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Project lifeline

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

A big announcement is expected from the top six mortgage lenders in USA – an announcement of a plan to stop borrowers in danger of defaulting on loans from losing their homes.

How’s this plan called? Project Lifeline.

The top lenders, which include Bank of America and Citigroup, are expected to offer a 30-day freeze on foreclosures, this would help loan refinancing. The announcement is supposedly today in Washington at 4:15 GMT.

The name “Project Lifeline” is given because it will give the lender’s customers a lifeline in case they can’t afford to make the payments.

This is all responding to the hard times the Us economy is having this year. Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who heads the House Financial Services Committee, said yesterday: “We are now in the midst of one of the most serious economic crises we have seen in recent years.”

Let’s hope this is a true move to help people.

Wwmt, wood tv, wotv, wzzm, woodtv, yahoo

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

As a police dispatcher, Amanda Banas has directed police in all kinds of weather conditions.

But this morning was one of the worst the Allegan County dispatcher has experienced as near-blizzard conditions greeted commuters following a 40-degree temperature plunge.
Press Photo/T.J. HamiltonThe Civil War monument stands in swirls of snow along Division Avenue in Grand Rapids on Tuesday night as the snowstorm started around 11 p.m.

The triple whammy — ice beneath a blanket of snow and white-out gusts exceeding 30 mph — gave pause to even the hardiest drivers.

“I’ve never been so scared in my life coming into work,” Banas said. “It took me more than an hour to go from Wayland to Allegan. I drove into the ditch twice because of the white-out conditions.”

Banas avoided getting stuck, but dozens of other motorists were involved in slide-offs and crashes across West Michigan.

Road crews battled ice and snow as they tried to clear roads. Temperatures fell from 47 degrees to 7 degrees in nine hours.

“The temperature dropped so fast, going from rain to freezing rain to ice, that it’s very slippery,” said Kent County Road Commission Maintenance Director Jerry Byrne.

The Road Commission had 80 trucks on the roads this morning. Byrne said blowing snow made visibility the biggest challenge for drivers. He traveled about 15 mph on Int. 96 this morning coming into work.

Across the region, the wind knocked out power to thousands in West Michigan overnight, although Consumers Energy was making steady progress restoring electricity.
Quick change

Temperature drop: 40 degrees in nine hours

Fastest freefall: 27 degrees from 9 p.m. to midnight.

Highest gust: 52 mph at 11:27 p.m.; 30+ mph today

Wind chills: 10 to 15 below zero today

Snowfall: 2 to 3 inches

Forecast: Today: slowly clearing, high around 10; warmer Thursday, chance of significant snow late.

SOURCE: National Weather Service

About 1,420 customers in Allegan County and 1,700 in Kalamazoo County were without power before dawn, but just 100 customers were powerless in Kent County.

Most schools in the area were closed. At least two outbound flights from the Gerald R. Ford International Airport, one to Dallas and one to Chicago, were delayed this morning, according to the airport Web site.

Police reported few serious injuries from crashes this morning, though dispatchers at the state police post in Rockford said troopers were having trouble getting to some scenes quickly as the morning rush got under way.

Weather conditions were expected to improve throughout today, although temperatures were not expected to rise much above 10 degrees.

Temperatures are expected to moderate Thursday, but another winter storm with significant snow is possible late Thursday night into Friday.

Mike Kalembkiewicz, a meteorological technician, said it took him 30 minutes to drive seven miles into work this morning.

“I couldn’t see anything. I had to keep stopping,” he said.

The return of bone-chilling weather comes on the heels of a late January warm-up. A steady Tuesday-afternoon rain flushed much of the area’s snow into local rivers before the wintry landscape was restored hours later.
Press Photo/Dave OdetteDavid Bauer, a resident of Vern Barry Place, cleans the sidewalks along Division Avenue early this morning. Bauer shovels snow for no pay for a couple businesses along the 100 block of Division.

Grand River levels were near flood stage in Comstock Park this morning, but the water was expected to begin receding Friday without spilling over the banks.

Schools canceled sports events Tuesday night in anticipation of the storm.

