Monday, October 31, 2011

China paper says U.S. solar complaint driven by envy (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? An anti-dumping complaint filed by U.S. solar firms against their Chinese counterparts is driven by envy at China's rapid growth in the field and goes against global efforts to fight climate change, a major state-run newspaper said on Sunday.

Seven U.S. solar manufacturers this month asked the Obama administration to impose duties of more than 100 percent on China solar imports, which they said were unfairly undercutting U.S. prices and destroying American jobs.

In a front-page commentary, The China Energy News, published by Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily, said this was a foolish, misguided attempt at trade protectionism driven by jealousy.

"In the space of just five years, the rapid development of the Chinese companies has attracted envious eyes overseas," wrote Wang Yuehai, secretary general of the All China Federation of Industry and Commerce's new energy commission.

President Barack Obama had failed to live up to his promises to boost growth by supporting the renewable energy sector, leaving China to lead the way, he said.

"The U.S. solar industry is using the awkwardness of the Obama government to try and force it into trade protectionism and attack the rapid development of China's solar industry," Wang wrote.

The complaint also runs counter to the consensus reached by the two countries to develop clean energy, an important sector to support as the world tries to stimulate growth at a time of global financial crisis, he added.

The controversy comes at a sensitive time in U.S.-China trade relations, which are plagued by U.S. concerns over market access in China, Beijing's treatment of intellectual property rights, and stern debate over the value of China's currency.

China's Commerce Ministry has already warned the United States not to take protectionist measures over the solar energy issue that could harm the global economy.

The U.S. companies' complaint -- filed with the International Trade Commission and the U.S. Department of Commerce against the world's no. 2 economy -- has drawn scepticism from within the industry, as many fear a trade war could disrupt growth.

Many executives from the United States and Europe have complained privately for years about China's impact on solar markets, but most have also said the business had become so globalised that penalising one country would not help companies that are struggling to survive.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Paul Tait)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111030/ts_nm/us_china_usa_solar

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East Timor: Investing in Creativity and Culture ? Global Voices

East Timor is known for its material, musical and dance traditions. Celebration of ?culture? was a crucial part of its resistance to Indonesian occupation from 1975 to 1999, and East Timorese independence has seen a number of emergent cultural projects. But something that goes overlooked is a strong culture of craft and ?making? with locally available materials.

Enter a new project called ?Tatoli ba Kultura?, meaning ?Passing on Culture?. The objective of the project, after extensive research and preparation, will be to support the development of a school of creative industries:

The project aims to create an institution to conserve and protect indigenous culture but also to bring creativity to an educational level in order to create innovation.

The coordinator of the project, David Palaz?n, is an artist who hails from Barcelona, Spain. He says:

Passing on culture

Passing on culture

By chance I came here [to East Timor] to have a break with my career, do some volunteering in my field, one thing led to another.

He has been crisscrossing the country with his team researching Timorese material and performance culture, and posting fascinating videos, images and audio on the Tatoli ba Kultura ?media map?, which is fast becoming a great reference.

Some of the most compelling videos are of musical instruments which are region-specific. Take for example this video of a musical instrument called Rama from Ata?ro Island:

The Timorese context is quite specific, argues Palaz?n:

Kultura is not quite the same as we understand culture in the western world. For Timorese, culture is all those things that comes from the past, it's a reference point to understanding where they come from. My most common question when I do fieldwork is: Why do you do this like this? And the reply is always the same: ?Because it is the way our ancestors used to do it, and it has been passed on from generations.' Obviously they have many influences from Indonesia, China, Portugal, etc ? which are also rooted in the inside of the culture and are in practice totally embedded.

He says, in relation to innovation:

Traditionally speaking, Timor is still very much a country dependent on subsistence agriculture, the economy outside the capital is very much dependent on the family, their goods, what they can exchange, their family members and their incomes, and how these are distributed among who they choose in relation to their own traditions and beliefs. So in a way it is very conservative - not politically speaking - but because changing things implies a serious risk that many people cannot afford [?] Nevertheless inside the traditional system there are people who are more progressive.

Ultimately, Palaz?n hopes that a school of creative industries would among other things generate employment through the rise of a ?creative class?, increase small business development, and boost tourism.

Tatoli ba Kultura has the support of Griffiths University in Queensland, Australia and a number of institutional donors. Palaz?n paraphrases Griffiths Professor Tony Fry, who says, ?Timor has two national resources: oil and culture. Oil will not last forever, on the contrary, culture will last forever.?

Source: http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/10/28/east-timor-investing-in-creativity-and-culture/

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Ouch! Does this year's flu shot hurt more?

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Lawyers: Kidney broker's service was life-saving

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) ? Lawyers for a New York man who pleaded guilty Thursday in the first ever federal conviction for illegal organ trafficking say their client performed life-saving services for severely ill people.

Levy Izhak Rosenbaum admitted in a Trenton federal court to brokering three illegal kidney transplants for New Jersey-based customers in exchange for payments of $120,000 or more. He also pleaded guilty to a conspiracy count for brokering an illegal kidney sale.

Attorneys Ronald Kleinberg and Richard Finkel say Rosenbaum never solicited clients but agreed to help desperately ill people by finding them kidney donors.

The lawyers claim the surgeries occurred in prestigious American hospitals and were performed by experienced transplant experts. They did not name the hospitals.

They say the recipients are leading healthy lives thanks to Rosenbaum.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-10-27-Black%20Market%20Kidneys/id-480dddb3fb55414ab260fbf025cea84b

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Tanier: Some vaunted defenses are surprisingly bad

Steelers, Jets, Patriots, Bears haven't been able to live up to reputations

Image: Pittsburgh Steelers v Arizona CardinalsGetty Images

The Steelers' defense has been surprisingly porous this season.

ANALYSIS

updated 11:00 a.m. ET Oct. 27, 2011

Mike Tanier

If you are a fan of hard-hitting, well-played defense ? sacks, interceptions, goal-line stands and third-down stuffs ? you may be tempted to sit down to watch this week?s Steelers-Patriots game.

You may be better off renting a time machine and going back to see them play in 2005.

The Steelers' defense isn?t quite what it used to be. The Patriots defense isn?t even close. And they are not the only teams coasting on their defensive reputations. The Bears have become Monsters of the Mildly Middling. The Jets, while pretty good at stopping opponents, are only half as good as they claim to be.

Here?s a breakdown of four teams with winning records, great defensive aspirations and serious flaws that undercut their hard-hitting reputations. Much of the statistical analysis comes from Football Outsiders, whose DVOA statistic analyzes every play by down, distance, quarter and field zone, taking us past slobberknocker clich?s and deep into what each team does right, and wrong.

