight for escape under the family house, directly under the window out of which Mom was watching. The possum ran toward the house, not once but twice, and the boys barely prevented the house being burned down! I?m sure she was comforted to watch what her kids were doing that day!

One of the most frightening things to happen was when she learned that Don was severely injured when the saddle slipped on the horse he was riding, catching his foot in the stirrup, and dragging him across a bridge. He was unconscious, and was taken to the hospital. You had to be in pretty bad shape at our house to be taken to the hospital in those days. After the marvelous medical care he received in Lufkin, he was sent home, still unconscious! And he remained unconscious for three days! Apparently it was thought he might as well be at home, after all, there were no broken bones. And, he survived, though we have always had an obvious explanation for Don through the years since that happened!

I was the third child; the only truly good one of the bunch! I was never any trouble; I was always doing exactly as I had been told to do. The only problem I ever had was surviving all the slanderous reports about me that Ouida gave to Mom. Though she is younger than I, that?s the way it is with oldest sisters. They always get their brothers in trouble. Unfortunately, remember Mom made us play at home so she could watch all of this confusion and hear hourly behavior reports.
Then, there was Sue; beautiful Sue! Always primping and preparing for her anticipated glamourous life! I cannot recall her every doing anything mischievous or mean. For that matter, I cannot recall her ever doing anything at all! Just sitting around looking pretty!

Mom watched out her window as Mike became a cowboy. He learned to ride calves at a very early age. Cecil came home from college, we had a new baby calf, and little Mike (perhaps three years old) simply had to learn to ride that calf. He had some difficulty at first but he soon mastered the art . . . when Cecil tied Mike?s feet under the belly of the calf! Mike bounced around the yard on that calf until he because an expert cowboy. Or, until the calf tired of jumping. Or, until Mom demanded that Cecil save her baby! I don?t know which came first. But, the shaking he received also somewhat explains Mike today, doesn?t it? I?ve heard him say that he has no hair today because that calf rubbed it all off, dragging him around the yard. I don?t knows if that?s true or not; something definitely happened to Mike?s hair though!

Now, Barbara was the youngest, and was therefore totally spoiled. The kids that were still at home as she grew up probably, at the time, didn?t even like her. Mom had decided that Barbara was going to be a concert pianist, I guess. Anyway, she saved her dimes and coins until she was able to buy Barbara a piano. This was probably the worst thing that ever happened to the other kids. Thereafter, anytime there was a job to do around the house, Barbara was unavailable to help; she had to practice her piano lessons. Mom must have really been ?watching her kids? at that time. I?m a little surprised that both Barbara and the piano didn?t just mysteriously disappear one night!

Yes, Mom kept us at home, so she could watch us, and know what we were doing. She must have felt much ?better about us all, after witnessing some of the things we did! The other mothers of the community, no doubt, felt better about the safety of their children, knowing Mom was ?watching us.?

There were times when discipline was required. Switches were the order of the day; she could use one better than most mothers. On a bare back, her switches seemed almost lethal. Psychologists and psychiatrists today, with all their psycho-babble, tell us how damaging discipline is for kids. However, I?ve now seen several generations of children who have been raised on their philosophy, and I prefer Mom?s child-raising philosophy more than theirs. I believe her approach worked better and I think my brothers and sisters share that same view. None of us was permanently damaged by her discipline.

Mom?s love for the Lord and the church must also be remembered. She did something special which certainly none of us understood at the time. You see, until Cecil, and then Don, started preaching, Dad didn?t go to worship. She always took us to every worship . . . alone! I do not believe there was a family in the church more faithful than ours. During the critical, formative years of her children, she was determined they would know the Lord. That was the principle work of Mom. Dad was off somewhere else at worship time. He was usually working on one of his trucks all day, getting ready for Monday morning and his logging work.

Sundays always began the same way. A big breakfast was prepared for all. After breakfast, Dad had the boys do the dishes, then help him make the beds, and he swept the entire house, from one end to the other. Meanwhile, Mom was getting the girls ready for worship. Each had long hair and she meticulously curled every strand; she did it perfectly, and they were beautiful. We all had special ?church clothes? which Mom had carefully prepared ahead of time for the worship. When we went off to worship, we were wearing the very best, and cleanest clothes we had! We didn?t sit in the back at worship; we were seated on the front benches. For some reason, she always had me sitting on the bench directly in front of her and every time Ouida did something, Mom pinched me! I still don?t understand that.

Let me tell you something else I remember about the religion of our family in those days. In spite of our dire financial circumstances, we always had ?meat? to eat on Sundays and Wednesdays. That?s because the preachers ate with us on those days. The men who preached here in Groveton always had a Sunday invitation to lunch at our house, and to spend the afternoon with us. If it was just the preacher, or him and his wife, or him and his wife and five kids, whatever, they all were invited to our house on Sunday. And, usually in the afternoon, the neighborhood kids assembled there as well. Some good football games were played on Sunday afternoons on the dirt road that ran in front of our house.

