|
By Janet Evans
Monday, Dec 1 2008, 06:40 AM
Rafetus swinhoei Photo ATCN
Especially if you are endangered and only one of four Shanghai soft-shell turtles. Beware of flooding, too.
A rare Vietnamese turtle, one of just four believed left in the world, was swept away by a flood, taken hostage by an enterprising fisherman and nearly ended up in a soup pot. Instead, the 150-pound animal returned to its lake Wednesday and conservationists celebrated their deal with the fisherman — the turtle's freedom in exchange for about $200 and two new fishing nets.
Douglas Hendrie and other conservationists had been trying to find the turtle for two weeks after floods washed the animal out of Dong Mo Lake near Hanoi.
Continued HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Sunday, Nov 23 2008, 08:13 AM
Photo: Mark Hasty
How does Wal-Mart keep those prices so low? They shop around for the best suppliers of their products, don't they?
"The world’s largest retailer says it won’t do business with suppliers who violate environmental laws. But can Wal-Mart's low-cost mission align with its lofty goals for sustainability? Host Bruce Gellerman talks with green business consultant Andrew Winston about how Wal-Mart can clean up its act while cleaning up the environment."
Click to read a very interesting transcript
|
By Janet Evans
Friday, Nov 21 2008, 12:48 PM
This time thanks to the Aussie's.
What can I say, the topic is out there and it’s part of life. It cannot be ignored.
When I heard there was talk of a toilet tax, I wondered if you had heard the poop on that…
And besides that, "experts" dont want "flushing" toilets anymore.
What's the world coming to?
"As the world celebrates World Toilet Day today, sanitation experts have called for the end of the flushing dunny to save water and provide fertilizer for crops.
Leading health advocates have called for the use of "dry" toilets which separate urine from faeces and remove the need to flush. Speaking at the recent World Toilet Summit in Macau, World Toilet Organisation founder Jack Sims said the concept of the flushing toilet was unsustainable."
Enough of that...you'll have to finish reading this article by clicking HERE
And take a look at some "weird" toilet designs
|
By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 17 2008, 06:01 PM

It’s always been Pepsi for me…
But the problem for Pepsi and Coke is, people haven’t been drinking either lately.
What’s the No. 1 beverage you see people carrying around with them?
WATER
You have to wonder how we ever survived before there was bottled water, or how our kids survived before we had them bring a bottle of water to sports practices.
Then you have all the other types of beverages that have become popular over the past decade.
Those include fruit juices, energy and boost drinks, and flavored, black and green teas ~ and no, Kool-Aid isn’t on the list.
So, what’s an old favorite like Pepsi to do?
Come up with a new advertising campaign…that’s what.
"ONE of the longest relationships in advertising is coming to an end as PepsiCo shifts the creative duties in the United States for its flagship soft drink, Pepsi-Cola, from BBDO Worldwide, which has produced campaigns for the brand since 1960.
For decades, BBDO and Pepsi-Cola collaborated on some of the most popular and successful sales efforts ever developed on Madison Avenue. The ads created by BBDO, part of the Omnicom Group, carried themes like “The choice of a new generation” and “The joy of Pepsi.” Many of the campaigns helped transform Pepsi-Cola from a sleepy also-ran behind the leading soft drink, Coca-Cola, into a tough competitor that challenges Coke constantly for control of the carbonated beverage market.
But lately, the battle between Coke and Pepsi is being won not by either brand but mostly by noncarbonated products like juices, teas, energy drinks, sports beverages and bottled water. And the most recent campaigns that BBDO has created for Pepsi-Cola have not resonated with consumers the way previous ads did."
Continued at the New York Times HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Friday, Nov 14 2008, 09:30 AM
Remember that old saying?
It had it's place...plus, the concept was fun.
I tend to make light of the Brits quite often in my posts.
I can't help it. Blimey! They're, well, bloody daft most of the time.
The latest on them is that they've run out of room to, well....
Bury their dead.
I know, it's tough when you are land locked on the British Isles.
But they want to actually dig up the bodies and dig deeper and start stacking.
I don't know...
I think if I heard I was going to be double stacked like an Oreo cookie I'd start thinking of alternatives.
