Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Catch the afterglow of the solar storm

By Alan Boyle

Did you feel that magnetic breeze? Solar weather trackers say a "pulse" in the solar wind of electrically charged particles swept past monitoring satellites today, in the wake of last Friday's X-class solar flare and coronal mass ejection. But the main force of the blast was not pointing toward Earth, and thus no big impact on our planet's magnetic field is expected.

"Another effect of Friday's eruption, a solar radiation storm, continues its leisurely decay and is nearing the end of the event," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Solar Weather Prediction Center reported on its website.

The most significant effect of the past week's solar storming has been an upswing in spectacular pictures of the northern lights, as seen from Scandinavia and other high-latitude locales. Swedish photographer Peter Rosen got some great pictures over the weekend.

"I live in Abisko, next to the Aurora Sky Station ? a great place to see northern lights," Rosen told me in an email. "The Aurora Sky Station has become a very nice tourist attraction. ... I was there last Saturday and almost 100 people from all over the world were on the mountain. We had a great aurora from 9 p.m. to 12:30 due to another geomagnetic storm."

For more of the latest and greatest pictures of the northern lights, check out the selection on Rosen's website, Rosenmedia.se, as well as on SpaceWeather.com. Stay tuned for further auroral updates as the sun's 11-year activity cycle heads toward an expected peak in 2013.

More auroral glories:


Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

Source: http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/30/10271435-afterglow-from-the-solar-storm

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Landowners fight eminent domain in Pa. gas field (AP)

LAPORTE, Pa. ? When federal regulators approved a 39-mile natural gas pipeline through northern Pennsylvania's pristine Endless Mountains, they cited the operator's assurances that it would make sparing use of eminent domain as it negotiated with more than 150 property owners along the pipeline's route.

Yet a few days after winning approval for its $250 million MARC 1 pipeline in the heart of the giant Marcellus Shale gas field, the company began condemnation proceedings against nearly half of the landowners ? undercutting part of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's approval rationale and angering landowners.

Some of the landowners are now fighting the company in court, complaining that Central New York Oil and Gas Company LLC steamrolled them by refusing to negotiate in good faith on monetary compensation and the pipeline's location. Their attorneys say CNYOG has skirted Pennsylvania's eminent domain rules.

The company, a subsidiary of Inergy LP of Kansas City, Mo., insists it's trying to reach a "fair settlement" with all property owners and wants to be a good neighbor.

The dispute could foreshadow eminent domain battles to come as more pipelines are approved and built to carry shale gas to market in states like Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio.

The company promotes the MARC 1 pipeline as key infrastructure in developing the Marcellus Shale, a rock formation underneath Pennsylvania and surrounding states that experts believe holds the nation's largest reservoir of gas. The MARC 1, a high-pressure steel pipeline 30 inches in diameter, will connect to major interstate pipelines and the company's own natural gas storage facility in southern New York state.

CNYOG hopes to start construction soon and finish by July, but it awaits permits from Pennsylvania environmental regulators and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

It also needs to answer the legal challenge from residents.

Many of the complaining landowners say they favor natural gas drilling and some have leased land to gas drillers. What rankles them is that FERC has invested CNYOG with the power of eminent domain, taking away their bargaining power.

"Once the government becomes involved, this is what happens. Because you lose that leverage," said Amy Gardner, who, with her husband, faces condemnation of part of their 175-acre parcel in Sullivan County.

The Gardners say CNYOG offered less than a third of the amount that another pipeline company had previously paid them to install a gathering line on their land. The difference? Gathering lines ? smaller pipelines that take gas from the wellhead to a transmission line or processing facility ? are not regulated by the federal government and companies that operate them don't have condemnation power.

Amy Gardner said a company representative who made them the lowball offer told them to "take it or leave it."

"There's no negotiating with this company. They come and they tell you what they're going to do. They're telling you what they're going to pay. And they're counting on the government to enforce it," Gardner said in a recent interview at the Sullivan County Courthouse, where a judge has scheduled a mid-February hearing on the landowners' concerns.

Amounts offered by CNYOG range from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the amount of property taken. Court papers filed by CNYOG in late December say it valued damages at 37 condemned properties in Sullivan County at $310,900.

The pipeline has been controversial since it was first proposed two years ago.