Bears
Reputation: Hard-hitting, disciplined heirs to Dick Butkus and Mike Singletary, led by Brian Urlacher and the Cover-2 wizardry of coach Lovie Smith.

Reality: Unexcitingly average unit with red-zone troubles and an inability to stop big-time receivers.

The Skinny: Urlacher is still great, with three interceptions, a fumble recovery and four tackles for a loss this year, but the Bears rank as an almost perfectly average defense according to Football Outsiders. (They actually earn a 0.0 DVOA percentage, which is FO-speak for ?dead center.? It is hard to be that perfect.) Part of the Bears? problem is that they make life too easy for opponents in goal-to-go situations, allowing six touchdowns in eight opportunities. A bigger problem may be their inability to shut down elite receivers. Calvin Johnson, Steve Smith, Greg Jennings and Roddy White combined for 31 catches and 491 yards in four games against the Bears. Those guys are going to make a play or two, but they have to be held below 123 yards each. The Bears allowed 110 points in one four-game stretch. Neither Butkus nor Singletary would approve.

Patriots
Reputation: Chess pieces for Bill Belichick to deploy with Deep Blue precision, capable of tricking unprepared quarterbacks into four-interception days and stepping on an opponents? chest once the Patriots' offense knocks them over.

Reality: Where have you been? The Patriots' defense has been fading for years. This year, it ranks 26th in the league in yards allowed, and 28th in DVOA.

The Skinny: The Patriots have the worst first down offense in the NFL: opponents average 5.0 yards per rush and an awful 10.3 yards per pass on first down. Opponents have little fear of the Devin McCourty-Kyle Arrington-Leigh Bodden secondary, and the pass rush is not compensating. The Patriots have recorded just 10 sacks, even though opponents are passing all the time.

The Patriots do have some tricks up their sleeves. Their offense moves the ball so well that opponents are always pinned in their own territory, with average starting field position on the 23-yard line (worst in the NFL). The Patriots' defense also has a knack for red-zone stops, as the Chargers will tell you. Still, do not mistake this for a ?bend-don?t-break? defense. It is more of a ?bend, crack, splinter, and hope the offense scores over 30 points? defense.

Jets
Reputation: Rex Ryan?s marauding pirates, a danger to themselves and others, blitzing quarterbacks into the fetal position while banishing receivers to Revis Island.

Reality: The pass defense really is almost as good as advertised. (A birthday cake covered in diamonds, delivered by the ladies of Pan Am, couldn?t live up to the Jets advertising). The run defense, however, is mediocre, and saying that the defense gets better as the game goes on is a nice way of pointing out that it is pretty bad in the first quarter.

The Skinny: As usual, Darrelle Revis and his cohorts are doing an excellent job of eliminating top receivers from the opponents? game plans. Vincent Jackson had just one catch on eight passes last week, Anquan Bolding caught just one pass for the Ravens and while Brandon Marshall caught six passes two weeks ago, Revis returned one pass to Marshall 100 yards for a touchdown. The Jets rank 18th in the NFL in run defense according to DVOA, and poor play against the run cost them the Raiders game. Like their offense, the Jets' defense has trouble with slow starts. The Cowboys, Raiders, and Patriots all scored touchdowns on their opening drives, and even the Dolphins managed an early field goal. With their offense sputtering out of the gate and the defense taking its time to get settled, the Jets are always in danger of falling behind early.

Steelers
Reputation: Angry linebackers blitzing from all angles, Troy Polamalu everywhere at once and a run defense as stout as a bank vault door.

Reality: You can run against the Steelers. Unless you are Tarvaris Jackson or Blaine Gabbert, you can drop to pass without fear of being picked off or turned into coleslaw.

The Skinny: Ten of the Steelers' 17 sacks came against Jackson and Gabbert, two of the league?s favorite pi?atas. The Steelers have intercepted just two passes, a shocking total for a team that has faced Jackson, Gabbert, Kevin Kolb and the Kerry Collins-Curtis Painter Project. The Steelers have allowed just 108 rushing yards per game, but even that figure is high when you realize their opponents are often playing from behind. Arian Foster and Ray Rice combined for 262 rushing yards in the Steelers' two losses, and Maurice Jones-Drew gained 96 yards and kept the Jaguars game close even though he may as well have been the only player on the field.

If an opponent with a good quarterback can build a small lead, they can drive the football right through the Steelers? abdomen. Look for the Patriots to try it on Sunday: if their own defense does not turn a former defensive duel into a game of playground basketball.

Mike Tanier writes for NBCSports.com and Rotoworld.com and is a senior writer for Football Outsiders.


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'Suck for Luck'? Go for it

Ventre: For an NFL team, there is no shame in sucking for Andrew Luck. Let?s face it, the teams we?re talking about suck anyway. What?s a little more gloom?

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45060600/ns/sports-nfl/

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Friday, October 28, 2011

GOP Debate Reflects Capitol Hill Antics (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | Last night's CNN-sponsored GOP debate in Nevada gave us a picture of the true culprits of our country's economic despair. A presidential hopeful claiming that the middle- and lower-class victims of the recession are to blame for being unemployed and impoverished, then claiming they were being exploited by lobbyists, politicians, accountants facilitating the current tax code. Another claimed that religious values can determine one's abilities, while yet another promised to continue an "American tradition" that needs to end: not negotiating. The 2012 GOP candidates bring promises of changes, but mirror the status quo of the Washington they aim to change.

Ad hominem attacks on personal religious faith, usage of or leniency towards undocumented immigrants, replaced true debates of political policy. Rather than a stellar policy proposal, the most poignant scene from Tuesday's is former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney getting physical with Texas Governor Rick Perry over the former's alleged hypocritical pursuit of illegal immigrants. However, the issue here is not their mini-fracas, but what motivated it.

Amidst a critique of Perry's position on illegal immigrants-particularly the issue of granting tuition aid to certain illegal immigrant children-Romney was forced to defend his alleged decision to continue employing a landscaping contractor after learning it employed illegal immigrants dating back to 2006. As Perry began assaulting Romney's credibility on the illegal immigration issue Romney was so flabbergasted, all he could manage was "I'm speaking, I'm speaking" and resting a punitive hand on the Texas governor's shoulder.

To be fair, Perry still refused to refute comments from an associate claiming that Romney's Mormon religion was a "cult" and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum led the way in claiming that personal faith shouldn't be judged in terms of "the road to salvation", but that the tenets of one's religion will show what values are most important to that individual and give an accurate portrayal of them "as a president or a senator or any other job".

It would be nice if our elected officials showed as much passion for stopping school budget cuts and ensuring that jobs actually return to the United States as they did for slandering each others character.

