Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Horror at the opera: Fire-blowing actor burned

By Natalie Martinez, NBCChicago.com

A fire-spitting effect was removed from the Lyric Opera of Chicago's production of ?Die Meistersinger von Nurenberg" on Monday after a stilt walker was seriously burned during a dress rehearsal.

Despite his flameproof costume and mask, fire-blowing actor Wesley Daniel suffered second-degree burns to his face and throat while performing in front of an audience.

Daniel staggered away and collapsed just off stage. A stage manager with a fire extinguisher then put out spots of flame onstage.

"I don't think he closed his mouth quick enough, so the fire, the stuff in his mouth, came on his clothes and so did the fire, and it also dribbled all over the floor so we saw a line of fire across the stage," said audience member Karen Avgush. "And then I think he was trying to quickly get off the stage, and I think he was moving too quickly with everybody in the way, so he fell really hard off the stilts."

First responders responded to the theater, at 20. N. Wacker Dr., shortly before 5 p.m. and took the actor to Northwestern Memorial Hospital on advanced life support, officials said.

"It was really scary and nerve-wracking, and we were just all really nervous for what was going to happen to him," said child actor Mia Rehwaldt, who was on stage with Daniel when he caught fire.

Read more from NBCChicago.com

Opera spokesperson Magda Krance said the 24-year-old Daniel suffered blistering around his mouth but said his injury didn't appear to be serious.

Fire officials later said Daniel had second degree burns.

He was being treated at Loyola Hospital on Monday night.

The effect had been approved by the Chicago Fire Department, Krance said.?

Last week, another performer had experienced a lesser mishap attempting the same trick, part of a festival scene on the crowded Lyric stage.

Several hundred people made up the audience. The mishap occurred about 30 minutes prior to the end of the five-and-a-half-hour performance.

The incident halted the performance for about 45 minutes before it resumed. Still, the audience missed out on the last few minutes of the show because of a union-mandated break for the 81-member orchestra.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/05/16850752-actor-burned-after-fire-blowing-on-stilts-stunt-goes-wrong-during-opera?lite

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China extremely concerned after latest North Korea threats

BEIJING (Reuters) - China expressed serious concern on Wednesday after North Korea stepped up its bellicose rhetoric and threatened to go beyond a third nuclear test in response to what it sees as "hostile" sanctions imposed after a December rocket launch.

"China is extremely concerned by the way things are going. We oppose any behavior which may exacerbate the situation and any acts which are not beneficial towards the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula," said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying.

"We call on all the relevant sides to remain calm and exercise restraint and earnestly work hard to maintain peace and stability in the Korean peninsula," she told a daily news briefing.

China is the North's sole remaining major diplomatic and economic benefactor but has been showing sings of exasperation with its isolated neighbor.

One of China's most widely read newspapers, the tabloid Global Times published by Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily, said China should take a tough line and inform North Korean leaders of the consequences of their actions.

"If North Korea insists on a third nuclear test despite attempts to dissuade it, it must pay a heavy price," it said in an editorial in both its Chinese and English-language issues.

The newspaper said China should cut its help if North Korea went ahead with the nuclear test. In 2009, China reportedly cut fuel supplies to North Korea after a nuclear test, although it was impossible to verify the reports.

"The assistance it will be able to receive from China should be reduced. The Chinese government should make this clear beforehand to shatter any illusions Pyongyang may have," the Global Times said.

While the stridently nationalist newspaper is not considered an official mouthpiece of the Chinese government, it is nonetheless an influential publication.

North Korea has vowed to conduct more rocket and nuclear tests in response to a U.N. censure for its launch of a long-range missile launch in December. On Tuesday, it vowed "stronger" but unspecified actions in addition to the test.

U.S.-backed South Korea and others who have been closely observing activities at the North's known nuclear test grounds believe it is technically ready for a nuclear test and is awaiting the final word from supreme leader Kim Jong-un.

The Chinese spokeswoman reiterated China's wished to see a nuclear-weapons-free Korean peninsula.

NORTH HAS STRUCK BEFORE

In 2010, North Korea was blamed for sinking a South Korean naval vessel. It also shelled a South Korean island in the same year, killing civilians.

The North, which frequently aims fiery rhetoric at South Korea and the United States, did not spell out the actions it would take in its comments on Tuesday.

It is not capable of staging a military strike on the United States, although South Korea is in range of its artillery and missiles and Japan of its missiles.