Cremation would sound all the more appealing to me if I was in their shoes.
I know...you're already dead, so what's the difference?
Exactly...what's the difference...
I always get a kick out of some of the British comments on the stories from their sites. They're better than the entire article...here's one of the comments....
"There are so many ways of respectfully handling the dead. Myself, I would love to go like a Viking: put me on a ship, set it on fire and push it out to sea. Or put my corpse on a hillside and let the birds feast. The spirit is more important than the flesh. Only the living care about tombs.
Mathieu , Delft, Netherlands"
Read the article "More Room On Top..." and view the other comments HERE
It's jolly good!
|
By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 13 2008, 06:45 AM
I'm worried about issues with Obama being president, but this isn't one of them...
Of course, now that Obama is going to be president, he has so-called relatives coming out of the woodwork. It doesn't surprise me and it doesn't suprise me in the least that there would be those who say they are "Arab" relatives. I suppose there will be more of this to come during the next four years....But does it matter? He has been elected president and come on...we know his citizenship has been verified.
"Now Barack Obama is being claimed by not one but as many as 8,000 Beduin tribesmen in northern Israel.
Although the spokesman for the lost tribe of Obama has yet to reveal the documentary evidence that he says he possesses to support his claim, people are flocking from across the region to pay their respects to the “Beduin Obama”, whose social standing has gone through the roof.
“We knew about it years ago but we were afraid to talk about it because we didn’t want to influence the election,” Abdul Rahman Sheikh Abdullah, a 53-year-old local council member, told The Times in the small Beduin village of Bir al-Maksour in the Israeli region of Galilee. “We wrote a letter to him explaining the family connection.”
Read the entire article HERE
Actually, I think many people would be amazed that the origin of their name may come up in the Middle East and Europe with links in one way or another from a very long time ago. People were every transient .
So, as long as a certain guy who has been hiding in the mountains for eight years doesn't start making accusations...I'm sure we'll be okay on this one.
|
By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Nov 12 2008, 08:10 PM

It wasn’t always that way in Europe.
Fruits and vegetables had to practically perfect in every way…sort of like Mary Poppins. Talk about being a Nanny State.
Like it really matters if your eggplant has a dimple or your carrot is curved.
Oh, no...they had to actually be thrown away. Sheesh.
There are hungry people in the world.
Well, now because of the econonmy, suddenly imperfections in legumes are acceptable.
Now, while we may not find bent veggies in a Sendiks...we don't ban them. A store has always been able to sell them if they choose. It' s personal choice. You just don't throw them away. They'd be great for use in a vegetable soup!
Misshapen fruit and vegetables won a reprieve on Wednesday from the European Union as it scrapped rules banning overly curved, extra knobbly or oddly shaped produce from supermarket shelves.
Ending regulations on the size and shape of 26 types of fruit and vegetables, the European authorities killed off restrictions that had become synonymous with bureaucratic meddling. The rising cost of commodities also persuaded the European Commission that there was no point in throwing away food just because it looked strange.
Read all about it HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Nov 12 2008, 11:46 AM
Perhaps it is possible for the people of Iraq to realize that they don’t have to tolerate terrorism. Perhaps it is possible for them to understand that freedom from terrorists is a constant battle, but it must be fought. Even if it takes one small town in Iraq at a time...
"Dulaim is an Iraqi village transformed. Where masked gunmen from Al Qaeda in Iraq once imposed their will with killings and even stole irrigation pumps, today numerous Iraqi Army, police, and local Sunni militia checkpoints attest to new levels of security.
The change has been dramatic. It is the result of this farming hamlet deciding last January to change sides, reluctantly turning away from Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) and toward US and Iraqi forces.
But despite recently paying a high price for that shift, this village is determined not to turn back."
Read the complete article from Christian Science Monitor
Iraqi town defies Al Qaeda
|
By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 10 2008, 06:41 PM
Boston already has the hippest school of music. It’s the Boston Berklee College of Music.
That's the in place to be. But if you have a child who may be interested in a career in music arts...or you yourself are planning for a future in music, you've got to check out the future home of Berklee's ARTeria Valencia.