Speaking in Nevada, home to the nation's highest foreclosure rates, the candidates displayed either lukewarm concern or no interest at all in the housing calamity, until prompted by an audience member. Economics were discussed, but it was largely broadsides at Herman Cain's "9-9-9" economic plan, and Cain's awkward attempt to claim his opponents were mixing "apples and oranges" in attacking his proposed makeover of the American tax code. Cain did however, fail to mention who would really benefit under his tax plan, echoing the lack of transparency in Washington on such issues, and a seemingly greater desire to bicker over how to rather than actually fixing the nation's economic crisis.

Instead illegal immigration was a hot button topic throughout the debate, used in an attempt to scapegoat undocumented citizens for the disappearance of jobs and absolve the businesses shipping those jobs overseas. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota insinuated that legislation to alter the 14th Amendment-along with the costly construction of a barrier wall along the U.S. border-was needed to curb the problem posed by "anchor babies" instead of citing that 2.9 million American jobs were cut by American companies and 2.4 million of the jobs were outsourced overseas in the same calendar year. When she did address the job issue it was in the typically vague fashion of other self-proclaimed job creators: full of energy but lacking a clear method for how to accomplish the goal. She did however artfully manage to continue her assault on President Obama while attacking her onstage opponents.

The real problems are so routinely dismissed it's almost taken for granted they will be. Along with the assault of Cain's 9-9-9 plan, his fellow presidential hopefuls criticized him for something he hadn't yet done: a hypothetical negotiation with terrorists to save an American soldier's life in light of the exchange of one Israeli prisoner for 1,000 Palestinian prisoners from the Hamas terrorist group. Cain claimed he'd be open to the discussion, and opened the floodgate for attacks on his patriotism since as Rep. Bachmann claimed, "We don't negotiate".

Indeed we don't negotiate We instead make claims that a liberal president would drive the tax up to 90% under Cain's 9-9-9 plan, that judging the road to salvation is wrong but judging the religious tenets of that highway can define one's professional character, and that slandering character trumps sound political, fiscal, and social policy. America will remember Romney and Perry's awkward exchange, but hopefully also remember them as an example of the kind of politics that needs to leave this country for good.

Hopefully, we'll remember a quote from Newt Gingrich instead: "bickering is probably not the road to the White House.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111028/pl_ac/10240437_gop_debate_reflects_capitol_hill_antics

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

China to curb 'overly entertaining' reality TV

BEIJING (AP) ? China plans to limit reality TV shows and other light entertainment fare shown on satellite television stations as part of a drive to wrest back Communist Party control over cultural industries that are fueling more independent viewpoints.

The order from the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, known as SARFT, refers to shows that are vulgar or "overly entertaining." It singles out programs dealing with marital troubles and matchmaking, talent shows, game shows, variety shows, talk shows and reality programming.

Such shows must be largely phased out by the beginning of next year by the country's 34 satellite TV stations, to be replaced with news and cultural programming. The order also bans viewership surveys and the use of ratings as the sole criteria for whether to broadcast a particular show.

The changes aim to "meet the public's demand for varied, multilevel, and high quality viewing," said the order, published Wednesday.

"Satellite channels are mainly for the broadcast of news propaganda and should expand the proportion of news, economic, cultural, science and education, children's, and documentary programming," the order said.

The order follows a Communist Party meeting last week that asserted the need for strengthening social morality and boosting China's cultural influence abroad ? a recognition by the party that it is losing its power to dictate public opinion. Social media, especially hugely popular microblogs that encourage individuals to generate content, are also being targeted by government censors.

The crackdown coincides with a bout of national hand-wringing over a lack of public ethics, highlighted by the death last week of a toddler who was struck by a vehicle and left for dead by passers by. Officials believe the promotion of "core socialist values" ? a phrase meant to counter calls by liberal Chinese for "universal values" ? will bolster social cohesion in the face of rising materialism.

The communique that emerged from last week's meeting called on officials to "focus education and improvement in the ethical field where there are particularly serious problems."

"Resolutely oppose money worship, hedonism, and extreme individualism and arduously correct bad tendencies such as abusing one's powers, fakery, unprincipled acts, and harming others for profit," said the document, published Wednesday on government websites.

It said television programs and other cultural products should be "refined and inspiring," while oversight of the Internet must be strengthened to block pornography, vulgarity, and the "transmission of harmful information."

In a sign authorities intend to pursue online infractions, three people have been punished with warnings or up to 15 days in detention for spreading rumors online, while suspects were being sought in another three cases, the official Xinhua News Agency said Wednesday.

According to the SARFT regulation, satellite channels as a whole can show no more than nine of the restricted programs each night between the prime time hours of 7:30 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., with individual channels limited to two programs each not exceeding 90 minutes in total.

They must also show at least two hours of news programs between 6:00 a.m. and 11:30 p.m., with at least two news programs running no less than 30 minutes each to be shown in prime time.

While satellite television has grown massively as an alternative to the staid government-run terrestrial channels, younger Chinese have increasingly turned to the Internet for viewing domestic and foreign produced movies and television programs. Government efforts to police the Web have focused mainly on blocking pornography, gambling sites, and those featuring politically sensitive content, while moves to restrict entertainment have been largely ineffective.

The new rules emerge from an ongoing push for media to be both politically docile and relevant to a Chinese audience, according to David Bandurski, editor of the China Media Project website at the University of Hong Kong. Heavy restrictions on content may ultimately doom that to failure, he said.

"They can't have it both ways. That is the real conflict. This is not really about culture at all, it's about politics," Bandurski said.

The new restrictions also contain a strong commercial element in that they stand to favor central government broadcaster CCTV, which has been struggling for viewers despite its monopoly on nationwide terrestrial television. Authorities last month had already ordered leading competitor Hunan Satellite to suspend broadcasts of the hugely popular "American Idol" type singing contest "Super Girl," allegedly for running overtime.

The restrictions had been expected for some time and media reports said stations were already tailoring their programming to conform. Most were already cutting contest shows in which viewers vote for their favorite contestant, a concept frowned on by party cadres who don't permit competitive elections or other facets of Western-style democracy.

The producer of a popular dating program on Shanghai satellite station Dragon TV called "Pick One From a Hundred" referred questions on programming to station managers who did not answer their phones.

"I'm OK with the new rule. The authorities have their reasons for issuing it and we just need to go along," Shao Zhiyu said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-26-AS-China-Culture-Curbs/id-bfa86ca960af4a7385a4a146ffd6215b

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Obama admin says Europe on way to financial fix

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Obama administration says it believes that European leaders are on their way to creating a credible response to the eurozone's financial crisis.

Assistant Treasury Secretary Charles Collyns told U.S. lawmakers Tuesday that the administration is confident in the commitment of European leaders and sees a "very strong likelihood that Europeans will achieve success."

Collyns said that Europe's financial woes posed a substantial risk for the U.S. economy. But he reassured lawmakers that while the administration was offering frequent advice to European leaders, it was not promising U.S. taxpayer funds to bail out European countries.

