Saturday, March 28, 2009

Two People Arrested at Smithtown Social Club

SMITHTOWN (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police Fourth Precinct Crime Section Officers, assisted by COPE and Patrol Officers, as well as the Smithtown Fire Marshal, conducted an inspection at a Smithtown club and arrested two employees for maintaining a criminal nuisance premises and other charges.
 
Prompted by multiple community complaints of underage drinking and smoking at the Fire and Ice Hookah Lounge in Smithtown, Crime Section Officers conducted an inspection of the premises that were purported to be a tobacco lounge, on March 28, 2009 at 12:06 AM.  On arrival at the Hookah Lounge, the officers noted that underage youth were bringing beer and consuming it openly within the premises.  It was also noted that the employees were allowing such conduct within the premises.
 
The officers arrested the Head Manager, Amar Patel, 25, of 479 West Main Street, Patchogue, and Host/Manager, Poonum Patel, 20, of 435 Washington Avenue, Brentwood, and charged them with Criminal Nuisance 2nd Degree, under the Penal Law, and Unlicensed Bottle Club, under the State Alcohol Beverage Control Law.  The Patels were issued Appearance Tickets and will be arraigned at First District Court, Central Islip, on a future date.
 
In addition, the Fire Marshal issued 15 summonses for violation of the Town Fire Code and closed the premises down.
 
A criminal charge is an accusation.  A defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Thursday, March 26, 2009

House GOP offers alternative budget, with details to come

By David Lightman

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ Republicans in the House of Representatives answered President Barack Obama's challenge for a GOP alternative budget on Thursday by producing their own plan _ but the document contained virtually no specifics on spending, taxes or deficit reduction.

Instead, the glossy 18-page book, "The Republican Road to Recovery," was largely a harangue against Democratic policies and a series of statements of long-held Republican principles. House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio promised details next week.

Obama at his Tuesday news conference had criticized Republicans, saying, "We haven't seen an alternative budget out of them."

"Here it is, Mr. President," Boehner declared on Thursday.

Asked if the Republican plan would cut the deficit in half in five years, as Obama proposes, Boehner said, "It'll be better."

The House and Senate expect to vote next week on fiscal 2010 budgets, and separate votes are expected on Republican alternatives.

Since Democrats have comfortable majorities in both houses of Congress, and such budget debates are tightly controlled, the bills they have written are expected to pass easily.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., the top Republican on the House Budget Committee, set the tone for the Republican effort, calling the Democratic plan "so reckless, so irresponsible ... a gusher of new spending followed by a gusher of new borrowing we cannot sustain."

Democrats would spend about $3.55 trillion next year. Obama wanted a 10.1 percent boost in nondefense discretionary spending, which includes most domestic programs. The House Democrats' version would pare that to 9.5 percent, while the Senate's would cut it to 7 percent.

Most of Obama's key initiatives, such as health care, climate change and his "making work pay" tax credit, will be considered later this year. The House and Senate Democratic budgets require that their costs be covered by tax increases or offsetting cuts in spending elsewhere.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Democrats scoffed at the GOP plan.

"It's like being in the era of the Bush administration all over again," said Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C., the House Budget Committee chairman.

The GOP plan methodically takes the Democratic bill apart. On health care, it complains that "Democrats propose to finance nationalized health care," and says a better solution would be allowing people to shop across state lines for insurance policies.

On spending, the Republican plan lists specific objections to Democrats' plans, but proposes only that the GOP would "cut overall nondefense spending by reforming or eliminating a host of wasteful programs deemed ineffective by various government entities."

Taxes would be lower, the Republicans promise, in a "simple and fair tax code" with a 10 percent tax rate for incomes up to $100,000 and 25 percent thereafter, as well as "a generous standard deduction and personal exemption."

However, Republicans also would "allow any individual or family satisfied with their current tax structure" to pay those rates, though it would drop the two lowest brackets by 5 percent. Rates currently range from 10 percent to 35 percent.

On energy, the Republican plan would open the Arctic Coastal Plain to energy exploration, while making it easier to build new nuclear reactors.

And the party says it would help ease financial industry turmoil by discouraging bailouts and creating a climate of "certainty and economic growth."

___

ON THE WEB

Republican road to recovery plan": http://www.gop.gov/solutions/budget/road-to-recovery-final

Internal Revenue Service description of 2009 tax brackets: http://tinyurl.com/6xpayy

Congressional Budget Office budget projections: http://tinyurl.com/ddjb9p

President Obama's 2010 budget outline: http://tinyurl.com/bcbxk6

Concord Coalition budget analysis: http://tinyurl.com/cwjb2e

___

© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.

In Fargo, flood crest could be highest ever


Michael Stensgaard uses one of his family's boat to get back to their home a few yards away from the Red River in Minnesota, March 25, 2009. The water is over 40 feet and has completely surrounded their home. (Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Minneapolis Star Tribune)

By Matt McKinney, Allie Shah and Bill McAuliffe

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

FARGO, N.D. _ Shifting from confident to jittery, flood fighters in and around Fargo intensified their dike-building Wednesday after a dire new forecast called for the Red River to swell to its highest level ever by Saturday.

Authorities used airboats, helicopters and large military trucks to rescue dozens of trapped residents in the North Dakota towns of Oxbow and Abercombie. And if the rising river weren't enough to heighten anxiety, eight inches of snow blew in with ice and wind to handicap sandbagging efforts and close highways not already swamped with floodwater.

"It's uncharted territory," Fargo Mayor Dennis Walaker said. "If nature has anything else to throw at us, it'd have to be a tornado."

The mayor pleaded for more sandbag volunteers and urged exhausted crews to raise the dikes another foot _ to 43 feet _ before Saturday's expected crest of 41 feet. That would eclipse the 1897 record level of 40.1 feet in Fargo and the 39.57 feet reached during the devastating 1997 flood.

Beginning Thursday, Fargo officials will start distributing evacuation information.

"People are starting to get worried," said Robin Mattson, a staff sergeant with the Minnesota National Guard, supervising intersections across the river in Moorhead.

When one resident tried to drive his sand-filled pickup over an earthen levee, police were called to issue a warning.

"He ignored the National Guard to put his own sand in, endangering everyone else," Mattson said.

For the most part, though, neighbors continue to help each other in an overwhelming spirit of cooperation. For a while Wednesday afternoon, Moorhead resident Scott Peterson worried he wouldn't get enough sandbags to raise his backyard dike the extra foot authorities have requested.

Just then, a group of college students arrived along with a truck towing a trailer of sandbags.

"If it wasn't for Concordia College," Peterson said, "our neighborhood would be under."

In Oxbow, a small town just south of Fargo, water from the Red spilled onto several residential streets, trapping homeowners. Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney said airboats helped on a dozen rescues and he anticipates many more in coming days.

"A large number of people are in their homes and we know they're going to need to come out," he said, adding that airboats and military trucks are the only vehicles that could pass through some of the streets submerged in 2 feet of standing water.

A Coast Guard helicopter plucked a family from a farmhouse two miles southwest of Abercrombie, N.D., where overland flooding from the Wild Rice River increased rapidly. Richland County, N.D., spokesman Warren Stokes said five adults and one child were rescued from the house by a basket and taken to a social service center in Wahpeton.