FERC, which considers all applications for new interstate pipelines, received 22,000 comments on the MARC 1 project, with many expressing concern about environmental and safety impacts. The Environmental Protection Agency also worried about potential damage to the forest ecosystem, noting the pipeline will cross dozens of pristine waterways in an area popular with hikers, hunters and fishermen.

FERC ultimately determined the pipeline would not significantly impact the environment and allowed it to proceed.

The commission was also supposed to consider whether there would be an "unneeded exercise" of eminent domain ? the often-contentious legal process by which the government, or a party such as a public utility, takes private property for public benefit.

Indeed, the commission said last year its approval relied on the company's assertion that it was acquiring land "through negotiated agreements with landowners, thus minimizing the need" to condemn people's land.

In reality, the company had prepared condemnation papers for dozens of properties even before winning commission approval on Nov. 14. Within a few days, it began eminent domain proceedings against 74 of 152 property owners along the pipeline's route through the mountains of Bradford, Lycoming and Sullivan counties.

Deborah Goldberg, an attorney for the environmental group Earthjustice, said the large number of condemnations suggests that CNYOG "never made a serious effort to get negotiated agreements with the landowners that the landowners thought were fair." Earthjustice has intervened in the case and is challenging the pipeline's approval.

While most of the landowners receiving condemnation papers have since settled ? the company says private agreement has been reached with more than 80 percent of the landowners ? Goldberg suggested the pace of settlements has quickened because condemnation takes leverage away from the property owner.

The company insists it has met its obligation to negotiate. Its attorney, Michael Wright, said there were several "meet-in-the-middle cases" involving compromise.

"It's not like we were sitting silently until the FERC order and rushed to the courthouse," said Wright, who is based in Vestal, N.Y. "To say we did not attempt to negotiate in good faith is incorrect."

Wright acknowledged, however, that CNYOG told landowners that if they challenged the company in court, forcing it to incur legal expenses, then any deal on the table would be withdrawn.

Some landowners aren't interested in the money. They're more concerned about the pipeline's route.

CNYOG told Bob Swartz that it plans to cut a 50-foot-wide, 400-foot-long gash through an ancient stand of trees across the front of his property. When Swartz proposed an alternate route through an open field that would preserve his trees and views, the company said it wasn't interested and offered instead to pay him for the wood.

"That's not negotiation. It was their way or no way, and `we'll see you in court.' It's the little guys against Goliath," said Swartz, who has challenged the company in court.

Another landowner, Lisa Richlin, has appealed to federal regulators to force CNYOG to abandon plans for an access road along her property. Richlin said the road is at the bottom of a long hill and around a sharp bend where there have been many accidents, at least one of them fatal.

When Richlin pressed the company to use an alternate route a short distance away, she said, the company told her that would result in a six-month delay.

"I want them to go elsewhere. I don't want somebody to die because of stupidity," she said.

In a statement, the company said it has accommodated dozens of landowner requests for route changes, but can't do more because of "environmental, cultural and biological restrictions as well as other land use constraints."

Some landowners who didn't bother fighting the pipeline say the company still managed to leave a bad taste.

Linda Gavitt of Sonestown said she signed with CNYOG because she didn't feel it was worth it to hire a lawyer to fight for more money. Even as she signed the paperwork, she got a hint of the company's negotiating stance.

"They said that other people were holding out because they wanted more money," Gavitt recalled. "They said, `We're not paying more money because this is a federal line that's going to go through no matter what, and $2 a foot is what we pay.'"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120131/ap_on_re_us/us_gas_drilling_eminent_domain

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Memorial exposes anger over Paterno's treatment (AP)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ? The near-capacity crowd of 12,000 seemed to be just waiting for somebody to bring up the subject. Finally, when someone rose in Joe Paterno's defense to argue that he had been made a scapegoat, the audience was instantly on its feet, applauding thunderously.

Anger and resentment came spilling out at a campus memorial service Thursday for the football coach, two months after he was summarily fired by the trustees.

It was Nike founder and CEO Phil Knight who broke the dam, defending Paterno's handling of child-sex allegations that were leveled against a former coaching assistant.

"If there is a villain in this tragedy, it lies in that investigation and not in Joe Paterno's response," Knight said. Paterno's widow, Sue, was among those rising to their feet.

Later, Paterno's son Jay received a standing ovation when he declared: "Joe Paterno left this world with a clear conscience."

Capping three days of mourning on campus, the 2 1/2-hour ceremony was filled with lavish praise that probably would have embarrassed Paterno, who died Sunday of lung cancer at 85 after racking up more wins ? 409 ? than any other major-college football coach and leading his team to two national championships in 46 seasons.