It's a state-of-the-art, 25-story building in Valencia Spain. And if you want to study music abroad, this is where you will want to be.
"Valencia, Spain will soon be home to a $145 million school of rock (and pop and jazz) from the Boston-based Berklee College of Music, which hopes to extend its successful contemporary music training program to European shores.
"ARTeria Valencia" will be a state-of-the-art, 25-story building (see artist's renderings) featuring faculty and student housing, a high-speed data network, a 1,000-seat outdoor amphitheater and several smaller performance spaces. Construction will be largely bankrolled by the SGAE Spanish performing rights organization, which is apparently eager to bring Berklee's approach to contemporary music education to Valencia -- already a popular "semester abroad" destination.
You might think the music industry's heavily-publicized woes would scare kids into more financially stable lines of work -- say, brokering stocks or managing hedge funds. Those aren't the greatest examples these days, but still, given shrinking labels and dwindling sales, the music industry seems like a hard place to get a foothold.
Nonetheless, budding musicians continue to be drawn like moths to the flame of the Berklee College of Music in Boston, where applications for Fall '09 matriculation are up 40 percent according, to Larry Monroe, the school's vice president of international programs, and popular subjects include music theory, composition, performance, music management, music education and even music therapy. The Boston location turns out 800 graduates each year, while the Valencia location will produce smaller classes of 250."

Read the complete article HERE
Berklee Valencia
|
By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 10 2008, 07:08 AM
There's trouble brewing....Not in the U.S., either.
It seems Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad isn't please that President-elect Obama was the chosen one. He'd rather have us our own country picking apart our leader. He liked it better when the world didn't receive GWB with open arms.
There's trouble brewing...
"Efforts are already efforts under way in the Iranian press to tarnish Obama's image.
"A hawk in a dove's outfit" is the way the right-wing newspaper Keyhan described Obama in a front page article the day after his election. The article puts special emphasis on what it calls "Obama's praise of America's actions in Afghanistan and George Bush Sr.'s war in Iraq." It goes on to say, "Obama has never been peace-seeking."
Read the complete article HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 6 2008, 07:21 AM

North Korea seems to be parading Kim Jong-il around and propping him up, or showing photos of him that don't match up with a story that he may have had brain surgery.
If he was really ill, wouldn't they just fess-up and be done with it? If your leader is ill, wouldn't your country just admit it and let things move on. Unless the country isn't prepared. That seems to be the case.
Since Sunday, news outlets in the North have described three separate appearances by Mr. Kim, 66, who officials in Washington and Seoul have said probably suffered a stroke around August and may have undergone brain surgery.
Read the article from the New York Times International
HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Friday, Oct 17 2008, 11:54 AM
You’ve heard of the Ukrainian and South Korean hijacked ships? Do you believe they are the only ones? Think again. Those pirates have had 73 attacks so far this year. Of those 73, there have been 29 hijackings. Now it’s reported that this past Wednesday, another ship was hijacked; a Philippine bulk carrier ship that has a crew of 21 aboard. And why not? The South Korean’s paid the ransom the pirates requested. Keep paying ransoms, and the pirates will keep doing what they are doing. No one has the answer, but we need to find a way to blow those pirates out of the water.
Read more on my Righty Blog
HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Sunday, Oct 12 2008, 09:21 PM
Farmer John Magill in southeastern Australia inspects a dried up dam on his farm. Over half of Australia's farmland is in drought. The drought has also seen a rise is farmer suicides in rural Australia, with the suicide rate among farm workers being double that of the regular population. (Photo by Ian Waldie/Getty Images)10/06
Australian farmers are drowning---in drought. Their land has been drying up year after year, to the point that they actually trade water. Have you ever heard of that before? Trading water is a national market in Australia.
As always with supply and demand, there is money to be concerned about. So we have farmers, with land, the driest continent on the planet, no water, high prices, high stress…
For farmer Malcolm Holm, water now is just like a new shovel or tractor — he has to buy it.The amount of water he is allowed to take from nearby Murrumbidgee River has dwindled to nothing for the past three years because of Australia's crippling drought. And so, except for rain he can catch and store himself, he needs to buy water for his 1,000 acres at Finley in New South Wales state, where he grows crops to feed his 600 dairy cows."It's no different to buying a ton of grain or a ton of fertilizer," Holm said. "It's just another commodity."
