вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Rice says Obama's campaign success shows US has come a long way in race relations

Condoleezza Rice says it is a remarkable accomplishment that a black politician is on track for his party's presidential nomination.

The secretary of state says it's great for the country that Barack Obama is the expected Democratic nominee. Rice says it shows that the U.S. has come a long way. Rice herself is the second black to be America's top diplomat. Colin Powell was the first.

Rice also is making clear that she doesn't want to be considered for vice president. She wants to return to California and write a book about America's foreign policy when President George W. Bush leaves office in January.

Rice also says, in a television interview that aired Sunday, that she has decided which candidate she will vote for in November. She just isn't saying in public who it will be.

Hurt dog shows up at New Mexico emergency room

The patient was only slightly injured when he limped into a hospital in the northwest New Mexico city of Farmington. The only problem was, he was a dog. When the automatic doors at San Juan Regional Medical Center's emergency room slid open Saturday night, the pooch walked in, blood on his nose and paw, and a puncture hole in one leg.

Animal control officer Robin Loev (LOHV) responded to a call from the hospital and suspects the puncture wound was from the bite of another dog.

Loev says the German shepherd mix appeared to be intelligent and calm _ and knew enough to go to the right place.

The animal was taken to the Farmington Animal Shelter and claimed by its owner.

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Information from: The Daily Times, http://www.daily-times.com

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Bank of Sierra Blanca closes in Texas

Bank of Sierra Bianca

closes in Texas

Insured deposits of Bank of Sierra Blanca, Tex., are being assumed by Security State of Pecos, Tex. The Sierra Blanca bank was closed by regulators Jan. 18.

The failed bank has $10.8 million in assests and $9.8 million in deposits. Security State of Pecos is assuming approximately $9.1 million of insured deposits. The failed bank has some $720,000 in deposits exceeding the federal deposit limit when it was closed.

Security State is paying the FDIC a premium of $218,000 to assume the deposits and to purchase approximately $3.5 million of the failed bank's assets. The FDIC, as receiver, will retain the remaining assets for later disposition.

The FDIC estimates the cost of this transaction to the Bank Insurance Fund to be $1.4 million. This was the second FDIC-insured institution to fail this year and the first in Texas since mid-1999.

NASA: Space station may be evacuated by late Nov.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) — Astronauts may need to take the unprecedented step of temporarily abandoning the International Space Station if last week's Russian launch accident prevents new crews from flying there this fall.

Until officials figure out what went wrong with Russia's essential Soyuz rockets, there will be no way to launch any more astronauts before the current residents have to leave in mid-November.

The unsettling predicament comes just weeks after NASA's final space shuttle flight.

"We have plenty of options," NASA's space station program manager, Mike Suffredini, assured reporters Monday. "We'll focus on crew safety as we always do."

Abandoning the space station, even for a short period, would be an unpleasant last resort for the world's five space agencies that have spent decades working on the project. Astronauts have been living aboard the space station since 2000, and the goal is to keep it going until 2020.

Suffredini said flight controllers could keep a deserted space station operating indefinitely, as long as all major systems are working properly. The risk to the station goes up, however, if no one is on board to fix equipment breakdowns.

Six astronauts from three countries presently are living on the orbiting complex. Three are due to leave next month; the other three are supposed to check out in mid-November.

The Sept. 22 launch of the very next crew — the first to fly in this post-shuttle era — already has been delayed indefinitely. Russia's Soyuz spacecraft have been the sole means of getting full-time station residents up and down for two years.

To keep the orbiting outpost with a full staff of six for as long as possible, the one American and two Russians due to return to Earth on Sept. 8 will remain on board at least an extra week.

As for supplies, the space station is well stocked and could go until next summer, Suffredini said. Atlantis dropped off a year's supply of goods just last month on the final space shuttle voyage. The unmanned craft destroyed Wednesday was carrying 3 tons of supplies.

For now, operations are normal in orbit, Suffredini noted, and the additional week on board for half the crew will mean additional science research.

The Soyuz has been extremely reliable over the decades; this was the first failure in 44 Russian supply hauls for the space station. Even with such a good track record, many in and outside NASA were concerned about retiring the space shuttles before a replacement was ready to fly astronauts.

Russian space officials have set up an investigation team and until it comes up with a cause for the accident and a repair plan, the launch and landing schedules remain in question. None of the spacecraft debris has been recovered yet; the wreckage fell into a remote, wooded section of Siberia. The third stage malfunctioned; a sudden loss of pressure apparently was noted between the engine and turbopump.

While a crew may well have survived such an accident because of safety precautions built into the manned version of the rocket, no one wants to take any chances.

One or two unmanned Soyuz launches are on tap for October, one commercial and the other another space station supply run. Those would serve as important test flights before putting humans on board, Suffredini said.

NASA considered vacating the space station before, following the space shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003. Back then, shuttles were still being used to ferry some station residents back and forth. Instead, the station got by with two-man crews for three years because of the significant cutback in supplies.

The space station's population doubled in 2009, to six. It wasn't until the space station was completed this year that science research finally took priority.

Even if the space shuttles still were flying, space station crews still would need Soyuz-launched capsules to serve as lifeboats, Suffredini said. The capsules are certified for no more than 6½ months in space, thus the need to regularly rotate crews. Complicating matters is the need to land the capsules during daylight hours in Kazakhstan, resulting in weeks of blackout periods.