But, this was not all about food and fun. Mom was raising a large family, and she was determined to spiritually lead us properly. If Dad was not there to take the lead, then she had to do all she could, enlisting the help of the godly men who preached here, to see that her kids turned out to be Christians. If she had to work harder to accomplish that, she would pay the price. Cecil and Don, in their critical teenager years, came under the influence of these brethren, and they obeyed the Gospel. Through the influence of Mom, Grandma and Jodie, and those preachers, in time Cecil and Don decided they would spend their lives preaching the Gospel. They were nurtured along and encouraged by Mom and these brethren, and by the time they were in high school, both had Sunday preaching appointments in small congregations throughout this part of the country. Though Dad was still not faithful, the boys would each take a log truck, and drive to their preaching appointments on Sundays.

Mom had achieved her objective with her two oldest children. Through their influence, in time I also became a gospel preacher, as did Mike; all four of us. The girls all also obeyed the gospel. Ouida?s husband was an elder in the church, and Sue?s husband is a deacon. The family has had a significant impact on the church as a result of Mom?s faithfulness. When Cecil held his first gospel meeting here in Groveton, Ouida and I were baptized, and Dad was restored. Dad remained faithful to the end of his days! That, too, must be attributed to Mom?s faithfulness. Had she just lived as he had, none of us would likely be serving God today.

The preaching of Mom?s sons has been far-reaching. In those days, she could never have imagined the impact her family would have on the church of the 20th and 21st centuries. From this small town of about 1000-1200 people, her boys have gone forth. We have preached in most parts of Texas, into many different places in Florida, Kentucky, Kansas, Tennessee, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Georgia, Alabama, California, Illinois, Michigan, Hawaii, Alaska, and Wisconsin. Probably other states as well. We have preached in Eastern and Western Canada, in the Philippines, in Israel, Germany, and in Greece. We have had opportunity to teach many more through religious journals we have edited, articles we have written for publication, church bulletins we have edited, radio teaching we have done, published debates we have conducted, and books and tracts we have written. Who would ever have dreamed that a Mother living in a small East Texas town might touch the lives of so many, in such distant places, as Mom did through her sons? She put us in a place to be taught the Truth, and was determined we would know how important it is to teach and defend it. It is a tribute to Mom, for without her direction, such would never have happened.

Mom was not totally absorbed in her husband and her children. She actively sought occasion to get out of the house and into her own activities. When we owned the Woodlake store, she was in it meeting, talking with, and serving the people of the community. Through the years, she worked many hours in the Post Office at Woodlake. She loved to laugh and joke, till near the end of her life. When the doctors told her she was dying, Ouida asked her if she wouldn?t like to go see Dad. She responded, ?Let Sue go!?

Her passion was crocheting. Dad called it knot-tying. She made many beautiful items for her family and friends through the years. Her last big undertaking was crocheting family last names for her children and grandchildren. She even made some of these items for distant relatives and strangers. She crocheted probably 125 of these name displays. They are beautiful when mounted and framed. Young people, Mom would be pleased if, each time you see and admire her crochet work in the future, you would remember her, and her love for you which prompted her to spend so many hours making that ?name? display for you.

Mom dearly loved to sing. All of her children can and love to sing, also. We used to travel throughout this region to singings conducted by churches of Christ. We had a quartet, consisting of Mom, Cecil, Don, and me. We entertained our area brethren with spiritual songs, until we learned that the worship of the Lord is not to be entertainment. Had we had our preference, we would have preferred to continue.

Many hours were spent at home singing. When the peas were picked each year, after supper we all went to the back porch to shell them. Sometimes there would be several tubs of peas to shell, so it took a lot of time. Sometimes the neighbors came to help with the task, sometimes we helped them at their homes. But, always we sang! We knew the words, the parts, and the music by heart. There were very few songs we couldn?t sing. We sang the ?fancy, spirited? songs, and we sang the old standards. You know the words of one of them. Sing it with me:

What a friend we have in Jesus, All our sins and griefs to bear;
What a privilege to carry Everything to God in prayer.
O what peace we often forfeit, O what needless pain we bear,
All because we do not carry, Everything to God in prayer.

Listen . . . Listen . . . Can you not almost hear her singing the alto part years ago, or in later years, singing the tenor? Yes, we hear and we remember. That?s why we could hardly sing that old familiar song today.

Family and friends, ladies and gentlemen, these things of which I have spoken are family memories ? Precious Memories. J.B.F. Wright penned a song by that title, some of the words of which stir our souls today:

Precious father, loving mother, Fly across the lonely years;
And old home scenes of my childhood, In fond memory appear.
Precious mem?ries, how they linger, How they ever flood my soul;
In the stillness of the midnight, Precious, sacred scenes unfold.