Flood-fighting crews in Abercrombie had put up dikes to protect the town against Red River flooding, but they shifted their efforts to battle overland flooding from Wild Rice River to the west.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"We've never worried about anything from that direction," said Vice Mayor David Hammond, adding that the town would open its school to house any farmers flooded out of their homes.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Across the river in Wolverton, Minn. _ which sits an eighth of a mile from the river bank _ water flowed into the streets in lower areas. Maryann Olthoff was hoping that sandbag dikes up to 5 feet tall around her house would hold back the water, which she said was higher than anybody in the town of 120 people has ever seen.

"God willing and the creek don't rise," Olthoff said.

Back up in Fargo, bundled-up residents and volunteers braved the miserable conditions, piling up sandbags in vulnerable neighborhoods amid blowing snow, temperatures in the 20s and a strong wind.

"The bags are starting to freeze," said Martin Fisher, adding another layer of sandbags onto his backyard dike. "That's a problem. You can't put rock on top of rock."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Despite the city's efforts to keep the bags warm by storing them overnight in a heated garage, some bags were as hard as stone.

"Frozen!" one volunteer called out, alerting the rest of the assembly line.

Many flood-fighters swapped their rain boots for their winter boots, anticipating the pain that comes from standing outside for hours at a time in the icy mud. But slinging sandbags really builds up a sweat, and you hardly notice the cold, according to Bill Eral, who drove from St. Paul, Minn., to help.

With an outside fire pit, Sarah Keim's driveway was the place to be in Fargo's Oak Creek neighborhood. A steady stream of neighbors and volunteers popped in to warm their hands and nibble on homemade banana bread.

Between the snow and the flooding, several highways from Ada to Zerkel were closed or under water in western Minnesota. State officials urged motorists to call 511 or click on www.511mn.org for current road conditions.

___

(Staff writers Curt Brown and Bob von Sternberg contributed to this report.)

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

_____

PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): FLOODING

GRAPHICS (from MCT Graphics, 202-383-6064): 20090325 River FLOODING and 20090325 FLOODING dikes

Huge public lands bill gets final congressional approval


Map of the U.S. locating lands to be protected as wilderness; the House has passed and sent to President Barack Obama a long-delayed bill to set aside more than 2 million acres in nine states as protected wilderness. MCT 2009

By Michael Doyle

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ The House of Representatives on Wednesday gave long-awaited final approval to a massive public lands package designed to protect wilderness, restore rivers and expand national parks.

Years of debate and negotiations ended anticlimactically, as the 1,218-page bill strolled to victory on a 285-140 margin. Approved earlier by the Senate, the legislation now goes to the White House for President Barack Obama's signature.

"It will restore balance to the management of our public lands ... after nearly a decade in which responsible land stewardship was abandoned," said Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee.

Tactically constructed, with provisions targeting a majority of states, the bill drew 38 Republicans to join 247 Democrats. Even so, conservative GOP critics lambasted the bill as a land grab put together with what one Republican lawmaker termed "every legislative trick in (the Democratic) playbook."

House Democratic leaders brought the measure to the floor in a way that blocked potential amendments.

"The passage of this bill is another disappointing display of heavy-handed Democratic tactics that rely on secret, backroom bill-writings that are then jammed through without any opportunity for alternatives," complained Rep. Doc Hastings of Washington, the senior Republican on the House resources panel.

Dubbed the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009, the measure pulled together more than 150 separate public lands, parks and water bills into one package. Among other things, the legislation designates 2 million acres of additional wilderness in nine states and 1,000 miles of new wild and scenic rivers. It creates three new national park units, one new national monument and 10 new national heritage areas.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Provisions in the bill range from honoring President Bill Clinton's birthplace in Arkansas to creating a national institute for the study of caves. It designates a Wyoming river as wild and scenic, creates a geologic trail that tracks cataclysmic ice age floods and requires the government to research the problem of increasingly acidic oceans.

"Altogether, it is one of the most sweeping conservation laws that Congress has passed in many, many years," declared Sen. Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

The bill will be expensive. It authorizes projects expected to cost more than $5.5 billion over five years if Congress provides the money, according to the Congressional Budget Office. It also adds an additional $900 million in spending after 2013, the nonpartisan budget office estimates.

Hastings warned the bill would restrict potential development of energy resources on public lands, while other lawmakers focused on the addition of new lands to the national wilderness roll.

"The federal government already owns 30 percent of the total land area of the United States," said Rep. George Radanovich, R-Calif. "I don't think we need any more."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, however, called the bill's passage "a day of celebration for all who treasure and enjoy our natural and cultural heritage," and numerous environmental groups had been lobbying hard for its passage. In many cases, the public lands package collected provisions that had lingered without action during the years that Republicans had controlled Congress.

One provision, for instance, names a new wilderness in California's Sierra Nevada mountains after former California Rep. John Krebs. The measure creating the John Krebs Wilderness was first introduced in 2002.

The bill's occasionally rocky road to passage included a controversy over allowing guns in national parks and a concern that some amendments might expose potentially vulnerable lawmakers to difficult votes.

___

(Les Blumenthal and Erika Bolstad contributed to this report.)

___

© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.

_____

GRAPHIC (from MCT Graphics, 202-383-6064): 20090325 LANDS map

Three People Arrested, Heroin and Cocaine Seized

Suffolk County Police today arrested three people on drug related charges after seizing heroin and cocaine at their home in Copiague.

First Squad detectives, First Precinct Community Oriented Police Enforcement (COPE) officers, Emergency Service officers and Canine officers executed a search warrant at 13 39th St. in Copiague at 6:35 a.m. Detectives seized more than 100 packs of heroin, 1/4 once of cocaine along with more than $3,000 in cash.

Arrested were:
·Richard Beltre, 19, of 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 4th Degree.

·Stephanie Filippone, 21, of 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree, two counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 4th Degree and three counts of Criminal Sale of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree.

·Leoncio Beltre, 50, 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree.

The Suffolk County Police Narcotics Section assisted in this investigation. All three suspects will be held overnight for their arraignment tomorrow at First District Court in Central Islip.

North Carolina Fugitive Arrested in Mastic

MASTIC (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police Fugitive Squad Detectives, assisted by the Seventh Precinct Gang Unit, COPE and Patrol Officers, arrested a Bloods street gang member who was wanted for Attempted Murder in North Carolina, at a house in Mastic.

The suspect, Sean Lamar Melvin, 21, fled North Carolina after the March 4, 2009, attempted murder incident. An investigation by Raleigh, North Carolina Police revealed he had fled to the Mastic area and Suffolk’s Police were notified. The subject was located at a residence on 6 Elm Place, Mastic, and was arrested as he tried to flee from that location.

Melvin was transported to the Seventh Precinct and charged with being a Fugitive from Justice under NY State law and the outstanding North Carolina Attempted Murder warrant. He will be held overnight at the Seventh Precinct for arraignment at First District Court in Central Islip.

In addition two other subjects at that location were charged with Obstructing Governmental Administration and various drug charges.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

SCSD: Accolades and Updates 3-24-09

Edward Ehmann, Superintendent of Schools of the Smithtown School District, made the following announcements at the March 24th Board of Education meeting at the Joseph M. Barton Administration Building.

March 27, 2009, originally scheduled as a Superintendent’s Conference Day, will remain for the purpose of scoring the Math 6-8 assessments. K-5 students will attend school as usual, but there will be no school for students in grades 6-12.