The comments come as eurozone governments are struggling to come up with a comprehensive plan to tackle their debt crisis by Wednesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-25-US-Europe-Financial%20Crisis/id-e77118a281d34f5387294b79bfb64500

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Asia pays watery price for overdevelopment (AP)

BANGKOK ? As millions of urbanites living a modern lifestyle fear that torrents of floodwater will rage through Thailand's capital, some in enclaves of a bygone era watch the rising waters with hardly a worry ? they live in old-fashioned houses perched on stilts with boats rather than cars parked outside.

"No problem for them. They'll be safe," says boatman Thongrat Sasai, plying his craft along some of the remaining canals that once crisscrossed Bangkok, earning it a "Venice of the East" moniker.

Like most of monsoon-swept Asia, the city and its environs have experienced periodic floods since it was founded more than two centuries ago. But recent decades have witnessed dramatic changes ? from intense urbanization to rising waters blamed on climate change ? that are turning once burdensome but bearable events into national crises.

"In a sense traditional society had an easier coexistence with water and flooding," says Aslam Perawaiz, an expert at the Bangkok-based Asian Disaster Preparedness Center. "Now, with such rapid development there's a much bigger problem."

Across Asia, areas of high population density are also those most prone to flooding and other water-related disasters, according to an Associated Press analysis of recent U.N. maps. When overlaid, the maps show such convergence in a wide arc from Pakistan and India, across Southeast Asia, to China, the Philippines and Indonesia.

This isn't mere bad luck. Historically, agrarian societies settled in the continent's great river basins, including the Ganges in India, the Mekong in Southeast Asia and the Chao Phraya in Bangkok. The gift of the rivers was fertile land, but it came at the price of almost annual flooding during the monsoon rains.

By providing sufficient food for growing populations, these rice bowls in turn spurred the rise of some of Asia's largest cities from Bangkok to Kolkata, India. The concentration of national resources and wealth means even smaller disasters can have a big impact.

Severe flooding this year has killed more than 1,000 people across Asia, and economic losses are running in the tens of billions of dollars.

Thailand, suffering its worst flooding in 50 years, offers a prime example of the perils of centralization and man's fractured bonds to the natural environment. Floodwater has spilled into outlying parts of Bangkok, and the government is scrambling to try to prevent the inundation of the city center.

The basin of the Chao Phraya ? the River of Kings ? and its headwaters in the north are home to 40 percent of the country's 66 million people. Bangkok is Thailand's industrial, financial, transportation and cultural heart, contributing more than 65 percent of its gross domestic product.

Growth, outward and upward, has been stunning. Bangkok's greater metropolitan area now covers nearly 3,000 square miles (more than 7,700 square kilometers) and continues to gnaw away at a surrounding countryside that once acted as a natural drain for water from northern mountain watersheds ? themselves shedding more water because of widespread deforestation.

Highways, suburban malls and industrial parks, many now swamped and sustaining crippling losses, create dangerous buildups of water or divert it into populated areas rather than along traditional paths toward the Gulf of Thailand.

In Bangkok itself, streets where today's middle-aged residents used to play with water buffaloes as children are studded with towering, cheek-by-jowl condominiums and office blocks. The ratios of green space to population and area are among the lowest of any major city in the world.

To this add extreme and erratic weather, said to be triggered by climate change, which has increasingly buffeted Asian countries with storms, typhoons and floods. These include ones such as Thailand with a historically mild tropical climate.

Further, the legal and illegal pumping of underground water faster than it can be replaced has compressed water-storing aquifers, causing Bangkok to sink between 0.8 and 2 inches (2 to 5 centimeters) each year. Scientists say the rise of waters in the nearby gulf as a result of global warming could combine with the sinking land to put Bangkok under water much of the time by mid-century.

Similar subsidence and seawater encroachment is occurring in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City and Manila, where a typhoon last month triggered the worst flooding in the Philippine capital in decades.

Bangkok, some experts half-jokingly say, may well return to what it was in the 19th century: a water world where almost all its 400,000 inhabitants lived on raft-houses or homes on stilts. "The highways of Bangkok are not streets or roads, but the river and the canals," wrote British envoy Sir John Browning in 1855.

A century later, on the advice of international development agencies, Bangkok began to fill in most of its canals ? excellent conduits of floodwaters ? to build more roads and combat malaria.

Sumet Jumsai, a prominent architect and scholar, says that Bangkok's early development "evolved with nature and not against it." But, he adds, by the early 1980s the city had become "an alien organism unrelated to its background and surroundings, a great concrete pad on partially filled land that ... must succumb to the flood every year."

Dikes and drainage pipes have been built, but nature appears to be keeping several steps ahead of manmade defenses.

"Of course this year the flood is maybe too great to stop, but all in all it was better in the old days," says Phairat Klatlek, sitting atop a poorly erected concrete flood wall through which water rushed into the first floor of her home. She and her electrician husband, like most of their neighbors, had built a ground-hugging, modern house along the Bangkok Noi canal.

Sumet is designing modern, functional buildings, including a university campus, built on stilt columns and proposes a revival of floating houses, promenades and markets.

"The underlying philosophy is the return to living with nature like in Bangkok of yesteryear," he says.

But Aslam, the disaster expert, says, "I don't think we can go back to living in harmony with nature as in the past. What is now necessary is huge investments and long-term planning by governments to mitigate such flooding."

___

Associated Press writers Sopheng Cheang in Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Teresa Cerojano in Manila, Philippines; and Asia interactive producer Pailin Wedel contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS spelling of name in 21st paragraph to Phairat Klatlek)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_as/as_asia_flooded_cities

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Stocks fall as hopes for Europe debt deal falter

In this Oct. 24, 2011 photo, traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stock markets fluctuated on Tuesday as investors cautiously waited for European leaders to unveil a plan to tackle the continent's debt crisis, while corporate earnings were mostly upbeat. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

In this Oct. 24, 2011 photo, traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stock markets fluctuated on Tuesday as investors cautiously waited for European leaders to unveil a plan to tackle the continent's debt crisis, while corporate earnings were mostly upbeat. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Stocks closed with steep losses Tuesday after disappointing corporate earnings and reports that a key meeting of European financial ministers had been canceled. Assets that tend to hold their value in a weak economy like U.S. government debt and gold rose.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 207 points. It had gained 409 points over the previous three days.

Manufacturing conglomerate 3M cut its 2011 earnings forecast, and U.S. Steel warned that demand for its products could slow. Netflix Inc. plunged 35 percent after the company cut its profit forecast and said it is losing subscribers following a price increase in July. After the market closed, Amazon Inc. plunged 17 percent after its earnings came in far below Wall Street's forecasts.