It has occurred to me that this will very probably be our last family gathering here in Groveton . .? . this occasion then will itself become a Precious Memory, hopefully. We have briefly gazed back upon an ancestor and our ancestry. We have shared some laughs and some tears. And now we must take Mom to her final resting place beside Dad and Cecil. The moments will pass swiftly now; savor them each and every one. Paint the scene indelibly on your mind and heart as we go to Sumpter Cemetery. Remember each mile, each step of the way. And, should your travels bring you into this area in the future, remember their grave sites; pause to visit, to pay your respects, to remember.

Yes, We Are Going Down The Valley One By One, Frankie, then Cecil, Dad, and now Mom. She committed herself to place in our hearts and lives the faith of the New Testament. If you have never obeyed that Gospel, do so at your earliest opportunity; don?t waste any valuable time in doing so. If you are not a faithful Christian, repent of your sins, and start serving God again. If you are in a human denomination, get out while you can; you cannot go to Heaven in that human-controlled church. If you are in an unfaithful church of Christ, one teaching, sympathizing with, and/or practicing error, get out while you can.

We, too, will join that procession into eternity ere long, marching toward Judgment Day. Let?s all get ready so we can join our loved ones who have gone before, and by God?s grace and mercy, let?s enter the portals of Heaven itself, safely at home again with each other and with our God, as a family!

491 E. Woodsdale, Akron, Ohio 44301

Truth Magazine Vol. XLIV: 20? p16 ?October 17, 2000

Source: http://www.truthmagazine.com/eulogy-for-mom-2

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Burden of epilepsy in developing world described

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) ? The burden of epilepsy in poorer parts of the world could be readily alleviated by reducing the preventable causes and improving access to treatment, according to a review article published September 27 in the Lancet.

The researchers call for greater recognition from international and national health agencies to address the management of epilepsy in the developing world.

Despite being one of the most cost-effective disorders to treat, there are twice as many people living with epilepsy in low- and lower-middle-income countries than higher income nations and more than 60% of those affected in these regions are not accessing any appropriate treatment.

Lead author Professor Charles Newton, who works in the Wellcome Trust programmes in Tanzania and Kenya, said: "Epilepsy needs to be brought into the agenda of non-communicable diseases. It was not mentioned in the UN General Assembly Meeting in New York to address the global burden of non-communicable diseases, and yet it represents a substantial burden of ill health."

Epilepsy is a common disorder, particularly in poor areas of the world, but deriving accurate figures on the epidemiology of epilepsy in low- and lower-middle income countries is very difficult. There have been very few surveys to gather appropriate data and such studies tend to be expensive, especially for countries whose health research funding is likely to be very limited.

Professor Newton and Professor Hector Garcia, both Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellows, conducted a comprehensive review of academic articles about epilepsy in developing countries in order to piece together a picture of the burden of the disease in poorer parts of the world.

They conclude that the high number of people with epilepsy in these regions is likely caused by the higher incidence of risk factors, such as head trauma, complications during childbirth, and parasite infections such as pork tapeworm (neurocysticercosis), and river blindness (onchocerciasis).

The study also reveals the enormity of the treatment gap in poorer nations, with over 60% of people living with epilepsy in low- and lower-middle-income countries not accessing appropriate care. This is partly due to poor adherence to prescribed treatment but there remain huge barriers to accessing care, particularly in rural areas. The stigma associated with the disorder and cultural beliefs around causation is identified as a major problem, along with distance from a health-care facility and inadequate skilled manpower.

The epilepsy burden could be easily reduced by addressing some of the risk factors, say the authors. They highlight several ways in which epilepsy care could be improved at low cost, including by engaging traditional healers who for many people are the only point of care for epilepsy. Given the lack of expertise in management of epilepsy in poorer areas, they suggest that neurologists and psychiatrists should combine to set up services for the management of epilepsy in these regions.

"Sadly, adequate facilities for diagnosis, treatment and on-going management of epilepsy are virtually non-existent in many of the world's poorest regions. Many people with epilepsy or their families do not even know that they have a disorder that can be controlled with biomedical treatment, so it is vitally important that awareness is raised and medical care improved in these regions," added Professor Newton.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wellcome Trust, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Charles R Newton and Hector H Garcia. Epilepsy in poor regions of the world. The Lancet, Volume 380, Issue 9848, Pages 1193 - 1201, 29 September 2012 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61381-6

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/EQa5c1Zcd2g/120927205459.htm

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Just Back From: Feast Portland | Travel News from Fodor&#39;s Travel ...

1--PortlandFeast-Night-Market.jpg

There's nothing scene-y about easy-going Portland, except for the farm-to-table food scene. Surrounded by farms, rivers, and peaks producing fresh everything, food and drink is something Oregonians take seriously, and last weekend, this bounty took centre stage at the first annual, Bon Appetit-sponsored Feast Portland, and we were on the ground with a camera, a pen, and... stretchy pants.