The 2009-2010 budget will be presented to the Board of Education for approval at the April 14th Board of Education Meeting.

A Facilities Committee Meeting will be held on Thursday, March 26th at 7:00 p.m. at the Joseph M. Barton Building, 26 New York Avenue, Smithtown.

All transportation requests for the 2009-2010 school year for private or parochial school students must be made by April 1, 2009, regardless of whether the request is for a first-time applicant or is a renewal.

Mary Cahill, Assistant Superintendent for Instruction and Administration, recently received an award from the Council of Administrators and Supervisors in Recognition of Her Outstanding Leadership in the Field of Education. Scope Education Services also presented her with The Administrator Service Award in Appreciation for Her Outstanding Service to the District.

Three Smithtown Juniors, Valentine Esposito, Reena Glaser and Jessica Noviello, have been awarded a Simons Summer Research Fellowship at Stony Brook University. Only 32 juniors are selected to participate in this prestigious program which receives applications from students throughout the country.

Congratulations to Smithtown High School East students Ashley Beck and Cara Hallahan for earning All County Honors this winter track season. Cara was the Large School Champion in the high jump and Ashley placed 2nd at the State Qualifier, also in the high jump. Ashley represented Suffolk County at the State Track Meet at Cornell University.

Robyn Suchy is a 16 -year-old HSE student who already has a published book. Robyn is part of the Young Poets Mentoring Program established in 2007 by Suffolk County Poet Laureate Dr. David Axelrod. This program gives students the opportunity to publish their first book of poems. A collection of Robyn’s poems can be found in the book, “Stairwells and Window Frames” published by Writers Ink Press.


Smithtown High School East & West DECA completed its best ever results at the recent State Championship Conference in Rochester. More than half the students received recognition with four receiving first place in the state recognition. With their phenomenal performance, 28 students will represent Smithtown at the International Conference to be held in Anaheim, California beginning on April 29th.

During the month of March, National Nutrition Month, the Mount Pleasant PTA’s Health and Wellness committee has sponsored “Tasting Tuesdays”. Every Tuesday the students have been given the opportunity to try different healthy fruits and vegetables during their lunch period.

The Smithtown Teachers’ Association recently had a fundraiser and raised $1,000 for a medically fragile student.

Students from each grade level at Saint James Elementary School were awarded certificates for exhibiting compassion by taking care of themselves, each other, and St. James. Compassion is one of the character traits that are celebrated as part of the St. James Character Education Program.

Accompsett Elementary students recently had the opportunity to meet with local author Brian Heinz. The students first met with Mr. Heinz and were taken through the process “From Writer to Reader”. Mr. Heinz then shared his writings and many of his wildlife experiences which are the basis of his works.

Smithtown High School West Leadership Club recently hosted the Spring Blood Drive.
The third graders at Smithtown Elementary culminated their study of Japan with a Japan Day celebration. Children and teachers dressed for the occasion in clothing typical of the Japanese culture.

Under the direction of Librarian Harriet Pasca-Ortgies and Linda McCann, 44 students from GreatHollow Middle Schoolhad their original poetry published in the Pine Tree Poetry book for 2009.

For the third time in five years, the Nesaquake Middle School Trivia Team took first place in the Middle School Division of the Suffolk County United Cerebral Palsy Trivia Contest.

Matthew Hennings’ Sports Management Class at HS East recently had an opportunity to meet with Andy Collier from The Baseball Hall of Fame via videoconference. Students experienced a unique lesson in free enterprise through the evolution of contracts and commerce. In addition students had an opportunity to ask questions and engage in discussion with Mr. Collier.


Ms. Armstrong’s second graders from Smithtown Elementary held a videoconference with Michael Hare from the NASA Johnson Space Center to learn about the Solar System in the Distance Learning Lab at HS West. Students also had an opportunity to see live footage of the Astronaut Training Center and the International Space Station.
Through the Kids Helping Kids Book Drive, Accompsett students and parents donated more than 3,190 gently used or new books for the Hope’s Children’s Fund. The foundation will use these books to create a library for children in Africa. The Kids Helping Kids Book Drive was used to jump start the school’s PARP (Parents as Reading Partners) month.

Three DECA West students, Lauren Baruch, Thomas Kirnbauer and Connor Levens, won first place in New York State DECA Career Conference for their work on the Smithtown Solar/Energy Savings Initiative Public Relations Campaign.

Medal of Honor event honors heroic acts of ordinary people

By David Goldstein

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

ARLINGTON, Va. _ Six years ago, David Bryan, a 53-year-old federal worker from Kansas City, Mo., helped rescue a man from a burning Missouri Highway Patrol car on Interstate 70 near Higginsville, Mo., after it was struck by a 1-ton pickup truck.

So on National Medal of Honor Day, Bryan and two others received the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation's second annual "Above & Beyond Citizen Honors."

In the solemn chill of an early spring afternoon at Arlington National Cemetery on Wednesday, a ceremony recognized 35 recipients of the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest military award. The event also commended acts of courage by ordinary people such as Bryan.

They "remind us that every one of us has the capacity for tremendous courage and heroism," said the foundation's Robert Howard, a Medal of Honor recipient and Green Beret during the Vietnam War.

Other recipients were Jeremy Hernandez, a 22-year-old Minnesota youth worker; and Rick Rescorla of New Jersey, a security official who died on Sept. 11, 2001.

Hernandez saved more than 50 children in August 2007 when the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed in Minneapolis. Rescorla was a 62-year-old security official at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter when hijacked planes struck the World Trade Center. He evacuated thousands of people from the burning towers but wasn't seen again after they collapsed.

His son and daughter accepted the award.

"Heroes" has become a pretty shopworn label of late.

But if there is evidence to be found of heroism anywhere in the nation's capital, it's across the Potomac River, on a patch of rolling green meadows overlooking the city that enshrines lives that were lost, and battles won and the costs.

The ceremony took place just down the hill from the Tomb of the Unknowns, where the remains of unidentified Americans from the two world wars and Korea are interred.

Moments earlier, President Barack Obama had laid a wreath at the tomb, accompanied by four Medal of Honor recipients.

The president's visit had gone unannounced to avoid crowd control problems. He made no formal remarks, only his quiet thanks to each of the 35 highly decorated veterans as he shook their hands and patted their shoulders before leaving.

There are 98 living Medal of Honor recipients.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

At Bryan's award ceremony, he stood before the same group of Medal of Honor recipients Obama had visited. Bryan's first words were to thank the motorist who aided him in rescuing Michael Nolte from the burning highway patrol car on May 22, 2003. He was unable to save the state trooper.

"I want to include Troy Brinkoetter as part of this ceremony," Bryan said. "Troy was with me to help pull Michael Nolte from the car that day. He, too, deserves your thoughts."

Missouri State Trooper Michael Newton had stopped Nolte for a traffic violation and was writing him a ticket when the truck crashed into the patrol car. Newton died and Nolte was seriously injured.

Candidates for the award can be nominated by anyone through the foundation's Web site, and apparently no one nominated Brinkoetter. A group of judges, including several Medal of Honor winners, pick finalists from each state and narrow them down to three.

Foundation president Nick Kehoe said Bryan's name came to their attention, "but we appreciate the courage of Troy."

___

© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.