The market was also pulled lower by a report that consumer confidence plunged in October to the lowest level since March 2009. The Conference Board index measures how shoppers feel about business conditions, the job market and their outlook for the next six months.

"It's hard to parse this data and find any way that you can glean something positive about it," said Tim Speiss, vice president at EisnerAmper Wealth Planning.

The Dow fell 207 points, or 1.7 percent, to close at 11,706.62. 3M fell 6.3 percent, the largest drop among the 30 stocks that make up the Dow average.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 25.14, or 2 percent, to 1,229.05. The Nasdaq dropped 61.02, or 2.3 percent, to 2,638.42. The losses turned the Nasdaq negative for the year once again. A rally Monday left the index up 1.8 percent for 2011.

Small company stocks fell far more than the broader market, a sign that investors were shunning assets perceived as being risky. The Russell 2000, an index of small companies, plunged 3 percent, reversing a gain of 3.3 percent Monday.

Prices for assets seen as stable stores of value rose. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes fell to 2.14 percent from 2.23 percent late Monday. Bond yields fall when investors send their prices higher. Gold rose 2.9 percent.

The latest headlines from Europe cast doubt over whether leaders there can agree on a comprehensive solution for the region's debt crisis in time for a summit Wednesday. Europe's ongoing debt crisis has been behind much of the market's big moves lately.

European officials are working to patch together a plan that will prevent banks from taking huge losses if the Greek government defaults on its bonds. A messy default could lead to a credit freeze-up similar to the one in 2008 following the fall of Lehman Brothers.

Anticipation of a solution to Europe's debt mess and strong profit reports from Caterpillar Inc., McDonald's Inc. and other major U.S. companies helped the S&P 500 surge 14.1 percent from Oct. 3, when it slumped to its lowest point of the year, through Monday's close. Traders warn that if European leaders fail to come up with a credible solution it could sent markets sharply lower.

United States Steel Corp. dropped 9.6 percent after the nation's largest steelmaker warned that demand for some of its products could decline in the final three months of the year if the economy slows down more.

Delta Air Lines Inc. slumped 5.2 percent after the airline reported results that missed Wall Street's expectations. Delta cut its flights 1 percent in the most recent quarter and said it would cut as much as another 5 percent during the last three months of this year.

United Parcel Service fell 2.1 percent after the company said its growth in Asia was slowing. First Solar Inc. plunged 25 percent after the company said its chief executive had stepped down.

Five stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume was average at 4.3 billion shares.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-25-Wall%20Street/id-5076ab2886d44cf781411436df409034

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Longtime CBS correspondent Robert Pierpoint dies (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? CBS News correspondent Robert C. Pierpoint ? who covered six presidents, the Korean War, the Kennedy assassination and the Iranian hostage crisis in a career that spanned more than four decades ? died Saturday in California, his daughter said. He was 86.

Pierpoint, who retired in 1990, died of complications from surgery at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, Marta Pierpoint told The Associated Press. He had broken his hip Oct. 12 at the Santa Barbara Retirement Community where he lived with his wife Patricia.

After making his name covering the Korean War ? a role he reprised when he provided his radio voice for the widely watched final episode of "MASH" in 1983 ? Pierpoint became a White House correspondent during the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration, a position he would hold through the Jimmy Carter administration.

"He lived quite an amazing life," said Marta Pierpoint. She said her father was most proud of his coverage of the Korean War, Watergate and most of all the Kennedy assassination, an event that would still bring him to tears in an interview with his hometown paper three weeks before his death.

"I didn't like what the priest said about a time to live and a time to die," Robert Pierpoint told the Santa Barbara News-Press in an Oct. 2 story. "It was not Kennedy's time to die."

Pierpoint said his "one bad mistake" the day of the assassination was not revealing that Jacqueline Kennedy had blood on her pink suit when she walked out of her husband's hospital room.

"I didn't describe the blood, and I should have," he said. "I was in shock."

Pierpoint said of the six administrations he covered, Kennedy's was the most fun.

"He was not afraid of the press," Pierpoint told the News-Press. "He had been a reporter. He knew everyone in the White House press corps by name and reputation and joked with us. He was comfortable in his own skin."

Pierpoint said his first White House assignment, the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration starting in 1957, was not as easy. He said Eisenhower was "a relatively good president, but he wasn't a good communicator. I didn't feel that I did a good job, but they kept me on."

CBS certainly did keep Pierpoint on at the White House, for 23 years, a period he chronicled in his 1981 memoir, "At the White House."

He moved to covering the State Department in 1980, and ended his career on the show "Sunday Morning" with Charles Kuralt.

Born May 16, 1925, in Redondo Beach, Calif., Pierpoint joined the Navy in 1943 but didn't see action. He graduated from the University of Redlands, where his papers and archives are now kept, in 1948.

While a graduate student at the University of Stockholm he began work as a stringer for CBS, and found his calling. His coverage of an attempted Communist coup in Finland won him attention, and he was sent to Tokyo as a full-time correspondent, which led to his coverage of the entire Korean War.

Pierpoint shifted as the news business did from radio to television, and appeared on the first episode of Edward R. Murrow's "See It Now" in 1951, eventually becoming one of the close Murrow associates known as "Murrow's Boys."

Before his career was over he had won two Emmys with other reporters, including one for his work on a 1989 banking scandal just before his retirement.

During retirement he was a frequent speaker and frequently went fishing in Montana.

He also didn't hesitate to give his opinion on the directions the White House went after he left, saying recently that he was not impressed with President Obama.

"He's not a fighter. He surrenders to Congress before it's necessary," Pierpoint told the News-Press. "Lyndon Johnson was a fighter. He fought for what he believed in. He was wrong on Vietnam, but right on civil rights."

In addition to Patricia, he is survived by four children, including actor Eric Pierpoint, who has appeared "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen," and "Liar, Liar" with Jim Carrey.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111023/ap_on_en_tv/us_obit_robert_pierpoint

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Monday, October 24, 2011

TKC BREAKING NEWS!!! OCCUPY KC CONDUCTING UNION WORKSHOPS!!!

Once again, allow AWESOME TKC TIPSTERS to shed some light where only local ignorance and silence exists . . .

TKC TIPSTERS ARE TELLING US THAT AN UPCOMING "DAY OF LEARNING" AT OCCUPY KC WILL FEATURE WORKSHOPS LED BY LOCAL UNION OFFICIALS!!!

This is a fact that organizers, participants and promoters aren't mentioning in their recent communications.

To wit . . . TKC is calling out the group regarding their associations . . .

IN MUCH THE SAME WAY THE TEA PARTY WAS TACITLY RACIST, THE OCCUPY KC MOVEMENT IS BEING USED LIKE PUPPETS FOR UNION INTERESTS!!!