"The DPRK (Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea, or North Korea) has drawn a final conclusion that it will have to take a measure stronger than a nuclear test to cope with the hostile forces' nuclear-war moves that have become ever more undisguised," the North's KCNA state news agency said.

New U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry discussed North Korea in what he said were "remarkably similar" telephone conversations with his counterparts from Japan, South Korea and China, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

U.N. resolutions ban North Korea from developing missile or nuclear technology after its nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009.

North Korea says that it has the sovereign right to launch rockets for peaceful purposes, even though the multiple U.N. resolutions make this illegal under international law.

The North has in the past said its nuclear program was for peaceful purposes but has more recently boasted of becoming a nuclear weapons state.

(Reporting by Koh Gui Qing and Ben Blanchard)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-says-extremely-concerned-latest-north-korea-threats-101838246.html

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

22 killed in clash of Filipino extremists, rebels

MANILA, Philippines (AP) ? A Muslim rebel group said Monday it attacked Abu Sayyaf gunmen after the al-Qaida-linked militants refused to free hostages, sparking fierce jungle clashes that left up to 22 combatants dead in the southern Philippines.

There was no word on whether the hostages were hurt in the fighting, but they remained in the grip of the Abu Sayyaf militants, police said.

Rebel commander Khabir Malik of the Moro National Liberation Front, which has an autonomy deal with the government, said his group decided to attack the Abu Sayyaf in the rugged mountains of Patikul town in southern Sulu province after negotiations collapsed on the release of several of its foreign hostages, including a Jordanian TV journalist and two European men who have been held since last year.

Abu Sayyaf militants did release two Filipino hostages over the weekend after an unspecified ransom was paid, security officials said, adding the captives were let loose on their own and not turned over to the Moro rebels.

"We had no choice," Malik told The Associated Press by telephone from Patikul. "They told us they won't hand over their hostages to us even if they die."

The Moro rebels battled the Abu Sayyaf with guns and knives at close range Sunday, Malik said, adding his group lost eight men, including one who was beheaded and a few others who were hacked to death.

Military and police officials in Sulu said up to 14 Abu Sayyaf men were killed, citing intelligence.

The fighting subsided Monday after Abu Sayyaf gunmen split into smaller groups, with a large group seen fleeing from Patikul to an adjacent town. But the clashes could erupt again, Sulu provincial police chief Senior Superintendent Antonio Freyra said.

It was the first major bloody confrontation between the two insurgent groups, which have coexisted for years and at times were suspected of collaborating on kidnappings and backing each other in clashes against government troops in predominantly Muslim Sulu.

Malik said his group had taken the initiative to seek the freedom of the hostages to help the government clean up the image of Sulu, where the Abu Sayyaf has carried out deadly bombings, kidnappings and beheadings, primarily in the early 2000s.

The two Filipinos freed by the Abu Sayyaf, cameraman Ramel Vela and audio technician Roland Letriro, worked for veteran Jordanian journalist Baker Abdulla Atyani. The rebels were also holding two European bird watchers, a Japanese treasure hunter, a Malaysian man and at least one Filipino resident of Sulu, police said.

Vela said he and Letriro last saw Atyani five days after they were taken into Abu Sayyaf custody in June last year, when the militants separated him from them. Atyani wanted to interview the militants in Sulu but he and his Filipino crewmen were taken hostage, Vela said.

Vela recounted his ordeal in a news conference in Manila, saying he saw about 400 Abu Sayyaf fighters in different Sulu jungle encampments, where they were held. He added that they were treated well.

"We were not harmed, not a pinch," he said from a wheelchair, where he sat with a swollen leg from constant jungle treks.

Atyani has gained prominence for having interviewed Osama bin Laden and his aides in Afghanistan about three months before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The Abu Sayyaf is an extremist offshoot of a Muslim rebellion that has been raging in the predominantly Catholic nation's south for decades. U.S.-backed military offensives have crippled it in recent years, but it remains a national security threat. Washington has listed the group, which has about 380 armed fighters, as a terrorist organization.

Moro National Liberation Front rebels signed a peace deal with the government in 1996 that did not require them to disarm. They have settled back to their Sulu communities but have clashed with government troops periodically while negotiating for more concessions.