At AMR Ambulance Service, operations supervisor Craig Veldheer said staffing overnight Tuesday was at normal levels even though forecasters predicted travel would be treacherous. Veldheer had five crews on duty in Grand Rapids and several lined up for emergency call-in if needed.

“We’re constantly watching the radar and planning for the worst while hoping for the best,” Veldheer said. “Just like everyone, we kind of sit back and see what hits us.”

Veldheer, however, thinks the storm warnings kept drivers off the roads Tuesday night. Most crashes reported involved only minor property damage, dispatchers said.

“People are hunkering down and staying inside,” Veldheer said. “The problem starts when second-shifters head home and third-shifters or day-time workers have to go in.”

Just between friends, learning annex, jbf, big idea, the big idea, yahoo

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Just between friends, learning annex, jbf, big idea, the big idea, yahooJust Between Friends is a 1986 drama film about two women whose friendship is tested by tragedy. The film was directed by Allan Burns, and stars Mary Tyler Moore, Ted Danson, and Christine Lahti.

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Allan Burns

Produced by Allan Burns

Written by Allan Burns

Starring Mary Tyler Moore

Ted Danson

Christine Lahti

Sam Waterston

Julie Payne

Music by Patrick Williams

Cinematography Jordan Cronenweth

Editing by Anne Goursaud

Distributed by Orion Pictures

Release date(s) March 21, 1986

Running time 110 min

Country  United States

Language English

Naked mole rat, naked mole rats, mole rat, mole rats, almiqui, yahoo

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

The naked mole rat (Heterocephalus glaber), also known as the sand puppy, or desert mole rat is a burrowing rodent native to parts of East Africa and the only species currently classified in genus Heterocephalus. It is notable for its eusocial lifestyle, nearly unique among mammals, and for a highly unusual set of physical traits that enables it to thrive in a harsh, underground environment; including a lack of pain sensation in its skin, and a nearly cold-blooded metabolism.

Physical description

Typical individuals are 8–10 cm long and weigh 30–35 g. Queens are larger and may weigh well over 50 g, the largest reaching 80 g. They are well-adapted for their underground existence. Their eyes are just narrow slits, and consequently their eyesight is poor. However, they are highly adapted to moving underground, and can move backwards as fast as they move forwards. Their large, protruding teeth are used to dig. Their lips are sealed just behind their teeth while digging to avoid filling their mouths with soil. Their legs are thin and short. They have little hair (hence the common name) and wrinkled pink or yellowish skin.

The naked mole rat is well adapted for the limited availability of oxygen within the tunnels that are its habitat: its lungs are very small and its blood has a very strong affinity for oxygen, increasing the efficiency of oxygen uptake. It has a very low respiration and metabolic rate for an animal of its size, thus using oxygen minimally. In long periods of hunger, such as a drought, its metabolic rate can reduce up to 25 percent.

The naked mole rat is unique among mammals in that it is virtually cold-blooded; it cannot regulate its body temperature at all and requires an environment with a specific constant temperature in order to survive.

The skin of naked mole rats lacks a key neurotransmitter called Substance P that is responsible in mammals for sending burning pain signals to the central nervous system. When naked mole rats are exposed to acid or capsaicin, they feel no pain. When injected with Substance P, however, the pain signaling works as it does in other mammals, but only with capsaicin and not with the acids. This is proposed to be adaptation to the animal living in high levels of carbon dioxide due to poorly ventilated living spaces, which would cause acid to build up in their body tissues. [1]

Ecology and behavior

Distribution and habitat

The naked mole rat is native to the drier parts of the tropical grasslands of East Africa, predominantly South Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia.

Clusters averaging 75-80 live together in complex systems of burrows in arid African deserts. The tunnel systems built by naked mole rats can stretch up to two or three miles in cumulative length.[1]

Social structure and reproduction

Naked mole rats are one of the two mammals that exhibit eusociality. They have a complex social structure in which only one female (the queen) and one to three males reproduce, while the rest of the members of the colony function as workers. As in certain bee species, the workers are divided along a continuum of different worker-caste behaviors instead of discrete groups[1]. Some function primarily as tunnelers, expanding the large network of tunnels within the burrow system, and some primarily as soldiers, protecting the group from outside predators.