New apps change how you use mobile devices

By John Boudreau

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ They tell us where to eat, how to find friends, when to make a left turn.

Oh, and they can also make a phone call.

An explosive proliferation of software applications _ and easy ways to get them, most notably through Apple's App Store _ is changing our relationship with mobile phones. The always-connected era is dawning. The cell phone is becoming more a companion than merely a means of one-on-one conversation.

"I can't live without it," said James London, a 19-year-old De Anza College freshman, cradling his iPhone. "It's like water or food."

Though Apple was the first company to create an easy and orderly way for developers to sell smart phone software, the rest of the industry is trying to catch up.

Owners of all the major mobile phone operating systems _ Research In Motion, Windows Mobile, Palm, Symbian and Google's Android _ are gearing up online application stores. Independent app sites are also popping up, offering unauthorized software for the iPhone.

Soon, nearly every imaginable function of the office and home entertainment center will be delivered to the computers that fit our palms.

"I'm a big believer that the mobile phone will become the remote control of our lives," said Chetan Sharma, an independent wireless industry analyst. "Anything that we touch and see and feel, and whomever we communicate with _ we will control that with our mobile phones."

Though the recession is slowing sales of so-called smart phones, futurists view app-packed mobile devices as the next tech tsunami to hit society and fundamentally change how people navigate life.

"It's a new category of activity," said veteran Silicon Valley forecaster Paul Saffo. "Voice (functions) are an afterthought."

Already people are using their smart phones to locate friends at nearby bars and restaurants or find a service station with cheap gas. They stream TV to their phones, update Facebook pages on the go and play sophisticated games.

The Shazam program allows people to instantly identify a song and artist by holding the iPhone up to, say, a radio. The Trapster program for iPhone and BlackBerry uses crowd-sourcing to avoid speeding tickets _ the phone signals a warning when entering ticket zones. The Android Cab4me app helps hail a cab.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"It's my lifeline," said Grace Redmond, a 20-year-old San Jose State University student. "My iPhone was broken today. It ruined my day."

Redmond, who grew up in Virginia, relies on GPS-enabled programs to help her get around, and avoid getting lost in the Bay Area. She found the Urbanspoon app indispensable during a recent vacation to Seattle. "My phone told me where to eat," she said.

Giovanni Valasco, a 24-year-old Campbell, Calif., resident, treats his iPhone like a pocket Yellow Pages by using a business listings program. "I use it all the time."

De Anza College student London worries about an affliction common to BlackBerry users: sore neck. "I'm constantly looking down at my iPhone _ every 10 minutes."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Because their smart phone is with them everywhere they go, people develop far closer attachments to the devices than to their home PCs or laptops, said B.J. Fogg, a Stanford University researcher author of "Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do."

Sharma said people using smart phones spend 70 percent of their time doing things other than talking.

"They have become devices people use for productivity and leisure," he said. "They save time and they kill time."

Last year, some 34 million smart phones were sold in the United States, about 20 percent of the nation's overall mobile phone market of some 173 million units, according to research firm IDC. But by 2013, it predicts nearly half the mobile phones purchased in the United States will be smart phones.

"The sea change is starting to happen," said IDC analyst Sean Ryan.

But there are barriers to smart phone ubiquity. Perhaps the biggest challenge is the cost of data plans. Apple's U.S. iPhone partner, AT&T, for instance, offers a basic data and voice plan for about $80 a month with taxes. That's almost $1,000 a year, which can be a hard sell to the general population, particularly in tough economic times.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"The prices of service plans are big impediments for many people," said Shaw Wu, analyst with Kaufman Brothers. "It's not cheap."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

But service providers have a lot at stake _ analyst Sharma said they pulled in $34 billion last year in data charges _ and are likely to compete fiercely, which could push down costs and expand consumer options.

Hints of the future can be found at Apple's App Store, which now offers some 27,000 iPhone applications, according to 148Apps.com, a San Francisco Web site that reviews iPhone apps. Some of those are given away for free, while many are sold for less than $3. As of mid-January, Apple said there had been 500 million downloads from the App Store, which opened in July.

"It's like a concierge. When you have a problem, it can help solve it for you," said Stanford's Fogg. "Nothing is as close to us all the time _ not even your spouse or partner."

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit Mercury Center, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Lawmakers poised to make cuts to Obama's budget

By David Lightman

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ Congress will begin rewriting President Barack Obama's $3.55 trillion fiscal 2010 budget Wednesday, and key lawmakers are poised to change some of his most ambitious plans significantly.

"There will be change, there's no question," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., a Senate Appropriations Committee member.

The House of Representatives and Senate budget committees hope to cut hundreds of billions of dollars from the president's outline.

Obama originally proposed a 10.1 percent increase in key nondefense domestic spending last month, according to Senate Budget Committee estimates, and Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D., wants to hold the increase to about 7 percent. Conrad also wants to eliminate a $250 billion reserve that Obama wants for future bailouts of troubled companies.

The committees are unlikely to back resorting to a controversial legislative tactic that would make it easier to win Senate approval of carbon emission curbs, however.

The president, who plans to meet Wednesday at the Capitol with Senate Democrats, is contending that he will have succeeded if the final budget achieves four general goals: making a "down payment" on a health care overhaul; creating a "path to energy independence"; overhauling education; and cutting the "inherited" deficit in half by 2013.

Few lawmakers from either party would disagree with those principles, but they're sharply divided over how to attain them _ and alarmed by new deficit projections.

Obama's budget estimated that the 2010 deficit would reach $1.17 trillion, but the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office last week projected the figure at $1.4 trillion. The CBO also issued new, dire warnings about the future. By 2019, it said, debt held by the public would double to 82 percent of the gross domestic product if the president's budget becomes law.

The new figures have made Democratic budget leaders in Congress more aggressive about cutting Obama's budget. Conrad will offer a plan Wednesday to cut the deficit to $508 billion by fiscal year 2014.

Among the changes that are being seriously discussed:

_The non-filibuster rule. The president's budget team has considered using the budget "reconciliation" process to bring up complex changes in health care and carbon emissions "cap-and-trade" measures. That tactic permits the Senate to enact budget-related bills with only a simple majority of the 100-member body.

Usually Senate rules permit a minority to hold up legislation until 60 members vote to move to a final vote. Democrats control 58 Senate seats, so they could ram big programs through under "reconciliation." Republicans object, however, and even some Democrats remember that when they were in the minority, they valued minority-protection rules.

The House Democratic Blue Dog Coalition, a group of 51 party moderates, has made it clear that it doesn't want the reconciliation process used to change policy. Also, senators from industrial states, worried about the impact of a cap-and-trade system to limit emissions from the auto industry, are voicing concern.

Still, House Democratic leaders are balking at abandoning the tactic for winning an overhaul of health care.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Using the tactic could wound already-bruised relations with Republicans. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who cast a crucial vote for last month's economic stimulus package, said she flatly opposed using the tactic for such big issues.

"Reconciliation should not be used to implement a major policy change," she said. "It's unfair to those who hold minority views."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

_The financial rescue plan. Obama's budget lists a $250 billion "placeholder" aimed at giving more help to ailing industries, but Congress seems in no mood to provide it. Since the first major bailouts last fall, lawmakers have heard repeatedly from angry constituents who oppose government aid to shaky companies.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"I don't think it should stay in. I don't think there's enough support for any additional rescue plans at this point," said Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., a key moderate.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada agreed. "I have no problem with that. ... If it's an emergency we can do it."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

_Nondefense discretionary spending. The Senate Budget Committee says the president wants a 10.1 percent increase in domestic discretionary spending, which includes most education, labor, transportation and other popular programs.