The group's stature has been overshadowed in recent years by the larger Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which is currently engaged in Malaysian-brokered talks with the government to expand and seek more power and resources for an existing Muslim autonomous region in the south.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/22-killed-clash-filipino-extremists-rebels-102641689.html

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Winter Health: Tips For Healthier Skin And Hair This Season

2012-01-18-GreatistLogoFullGray.jpg
By Sophia Breene

It's wintertime and the livin' ain't easy -- for our hair, skin and nails, that is. Whipping winds, dry air and chilly temperatures can really do a number on soft skin and hair. Cold air outside and central heat indoors can strip moisture from strands and pores, making hair rough and skin itchy and dry. But endure cracked hands no more: Items hiding in the back of your kitchen cupboard could just be the answer.

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Body Talk -- The Need-to-Know
Hair and skin aren't just for looking pretty -- they're required for specific bodily functions, too. Humans lost body fur a while ago (thankfully), but we still have hair on our heads to keep the brain toasty and protected from occasional bumps. Skin isn't only the barrier between the environment and our insides -- it's a living organ that's responsible for keeping the body cool, protecting it against germs and ?invaders,? and many other metabolic processes. It's important to keep these tissues in good condition and working well all year long so they can do their jobs and keep us healthy and safe.
Cracked, flaky, irritated or inflamed skin is normal during winter, though it's not exactly fun. If red, scaly, itchy skin lingers or is causing serious discomfort, be sure to visit a doctor; it might be a more serious dermatological condition like dermatitis, eczema or athlete's foot. Barring more serious issues, there are a few strategies that can give the body a break when the mercury plunges:

  • A 20-minute long, boiling-hot shower might feel great on a cold day, but stick to warm or lukewarm water for 10 minutes or less. Long exposure to hot water can strip moisture from hair and skin.
  • When heading into the great outdoors, dress for the weather with a hat, scarf and gloves to avoid windburn and prolonged exposure to cold air.
  • At the grocery store, fill up a cart with foods full of healthy monounsaturated fats and omega-3 fatty acids, such as fish, nuts, olive oil, flax, sardines and avocados.
  • While at the market, load up on vitamin C-rich produce like citrus fruit and dark leafy greens. Vitamin C can help boost the body's production of collagen, a protein that maintains skin and other connective tissues.
  • It's a good idea to drink plenty of water during winter, but there is actually no scientific proof that guzzling water can rehydrate scaly skin.

Read on for more specific cures and preventative measures to combat winter woes from itchy scalp to frozen fingers and more.

Smooth Sailing -- Your Action Plan
1. Dry Skin
To cure dry skin all over the body, go big or go home. Mix a few drops of olive or grape seed oil in bathwater and hop in, or apply a thin layer of oil to the body after showering (and maybe wear some old PJs to bed). As weird as it may sound, adding a few cups of whole milk to bathwater can moisturize skin. The proteins, fats and vitamins in moo-juice can help soothe rough skin. If feeling lactose-averse, the old chicken pox standby of an oatmeal bath can make red, irritated skin feel better. Immediately after an oil/milk/oatmeal bath, apply plenty of thick cream (or even Crisco or Vaseline for seriously damaged skin) and crank up the humidifier before hitting the hay. Slathering on lotion within three minutes of stepping out of the bath or shower is most effective for trapping in moisture.

2. Red Nose
The holidays are over, so there's no reason to keep dressing up like Rudolph. When outdoors in cold weather, the blood vessels cut off circulation to the nose. After coming indoors the blood vessels dilate quickly, causing a rush of blood (and bright-red color). To bring the nose back to a normal hue, apply a warm -- but not hot -- compress to the skin for several minutes after coming indoors. Sometimes a winter cold and the tissues that come with it can make the nose raw and chapped, too. When the sniffles hit, use extra-soft tissues and blot the nose; don't rub it. Apply a thin layer of moisturizing ointment or lotion to the sensitive area throughout the day.

3. Itchy Dry Scalp
Nope, it's not adult-onset lice. But a dry, flaky scalp is uncomfortable and just a wee bit embarrassing, too. Step one in preventing dandruff is to take cooler, quicker showers to reduce the scalp's exposure to drying hot water. Think about switching to a dandruff or dry scalp specific shampoo. Before hopping in the shower, massage the scalp with Vitamin E, olive or coconut oil. These oils replenish natural scalp oils and can moisturize dry hair, too. Tea tree oil is also a popular treatment for fungal and bacterial infections like dandruff or athlete's foot. Wash the hair and scalp with tea tree oil daily to cure a dry, itchy head naturally. Sometimes, the issue can be caused by product build-up ? not winter weather. If you think this may be the case, rinse the hair with apple cider vinegar to clear out the gunk and then wash normally with shampoo.