One by one, Penn State football stars and others credited Paterno with building not just better athletes but better men ? and women. He was saluted for his commitment to sportsmanship, loyalty, teamwork, character, academics and "winning with honor." He was called a good father, a good husband, a good neighbor, a good friend, a good teacher.

Players from each decade of Paterno's career spoke affectionately about him, saying he rode them hard but always had their best interests at heart and encouraged them to complete their educations and make something of themselves.

Though the Penn State campus has been torn with anger over the child-sex scandal and Paterno's dismissal, Jay Paterno said his father didn't hold a grudge.

"Perhaps his truest moment, his living testimony to all that he stood for, came in the last months of his life. Faced with obstacles and challenges that would have left a lesser man bitter, he showed his truest spirit and his truest self," Paterno said.

Only one member of the university administration ? the dean of the college of liberal arts ? and no one from the Board of Trustees spoke at the memorial, which was arranged primarily by the Paterno family.

Among the speakers were Michael Robinson, who played for Paterno from 2002 to 2005, quarterback Todd Blackledge from the 1980s and Jimmy Cefalo, a star in the 1970s. All three went on to play in the NFL.

Former NFL player Charles V. Pittman, speaking for players from the 1960s, called Paterno a lifelong influence and inspiration.

Pittman said Paterno pushed his young players hard, once bringing Pittman to tears in his sophomore year. He said he realized later that the coach was not trying to break his spirit but instead was "bit by bit building a habit of excellence."

"He was building a proud program for the school, the state and the hundreds of young men he watched over for a half-century," said Pittman, now a media executive on the board of The Associated Press.

Similarly, Chris Marrone, whose playing career at Penn State was cut short by injuries, said Paterno molded him into a young man with "the strength to overcome any challenge, any adversity."

Paterno was fired Nov. 9 after he was criticized for not going to police in 2002 when he was told that a former member of his coaching staff, Jerry Sandusky, had been seen sexually assaulting a boy in the showers. Sandusky was arrested in November and is awaiting trial on charges that he molested 10 boys over a 15-year span.

As the scandal erupted, Pennsylvania's state police commissioner said Paterno may have met his legal duty but not his moral one. Penn State president Graham Spanier was also fired in the fallout.

Among those at the memorial was former athletic director Tim Curley, who is awaiting trial on charges he lied to the grand jury that investigated Sandusky.

About midway through the ceremony, Knight became the first speaker to explicitly address the scandal. He said the coach "gave full disclosure to his superiors, information that went up the chains to the head of the campus police and the president of the school. The matter was in the hands of a world-class university, and by a president with an outstanding national reputation."

Lanny J. Davis, an attorney for the board, responded after the service by saying: "All the reasons for the board's difficult and anguished decision ? made unanimously, including former football players and everyone who still loves Coach Paterno and his memory ? reached a decision which was heartfelt. All 32."

"The facts speak for themselves" and include the grand jury testimony, he said.

After the memorial, Marrone said Knight was his "new hero" for expressing the "pent-up frustration" many people are feeling.

"I think the response that he got is indicative of how folks feel," Marrone said.

Jay Paterno, who served under his father as quarterback coach, began his remarks by imitating his father's raspy, high-pitched voice, telling the audience, "Sit down! Sit down!"

Growing serious, Paterno described his last moments with his father. As Paterno lay dying, his son kissed him and whispered in his ear.

"Dad, you won," Jay Paterno said he told him. "You did all you could do. You've done enough. We all love you. We won. You can go home now."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120127/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_penn_state_paterno

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Friday, January 27, 2012

Academy Of Country Music Awards Nominees 2012

Academy Of Country Music Awards Nominees 2012

The nominees for the 47th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards were announced this morning by country star Reba McEntire. So which country crooners received [...]

Academy Of Country Music Awards Nominees 2012 Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/3riMVE-MfXQ/

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Syracuse U., Boeheim want trial moved upstate (AP)

SYRACUSE, N.Y. ? Attorneys for Syracuse University and men's basketball coach Jim Boeheim (BAY'-hym) want a defamation suit moved to Onondaga County.

Lawyers filed a motion last week to move the suit related to the Bernie Fine sex abuse allegations from New York City to Onondaga County. They argue that Bobby Davis and Mike Lang improperly filed their lawsuit because all the parties are in Onondaga County.