The Blue Dogs want spending on these programs held to the rate of inflation, which is nearly zero, and Senate moderates also are concerned about runaway spending. Conrad is expected to recommend a 7 percent spending increase, but that's going to be a hard line to hold in the House, where liberals have more clout.

This looms as one of the biggest budget battles. A coalition of liberal groups began mobilizing Tuesday against major cuts from Obama's wish list, and House leaders, many of them sympathetic to liberal causes, are said to be balking at cuts too.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

_Pell grants. Currently, Congress and the president decide each year how much money this program to aid lower-income students should receive. Obama wants to make it an "entitlement," guaranteeing that it would get a certain level of funding each year.

He's proposed a maximum award of $5,550 for the 2010-11 school year, a sum that would be indexed to the rate of inflation plus 1 percent annually after that. Conrad would preserve Obama's increases, but wouldn't make the grants a full entitlement program, meaning that Congress would have more discretion to make changes each year.

Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the top House Budget Committee Republican, said that while he backed Pell grants, the president's plan would make it "another autopilot entitlement, immune from congressional oversight at precisely the time when we should be reforming" entitlements.

___

ON THE WEB

President Obama's 2010 budget outline: http://tinyurl.com/bcbxk6

Concord Coalition's budget analysis: http://tinyurl.com/cwjb2e

White House plan on Pell Grants, other education revisions: http://tinyurl.com/a9tvlo

___

© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.

E-cigarette sparks attention as FDA crackdown looms

By Ken Mclaughlin

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ The young man in the tall swivel chair at the mall seems lost in nicotine nirvana as he takes a deep drag on a cigarette and blows smoke rings to the surprise of passing shoppers.

Sarah Kruberg, a 21-year-old college student from Portola Valley, Calif., does a double take but keeps walking.

"I knew it couldn't be someone smoking a cigarette," she said with a laugh. "But I didn't know what it was."

What Kruberg saw at Westfield Valley Fair mall in Santa Clara, Calif., was a kiosk salesman puffing away on an electronic cigarette, a new product that Jose Canseco, the steroid-tainted baseball slugger turned e-cigarette pitchman, predicts will "revolutionize the industry of smoking."

Health officials worldwide, however, are casting a wary eye.

Last summer a Florida company began aggressively marketing e-cigarettes _ which emit a nicotine vapor with the help of a computer chip _ but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration now seems poised to pull e-cigs from the market because the agency considers them "new drugs." That means they need approval from the FDA, which requires companies to back up their claims with scientific data.

"It is illegal to sell or market them, and the FDA is looking into this," said Rita Chappelle, an agency spokeswoman.

Asked if that meant the FDA would crack down on the dozens of mall kiosks nationwide where the product is being sold like perfume and cellphone covers, Chappelle said: "This is an open case. Beyond that I cannot comment."

Informed of the FDA's position, David Burke, general manager at Westfield Valley Fair, said Monday that the shopping center is looking into the legality of the product. "All our retailers are required to comply with applicable federal, state and local laws and regulations," he said.

Invented in China several years ago, the e-cig not only "smokes" like a cigarette. It also looks like a cigarette, feels like a cigarette, glows like a cigarette and contains nicotine like a cigarette.

But it's not a cigarette. It's a slender stainless-steel tube.

When someone puffs on an e-cigarette, a computer-aided sensor activates a heating element that vaporizes a solution _ usually containing nicotine _ in the mouthpiece. The resulting mist _ which comes in flavors such as chocolate and cherry _ can be inhaled. A light-emitting diode on the tip of the e-cigarette simulates the glow of burning tobacco. The device is powered by a rechargable lithium battery.

Its boosters say it's the perfect way to quit smoking because the nicotine mist contains no tar or any of the host of cancer-causing agents of tobacco smoke _ yet has the touch and feel of smoking. That, they say, makes the e-cigarette superior to other nicotine-delivery systems such as patches, chewing gum, aerosol sprays and inhalers.

The levels of nicotine can be adjusted, from "high" to no nicotine at all. That, e-cig supporters say, allows smokers to wean themselves from nicotine, which most doctors say is highly addictive but not, as far as they know, a carcinogen.

The product's aficionados say that because it contains no tobacco, it can be used in bars, nightclubs, restaurants and other public places where states and localities have banned tobacco use.

But anti-smoking groups say that's exactly the problem. They fear that it will reintroduce a "smoking culture" into places where people no longer are used to seeing wisps of smoke and cigarettes hanging from people's mouths.

"I understand why people use the nicotine replacement aids," said Serena Chen, regional tobacco policy director of the American Lung Association in California. "But I don't understand why people want to pretend that they're smoking."

Chen believes that many ex-smokers will conclude that the e-cigarette is harmless and be lured back into the smoking trap.

"If you had a serial killer who liked to stab people, would you give him a rubber knife?" asked Chen. "This just boggles the mind."

Executives at Smoking Everywhere, the Sunrise, Fla., firm that is marketing the product on the Internet and in mall kiosks, say criticism of the e-cigarette is irrational.

"The mist is mostly water. It has to be better for you than smoking," said Eitan Peer, vice president of the company. "It's been approved by doctors. We've been on Fox News. We've been on the 'Howard Stern Show.' Our spokesmen are Jose Canseco and Danny Bonaduce."

Company officials say the other main ingredient in the e-cig is propylene glycol, which is used in everything from Hollywood smoke machines to food colorings to hydraulic fluids.

Peer said the suggested retail price of the Chinese-made e-cig is $149, but because the kiosk operators are independent vendors, the price varies.

The other day, Dan Conroy picked up his e-cigarette "starter kit" from one of the two Smoking Everywhere kiosks at Valley Fair for $140, plus tax.

"It's the first time I've seen the product," said Conroy, 37, a Sacramento, Calif., contractor. "But I'm interested in quitting, and this has to be healthier than tobacco."

He and several other smokers interviewed at the mall agreed that e-smoke isn't as satisfying or rich as tobacco smoke. But they all said they thought they could get used to it.

"It tastes pretty good," said Oliver De La Cruz, 29, of Daly City, Calif., whose wife, Kristine, was about to give birth to their first child. She encouraged him to try the e-cig, saying it would be a wonderful present to their newborn if Daddy would quit smoking.

But both De La Cruz and one nicotine-addicted friend, 23-year-old Marco Maneru of Daly City, said they wanted to do some research on the e-cigarette before they buy one.

"Who knows?" Maneru said. "There could be some chemicals in there that are really bad for you."

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit MercuryNews.com, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.mercurynews.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Fire Threat

Bulletin: Red Flag Warning issued again for LI Tues
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Videoconferencing Broadens Knowledge of High School Students



Matthew Hennings Sports Management Class at Smithtown High School East recently had an opportunity to meet with Andy Collier from The Baseball Hall of Fame via videoconference. Students experienced a unique lesson in free enterprise through the evolution of contracts and commerce and have a better understanding of the decision-making process that defines the employer-employee relationship, including negotiation, conflict resolution and contract enforcement. In addition, students had an opportunity to ask questions and engage in discussion with Mr. Collier.