And while Unions are great when they speak for themselves . . . Operating clandestinely and attempting to co-opt a movement that wasn't about union interests is kinda sleazy.

Let's explain why this is a contradiction to the so-called "principles" of the Occupy KC movement that has avoided any accountability by refusing to developing:

We've already documented Local 42 infiltrating Occupy KC - This is a group that basically RUNS KANSAS CITY POLITICS and has endorsed a slate of candidates that includes most of The City Council AND the Mayor. Local 42 is so powerful that their members and local firefighters are GETTING A SALARY INCREASE AHEAD OF OTHER CITY UNION MEMBERS WHO HAVE BEEN ENDURING A PAY FREEZE FOR YEARS!!!

So . . . While I'm not a friend of hedge fund managers, bankers or anybody really . . . It's easy to see . . .

OCCUPY KC IS LOSING CREDIBILITY AS A GENUINE PROTEST MOVEMENT BECAUSE OF THEIR LACK OF KNOWLEDGE REGARDING HOW KANSAS CITY POLITICS HAS BEEN CORRUPTED BY LOCAL 42 AND UNION INTERESTS!!!

Again, basically I'm a supporter of Occupy KC . . . But it's important for people who march with these folks to realize that RIGHT NOW they're doing so at the behest of Unions that already control local politics.

DEVELOPING . . .

Source: http://www.tonyskansascity.com/2011/10/tkc-breaking-news-occupy-kc-conducting.html

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Floods threaten Thai capital, scores killed in Myanmar (Reuters)

BANGKOK (Reuters) ? Thailand battled to protect the capital Bangkok from being swamped by water on Friday, with canals full to the brim after devastating floods across the region that sources in neighboring Myanmar said had killed at least 100 people there.

After trying to hold the line for a week, the Thai government opened some canals on Thursday to allow water to run through the inner city, carrying the risk of inundating some districts but relieving pressure on dikes.

At least 100 bodies had been found in the low-lying parts of central Myanmar along the Irrawaddy River, with at least 100 more missing after floods and torrential rains since Wednesday, according to a reliable source in Pakokku, about 450 km (280 miles) north of the biggest city, Yangon.

The source requested anonymity and cited information provided by a local administration official. Residents contacted by Reuters in Monywa and Kyaukse towns said there was damage to property and crops, but could not confirm casualties.

Government officials in the secretive country were not available for comment and state-controlled media made no mention of the rains and floods.

The floods have also killed at least 247 in Cambodia and displaced tens of thousands of people.

The floods are the worst in Thailand in five decades and have killed at least 342 people since July and devastated industrialized areas to the north of Bangkok.

The crisis is the first real test for politically inexperienced Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, whose government has had to form uneasy alliances with the military and political rivals to coordinate the relief effort.

Bangkok's metropolitan authority is controlled by the opposition Democrat Party, while the military has a frosty relationship with the ruling Puea Thai Party because of its de facto leader and Yingluck's brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, the self-exiled former premier overthrown by the army in 2006.

The flood problem was building even before she took office in early August and looks set to cost industry more than $3 billion, slashing economic growth this year.

The 44-year-old former businesswoman is resisting calls to declare a state of emergency, saying authorities are able to manage.

"It would ruin investors' confidence, which is quite weak already," Yingluck told reporters at the crisis center.

"At this moment we can see that we (the government and the people) are cooperating very well to help us get through the problem. If I declare a state of emergency, I would be telling the world that we can't help each other."

Thousands of people in northern parts of Bangkok were moving valuables and electrical equipment to higher floors while evacuees pitched tents in the city's Don Muang airport.

In the fringe provinces of Ayutthaya, Pathum Thani and Nonthaburi, residents packed into boats, some carrying the elderly on their shoulders. Elevated tollways had been turned into giant car parks, with moving traffic reduced to a single lane on some highways.

Many convenience stores in downtown Bangkok were sold out of water and instant noodles and appeals were made for supplies from medicine and food to diapers and slippers.

Some workers stayed home to fortify their houses and banks and shops in Bangkok's business districts were piling up sandbags in case canals burst.

DAMAGE, DISRUPTION

"If the floodwater reaches Bangkok... the damage would be immeasurable because of the disruption to people's lives," Bangkok Bank's executive vice-president, Bhakorn Vanuptikul, told Reuters outside his bank's fortified headquarters.

Water now covers a third of Thailand's provinces, some four million acres (1.6 million hectares) in the north, northeast and center of the country, and a seventh big industrial estate was overwhelmed late on Thursday when flood barriers at the Bang Kadi park in Pathum Thani were breached.

The government's effort to steer the water around the east and west of the capital has had some success, the crisis center said, but people in the northern Don Muang and Lak Si districts were told to be on the alert and ready to move.

Viphavadi-Rangsit, a main road from the north into the heart of the city, is the biggest concern, with fears that canals could overflow and swamp it, said Bangkok Governor Sukhumbhand Paribatra.

The start of the new term for 116 schools, scheduled for November 1, would be delayed indefinitely, Sukhumbhand added.

The weather was expected to clear Friday and similar conditions forecast for on Saturday, but light rain was expected Sunday and thunderstorms in the days after, according to the Meteorological Department.

The central bank has put the damage to industry at more than 100 billion baht ($3.3 billion) on Thursday and said 2011 economic growth could be closer to 3 percent than the 4.1 percent it forecast. Finance Minister Thirachai Phuvanatnaranubala said growth might be barely 2 percent.

The Commerce Ministry said exports might fall 13 percent in the fourth quarter compared with 2010.

Thailand is a big regional hub for the world's car makers and most are suffering disruption, either because their plants are flooded or, more often, because parts makers have had to close and the supply chain has been disrupted.

The output of Japanese car makers has fallen by about 6,000 units a day because of the flooding. Germany's Daimler AG said late on Thursday it had halted car production because of the threat of flooding.

Thailand is the world's top rice exporter. Traders and analysts said it was too early to assess the damage, but estimated about 2 million tonnes of milled rice may have been ruined, with delays to the loading of 100,000 tonnes of rice.

(Additional reporting by Aung Hla Tun in Yangon, Apornrath Phoonphongphiphat in Bangkok and; Angie Teo and Sinthana Kosolpradit in Nonthaburi; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111021/wl_nm/us_thailand_floods

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

UFC 137 interview: Mitrione wants to show he?s more than a heavy-handed striker

Next week at UFC 137, Matt Mitrione is back and he's facing his toughest test to date.

The former Big 10 defensive tackle and NFL veteran, has raced out to a 5-0 start, but now he faces another big puncher in Cheick Kongo. Mitrione doesn't sound like he's afraid to bang with the Frenchman, but also pointed out that he's been working on his ground game as well.