4. Chapped Lips
Keeping a tube of lip balm in an easily accessible pocket is a good first step, but winter winds can take chapped lips to a whole new level. If lips are flaky, take a clean toothbrush and very gently exfoliate the skin to remove excess skin. Slather on beeswax or a lip balm with lanolin (a natural oily wax extracted from sheep's wool!) and keep reapplying throughout the day. Lanolin is a natural moisturizer that softens skin and reduces evaporation, keeping the skin hydrated. If spending all day with animal product freaks you out, apply some Crisco (aka vegetable shortening) to lips. It's 100 percent vegan and very safe if ingested. For seriously dry lips, apply honey or Vaseline to the lips for 15 minutes and then remove with a cotton swab dipped in hot water.

5. Rough Hair
Hair needs a little extra TLC during wintertime. Shampooing strips moisture from the scalp and hair, so wash strands every other day. Everyone's hair is different -- if washing once or twice a week is normal for you, consider adding some time between shampoos to take dry winter conditions into account. And don't skip the conditioner -- skipping the 'poo and opting for a quick rinse and conditioning treatment works just fine to keep hair clean and moisturized. To prevent breakage or other damage, avoid blow-drying and brushing hair when wet because those locks are most delicate when waterlogged. If strands are really parched, comb hair with a few drops of olive oil and a wide-tooth comb after showering.

6. Dry Hands
It's bad enough to have freezing digits, but cracked and painful skin on the hands is the icing on the cake. To prevent hands from drying out, apply moisturizer after hand washing and at least several times throughout the day. Keep a bottle of lotion by each sink in your home and in your desk at work. If hands are very dry, use cream instead of lotion because the former has a higher oil-to-water ratio. Wearing rubber gloves while washing dishes can prevent hands from getting dried out due to excess contact with hot water, too. To really rehab the skin on hands, use very thick hand cream right before bed and then slip on white cotton gloves -- the enclosed space will help the moisturizer absorb into the skin.

7. Static-y Hair
The only thing worse than winter hat hair is fly-aways that won't stay in a hat to begin with. A dried-out scalp produces fewer oils, which can make hair full of static. Don't skimp on conditioner, and simulate natural scalp oils by combing a bit of vitamin E oil through the hair before bed to replenish moisture. If static is a major problem, consider switching up your grooming routine. Brushes with natural bristles help redistribute oils from the scalp to the rest of the hair and also conduct less static than plastic brushes and combs. Need a quick fix? Run a bit of lotion through strands or run an unscented dryer sheet (really) over the hair before heading out the door. During the winter, stick to cotton hats (which conduct much less static electricity than acrylic and wool).

8. Scaly Elbows
The skin over high-pressure joints like elbows, knees and heels is thicker to cushion the essential bones underneath. It's great to have some extra padding, but ashy, scaly elbows are uncomfortable and unattractive. The key to keeping elbows (and other rough spots) soft is to exfoliate once or twice per week and moisturize every day. Combine a scoop of sugar, a few glugs of olive oil and a drizzle of lemon juice to make a quick scrub. Even shorter on time? Halve a lemon, add a few pinches of sugar or salt, and rub the surface over rough skin. After exfoliating, rinse the skin and moisturize with a thick cream. If the dryness situation is really dire, apply a thin layer of petroleum jelly to the area before bed. When elbows are really itchy, soak them in milk or apply cold compresses. Thick, red skin with flaky white patches that doesn't go away may be psoriasis. If none of the above treatments work, see a dermatologist for more specialized care.

9. Brittle Nails
Dry air saps the moisture right out of nails and leaves them delicate and susceptible to breaks and tears. To treat them, apply olive oil or lotion containing lanolin to nails before bed and sleep with gloves on to help aid absorption. Dudes, it may be time to raid your mother/girlfriend/wife/sister/friend's makeup drawer, because a thin coat of clear nail polish can protect brittle nails from the environment. Also consider adding biotin-rich foods (also called Vitamin B7) to the diet -- this essential vitamin helps the body process amino acids and produce fatty acids. Vegetables (including carrots and Swiss chard) and protein sources including nuts and fish are good ways to pack in enough of the vitamin. Biotin is also very effective when taken in supplement form.