Fire Threat Continues Tuesday

By James Brierton
The MatadorOnline.com

With dry grass and breezy conditions expected again Tuesday, the National Weather Service has once again issued a Red Flag Warning for Long Island.

Multiple fire departments, including Centereach, Nesconset and Lake Grove, were on scene of a fire in Lake Grove Tuesday afternoon. The brush fire broke out in woodlands behind a local elementary school and came within a few dozen feet of nearby homes.

The National Weather Service had issued a Red Flag Warning for the entire tri-state Monday and reissued it for Long Island Tuesday morning.

"Residents are urged to keep vehicle out of grassy areas and to ensure proper disposal of any smoking materials," says a forecaster from the National Weather Service identified only as "JST" in the forecast. "It only takes a careless disposal of a cigarette to ignite a wild fire and with the dry and windy weather conditions a small fire could spread rapidly."

Treasury to spend $100 billion to lure investment in bad securities

By Jim Puzzanghera and Walter Hamilton

Tribune Washington Bureau

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ The Obama administration on Monday released the long-awaited details of its plan to cleanse banks of bad home loans and other toxic assets, igniting a major Wall Street rally as investors glimpsed what might be the beginning of the end of a problem at the core of the financial crisis.

The Dow rocketed nearly 500 points after Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner briefed reporters on the administration's innovative but untested plan, which makes a strategic bet that partnering with private investors to buy the assets will stabilize the crisis while limiting the risk to taxpayers.

"We believe that this is one more element that is going to be absolutely critical in getting credit flowing again," President Barack Obama said. "It's not going to happen overnight. There's still great fragility in the financial systems. But we think we are moving in the right direction."

The new Public-Private Investment Program will use $75 billion to $100 billion in federal financial rescue money to lure private investors to join with the government in purchasing as much as $1 trillion in bad subprime mortgages, mortgage-backed securities and other troubled assets that are dragging down the balance sheets of financial institutions.

With Wall Street greeting the plan optimistically, experts said, the potential for generous government financing could entice investors into the troubled sector.

"I like where they're going," said Frank Pallotta, a principal at Loan Value Group in Rumson, N.J., a consulting firm that advises buyers and sellers of distressed mortgage assets. "It's a step in the right direction."

Two large money management firms, Pimco in Newport Beach, Calif., and BlackRock Inc. in New York, said they would participate in the asset-purchase program. And the Financial Services Roundtable, which represents large banks that would put assets up for sale and private-equity firms that would buy them, said it heard positive feedback Monday.

Geithner on Monday tried to ease concerns among potential investors in the toxic assets that Congress might change the rules later, reflecting a worry raised by congressional outrage over the $165 million in retention bonuses paid to employees at bailed-out insurance giant American International Group.

Getting investors to join with the government and take the risk of buying the bad assets "will require confidence among investors there's clearly established rules of the game consistently enforced going forward." Geithner said the administration would work with Congress to strike the right balance. The administration understands the anger over the bonuses, he said, and more broadly at the financial institutions that helped cause the crisis by making risky investments.

For that reason, the program is designed to limit the risk to taxpayers of cleaning up those assets, while also trying to lure private investors to help participate in the cleanup.

Geithner said the program would allow the government to share with private investors both the risks of acquiring the bad assets and the potential gains if they are bought at low enough prices. That innovative idea was selected as a better alternative to having the government buy up all the assets itself or simply allowing banks to work through the problems on their own.

"The alternative strategies would have the government either taking on all that risk ourselves, having all those losses on our balance sheet, or sitting back and let this process of deleveraging continue to weigh on the American economy, pushing viable businesses closer to the edge," Geithner said.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

The final details are still being developed and the Treasury Department hopes to launch the program within the coming weeks, in participation with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Federal Reserve. The FDIC and the Fed are partners because they have large amounts of money to provide loan guarantees.

The FDIC also has experience in selling financial assets, which it does after it seizes failed banks.

The new Treasury program targets two groups of assets that are at the center of the financial crisis: bad mortgage loans being held by banks and securities containing those loans that are held by banks and other financial institutions. The values of those assets have plummeted with the collapse of the housing market, making them almost impossible to sell. That dynamic has dragged down the value of financial institutions and made it extremely difficult for them to raise the money to provide new loans. The resulting credit crunch has pushed the financial system into crisis, deepening the recession.

Geithner's plan involves using government loans and guarantees to lure investors to buy the assets at discounted prices.

"A principal virtue of this mechanism is to use the financial interests of investors to help set the price. Because they have money at risk, they're going to make better judgments about how to set the price for these assets than the government could hope to make," Geithner said. "We have seen and I expect to see a lot of interest from the private sector."

Scott Talbott, senior vice president of government affairs for the Financial Services Roundtable, said the plan will help determine prices for the assets even if it isn't widely used, resolving the main issue holding up their sale. "They're not toxic because they have no value, they're simply toxic because they have no market, and because there is no market we don't know what the price is," Talbott said. "The proposal today cuts the Gordian knot and provides an elegant solution to an elusive problem."

___

© 2009, Tribune Co.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

_____

Sandbaggers race against time as Red River rises

By Bill McAuliffe, Matt McKinney and Bob von Sternberg

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

FARGO, N.D. _ Mud-soaked and aching, residents of Breckenridge, Minn., spent Monday trying to build a walled city against the marauding Red River and its tributaries.

By evening, after a day of sandbagging to fill gaps in permanent dikes, residents and officials believed they were protected 1 foot higher than the 19-foot crest predicted to pass through the city beginning at midday Tuesday.

"That was critical," said Wilkin County highway engineer Tom Richels. "We're feeling pretty good right now."

Thousands of volunteers up and down the Red River Valley toiled mightily Monday as potential record flooding threatened those along the north-flowing river. In Fargo, where classes at North Dakota State University were postponed indefinitely so students could help, sandbaggers worked to fill nearly 2 million sandbags ahead of Thursday's anticipated crest.

"This is coming up way faster than in 1997. We had a lot more time then," said college student Krista Ramstad as she took a break Monday night with tired friends who were filling sandbags in the Fargodome. Some of them had worked since Sunday morning.

Already main roads _ Interstate 29 on the North Dakota side and Hwy. 75 in Minnesota _ were closed between Wahpeton, N.D., and Fargo because portions were under water.

Richels estimated Monday morning that 80 percent of his county's roads outside the city of Breckenridge were under water and closed.

It probably will only get worse as heavy rain, eventually turning to snow, will bedevil the region this week.

According to the National Weather Service, rain will accumulate by as much as an inch before turning Tuesday night to snow that will linger through the rest of the week.

That could be a mixed blessing, as colder temperatures slow the melting that's feeding the flood, but make it tougher for volunteers to erect the cities' flood defenses.

As night fell Monday, heavy rain was falling in Breckenridge, accompanied by thunder and lightning.

Rain of more than half an inch in the region could push the city's crest toward 20 feet, higher even than the 19.4-foot record set in 1997, which devastated Breckenridge, its sister city of Wahpeton across the river, and began a wave of misery that culminated at Grand Forks, N.D., and beyond.

For some homeowners, slinging sandbags is becoming a wearying spring routine.