Listen to a very confident Mitrione with Kevin Iole and myself on ESPNRadio1100/98.9 FM's "The MMA Insiders" show. You'll be shocked to find out who "Meathead" from Season 9 of the "Ultimate Fighter" is training with now.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/UFC-137-interview-Mitrione-wants-to-show-he-82?urn=mma-wp8472

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

DeMarco: Yadier Molina is Cardinals' secret weapon

Catcher's prowess on defense, game-calling takes pressure off pitchers

Image: Yadier Molina, Chris CarpenterReuters

How important is Yadier Molina to the Cardinals pitchers? "He's phenomenal," says St. Louis ace Chris Carpenter.

By Tony DeMarco

NBCSports.com contributor

updated 6:22 p.m. ET Oct. 20, 2011

Tony DeMarco

Yadier Molina is mentioned as one the game's best defensive catchers ? often atop the list. And he's always tied to catching brothers Bengie and Jose, as they are the only trio of brothers to each win a World Series ring.

But Molina and NFL offensive tackle Michael Oher? Let Chris Carpenter make the connection:

"I read a book called 'The Blind Side', and they talk about the left tackle covering the quarterback's blind side,'' Carpenter said after Game 1. "And if it wasn't for the left tackle, the quarterback wouldn't have the time to get that pass off ? to make the quarterback a star, or that wide receiver a star.

"That's what Yadi is. He's secretly behind the scenes. He just makes it that much easier. He makes me be able to go out there and do things that I do with zero concern, knowing that he is on the same page, doing the same things I do: Studying hitters, studying our game plan, knowing hitters, paying attention to what each at-bat is all about. He's phenomenal.''

And if you didn't already know about Molina's ability to slow down a running game, a key example came in the top of the first inning in Game 1. After drawing a leadoff walk, Ian Kinsler went on a failed hit-and-run attempt, and Molina gunned him down at second, snuffing out a potential Rangers' scoring threat.

"He's a weapon,'' Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said about Molina.

? 2011 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44981920/ns/sports-baseball/

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Global ban on exports of toxic waste advances (AP)

CARTAGENA, Colombia ? More than 170 countries agreed Friday to accelerate adoption of a global ban on the export of hazardous wastes, including old electronics, to developing countries.

The environmental group Basel Action Network called the deal, which was brokered by Switzerland and Indonesia, a major breakthrough.

"I'm ecstatic," said its executive director, Jim Puckett. "I've been working on this since 1989 and it really does look like the shackles are lifted and we'll see this thing happen in my lifetime."

The deal seeks to ensure that developing countries no longer become dumping groups for toxic waste including industrial chemicals, discarded computers and cellphones and obsolete ships laden with asbestos, he said.

Delegates at the U.N. environmental conference in Cartagena agreed the ban should take effect as soon as 17 more countries ratify an amendment to the so-called 1989 Basel Convention.

"This agreement was stalled for the past 15 years," Colombia's environment minister, Frank Pearl, said in praising the vote.

Katharina Kummer, the convention's executive secretary, estimated it will take about five years to reach the required 68 ratifying nations. Puckett said he thought it would be closer to two years.

Fifty-one nations have already ratified the 1995 amendment, which effectively enforces the Basel Convention, a treaty aimed at making nations manage their waste at home rather than send it overseas.

The United States, the world's top exporter of electronic waste, is among nations that have not even ratified the original convention.

"Unless the U.S. joins the treaty they are just going to be a renegade," Puckett said, adding that the U.S. has no rules for exporting electronic waste, which it sends mostly to China but also to Africa and Latin America.

Phone messages left by The Associated Press for members of the U.S. delegation to the talks were not immediately returned.

The global ban has been strongly backed by African countries, China and the European Union, which already prohibits toxic exports and Puckett said Colombia played a strong role in Friday's breakthrough.

Opponents have been led by Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan, and recently joined by India, said Puckett.

But in Cartagena, he said, Japan's position softened from 2008, when parties to the convention held their last meeting in Bali, Indonesia. It ended in a stalemate.

The issue took center stage in 2006 when hundreds of tons of waste were dumped around the Ivory Coast's main city of Abidjan, killing at least 10 people and sickening tens of thousands. The waste came from a tanker chartered by the Dutch commodities trading company Trafigura Beheer BV, which had contracted with a local company to dispose of the waste.

Puckett said shipping companies had opposed inclusion in the ban, wanting the keep sending old ships to India, Pakistan and Bangladesh to scrap them.

"Just about four days ago another six people died on the beaches of Bangladesh," he said.

He told the AP there are no reliable estimates on how many tons of toxic waste are exported annually because developed nations don't accurately report them.

He said a private U.S. company will, for example, list them as "exports" in sending them to a developing nation so they can avoid paying taxes and other fees.

The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal allows its 178 members to ban imports and requires exporters to gain consent before sending toxic materials abroad.

But critics say insufficient funds, widespread corruption and the absence of the United States as a participant have undermined the convention, leaving millions of poor people exposed to heavy metals, PCBs and other toxins.

They have long argued that an outright ban of exporting toxic waste is the only solution.

___

Frank Bajak contributed from Bogota, Colombia.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_bi_ge/lt_colombia_toxic_trade

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Tornado leaves mile-long trail in South Florida (AP)

SUNRISE, Fla. ? Three tornados touched down in Florida as a storm system drenched the state's Atlantic coast, including one tornado that left a trail of damage more than a mile long in a suburban neighborhood, officials said Wednesday. Minor injuries were reported.

The storm system soaked an already-soggy region late Tuesday, leaving behind damaged property, blocked roads and fallen trees.

A tornado with top winds of 120 mph struck Broward County, according to the National Weather Service in Miami.

"You could see the rotation of the whole storm system on Doppler radar," said Dan Gregoria, a meteorologist with the weather service. "It was really strong, and we were concerned about a strong tornado going across the metro area."

Up to 50 homes were damaged in Plantation and Sunrise, though no serious injuries were reported. About a dozen homes were severely damaged, and two trailer homes were destroyed, according to the weather service.

"It really could have been much worse," Gregoria said.

The debris field was strewn with twisted trees and misplaced cars, Plantation Fire Battalion Chief Joel Gordon said.

Neighbors gathered on a Sunrise street Wednesday morning to assess the damage.

Yom-Tiv Assidon picked through the wreckage of his home looking for his family's jewelry. The house's roof had come completely off, dining room chairs had been blown through a front window and the backyard pool was full of debris.

"We were sitting watching `Dancing With the Stars' and `The X Factor.' I went to get ice cream, and then the windows popped and we heard a boom. Now there's nothing left," Assidon said.

He took his wife to the hospital to have sutures from a recent cancer surgery restitched, but otherwise the couple was uninjured.