10. Cold Digits
If fingers and toes are still cold despite wooly socks and gloves, it's time for a different strategy. To encourage blood flow all the way to the hands and feet, keep the core toasty warm with plenty of layers. Avoid tight garments or jewelry at joints (hands, ankles and wrists) that could constrict blood flow. Studies have shown that rosemary and gingko biloba can naturally improve blood circulation, too.

11. Windburn
Kudos to those who enjoy the great outdoors even when it's frigid outside. Protect sensitive skin by layering on thick face cream with a high SPF -- the only thing worse than windburn is winter sunburn. If red windburn patches don't go away, apply a thin layer of one-percent hydrocortisone cream on irritated spots as needed. This medicated cream contains steroids that reduce inflammation and stop itching in its tracks.

12. Rough And Cracked Feet
Nothing screams ?dead of winter? like gnarly, callused feet with cracked heels. Save some cash and skip the pedicure by exfoliating and moisturizing at home. Scrub calluses with a pumice stone in the shower once per week to slough off rough, dead skin. Moisturize feet, especially the heels, every day with thick cream -- lotions containing lactic acid are especially effective -- and wear cotton socks to bed. It may look nerdy, but sporting socks while snoozing can help creams absorb. Warmer feet means sweatier feet (ick) and moisturizers are most effective when applied to warm, damp skin. On the down side, wearing super toasty wool footwear can raise the overall body temperature, sometimes making it difficult to stay asleep all night long.

13. Irritated, Dry Eyes
Wind and dry air are not a good combination for sensitive eyes. Sporting sunnies on a sub-zero day might look weird, but the lenses can protect eyes from glare and wind. Keep a bottle of non-medicated saline tears or eye drops on hand and use it to refresh eye moisture when needed. Prevent irritation by keeping those well-moisturized hands away from the eye area.

14. Dry Face
It's unfortunate (but unavoidable) that the body's most sensitive skin is always exposed to the elements. Definitely take some time this winter to give your mug a little extra lovin'. First thing's first: During winter, avoid any face products with alcohol and switch to a milder face wash and a thicker moisturizer. Need to mix up the routine a bit? Wash your face once a week with Greek yogurt. It sounds weird, but the lactic acid works as a gentle, non-abrasive exfoliator. For a moisturizing face mask, take a look in the kitchen before heading down the beauty aisle: Bananas, avocado, egg yolk and milk can all make great moisturizing face treatments. Another good option? Whole grains and aromatic veggies contain selenium, a compound that gives skin the elasticity to make silly faces. Snack on quinoa, brown rice, onions or garlic when skin gets tight and dry.

What's your go-to solution for treating winter skin and hair woes? Tell us in the comments below.

Thanks to Greatist Expert J. Scott Kasteler for his contributions to this article.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/03/winter-health-skin-hair_n_2599508.html

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College of Business to Celebrate 50th Anniversary with a Mardi ...

Good food, good fun and good memories are in store when the UCF College of Business Administration celebrates its Golden Anniversary with a Mardi Gras Banquet on Friday, February 15. Presented by BB&T, the event will take place from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Venue at UCF (the former Arena).

The banquet includes a reception and dinner and will honor those that helped shape the college over the past five decades. A nominating committee selected 50 people or organizations that best exemplify the tenets of the UCF Creed,?integrity,?scholarship,community,?creativity, and?excellence. This prestigious group will be recognized and honored during the banquet.

Integrity:

Those selected in this category have contributed to the research and teaching of ethics and social issues in the classroom. Honorees include:

  • Branch Banking & Trust Company
  • Bill Callarman, Ph.D., associate professor emeritus, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Kenneth G. Dixon, ?75, founder and CEO, Leland Enterprises, Inc.
  • Robert Folger, Ph.D., distinguished alumni endowed professor in business ethics, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Paul P. Gregg, ?74 & ?76, instructor of finance, UCF College of Business Administration and chief financial officer, Rini Technologies, Inc.
  • Stan Horton, ?73, president and CEO, Boardwalk Pipeline Partners
  • Richard Lapchick, Ph.D., endowed chair and director (DeVos/Orlando Magic Sport Business Management Eminent Scholar), president and CEO, National Consortium for Academics and Sports, founding director, The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Robin W. Roberts, Ph.D., Al and Nancy Burnett Eminent Scholar Chair in Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • John H. Salter, Ph.D., professor emeritus, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting and?Marilyn P. Salter, MSA ?81, retired instructor, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Marshall Schminke, Ph.D., BB&T Professor of Business Ethics, UCF College of Business Administration