Chris Vedder, heaving sandbags in a long line of volunteers trying to protect some private homes across the street from where she and her husband live, said the effort had a strange effect on her.

"You get happy to see another semi" filled with sandbags, she said. "It's a real sick excitement."

Vedder's home in Breckenridge was raised 3 feet after the foundation caved in 1997. "We can't keep doing this," she said.

Hydrologists have indicated that this year's flooding is the result of not enough of last fall's record rains draining into rivers. Much of that rain froze solid and deep in the soil, holding it all winter, along with deeper-than-average winter snows.

That said, a diversion ditch built after the 1997 flood is supposed to keep the water away from downtown Breckenridge. "We think it's going to do what it was designed to do," said Steve Buan, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service's regional forecast.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

The concrete floor of the Fargodome, the city stadium that was supposed to be getting prepared for a championship rodeo competition, instead held hundreds of volunteers swarming six piles of sand. There was no hi-tech sandbagging machinery here, just shovels and white plastic bags. A crowd of 200 volunteers swarmed the floor Monday evening, their pants and sweatshirts covered in sand as they piled 40-pound bags onto pallets for waiting bulldozers and trucks to haul away.

"The evening shift is the toughest and we've had to shut down for lack of volunteers in the middle of the night," Fargo Mayor Dennis Walaker said. "But today, we've got people coming from (NDSU) and the high school, so that should help. We still need 400 to 500 people a shift to pull this off. But things are looking better than yesterday."

Eighty football players from NDSU took shifts Monday. Public high school students were to be released if they wanted to help. Even inmates got into the act, with Cass County jail residents filling sandbags overnight.

"I think today was a really good day," said Kristi Brandt, who held open a bag as her sons Alex, 6, and Jacob, 11, worked nearby.

Memories of the 1997 flood that devastated Grand Forks have people in Fargo prepared for the worst. Ramstad, the college student who said her family lost half of their belongings in that flood, said her parents were once again shoring up their house in Ada, Minn., against a rising tide. "I was supposed to leave for school (Sunday) when my mom started screaming from the basement because the water's rushing down the walls," she said.

Her father, a highway department supervisor, hasn't been home for five days while he fights the flood elsewhere.

Ramstad said she doesn't want to go back to school. For now, she wants to sandbag.

"We were out earlier building dikes," said Jeran Hilde, who said he worked until 1 a.m. early Monday on the relief effort.

"I couldn't sit up this morning," said Ramstad, whose jeans were covered with sand. "This is pretty much what I've been wearing for the last 48 hours."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

A student from Horace, N.D., a small town just outside Fargo, said crews shut off the city water recently to relieve the drains.

"They just turned it back on today but the whole town smells like sewer," said Jaden Fedora. No one has lost their house there, she said, but there wasn't much in the way of sandbags to stop the water.

Back on the floor of the Fargodome, volunteers prepared to work into the night.

"We can use as many as we can get," said Capt. Lee Soeth of the Fargo Fire Department.

"I'm doing as much as I can, I guess," said Matt Blum, an NDSU student.

He held a bag open while a friend loaded it with sand. Behind him sat a pile of empty white bags.

Nearby, Fargo elementary school teacher Sheri Wanzek said she planned to stay, "until I tire out."

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Alaska volcano remains active after morning blast

By George Bryon

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska _ Since an erupting Mount Redoubt sent an ash cloud shooting nearly 12 miles high early Monday morning with its fifth and strongest explosion, the Cook Inlet volcano has remained highly active, the Alaska Volcano Observatory reports.

Six to seven smaller, subsequent explosions lasting about two minutes apiece have sent additional ash and gas into the atmosphere since the big blast at 4:30 a.m., AVO staff scientist Chris Waythomas said.

Ash has now been detected at 60,000 feet above sea level, the National Weather Service reported.

Midlevel winds are still carrying the ash plume north over the Susitna Valley, and minor ash fall has been reported in Skwentna, Willow, Trapper Creek and Talkeetna, according to the Weather Service, the Matanuska-Susitna Borough and eyewitness reports. Traces of ash also have now been reported in Denali National Park and at the village of Nikolai to the west.

High-elevation winds above 40,000 feet are beginning to veer toward Anchorage, but no ash is expected to fall on Alaska's largest city at this time, Bob Hopkins, the meteorologist-in-charge of the National Weather Service office in Anchorage, said.

"Eight miles up _ that's going to stay there," Hopkins said. "But that will affect aircraft at that altitude."

It's the lower-elevation winds between 10,000 and 20,000 feet, currently blowing north by northeast, that are most likely to carry ash to the ground, Hopkins said.

In the Su Valley, the ash fall is being described as fine gray dust around Skwentna, Trapper Creek and Talkeetna.

The eruption has apparently destroyed the "RSO" seismometer on the south flank of the volcano, as well as the AVO webcam inside a hut six miles from the summit, Waythomas said.

Two additional seismometers on Redoubt's north and east slopes were nonoperational for a while Monday morning, but that was due to a power outage on the Kenai Peninsula, he said.

By midmorning, residents in Kenai began reporting a sulfur smell in the air, but no ash had yet fallen there and schools are open, officials said.

Redoubt began erupting Sunday night, with the first explosion coming at 10:38 p.m., followed by another at 11:02 p.m., a third at 12:14 a.m. and a fourth at 1:39 a.m., the AVO reported.

Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport remains open, although some airlines have canceled or diverted flights. Alaska Airlines reported canceling 19 flights in and out of Anchorage because of the ash but other flights are operating.

Elmendorf Air Force Base reported that 60 planes, including fighter jets, cargo aircraft and a Boeing 747 commercial plane, are being sheltered. The base initially ordered only essential personnel to report for duty; that was later changed to all personnel reporting at 8 a.m.

Mount Redoubt, a 10,197-foot stratovolcano 100 miles southwest of Anchorage, last erupted during a fourth-month period in 1989-90. Its recent period of volcanic unrest began Jan. 25.

An official with the Federal Aviation Administration at the Anchorage airport early Monday said there were no immediate plans to close the airport.

The Weather Service advised people in areas of ash fall to seal windows and doors, protect electronics and cover air intakes and open water supplies as well as minimize driving.

___

© 2009, Anchorage Daily News (Anchorage, Alaska).

Visit the Anchorage Daily News online at http://www.adn.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Three Smithtown Juniors Have Been Awarded a Simons Summer Research Fellowship at Stony Brook University


Valentine Esposito and HSE Research Teacher Maria Trinkle

(SMITHTOWN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT) - Congratulations to Valentine Esposito, Reena Glaser and Jessica Noviello. Only 32 juniors are selected to participate in this prestigious program which receives applications from students throughout the country. According to a Simons release, the program "gives academically talented, motivated high school students who are between their junior & senior years the opportunity to engage in hands-on research in science, math or engineering at Stony Brook University. Simons Fellows work with distinguished faculty mentors, learn laboratory techniques and tools, become part of active research teams, and experience life at a research university." Along with this wonderful opportunity, a $1000 stipend will be awarded to each participant. Dr. Joanne Figueiredo, coordinator of the research program at West, believes that Reena and Jessica are dedicated students that epitomize a positive work ethic. Dr. Figueiredo stated that the knowledge that Reena and Jessica acquire at Stony Brook this summer will enhance their senior year experiences. Reena Glaser will be working with Dr. Marcia Simon and Dr. Miriam Rifailovich and Jessica Noviello will be working with Dr. David Krause. According to Ms. Trinkle, coordinator of the program at East, “Valentine is an exceptional student who goes above and beyond what is required to meet with success in a research setting. Her commitment to excellence is impeccable. Her affable nature makes her a joy to work with, and I anticipate much success for this lovely young lady.”