[...]
"In essence, what the water trade does is make irrigators really focus on the economic value of their water and using it more efficiently," Holm said. "If you can't produce a good crop for the cost of the water, you're better off selling it to someone who can. If the figures add up, you buy it."Holm is anxious. The price right now is too high for him and he is watching his pastures die while he waits for a turn in the market or a drop of rain.
Read the complete article on MSNBC HERE
Also, Farmers Suicide Rates Double National Average
|
By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Oct 8 2008, 07:02 AM
A naked Brit swims in the moat of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo
Picture this…
The home of the Imperial Family of Japan.
Just minding their own business in their Palace.
A palace that rarely has visitors.
And a large, naked British tourist decides to skinny dip and rock climb in the moat that surrounds the palace.
Just a typical day in Tokyo, right?
Well, no…
Now I know you're interested.
Visit the Daily Mail for more photos and some more information on thi s bizarre story
HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Monday, Oct 6 2008, 11:53 AM
 Photo Daily Telegraph UK Miguel Caballero is called the Armani of armour
It was all the rage in fashion shows this summer…bullet-proof designer clothing..sold to 16 countries.
Why not? If it’s better to be safe than sorry in the crime world, you may as well look good.
South Africa, Columbia..now Mexico….it’s getting closer…
Soon in a department store near you? Probably not, but it will be found somewhere. Maybe it can be found already.
From the International Herald Tribune...
"Tucked on a leafy side street in the Polanco neighborhood is a shop unlike the others, one whose bustling business says much about the dire state of security in this country. At Miguel Caballero, named after its Colombian owner, all the garments are bulletproof.
There are bulletproof leather jackets and bulletproof polo shirts. Armored guayabera shirts hang next to protective windbreakers, parkas and even white ruffled tuxedo shirts. Every member of the sales staff has had to take a turn being shot while wearing one of the products, which range from a few hundred dollars to as much as $7,000, so they can attest to the efficacy of the secret fabric.
"If feels like a punch," a salesman said of the shot to the stomach he received. Just who is willing to fork over thousands of dollars for these chic shields? Customers include Presidents Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and Álvaro Uribe of Colombia, not to mention assorted royalty, movie stars and other VIP's."
Continued
|
By Janet Evans
Thursday, Oct 2 2008, 05:47 PM
The photo you see here is of White Rabbit Candy. It’s made in China and has been found to contain melamine. Packages have been found in the U.S. in California and Connecticut so far.

We know Cadbury has some confections that are made in China and has recalled their products. But it doesn’t hurt to be aware of where your food items are actually being manufactured. You may want to look at packaged soups and other powdered items too.
The linked article regarding Cadbury may say samples were within “legal limits,” but if you are pregnant or suffering from an illness, and consume an industrial chemical, being within legal limits isn’t something you want to hear. That’s not acceptable when you are dealing with a chemical that has hundreds of thousands of children sick, and several dead, in China.
"Candy lovers beware. Melamine-tainted candy — imported from China — is now showing up on store shelves in the United States.
Officials in California and Connecticut confirm they have found White Rabbit Creamy Candy contaminated with melamine in their states.The Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection said the tainted candy was primarily found in Asian markets. But officials warn the contaminated candy could be on store shelves nationwide.
Melamine is the chemical at the heart of the Chinese-milk scandal, which is blamed for the deaths of four babies and the illnesses of more than 53,000 other children in that country."
Continued in Consumer Affairs HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Friday, Sep 26 2008, 08:32 PM
Now this is fresh…
The opinion of the Chinese on our presidential candidates and election process.
Right off the bat, you have a bookstore with three books about Barack Obama, translated into Chinese…but none on McCain…there are none translated.