Scholarship:

The 10 people selected in this category have contributed to the scholarship of the college and possess a strong research record. Honorees include:

  • Maureen L. Ambrose, Ph.D., Gordon J. Barnett Professor of Business Ethics, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Vicky Arnold, Ph.D., Ernst & Young Professor of Accounting, Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting UCF College of Business Administration and editor,?Behavioral Research in Accounting
  • Raj Echambadi, Ph.D., professor and James F. Towey Fellow, University of Illinois
  • Glenn Hubbard, Ph.D., ?79, dean and Russell L. Carson Professor of Finance and Economics (Graduate School of Business) and professor of economics (Arts and Sciences), Columbia University
  • Richard C. Huseman, Ph.D., founder and CEO, Executive Development & Education
  • Thomas L. Keon, Ph.D., chancellor, Purdue University Calumet
  • Ronald S. Rubin, Ph.D., professor emeritus of marketing, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Carol Saunders, Ph.D., professor of management, UCF College of Business Administration and Schoeller Senior Research Fellow, Dr. Theo and Friedl Schoeller Research Center for Business and Society
  • Steve G. Sutton, Ph.D., KPMG Professor of Accounting, UCF College of Business Administration
  • Gregory M. Trompeter, Ph.D., C.G. Avery Professor, UCF College of Business Administration

Community:

This category honors organizations or businesses that have partnered with the college. The companies selected have demonstrated their support by contributing financially, providing speakers, or hiring students. Honorees include:

  • DeVos Family and The Orlando Magic
  • Dr. Phillips Charities
  • Ernst and Young, LLP
  • Grant Thornton, LLP
  • NAIOP Central Florida Chapter
  • Orlando Health
  • Richard Nunis, retired chairman, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
  • SeaWorld Parks and Resorts Orlando
  • SunTrust
  • Walt Disney World Resort
  • Wells Fargo

Creativity:

Those selected in this category have used their entrepreneurial and creative talents to form new ideas, methods, or ways of doing business. They ?think outside the box.? and support the college in entrepreneurial activities and competitions. Honorees include:

  • N. Lois Adams, ?85, president, CEO, and chairman, HHCS Health Group
  • Debbie Balaschak, ?88?and?Jim Balaschak, ?86 & ?92, president, Deanja, LLC
  • G. Thomas Bland, Jr., ?75 & ?79, chairman & CEO, AquaFiber Technologies Corporation
  • Steven Felkowitz, ?79, chief executive officer, Atico International
  • Cameron M. Ford, Ph.D., director, Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership
  • The Honorable Phyllis A. Klock
  • Blaine Sweatt, MBA, ?76, president, New Business Division (Retired), Darden Restaurants, Inc.
  • Andrew B. Titen, ?75, president and chief operating officer, Bisk Education
  • Turbine Technology Services
  • Richard J. Walsh, ?77 & ?83, president, The Knob Hill Companies

Excellence:

This group consistently goes ?above and beyond? and performs at the highest level in every endeavor they participate in. Honorees include:

  • Merrell Bailey, ?85, ?89, ?01 & ?07, managing partner, Bailey Zobel Pilcher
  • Robert B. Case, ?70, president, RB Case Consulting, Inc.?and Chief Operations Officer, eSchool Solutions, Inc.
  • Lawrence J. Chastang, ?80, managing partner of International Services, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP
  • Les W. Eiserman, CPA CVA, ?81 & ?82, partner in charge ? Orlando Office Audit Department, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP
  • James W. Ferrell, ?80, president, Ferrell Wealth Management, Inc.
  • Melanie Fernandez, ?86 & ?91, partner, Cross, Fernandez & Riley, LLP
  • Andrew J. Fore, III, ?76 & ?83,?managing director ? Global General Services, Citigroup
  • Michael J. (?Micky?) Grindstaff, ?78, president, Shutts & Bowen, LLP
  • Laurette McPartland Koellner, ?77, executive chairman, International Lease Finance Corporation, Corporate Board Member, Celestica Inc, Corporate Board Member, Hillshire Brands
  • Nan B. McCormick, ?83, senior vice president, CBRE, Inc.
  • Tom Messina, ?84, executive director and associate vice president, UCF Alumni Association
  • Kenneth White, Ph.D., founding professor, UCF Economics Department

The 50 will be recognized during a brief ceremony, where Paul Jarley, dean of the college will share his new vision.