Randa Kader said her husband was in the attic trying to find a leak when her son ran out of his room yelling that the neighbor's roof was peeling off. As he did, the windows in his room blew out.

Kader, her son and two daughters huddled in the living room. "We couldn't find my husband for a little while. We couldn't hear him because of the loud noises," said Kader, 43.

When it was over, a neighbor's house was reduced to just its frame, four trees were broken in half in the yard and a concrete bench was cracked, she said.

"The strength of this thing was just tremendous," Kader said.

Barb McKie said her family had just seen the tornado warning on television when it seemed like the wind was rushing through their home. When it died down, McKie's husband opened their front door to see their neighbor's house missing a roof. He ran across the street to check on the neighbor, an elderly man. The neighbor was unharmed.

"I don't think that poor man knew what was going on. It happened that fast," she said.

"As many hurricanes as we've gone through, my daughter said this was worse than a hurricane," she said.

No injuries were reported in Indiantown, where a tornado with winds up to 85 mph touched down, according to the National Weather Service in Melbourne.

It shook siding and roof shingles off a house, destroyed a barn on the property and blew out the roof and back wall from the VFW post next door, said Martin County Fire Rescue spokesman Bill Schobel.

"We're finding pieces of the roof in the adjacent pasture," he said.

A third tornado with winds up to 65 mph struck Indian River County, causing major damage to one unoccupied home and strewing debris for about a block in Indrio, according to the weather service.

It's been raining in South Florida since the weekend, and the rain was expected to continue throughout Wednesday. School officials in the Florida Keys canceled classes Wednesday due to possible flooding and lingering storms.

___

Kay reported from Miami.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111019/ap_on_re_us/us_fla_severe_weather

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Expert: Jackson doctor violated age-old standards

Dr. Conrad Murray, center, looks on beside his lawyers J. Michael Flanagan, left, and Nareg Gourjian during Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in downtown Los Angeles. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, Pool)

Dr. Conrad Murray, center, looks on beside his lawyers J. Michael Flanagan, left, and Nareg Gourjian during Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in downtown Los Angeles. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, Pool)

Anesthesiology expert Dr. Steven Shafer gestures as part of testimony about the proper way to administer cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, during Dr. Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in downtown Los Angeles. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, Pool)

Deputy district attorney David Walgren holds a propofol bottle during Dr. Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in downtown Los Angeles. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, Pool)

Anesthesiology expert Dr. Steven Shafer demonstrates how propofol is extracted out of a glass bottle with a syringe during Dr. Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in downtown Los Angeles. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, Pool)

(AP) ? Michael Jackson's personal physician was giving the pop superstar a modern drug to help him sleep, but a prosecution expert told jurors Wednesday that in doing so he violated ancient principles for conduct between doctors and patients.

Dr. Steven Shafer, an expert in the anesthetic propofol that Jackson's doctor had been using as a sleep aid, said there were 17 violations by Dr. Conrad Murray that each put Jackson's life at risk.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. He was Jackson's personal physician for roughly two months before the singer's unexpected death in June 2009. The cardiologist's attorneys will cross-examine Shafer on Thursday.

Many of the violations concerned modern life-saving equipment that Murray lacked when he gave Jackson propofol in the bedroom of his rented mansion, but Shafer said among the cardiologist's worst transgressions was he put his own interests ahead of Jackson's.

Since Ancient Greece ? and probably before ? Shafer said societies had held doctors to high standards. He quoted the Hippocratic oath, "'In every house where I come, I will enter only for the good of my patients.'"

Instead of honoring the ancient creed, Murray came to Jackson's rented mansion nightly and gave the singer propofol, a drug as a sleep aid, a use it was never intended for, Shafer said. He likened the Houston-based cardiologist to an employee, akin to a housekeeper, who wouldn't tell his boss no.

"Saying yes is not what doctors do," he testified. "A competent doctor would know you do not do this."

Shafer, a Columbia University professor and researcher who helped write the guidelines and warnings included with every vial of propofol, repeatedly said Murray's actions were unconscionable, unethical and illegal. He frequently travels to lecture on propofol's effects, and his testimony took a global view Wednesday as he described attending anesthesia conferences in China, research from Canada, and how hieroglyphs in ancient Egypt showed doctors interacting with patient.

But he said Murray's case is unlike any he's seen before.

"We are in pharmacological never-never land here, something that was done to Michael Jackson and no one else in history to my knowledge," he told jurors.

Shafer's testimony tied together pieces of prosecution's case against Murray laid out over four weeks. The professor reminded jurors that Murray had bought more than four gallons of propofol to use on the singer during his employment, was on the phone in the hours before Jackson's death and delayed calling 911 when he found the singer unresponsive.

"A patient who is about to die does not look all that different from a patient who is OK," Shafer said, adding that doctors cannot multitask and properly monitor a patient who is sedated.

"The worst disasters occur in sedation and they occur when people cut corners," Shafer said. In Jackson's case, "virtually none of the safeguards were in place," he added.

Shafer, who wrote the package insert that guides doctors in the use of the anesthetic, leaned forward and spoke to jurors directly at times, as if he were in a classroom. Indeed, the early portion of his testimony was a crash course in propofol, explaining its effects on the body and why despite being a remarkable drug, it needed to be used by skilled people in the proper medical setting.

The researcher told jurors that it appeared Murray intended to give Jackson large doses of propofol on a nightly basis. He said records showed Murray purchased 130 100ml vials of propofol in the nearly three months before Jackson's death.

Shafer said that is "an extraordinary amount to purchase to administer to a single individual."

Like other expert witnesses, Shafer based much of his opinions on the case on Murray's own words during a lengthy interview with police two days after Jackson's death.

He said the lack of record-keeping was a violation of Jackson's rights, especially since something went wrong.

"He has a right to know what was done to him," Shafer said. "With no medical record, the family has been denied that right."

When Shafer spoke of Jackson's family, a couple jurors looked out into the audience, where the singer's mother, father, sister Rebbie and brother Randy were seated.

Testimony has shown that Murray took no notes on his treatment of Jackson and didn't record his vital signs in the hours before the singer's death.

Shafer said he was testifying for the prosecution without a fee because he wants to restore public confidence in doctors who use propofol, which he called a wonderful drug when properly administered.

"I am asked every day in the operating room, 'Are you going to give me the drug that killed Michael Jackson,'" Shafer said. "This is a fear that patients do not need to have."

Defense attorneys will begin calling their own witnesses. One of them will be a colleague of Shafer's at Columbia, Dr. Paul White, who was sitting in the courtroom during Wednesday's testimony.

Murray was mainly stoic as he listened to his medical skills and judgment were repeatedly called into question. White, seated behind him, took notes.

___

AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report.

___

McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-20-Michael%20Jackson-Doctor/id-b9b06a27c0414f55a3eb95bda8af3c88

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