With a fork firmly planted in the country's culinary culture, it's more than just-picked and just-caught that sets Oregon apart; eating and drinking goes beyond sustenance to lifestyle. Take Portland's cocktail king and Clyde Common's head barman Jeffrey Morgenthaler, who took up mixololgy after degrees in interior architecture and physics. For him, making drinks is an art and science he approaches with academic rigor, testing and re-testing drinks in beakers and barrels until they get an A+. Not satisfied with conventional egg-nog or apple juice for his creative concoctions, he makes his own, and this weekend he shared some of his trade secrets to a room of thirsty cocktail connoisseurs.

Nursing our cocktail-soaked soiree with a jolt of joe, Friday gave us a jump with a home-brewing demonstration at Stumptown Coffee. We learned that making coffee that rocks takes equal parts time, tools, and techniques, and above all, starts with a high-quality grinder. During the session, the term 'nerd' came up a lot, referring to the intense research behind each technique. It's this geeky devotion that's produced a 'head of the class' movement?be it in the form of cocktails, coffee, or cuisine?in Oregon's dining scene. Humbly, locals chalk it up to grey weather-induced kitchen wizardry, but it's more than that.

Still jittery from the coffee, we set our sights on the Southeast Asia-themed Feast Portland Night Market. Twinkling lights strung above, a DJ pumping out tunes, and free-flowing cocktails in every glance, stalls and stalls of restaurants (from Portland to Bangkok) seared and sauteed their take on market fare. True to form, smoky scents carried us abroad as we feasted on fish balls, crispy smoked salmon poofs, and rice noodle-topped palm sugar ice cream doused in coconut milk (served in a plastic bag, obviously).

2--PortlandFeast-Food-Table3.jpg

Fittingly, the edible escape ended with a multi-course brunch at the one of Bon Appetit's 50 best new restaurants, the Woodsman Tavern. A mimosa in one hand and an oyster in the other, we decided the weekend was as much about tasting and celebrating the region's superabundance, as it was about learning the tricks of the trade. Though we'll miss Portland, we're leaving with an arsenal of coffee, cocktail, and cooking tips to last, well, until next year.?

?Dates have already been set for next year's Feast, taking place September 20-23, 2013.

?Tickets for the gastronomic line-up can be purchased as singles (for as as little as $25) or in a package.?

?Up to 19 events per day run Thursday to Sunday. For a taste of this year's events, check out the event schedule.?

?Big-name restaurants like Luce?recently named one of the top 10 new restaurants in the US by Bon Appetit?have exclusive Feast-inspired evenings. These sell out quickly, so if you want tickets, you'll have to be quicker than a Stumptown barista brewing coffee for the Monday morning rush.

All photos by Trish Friesen

Source: http://www.fodors.com/news/just-back-from-feast-portland-6022.html

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Court fast-tracks some green card applications

(AP) ? A federal appeals court has ruled that immigration officials must give priority status to thousands of green card applicants who lost their place in line for U.S. residency when they turned 21.

A narrowly divided 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decided Wednesday that the United States Citizen and Immigration Services wrongly determined the applicants were no longer eligible for special visas as children of green card holders after they turned 21.

The immigration service said those children who "aged out" during the process lost their place in line, even if the parents' application took years to process.

Under U.S. immigration law, children 21 and older cannot immigrate under their parents' applications for green cards.

The court ruled 6-5 court otherwise, saying the applicants may keep their "priority date" established when their parents filed for a derivative visa for their children.

"Tens of thousands of children living in the U.S. or abroad who have 'aged out' of the green card process would reclaim their place in line based on this decision," said Carl Shusterman, one of the lawyers representing the applicants.

The ruling held that Congress meant to aid these applicants with the 2002 passage of the Child Status Protection Act. The act meant to preserve the original date of application of a minor who turned 21 during the pendency of the parents' application, the court ruled.

"We conclude that the plain language of the CSPA unambiguously grants automatic conversion and priority date retention to aged-out derivative beneficiaries," Judge Mary Murguia wrote for the majority.

The court ruled that immigration officials were wrongly forcing many of these applicants to file new applications for residency, putting their application at the bottom of the pile. The new ruling requires immigration officials to consider the original application date while processing the application for residency.

The opinion reversed a trial court judge, who tossed out a class-action lawsuit filed by legal U.S. residents whose children were removed from residency consideration under their application when they turned 21.

The federal government could ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the matter.

A U.S. Department of Justice spokesperson could not be reached after hours in Washington D.C.

Judge Milan Smith wrote a dissenting opinion. Smith called the 2002 law ambiguous and said it's unclear what Congress meant with its passage. Further, he said the new class of applicants now eligible for priority consideration will likely bump other, more clear applications of other seeking residency further down the line.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-27-Immigration-Aging%20Children/id-6ac05c6a064a4828905389ed61ff2072

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Coal makes a comeback in Europe

While regulation limits coal power in the US, Hunt writes that the energy source is on the rise in Europe.