This eusocial organisation social structure, similar to that found in ants, termites, and some bees and wasps, is very rare among mammals. The Damaraland Mole Rat (Coetomys damarensis) is the only other eusocial mammal currently known, although it has been argued that humans, too, are eusocial (Foster and Ratnieks 2005).

The relationships between the queen and the breeding males may last for many years. A behaviour called reproductive suppression is believed to be the reason why the other females do not reproduce, meaning that the infertility in the working females is only temporary, and not genetic. Queens live from 13 to 18 years, and are extremely hostile to other females behaving like queens, or producing hormones for becoming queens. When the queen dies, another female takes her place, sometimes after a violent struggle with her competitors.

Males and females are able to breed at one year of age. Gestation is about 70 days. A litter typically ranges from three to twelve pups, but may run as large as 25. In the wild, naked mole-rats usually breed once a year, if the litter survives. In captivity, they breed all year long. The young are born blind and weigh about 2 g. The queen nurses them for the first month; after which the other members of the colony feed them feces until they are old enough to eat solid food.

Diet

Radicivores[citation needed], the naked mole rats feed primarily on very large tubers (weighing as much as 1000 times the body weight of a typical mole rat) that they find deep underground through their mining operations, though they also eat their own feces (coprophagia).[1] A single tuber can provide a colony with a long-term source of food—lasting for months, or even years[1], as they eat the succulent inside but leave the outside, allowing the tuber to regenerate. Symbiotic bacteria in their intestines help them digest the fibres.

Longevity

The naked mole rat is also of interest because it is extra-ordinarily long lived for a rodent of its size. The secret of their longevity is debated, but is thought to be related to the fact that they can shut down their metabolism during hard times, and so prevent oxidative damage. Todd Karhu, an expert on the species, explains this by saying “They’re living their life in pulses.” [2]

Conservation status

Naked mole rats are not threatened. Despite their tough living conditions, naked mole rats are quite widespread and numerous in the drier regions of East Africa. Though seen living up to 20 years, their lifestyles in those situations consist of mostly sleep.

In popular culture

* A naked mole rat named Rufus is featured in the Disney Channel cartoon Kim Possible.
* The Errol Morris documentary Fast, Cheap and Out of Control features a naked mole rat specialist.
* A children’s book, The Naked Mole-Rat Letters, by Mary Amato, is about a young girl who sends fabricated e-mails to her father’s girlfriend, a zookeeper.
* The consumer website Consumerama awards a weekly “Naked Mole-Rats of Marketing Award” for shameless consumer abuse.

All american football league, all american football league draft, all american football, aafl, google trends, yahoo

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Former UT Vol Andy Kelly is leading the new team for Tennessee in the upstart All American Football League (AAFL). Kelly was the Vols QB from 1988-91 before heading toward the Arena Football League where he still owns a large handful of passing records. Although he is retired from playing QB, Kelly begins his head coaching career with the Tennessee team for the AAFL based here out of Knoxville.

So what’s the AAFL?

That’s a good question. Even living here in Knoxville we don’t know much about it. However, here’s what we do know. The league is trying to build its fan base out of college football markets like Knoxville, Michigan, ‘Bama, and Florida. The players initially are expected to have exhausted their college eligibility and have a degree from college to be able to participate. Essentially, it’s like a pick-up league of old college players who didn’t make the NFL.

The timing for the AAFL is good with the recent folding of the NFL Europe league. While we don’t expect the AAFL to be a household name anytime soon it is a cool idea to keep the rabid college football fans busy during the offseason. The league has 6 teams based in the most fanatical college football cities. Along with Knoxville, TN, there are teams in Michigan, Texas, Arkansas, Florida, and Alabama.

Some interesting rules of the AAFL are:

1. Four-year degrees are required to play.
2. Teams will have 46-man rosters.
3. The season will run from April 12 to July 5.
4. Games will be played on Saturdays.
5. A college size football will be used.
6. The league will have NFL officials.
7. Some of the rules are based on the college game, such as receivers needing to have one foot in bounds and a live ball on PATs.
8. Overtimes will be played like the college game, but offenses will start on the 35-yard line.