NASA wants American private companies to take over crew hauls, but that's three to five years away at best. Until then, Soyuz capsules are the only means of transporting astronauts to the space station.

Japan and Europe have their own cargo ships and rockets, for unmanned use only. Commercial front-runner Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, plans to launch a space station supply ship from Cape Canaveral at the end of November. That would be put on hold if no one is on board to receive the vessel.

Suffredini said he hasn't had time to consider the public relations impact of abandoning the space station, especially coming so soon after the end of the 30-year shuttle program.

"Flying safely is much, much more important than anything else I can think about right this instant," he said. "I'm sure we'll have an opportunity to discuss any political implications if we spend a lot of time on the ground. But you know, we'll just have to deal with them because we're going to do what's safest for the crew and for the space station."

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Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html

Bush will be tested by right-wingers over Supreme Court nominee

Legend has it that bluesman Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil in order to get a taste of what it's like to play the guitar like a madman.

President George W. Bush might want to make that story required reading in the White House.

From the moment Sandra Day O'Connor surprised the nation with her resignation announcement from the Supreme Court, the left and the right sprung into action and geared up for a monumental fight.

The left -- pro-choicers, civil rights organizations and unions -- sent out press releases warning that a Clarence Thomas clone -- Bush says he wants judges like the far-right jurist on the Court -- would do damage to the nation. On the other side, the right -- white evangelicals, pro-lifers and others -- made it clear that they will hold Bush to his promise to promote hard-core conservatives to the bench.

Even before he has announced his choice, the right-wingers have made it clear to Bush that his best buddy, Alberto Gonzales, is better off left in the Justice Department as attorney general, rather than have former Sen. Fred Thompson, R.-Tenn., escort him before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

It seems that Gonzales isn't conservative enough, and for those hard-core GOP'ers who pushed, prodded and projected Bush into the White House, they are a force to be reckoned with, and they want their choice in the court -- now.

So what does our president do? He sends a rather weak signal that he wants the conservative forces to "tone down" their rhetoric.

"Al Gonzales is a great friend of mine," Bush told USA Today. "When a friend gets attacked, I don't like it."

But surely, Bush must have known that this day was going to come. All of that talk about compassionate conservatism and respecting the rights and wishes of others doesn't mean squat now that the right-wingers are salivating over what they have always wanted to do: push the "activist" court more to the right.

Now, if many of you think the president has the guts to keep these guys in check, you'd better think again.

James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, and the other right-wingers have been emboldened by the results of the last two elections. They are riding high and believe they can do what they please, politics be damned.

Bush did all he can to give them this power. He spoke at their beloved Bob Jones University while campaigning, not saying a word about its racial hatred but reveling in its Christian faith. He threw open the door to the White House, allowing the zealots to run through the building like kids on recess. And he played to them at every opportunity with his "government dollars for faith-based grant" speeches, and the support for a constitutional amendment declaring marriage between a man and a woman.

But this intra-party fight is going to force Bush to make some difficult decisions, including hanging them out to dry if they continue to get out of line. White House aides were quickly dispatched to quell the growing sentiment against Gonzales by asking that the e-mails stop going out questioning the credentials of the former White House counsel and Texas Supreme Court justice. That's good enough for now, but what if Gonzales is the pick? Do you think Bush has the muscle to keep these guys quiet? Not a chance.

See, the president understands the realities of politics. His fervent followers, they don't. They are bullies who are used to getting their way, even if that means running over their patron saint -- George W. Bush. And trust me, they will seek to make like Gen. George Patton and march their ground troops across the White House lawn and grounds of the U.S. Capitol in order to see that their warped and less-than-inclusive vision of America is fulfilled.

My money is on Bush, who tapped Gonzales for the Texas court in 1999, doing the same and appointing the first Hispanic to the U.S. Supreme Court. If so, he will find out that his "friends" really don't trust and respect his wishes.

So send the president a few prayers, because his "prayer warriors" are about to make like Judas and betray him for their 21st century 40 pieces of silver.

Roland S. Martin is executive editor of the Chicago Defender and a commentator for TV One Cable Network. His columns are syndicated nationwide by Creators Syndicate, and he is the author of "Speak, Brother! A Black Man's View of America" He can be reached at rmartin@chicagodefender.com or (312) 225-2400, ext. 130.

Article copyright REAL TIMES Inc.

Nursing shortage likely to worsen

WASHINGTON The shortage of nurses is expected to worsen throughthe end of the century, the government told Congress Tuesday.

A report by Health and Human Services Secretary Louis Sullivansaid that the number of nurses is expected to increase for the next15 years, but the increase will not be sufficient to alleviate theshortage.

Public health experts say the nursing shortage has been causedin part by population growth. He also said hospital patients tend tobe more seriously ill than in the past and need more intensive care.

Gunman shoots 3 at NJ church during services

A gunman opened fire during services Sunday at a northern New Jersey church, injuring three people, one of them critically, authorities said. The gunman remained at large.

About 200 people were in St. Thomas Syrian Orthodox Knanaya Church in Clifton when the shots were fired before noon.

A law enforcement official said the shooting may be the result of domestic violence.

The New Jersey State Police and county law enforcement agencies were looking for the gunman.

Members of the church are mostly first-generation immigrants and their children from Kerala, India.