The two former Syracuse ball boys claim Boeheim defamed them when he called them liars out to make money with accusations that Fine, Boeheim's former assistant coach, molested them.

The men's lawyers don't think they'll get a fair trial in Onondaga County because of the basketball team's huge fan base.

The 66-year-old Fine has not been charged. He was fired Nov. 27 and has denied any wrongdoing.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_sp_co_ne/bkc_syracuse_fine_investigation

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

'Watch What Happens Live': Caller Mistakes Yvette Nicole Brown For 'The Help's Octavia Spencer (VIDEO)

When you have a live television show, there's no delay or filter to edit out the gaffes, which can make for exciting television. It can also make for some pretty embarrassing moments, as one caller experienced when calling in to "Watch What Happens: Live' (Weeknights, 11 p.m. EST on Bravo). Yvette Nicole Brown and Sherri Shepherd were guests on the show, and according to Shepherd the two women get mixed up for one another all the time, as well as a few other African-American actresses.

This caller mistook Brown for another in that unusual group, saying, "My question is for Yvette. ...What was it like working on the movie 'The Help'?'"

Brown took it in stride with a laugh, responding, "You know, it was great to watch 'The Help,' because I wasn't in it." The caller was mistaking her for recent Golden Globe winner Octavia Spencer in a move so embarrassing, the caller hung up after making it -- or maybe Andy Cohen hung up on them in an act of mercy.

Brown and Shepherd went on to detail an elite group of women who all seem to get mistaken for one another, including the two of them, Ms. Spencer and Loni Love, among others.

You never know what's going to happen on "Watch What Happens: Live," weeknights at 11 p.m. EST on Bravo).

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Related on HuffPost:

MONDAY, JANUARY 23: "Gossip Girl"

1? of ?19

"Gossip Girl" (8 p.m. EST, The CW) "Clueless" writer/director Amy Heckerling makes her first foray into TV directing since 2005 for Blair's bachelorette party, as others scheme behind Queen B's back to make it a night to remember. After discovering the truth behind Chuck and Blair's car accident, Nate joins forces with a surprising ally to gather the evidence, while Serena and Dan pretend to be dating again to protect Blair's secret. "Gossip Girl" (8 p.m. EST, The CW)
"Clueless" writer/director Amy Heckerling makes her first foray into TV directing since 2005 for Blair's bachelorette party, as others scheme behind Queen B's back to make it a night to remember. After discovering the truth behind Chuck and Blair's car accident, Nate joins forces with a surprising ally to gather the evidence, while Serena and Dan pretend to be dating again to protect Blair's secret.

MORE SLIDESHOWS NEXT?> ??|?? <?PREV

MONDAY, JANUARY 23: "Gossip Girl"

"Gossip Girl" (8 p.m. EST, The CW) "Clueless" writer/director Amy Heckerling makes her first foray into TV directing since 2005 for Blair's bachelorette party, as others scheme behind Queen B's back to make it a night to remember. After discovering the truth behind Chuck and Blair's car accident, Nate joins forces with a surprising ally to gather the evidence, while Serena and Dan pretend to be dating again to protect Blair's secret. "; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/23/watch-what-happens-live-yvette-nicole-brown-the-help-video_n_1222834.html

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Barry Larkin Elected to Baseball Hall of Fame

Barry Larkin?s oldest brother, Mike, was a linebacker at Notre Dame. When Mike chose the Irish over the University of Michigan, the Wolverines? coach, Bo Schembechler, told Larkin?s mother that he would someday persuade another of her sons to play for him.

Schembechler was only partly successful. He recruited Barry Larkin to play for Michigan, but he made him redshirt his first season. That decision cost Schembechler a defensive back, but set in motion an exceptional baseball career.

?That was influential, because I just worked on my baseball talent, just that alone,? Larkin said on a conference call. ?That was an eye-opener, because I got so much better.?

Larkin got so good that he achieved baseball?s highest honor Monday, collecting 495 of a possible 573 votes to be chosen as the newest member of the Hall of Fame. With 86.4 percent of the vote conducted by veteran members of the Baseball Writers? Association of America, Larkin easily eclipsed the 75 percent needed for induction.

He was the only player elected by the writers and will join Ron Santo, whom the veterans committee elected posthumously last month, with new plaques in July. Three others received at least 50 percent of the votes: Jack Morris (66.7 percent), Jeff Bagwell (56 percent) and Lee Smith (50.6 percent).