With all of the turmoil in China…their people have their own world to deal with, so our election is of little importance, but they do have some views…
"At the average person’s level in China, I’ve just found [the U.S. presidential election] to be less interesting than any other thing – the Olympics, the earthquake, other things going on in China that are of huge historical importance to China itself," observed James Fallows, who’s been based here for two years writing for The Atlantic Monthly. Apart from the events he mentioned, there were also the winter storms that paralyzed half the country; the Tibet riots; torch relay protests; violence in Xinjiang; and now the melamine-tainted milk scandal. No surprise then that most Chinese have been focusing on domestic events.But, as usual when it comes to China, it’s never that simple. As we talked to people about the American election, we found varying levels of interest and curiosity.
‘It’s just for fun’
"Many people pay attention to the election but with different motivations," said Professor Jin Canrong, Associate Dean at the School of International Studies. According to Jin, interest in China is broken down into three broad categories: official (government), intellectual (academics and policy analysts), and laobaixing (ordinary people)."For intellectual communities, they want to learn something from the process and try to improve China’s approach of governance," said Jin. "But for the average people, especially young people, it’s just for fun." "It’s entertaining for an outsider," agreed Li Xin, a young woman who edits an economic magazine.
"That makes you want to watch and follow and see what’s going on next."And while the government and think tanks have a sophisticated grasp of how the U.S. election campaign works, ordinary Chinese seem bewildered by the process. "I think the election process is quite complicated with all the rules of caucuses, primaries, and the general election," said Li.Especially the election conclusion. One Chinese acquaintance told me he was stunned, when he first witnessed a presidential election after moving to the United States, to see a candidate concede defeat. "The only form of democracy we Chinese have ever seen really is what is in Taiwan," he said. "And that is completely different. The loser never just gives up."
Personality, not policy
"We noticed some differences in their policy towards China," said Jin. "For John McCain, he will pay more attention to [the] so-called military build-up of China, the religious freedoms, and Taiwan…. For Obama, we have some concern about the possible trade protectionism, some dispute around climate change, human rights, especially the human rights issue relating [to] Tibet."But because the policy differences at this stage seem minute or elusive to most Chinese, they focus instead on the candidates’ personalities.
"McCain, he’s a veteran, he’s very patriotic, and he’s 70. He’s got all this old stuff going on," said Annie Gong, a 20-year old college junior. "Obama, of course, he’s young, cute…but I think he’s kind of lacking in experience."In general, young Chinese, however, seem drawn to the Illinois senator. "I think Obama is really exciting," said Li, who is 29. "He represents the fresh face of America. The typical American dream."And in a country which counts 253 million people as internet users – more than in the United States – Obama’s internet savvy has been noted. "His team is very skillful in communicating with young people by the internet," observed Jin.But for older Chinese, Obama’s race is a stumbling block.
"I’ve been struck by how many high-level people in China are sort of thrown off their feet by the idea of a black person possibly as the president of the U.S.," said Fallows. Racism isn’t enough to explain their reaction to Obama. Throughout the Cold War, the Chinese were fed a diet of anti-capitalist propaganda, a narrative that portrayed the U.S. political and economic system as corrupt and immoral. American capitalism, according to this viewpoint, was the root of its manifold social ills: inequality, sexual immorality, urban poverty, violence, and, especially, racism. On Wednesday, one of our interns noticed that a translation of a U.S. article discussing how race could cost Obama votes was being widely circulated on some of China’s popular websites. The fact of Obama as a U.S. presidential candidate creates anxiety for this older generation of Chinese.
"How is it possible that someone who grew up in that system can succeed?" a local Chinese journalist asked rhetorically."I think his success upsets those people’s world view – their understanding of what American society is." Read the complete article and see a video HERE
|
By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Sep 23 2008, 04:51 PM

Another school shooting...Not a tragedy…a massacre.
This time in Finland. Today one student killed killed ten others, and then himself (of course, he turned the gun on himself; coward).
Of course, neighbors said he was “quiet.”
A masked student went on the rampage at a Finnish school Tuesday, methodically gunning down 10 people before turning the weapon on himself, a day after police quizzed him over a chilling YouTube warning.
Young women screamed as the 22-year-old shooter stalked the corridors of the vocational college in a ski mask and black outfit letting off round after round at helpless students before starting several fires, witnesses and police said.