By Gary Hunt,?Guest blogger / September 26, 2012

A worker of the coal mine "Auguste Victoria" is pictured during his underground work in the western city of Marl, Germany in this June 2011 file photo. The German government policy is to encourage construction of 10 gigawatts of coal fired generation to displace aging nuclear plants and provide baseload backup for wind and solar power, according to OilPrice.com

Ina Fassbender/Reuters/File

Enlarge

A funny thing is happening on the way to the clean energy future.? While the US government wages a regulatory war on coal fired generation, in Europe, the land of the oh so politically correct the drive for greenhouse gas emissions reduction is meeting a new competitor?reality!

Skip to next paragraph OilPrice.com

offers extensive coverage of all energy sectors from crude oil and natural gas to solar energy and environmental issues. To see more opinion pieces and news analysis that cover energy technology, finance and trading, geopolitics, and sector news, please visit?Oilprice.com.

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The EU emissions trading scheme had fallen on hard times as the number of permits issued was large and demand in a falling economy was weak so prices fell.? Some reforms were made and the freebie credits were reined in but the economy was still weak.? While progress was still made in emissions reduction it was not the transformation some had hoped to achieve.

Then the Japan earthquake and tsunami sends Europe into a frenzy over the safety of nuclear power and Germany announced major closures of its nuclear fleet.? The Greens hoped killing off nuclear would give them a two-fer?less nuke and more renewables.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Family Fun: Touring Key West | Hotels In Key West

Key West is the most southern city in the U.S. and goes out of it?s way to offer family friendly fun, attractions and food. ?Here are a few family fun things to do while touring Key West:

The Key West Marine Park is located on the southwest side of the Key West running from White Street to Duval. The reef is cordoned off with bouys, free of boats and jet skis, making it a safe place to swim and snorkel. It?s a protected habitat for fish and you?ll find coral reefs and tropical fish in abundance. Bring your goggles, snorkel and fins, you?ll want to stay and play for hours here.

Enjoy the Sunset Celebration daily at Mallory Square on Front Street. Open air performers including jugglers, sword swallowing, bagpipers, calypso tumblers, vaudeville acts, balloon artists, tight-rope walkers, musicians and many more who will entice your children into helping their act. You?ll also find food vendors offering tasty treats like hot dogs, lemonade, conch fritters, cotton candy and more. The arts and crafts exhibitors will be there hawking jewelry, blown glass, paintings and so much more. Be here two hours before sunset to enjoy the carnival-like fun.

The Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary runs the Eco-Discovery Center at the Truman Annex Waterfront. Children will love interacting with the many touch screen displays to learn about the reef and mangroves indigenous to Key West. Learn about the area?s native plants and animals, in the ocean and on land. Their mission is to bring awareness to the need to conserve the eco-system of South Florida. According to one review on Yelp, ?The Best thing going for kids in Key West?hands down!?

The Conch Tour Train has been entertaining families since 1958. Touring through Key West you?ll get to know local legends like Earnest Hemingway, Harry S. Truman, Jimmy Buffet, and Tennessee Williams to name a few. It?s a great place to kick-off your Key West trip to get as familiar with the island as the local Key Westers or ?Conch?s? as they are called here, and know where all the attractions you don?t want to miss are.

Look for the history at the Key West Aquarium which opened as the first open-air aquarium in 1935 helping locals make it through the depression. A hurricane hit the Keys hard just seven months later ripping out the Overseas Railroad, which at the time was the only way to get to Key West other than by boat. It was re-opened in 1946 a a roof added during the 1960s to prevent algae from forming in the tanks. the best part of this small aquarium is the shark feedings and Sting Ray Bay where you can pet and feed Cow nose rays. In the Touch Tank they?ll get to touch hermit crabs, starfish and sea cucumbers.

Salute! On the Beach located on Higgs Beach near the White Street Pier is a great place for kids. They offer, not your typical kid-friendly restaurant with crayons or clowns, but offer instead simple foods that children won?t turn their nose up at. Some of the under 5 foot fare includes the fresh-catch-of-the-day Sandwich and many different types of pasta including lasagna. The reviews on Yelp rave about their Key Lime Pie, saying it?s the best on the island. After the kids enjoy a great meal let them burn off the calories by running barefoot around the beach while you continue to relax and enjoy one of their infamous Mojitos.

The laid back Caribbean lifestyle mixed with good ole? southern charm of Key West is what makes it the perfect vacation destination for families who want to have fun.

Jaime Love

Jaime Love is a professional writer specializing in travel and leisure. With a passion to share thoughts, opinions and facts on these subjects to help educate her readers and followers about such topics. In her free time, she enjoys traveling. When not traveling, Love?s home base is in sunny Tampa, FL with her family.