?This event promises to be fun for all, and will be a great opportunity to reflect upon the past 50 years, as well as look forward to our very promising future,? he said.

The banquet is the highlight of a week-long celebration that also features a Mardi Gras party for faculty, staff and students as well as a student organization showcase.

Source: http://today.ucf.edu/college-of-business-to-celebrate-50th-anniversary-with-a-mardi-gras-banquet/

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Solar development absorbing Calif. farmland

FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2011 file photo, solar panels are seen at the NRG Solar and Eurus Energy America Corp.?s 45-megawatt solar farm in Avenal, Calif. There?s a land rush of sorts going on across the nation?s most productive farming region, but these buyers don?t want to grow crops. Instead developers are looking to plant solar voltaic cells to generate electricity for a state mandated to get 33 percent from renewables by the end of the decade. (AP Photo/The Sentinel, Apolinar Fonseca, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2011 file photo, solar panels are seen at the NRG Solar and Eurus Energy America Corp.?s 45-megawatt solar farm in Avenal, Calif. There?s a land rush of sorts going on across the nation?s most productive farming region, but these buyers don?t want to grow crops. Instead developers are looking to plant solar voltaic cells to generate electricity for a state mandated to get 33 percent from renewables by the end of the decade. (AP Photo/The Sentinel, Apolinar Fonseca, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2011 file photo, a worker looks over solar panels at the NRG Solar and Eurus Energy America Corp.?s 45-megawatt solar farm in Avenal, Calif. There?s a land rush of sorts going on across the nation?s most productive farming region, but these buyers don?t want to grow crops. Instead developers are looking to plant solar voltaic cells to generate electricity for a state mandated to get 33 percent from renewables by the end of the decade. (AP Photo/The Sentinel, Apolinar Fonseca, File)

(AP) ? There's a land rush of sorts going on across the nation's most productive farming region, but these buyers don't want to grow crops. They want to plant solar farms.

With California mandating that 33 percent of electricity be generated from renewables by the end of the decade, there are 227 proposed solar projects in the pipeline statewide. Coupled with wind and other renewables they would generate enough electricity to meet 100 percent of California's power needs on an average summer day, the California Independent System Operator says.

And new applications for projects keep arriving.

Developers are flocking to flat farmland near power transmission lines, but agriculture interests, environmental groups and even the state are concerned that there is no official accounting of how much of this important agricultural region's farmland is being taken out of production.

""We've been trying to get a handle on the extent of this for quite a while now," said Ed Thompson of American Farmland Trust, which monitors how much of the nation's farmland is absorbed by development.

The California Department of Conservation, which is supposed to track development on privately held farmland, has been unable to do so because of staff and funding reductions, officials say.

"I'd love to say we have all of that information, but we really don't," said Molly Penberth, manager of the land resource protection division. "We're going to play catch up getting that information, particularly in the San Joaquin Valley."

Planning department records in four of the valley's biggest farming counties show about 100 solar generation plants already proposed on roughly 40,000 acres, or about the equivalent of 470 Disneyland theme parks. Planners in Fresno County say their applications for solar outnumber the ones they received for housing developments during the boom days.

Solar developers have focused on the southern San Joaquin Valley over the past three years for the same reason as farmers: flat expanses of land and an abundance of sunshine. Land that has been tilled most often has fewer issues with endangered species than places such as the Mojave Desert, where an endangered tortoise slowed solar development on federal land.

Much of the solar development is proposed for Kern, Tulare, Fresno and Kings counties, which are home to more than 400 crops that pump $30 billion into the economy and help sustain U.S. food security.

In January, the farmland trust released a report projecting that by 2050 more than 570,000 acres across the region could be lost to development as the Central California population explodes. Farmland losses due to housing, solar development, a warming climate, cyclical drought and ongoing farm water rationing to protect endangered fish, plus the state's signature transportation project ? the High Speed Rail ? are all issues the trust is trying to monitor.

"These are things that don't make headlines, but come under the category that you don't know what you've got until it's gone," Thompson said.