The massacre in Kauhajoki in southwestern Finland was the country's deadliest school shooting and the second in under a year.
"I heard the sound of shooting and hysterical girls' voices. Then two girls came towards my room and said a weird man was shooting," Jukka Forsberg, the janitor of the school, told AFP.
"I went to see and saw a guy leaving a big black bag in the corridor and going into classroom number three and closing the door.
"I looked through the window and he immediately shot at me," he said, adding, "Thank God I was not hit! He fired at me but I was running zigzag. I ran for my life."
Forsberg said he heard "horrible screams of pain" as he raced out of the building. The shooter has been identified as a second-year culinary arts student Matti Juhani Saari.
Read the article HERE
Sure... there were advanced warning signs (a video).
I blogged last November about Terrorism in American Schools: The First of ALL Fears
It’s worth a second look.
Also, New Berlin is going to be installing high tech video equipment in their school district, just approved this past month.
I also blogged about schools using high tech video systems last November,
Smile Kids, You're On LIVE Camera.
An article came out last week in "Campus Safety" for educators that states there are between 2,000-3,000 camera "systems" out in the schools throughout the country right now. (Making the Leap To IP Video - A Safer Bet. www.campussafety.com (Sept/Oct 08).
Since Franklin Public Schools are so close to the House of Correction, with the threat of domestic terrorism (that includes from students), and whatever looms ahead from foreign terrorism, I think we need to keep this equipment in mind.
We are currently repairing our track again for $53,000 and have a renovation of the stadium/track in the future plans for over 2.5 million....
We just had a safety program on that track. Perhaps some safety equipment in the schools might be of benefit. Just a thought.
|
By Janet Evans
Sunday, Sep 21 2008, 10:11 AM
 Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Columbia University 2007
Are we to believe Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he makes bold statements such as this:
"If anyone allows himself to commit even a tiny offense against Iran's legitimate interests, borders and sacred land, our armed forces will break his hand before he pulls the trigger," Ahmadinejad said during the parade.
“Tiny offense?” “Break his hand before he pulls the trigger?”
"Washington and its Western allies are pushing for quick passage of a fourth set of sanctions to underline the international community's resolve.
But Ahmadinejad said Sunday that sanctions only help Iran achieve self-sufficiency.
"Those who once imposed sanctions, today should open their eyes and see our nation's technical achievements," he said.
Both the United States and its ally Israel say they support a diplomatic solution to the nuclear standoff with Iran but cannot rule out the military option.
"Today, Iran is not in a position to show softness toward its enemies," said Ahmadinejad, but added that threats made against Iran's nuclear facilities amounted to only "psychological warfare."
So far "psychological warfare" has worked pretty well against Iran.
Can Ahmadinejad succeed in using it back against the "enemies" he is speaking of?
Or are these promises?
Read the entire article HERE
How will McCain or Obama’s administrations handle Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?
More interesting reading:
|
By Janet Evans
Saturday, Sep 20 2008, 02:00 PM
The science project that some feared might end the world has encountered some problems.
This Is Really Huge
Of course, problems were to be expected. But this will only fuel the fire for those who continue to worry about the approach of an impending doomsday.
The Hadron Collider will be shut down for two months after just opening .
The giant Large Hadron Collider, the world’s largest and most expensive scientific experiment, will be shut down for at least two months, scientists at the European Center for Nuclear Research, or CERN, in Geneva said today.
The shutdown casts into doubt the hopes of CERN physicists to achieve high-energy collisions of protons in the machine before the end of the year.
“It’s too early to say whether we’ll still be having collisions this year,” James Gillies, head of communications for CERN, said in an e-mail message. The laboratory shuts down to save money on electricity during the winter.
A gala inauguration party scheduled for Oct. 21 will still take place, Dr. Gillies said.
A series of mishaps, including the failure of a 30-ton electrical transformer, have slowed progress since then. In the worst incident yet, on Friday, one of the giant superconducting magnets that guide the protons failed during a test. A large amount of helium, which is used to cool the magnets to within 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit of absolute zero, leaked into the collider tunnel.
Read the article HERE
|
More Posts Next page »
|
|