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Source: http://www.hotelskeywestfla.com/news/family-fun-touring-key-west/

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Harris Corporation Receives $25 Million Order from Government in ...

HarrisRF7800

Highlights:
? High-frequency tactical radios to provide long-range military communications.
? Radios establish crucial communication links for personnel operating in beyond line-of-sight environments such as mountains or urban areas.
? Contract expands international deployment of Falcon? family of tactical radios.

MELBOURNE, Fla. & ROCHESTER, N.Y. ? Harris Corporation (NYSE:HRS), an international communications and information technology company, has received a $25 million order from a government in the Middle East for Falcon II? high-frequency tactical radios as part of a military communications modernization program.
Harris will supply this country?s armed forces with Falcon II? RF-5800H base stations, vehicular systems and manpack radios to provide beyond line-of-sight terrestrial voice and data communications. The RF-5800H offers advanced features such as Third Generation-Automatic Link Establishment for initiating contact between two HF radios; integrated data link protocols for data sharing such as embedded text messaging and embedded GPS receivers.

ASDNews

Firetrench Directory

?Harris offers the world?s most advanced digital HF radio family for delivering highly reliable and secure communications for missions that require beyond-line-of-sight capabilities,?? said Brendan O?Connell, president, International Business, Harris RF Communications. ?HF radio systems are crucial for delivering up-to-the-minute situational awareness and command and control.??

Harris RF Communications is the leading global supplier of secure radio communications and embedded high-grade encryption solutions for military, government and commercial organizations. The company?s Falcon? family of software-defined tactical radio systems encompasses manpack, handheld and vehicular applications. Falcon III is the next generation of radios supporting the U.S. military?s Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) requirements, as well as network-centric operations worldwide. Harris RF Communications is also a leading supplier of assured communications? systems and equipment for public safety, utility and transportation markets ? with products ranging from the most advanced IP voice and data networks to portable and mobile single- and multiband radios.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://aerospace.firetrench.com/2012/09/harris-corporation-receives-25-million-order-from-government-in-middle-east-for-falcon-high-frequency-tactical-radios/

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Assistant Professor of Genetics/Biotechnology - HigherEdJobs

Institution: Eastern Connecticut State University
Location: Willimantic, CT
Category:
  • Faculty - Science - Biology
Posted: 09/25/2012
Application Due: Open Until Filled
Type: Full Time
Department: Biology
Position: Assistant Professor - Genetics/Biotechnology, tenure track

Qualifications: Ph.D., broad expertise in Genetics and familiarity with modern techniques in biotechnology. Postdoctoral experience and familiarity with population/evolutionary genetics is an advantage. Applicants must demonstrate an aptitude for teaching undergraduates and willingness to develop a research program involving undergraduates.

Position Description:
Teaching responsibilities will include lecture/lab courses in genetics for biology majors, and participation in the university's Liberal Arts Core Curriculum. Additional expectations include academic advisement, service to the university, and continued professional development.

Respond to:
Please send CV, copies of all graduate transcripts, statement of teaching philosophy and research interests, documentation of teaching ability, and three current letters of reference via email to Dr. Mike Adams, Search Chair, genetics@easternct.edu

Application Information

Postal Address: Eastern Connecticut State University
83 Windham Street
Willimantic, CT 06226
Email Address: genetics@easternct.edu

More Information on Eastern Connecticut State University

EASTERN is an AA/EEO employer. Women, members of protected classes and people with disabilities are encouraged to apply.

Source: http://www.higheredjobs.com/details.cfm?JobCode=175673348

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Black Diamond Acquires Pieps for $10.4 Million | Skiing Business

(Editor?s note: We?ll be talking with Black Diamond CEO Peter Metcalf this afternoon to find out the company?s long-term plans and more about BD?s latest acquisition. Stay tuned.)

Black Diamond, Inc. (NASDAQ: BDE) has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire PIEPS Holding GmbH and its operating subsidiary, PIEPS GmbH (together ?PIEPS?), a leading Austrian designer and marketer of avalanche beacons and snow safety products, from the SEIDEL Group, a family-owned group of companies focused on electronics manufacturing.

?Black Diamond?s acquisition of PIEPS reflects our ongoing strategy to assemble the best and brightest global companies that lead the charge in creating safer travel and backcountry adventure experiences,? said Peter Metcalf, president and CEO of Black Diamond. ?Like Black Diamond Equipment, PIEPS is widely recognized among backcountry enthusiasts for its electronic innovation, premium quality, product reliability and practicality. This reputation has translated into their position as one of the global leaders in avalanche transceivers and has given PIEPS a leading market share in its core markets of Germany and Austria.