No statewide plan or policy exists to direct projects to areas where land is marginal for farming and power transmission lines exist or can be easily routed, though groups as diverse as the Defenders of Wildlife and the independent state oversight agency Little Hoover Commission have issued studies calling for one.

Projects are approved by elected county boards of supervisors, or if larger than 50 MW, the California Energy Commission.

"There's no consistent approach" county to county in deciding what gets approved on farmland, said Kate Kelly, a planning consultant who is studying the environmental impact of valley projects for Defenders of Wildlife.

While one of the nation's leading solar trade groups has not taken an official position on conversion of farmland to solar, Katherine Gensler of the Solar Energy Industries Association says more thought must go into location.

The largest solar facility operating so far covers 500 acres 60 miles northwest of Bakersfield and produces enough electricity for 36,000 homes.

Just three weeks into 2013, five valley farmers have told the Department of Conservation that they want to cancel low agriculture tax rate contracts to develop solar on their property. None takes advantage of a year-old law making it easier to cancel on marginal land, Penberth said.

County boards of supervisors are attracted to the promise of clean energy construction jobs. Some of the projects are on prime land as small as 20 acres, some on habitat shared by threatened or endangered species such as the kit fox, Swainson's hawk and blunt nose lizard. The 9,000-acre Maricopa Sun project in western Kern County is on prime land that the county says lacks a reliable water supply.

Almost always developers chose sites because there's a willing seller in the vicinity of existing transmission lines, experts say.

Transmission is the biggest reason for the holdup of a massive project that energy planners, agriculture interests and environmentalists agree is perfectly situated ? the Westlands Solar Park in remote Kings and Fresno counties. It's planned for 47 square miles of farmland fallowed because of high levels selenium in the soil.

Developers say the project ultimately could provide 2.7 gigawatts of electricity ? enough for 2.7 million homes. But the wait for approval from the California Independent System Operator to tap into transmission lines for a large project proved too long so they got out. For now.

"We realized it would be a seven-to-10 year process," said Joshua Martin, the solar company's chief financial officer. "We could easily have spent $7 million in fees to stay in line, but it doesn't make good business sense. It's a messy market right now and things need to calm down."

Ten years might be wishful thinking. An email the ISO sent to stakeholders on Jan. 18 said that it could be 12 years or longer before the needed upgrades in transmission infrastructure could be complete for solar projects currently waiting for transmission hookups in the Fresno area.

Westlands Solar Park is betting that environmental obstacles and connection costs will force many of the projects in the pipeline statewide to be abandoned. But what they're hoping in the meantime is that state regulators eventually will direct solar development away from prime farmland.

Next month the California Energy Commission is set to make a move in that direction with adoption of a report that will recommend a coordinated approach placing solar in "zones with minimal environmental or habitat value," near existing or planned electric system infrastructure. The agency would also collaborate with the Department of Conservation to identify areas of the state with marginal land.

Martin says the move likely is too late to help the projects that are stalled and in danger of missing out on federal tax incentives that expire in 2016.

"Someone needs to take a role and say what lines should be built and which aren't in the state's best interest," said Martin. "So far we have been underwhelmed."

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Reach Tracie Cone on Twitter: www.Twitter.com/TConeAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-02-Solar%20Land%20Rush/id-aeffc0d7d88a4d03a50ed74d5206f680

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18 Officials, civil society activists, media on visit to ... - Ariana News

Sun Feb 03, 1:35 pm

A group of 18 delegates including upper house of the parliament members, civil activists, and media made a visit together to review the general status of progress in Helmand Province

The head of civil activist?s federation Sediq Mansour Ansari said he is on a 3 day visit to review work status in different governmental departments and civil society sections in Helmand Province.

According to Ansari,?The National assembly representatives in coordination with Helmand tribal scholars are working on plans to overcome the challenges they are facing.?

Based on Ansari?s comments, efforts are underway to push the young generation to stand for peace and stability in their areas.

Scholars and civil society activists in Helmand Province said, ?The original culture and customs of Afghanistan are being invaded by imported foreign cultures and customs.?

According to their opinions, media players in TV and radio have imported foreign ideas and customs into the country.? They believe that if the situation continues, the Afghan culture and customs will be badly damaged.

They have demanded the Government and civil activist?s members to step up efforts to protect the Afghan culture and customs.

Source: http://ariananews.af/regional/18-officials-civil-society-activists-media-on-visit-to-helmand/

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