?I?m incredibly, incredibly honored by the whole experience, and so excited about being the newest member of the Hall of Fame,? Larkin said.

Larkin excelled at Michigan, where he was twice an all-American and was drafted fourth over all by his hometown Reds in 1985. Larkin attended Moeller High School in Cincinnati ? predating Ken Griffey Jr. by a few years ? and idolized the championship teams of the Big Red Machine in the 1970s.

The Reds? shortstop then, Davey Concepcion, was still playing when Larkin reached the majors in August 1986. Larkin said Concepcion drilled him on the finer points of fielding, practicing bad hops on grass fields, even though he knew he was being replaced.

Concepcion had played shortstop for the Reds since 1970, and Larkin indeed succeeded him, making the first of 12 All-Star teams in 1988. Two years later, Larkin hit .301 with 30 steals to help the Reds win their last World Series title.

Larkin was the National League?s most valuable player in 1995, the last year the Reds won a playoff series, and few players have equaled his combination of a high batting average, speed, respectable power and fielding excellence.

Only three others have reached Larkin?s career batting average (.295) while also reaching his totals for stolen bases (379) and home runs (198): Barry Bonds and the Hall of Famers Roberto Alomar and Paul Molitor. Bonds, Alomar and Larkin are the only players to do that while also winning Gold Gloves. Larkin won three, from 1994 through 1996.

Larkin, who is now an analyst for ESPN, was never connected to performance-enhancing drugs, an issue that is increasingly complicating Hall of Fame elections. Support for the sluggers Mark McGwire and Rafael Palmeiro has virtually flat-lined; McGwire received 19.5 percent of the vote this year, down from 19.8 last year, while Palmeiro improved to 12.6 percent, from 11.

The ballot sent to writers next December will be loaded with first-time candidates connected to the steroids scandal, including Bonds, Roger Clemens and Sammy Sosa. No tangible evidence has ever linked Mike Piazza to steroids, but writers have long been suspicious.

Some voters said last year that they did not vote for Bagwell because they believed he probably used steroids. Yet besides Larkin, who increased his share of the ballot by more than 24 percentage points this year, Bagwell made the biggest jump. His support increased by 14.3 percentage points, from 41.7, suggesting that many voters may have initially rejected him simply to keep him from being a first-ballot Hall of Famer ? even though, officially, there is no distinction.

The leading vote-getter among new candidates was the former Yankee Bernie Williams, who received only 9.6 percent, barely clearing the 5 percent threshold to remain on the ballot. Craig Biggio, who had more than 3,000 hits, and Curt Schilling, who had more than 3,000 strikeouts, will make their first appearance on the next ballot.

The absence of compelling first-time candidates in this election probably helped Larkin; only 9 of the 573 ballots were blank. It may have also helped Morris, one of the more polarizing candidates in recent years, who now stands on the doorstep of Cooperstown.

Morris?s detractors point to his statistics; his 3.90 earned run average would be the highest in the Hall of Fame. But Morris was the No. 1 starter for three World Series winners ? the 1984 Detroit Tigers, the 1991 Minnesota Twins and the 1992 Toronto Blue Jays ? and has two years remaining to gain just 8.3 percentage points and reach 75 percent. Candidates have up to 15 years of eligibility on the writers? ballot.

Larkin made it on his third try. He never learned what kind of football player he would have been, but even Schembechler knew Larkin was smart to stick with baseball.

?Bo always told me he would strike me out anyway,? Larkin said. ?That was his way of saying, ?Congratulations, kid, you did it.???

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=72c76392120898aaa8ff30b3eae2e092

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Google Announces Date of Fourth Quarter 2011 Financial Results Conference Call

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) will hold its quarterly conference call to discuss fourth quarter 2011 financial results on Thursday, January 19th at 1:30 p.m. Pacific Time (4:30 p.m. Eastern Time).

The live webcast of Google?s earnings conference call can be accessed at?investor.google.com/webcast.html. A replay of the webcast will be available through the same link following the conference call.

Please visit Google?s investor relations website at?investor.google.com?on January 19th, 2012 to view the earnings release prior to the conference call.

About Google Inc.

Google is a global technology leader focused on improving the ways people connect with information. Google?s innovations in web search and advertising have made its website a top internet property and its brand one of the most recognized in the world.

Source: http://www.businesswire.com/news/banggoogle/20120109006949/en

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