Founded in 2006, with roots dating back to 1972, PIEPS is widely recognized as an innovator and technology leader in alpine safety equipment. PIEPS offers a focused range of premium alpine performance products, including avalanche transceivers and probes, shovels, safety equipment, packs, and satellite-based devices for messaging, route tracking, and navigation. PIEPS is the only authorized European Iridium satellite network partner within the alpine sport and outdoor sectors.

PIEPS? CEO Michael Schober commented: ?The joint power of Black Diamond?s global operational resources and PIEPS? leading alpine search and rescue technology creates a powerful platform for further product development. We believe that Black Diamond?s existing and planned electronic products will be supported with our extensive technical experience developing and manufacturing avalanche beacons and other electronic devices. In Black Diamond, we are confident that we have found our ideal match to cultivate our brand and look forward to continue delivering premium alpine performance products.?

For its fiscal year ended March 31, 2012, PIEPS? sales were ?6.0 million or approximately $8.2 million.

Under the terms of a definitive agreement, Black Diamond will purchase PIEPS for ?8.0 million or approximately $10.4 million in cash and will also assume approximately ?2.1 million or $2.7 million in debt. Black Diamond has committed up to an additional estimated ?2.3 million or approximately $3.0 million of contingent purchase price upon PIEPS? achievement of certain sales targets between the closing of the transaction and March 31, 2015.

The transaction is expected to close on October 1, 2012 and is expected to be immediately accretive to Black Diamond earnings per share.

?PIEPS will be run as a semi-autonomous, discrete but closely linked Black Diamond brand that we believe will benefit directly from our operational infrastructure that is similarly tailored to highly engineered, life-dependent products,? continued Metcalf. ?We also expect to grow PIEPS? sales in those markets and geographies covered by Black Diamond?s global distribution platform. PIEPS has historically generated higher gross margin than a typical hard goods company and we expect that to have a positive impact on our overall average gross margin. PIEPS intellectual property, specifically its avalanche technology?including their paradigm-changing Global Finder?supports Black Diamond?s continuing focus on developing our electronic technology and applications product portfolio. We believe that all of these factors make PIEPS an ideal acquisition for Black Diamond as we advance our strategy to become the world?s most respected outdoor equipment and lifestyle company.?

Black Diamond Europe Managing Director, Christian Jaeggi observed, ?In Europe the combination of Black Diamond with its highly respected, responsive, and centralized dealer services operation with the avalanche safety and transceiver leadership embodied in Pieps creates a truly synergistic opportunity that we believe will benefit not only both companies but retailers and consumers alike.?

All PIEPS products are designed and developed in its state-of-the-art facilities and are the result of close collaboration with top mountain guides and rescue teams, scientists and alpine security specialists, as well as major universities in Austria and Switzerland, such as the Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research. PIEPS electronic products will continue to be manufactured by SEIDEL Elektronik, another member of the SEIDEL Group and a contract manufacturer of electronic products for over 15 years.

Renowned for its technological innovation, PIEPS is the recipient of many prestigious industry awards, including Gear of the Show at the summer 2012 Outdoor Retailer and the ISPO Outdoor Award in 2011. It also holds the distinctive ISO (International Organization for Standardization) 9001 certification which defines the standard for quality management systems.

About PIEPS GmbH
PIEPS GmbH is the founder of avalanche transceiver technology, and a market and technology leader with more than 40 years of experience in alpine safety products. PIEPS offers the full range of premium alpine performance products, including avalanche transceivers, avalanche probes, shovels, safety equipment, backpacks and bags, as well as functional sportswear. Headquartered in Lebring, Steiermark, Austria, all PIEPS products are developed and designed internally with state-of-the-art technology and the highest demands on practical functionality. For additional information, please visit www.pieps.com.

About Black Diamond, Inc.
Black Diamond, Inc. is a global leader in the design, manufacturing and marketing of innovative active outdoor performance products for climbing, mountaineering, backpacking, skiing, cycling and other outdoor recreation activities for a wide range of year-round use. The Company?s principal brands, Black Diamond, Gregory and POC, are iconic in the active outdoor industry and linked intrinsically with the modern history of these sports. Black Diamond is synonymous with performance, innovation, durability and safety that the outdoor and action sport communities rely on and embrace in their active lifestyle. Headquartered in Salt Lake City at the base of the Wasatch Mountains, the Company?s products are created and tested on some of the best alpine peaks, slopes, crags, roads and trails in the world. These close connections to the Black Diamond lifestyle enhance the authenticity of the Company?s brands, inspire product innovation and strengthen customer loyalty. The Company?s products are sold by leading specialty retailers in the U.S. and 50 countries around the world. For additional information, please visit the Company?s websites at www.blackdiamond-inc.com, www.blackdiamondequipment.com, www.gregorypacks.com, or www.pocsports.com.

Source: http://skiingbusiness.com/14671/newswire/press-release/black-diamond-acquires-pieps-for-10-4-million/

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Suu Kyi visit a homecoming for many in Ind. city

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) ? Eight thousand miles separate southeast Asia from the American Midwest, but when Myanmar democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi visits an Indiana city on Tuesday, it will be a kind of homecoming.

Fort Wayne, home to one of the United States' largest Burmese populations, has become an unlikely base for opposition to the country's former military regime.

Here, Suu Kyi's followers meet regularly, criticizing what's happening in their homeland through Voice of America broadcasts and YouTube videos, lobbying Congress for continued economic sanctions and raising money for the opposition in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

"They cannot talk in there, so we talk for them here," said Thiha Ba Kyi, 57, a former dentist who earned an MBA after coming to the U.S. in 1994 and now hosts a weekly Burmese-language talk show on local television. "We are very staunch and very outspoken. ... I believe that's why Suu Kyi come here."

The visit by the 67-year-old Nobel laureate, who spent 15 years under house arrest for opposing military rule, marks the zenith of a two-decade influx of Burmese refugees that has brought a new global awareness to the city of 256,000 people two hours north of Indianapolis.

Since 1991, when a single Burmese refugee resettled here, thousands more have followed, many of them relocating under a federal program after years in refugee camps in Thailand. They join other political refugees from a host of countries who have made the city a second home since the fall of Saigon in 1975, thanks largely to the help of Catholic Charities.

The 2010 census found 3,800 Burmese in Allen County, where Fort Wayne is located, but Fred Gilbert, a retired welfare worker who now runs a website designed to help immigrants adjust to American life, says the number may be actually be a few thousand higher because some Burmese identify themselves by ethnic origin rather than nationality.

Many of those residents plan to turn out when Suu Kyi speaks to a crowd expected to number more than 7,000 Tuesday at Memorial Coliseum. The visit is part of a 17-day trip to the U.S. during which she has met with President Barack Obama and received the Congressional Gold Medal.

Signs welcoming her have shown up throughout the city. Local students gathered recently to make flags depicting the fighting peacock that appears on the flag of Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party.

"She is the hope for the people," said Ba Kyi, who now works for Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield and helps the Burmese opposition in exile. "She can bring democracy again in Burma."

For many of the city's Burmese residents, Suu Kyi's visit will be the first tangible connection in years, even decades, with the homeland some hope to return to one day.

Many, like Ba Kyi, left behind careers when they fled their homeland and learned new skills to get a job. U Tun Oo, who chairs the local welcoming committee for Suu Kyi's visit, was elected to parliament in the 1990 election won by Suu Kyi's party that was nullified by the military regime and served as finance minister for the elected government in exile.

"I'm finance minister in the jungle," he said with a laugh. "Jungle minister."

Now Tun Oo, who was a construction engineer in Asia, works in a Fort Wayne factory. When he's not working, he heads the local branch of Suu Kyi's party.

"We see people who were university professors and members of parliament who are very accomplished who are doing all kinds of work," said Tom Lewandowski, president of the AFL-CIO's are labor council. "They'll do what it takes to get by."

Refugees qualify for federal government assistance, but Meghan Menchhofer, a staffer at the Burmese Advocacy Center, said while many newcomers rely on food stamps, only a handful accept cash welfare. The center, which is funded by federal grants and private donations, helps refugees find jobs and homes and navigate issues from laws and customs to getting a driver's license.

"It was different. Vastly different. I knew very little English," said May Ayar Oo, 26, who came to the U.S. at age 16. She graduated in the top five in her high school class and now works as an engineer while attending graduate school.

Patrick Proctor, a member of the board of directors at the Burmese Advocacy Center, said some people in Fort Wayne harbor a negative stereotype of the Burmese who live there. About two years ago, some of that prejudice came to light when a worker at a coin-operated laundry posted a sign barring Burmese "for sanitary reasons," apparently a reference to some people's habit of spitting out the residue from chewing betel nuts.

But many of the city's Burmese seem to have found their way. Burmese-run businesses have popped up across the city, and both the valedictorian and salutatorian at a local high school this year were Burmese.

Former Buddhist monk Nai Sike, 48, and his wife operate a Burmese grocery, one of several in town.

Sike said he would like to stay in the United States because of his business, but he might go back to visit Myanmar. Like the other Indiana Burmese, he is excited about Suu Kyi's visit.

"It's good she's coming here, because of democracy," he said through a translator.

Those attending Tuesday's speech will be eager to hear Suu Kyi's views on sanctions toward Myanmar. Since her release in 2010, she has joined hands with members of the former ruling junta that detained her to push ahead with political reform. She is under pressure from Myanmar President Thien Sein's government to press the U.S. to remove the restrictions.

Ba Kyi wants to be a part of the change Suu Kyi is expected to bring. He said he wants to teach his people, who have no experience of freedom, what democracy is about.

"I would like to move back," he said. "Hopefully, they'll need educated people who have experience in a democratic country."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suu-kyi-visit-homecoming-many-ind-city-175719812.html

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