Red Flag Warning Issued

...RED FLAG WARNING IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM EDT THIS EVENING...

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON HAS ISSUED A RED FLAG
WARNING...WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM EDT THIS EVENING.

NORTHWEST WINDS OF 15 TO 20 MPH WITH FREQUENT GUSTS UP TO 25 MPH
WERE ALREADY OCCURRING IN SPOTS OVER EASTERN LONG ISLAND LATE THIS
MORNING...AND WILL BE WIDESPREAD THIS AFTERNOON AND EARLY
EVENING...ALONG WITH MINIMUM RELATIVE HUMIDITIES OF 15 TO 20
PERCENT. IF IGNITION OCCURS...THESE WEATHER CONDITIONS IN
COMBINATION WITH DRY FINE FUELS DUE TO LACK OF RECENT WETTING
RAINS AND LACK OF GREENUP WOULD PROMOTE RAPID FIRE GROWTH THIS
AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A RED FLAG WARNING MEANS THAT CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS
ARE OCCURRING OR IMMINENT. A COMBINATION OF STRONG WINDS...LOW
RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND DRY FUELS WILL PROMOTE RAPID FIRE GROWTH.

&&

$$

BG/BS/TM

Plane crashes in Montana, killed up to 17 people

By Phillip Reese and Jennifer Garza

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. _ A plane that left Oroville, a small town about 70 miles north of Sacramento, Calif., this morning crashed in Montana three hours later, killing up to 17 people, a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman said.

"The plane was in route from Oroville to Bozeman for reasons we don't know," said FAA spokesman Les Dorr. "They diverted into Butte and crashed 500 feet short of the runway."

Tom Hagler, a mechanic at the Oroville airport, said this evening he arrived at the airport at 11 a.m. and saw the plane. He let about a dozen children who were on the plane use the airport bathroom. The plane didn't refuel.

Hagler said he spoke briefly with the pilot but he didn't recognize the pilot or any of the children. He didn't know if any members of the group were local.

Hagler said he would be surprised if as many as 17 people could have been on the single prop plane.

An FAA spokesman told the Associated Press the children could have been part of a ski trip.

The plane had left Redlands, Calif., early today and flew to Vacaville, Calif., according to records at flightaware.com. It stayed in Vacaville for 50 minutes before taking a short flight to Oroville. It was on the ground in Oroville for 30 minutes before leaving for Montana.

Oroville law enforcement authorities said they knew nothing about the plane.

Dorr says the plane was registered to Eagle Cap Leasing Inc. in Enterprise, Ore., but he didn't know who was operating the plane.

___

© 2009, The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.).

Visit The Sacramento Bee online at http://www.sacbee.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

4th Oakland cop dies following shootouts that killed 3 officers, parolee


Police officers hide behind cars after hearing shots fired during a second shooting during a manhunt of a suspect who shot two more police officers Saturday Mach 21, 2009. In the most horrific day in Oakland Police Department history, a parolee shot to death three police sergeants within two hours of one another Saturday afternoon. When officers tracked down the suspect, a fourth officer was shot and was pronounced dead Sunday morning. (Dan Rosenstrauch/Contra Costa Times/MCT)

By Jessie Mangaliman and Mary Anne Ostrom

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ A fourth Oakland police officer has died following two separate shootouts in which three other officers and a parolee were killed.

John Hege, 41, who had been with the Oakland department since 1999, was pronounced dead at Highland Hospital shortly before noon today, said Jeff Thomason, a department spokesman.

The three other Oakland police officers were pronounced dead Saturday after a traffic stop and, later, as a SWAT team tried to apprehend the man.

The gunman, Lovelle Mixon, 27, of Oakland was fatally shot after police tracked him down to a nearby apartment.

Acting Police Chief Howard Jordan identified the other slain officers as: Sgt. Mark Dunakin, 40, who was killed during the traffic stop; and Sgt. Ervin Romans, 43, and Sgt. Daniel Sakai, 35, both killed at the apartment where the gunman was holed up. Dunakin was with the department since 1991, Romans since 1996 and Sakai since 2000.

A fifth officer, whom police did not identify, was grazed by a bullet. He was treated and released from Highland.

The killings were among the deadliest shootings of police officers in California history.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

They deeply affected Oakland police officers, California Highway Patrol officers and Alameda County sheriff deputies. Many of them were also at Highland on Saturday and this morning, hugging one another and wiping away tears of grief and shock.

"Everyone is pouring out their hearts," said Acting Police Chief Jordan said during a news conference late Saturday.

"We feel a tremendous sense of loss," said Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

After the first shooting of two police officers on motorcycles on MacArthur Boulevard, the gunman fled from the scene. Mixon was wanted on a no-bail arrest warrant for violating parole on a previous assault with a deadly weapon conviction, police said.

A tip led police about two hours later to an apartment one-tenth of a mile away in the 2700 block of 74th Avenue, blocks from a police substation in East Oakland. Heavily armed SWAT team members descended on the apartment building to take the suspect into custody.

Business workers and media responding to reports of the shootout on 74th Avenue described a "Wild West" scene, where cops yelled at pedestrians to get down and take cover behind cars.

Two more police officers were shot dead while trying to take the suspect into custody. Police said the two officers were shot inside the apartment with an assault weapon. A second weapon, which police did not identify, was used to shoot the motorcycle cops.

Traffic officers pulled over the parolee's 1995 Buick at 1:08 p.m. near the Eastmont Town Center. Eight minutes later, a caller reported two officers down in the 7400 block of MacArthur Boulevard.

After hearing gunshots, a barbershop worker nearby said he walked down the block to find the two officers on the ground near each other. He said he attempted CPR until police arrived.

"I went over to one officer and saw he was bleeding from his helmet pretty bad," said the worker, who asked not to be identified. "The other officer was laying motionless."

The officer lying near a car appeared to have two gunshots to his head. One bullet, the worker said, appeared lodged in the jaw, another in the neck.

The incident involving the gunman "is bad because he's a state ward, he's a state parolee, they let him out," said California Attorney General Jerry Brown, a former Oakland mayor. "There are hundreds of shooters walking around the East Bay. Our parole system isn't working."

Howard said Oakland police investigators believe no suspect other than Mixon was involved in the shootings. He was on parole for a conviction on assault with a deadly weapon.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Tensions have been high between police and many Oakland residents since the shooting death Jan. 1 of Oscar Grant, 22, by a BART police officer at an Oakland transit station. After Grant's death, violent protests erupted in Oakland streets.

By Saturday night, a dozen pastors were calling for calm in the city.

At the lobby of the police administration building, four bunches of white roses were placed at the bottom of a memorial that lists the names of 47 Oakland police officers who have been killed in the line of duty since 1867. The last on the list was an Oakland police officer killed in January 1999.

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© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

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_____

PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): OFFICERSSHOT

Astronauts' spacewalk should ease workload for future missions

By Robert Block

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

ORLAND, Fla. _ U.S. astronauts Steve Swanson and Joe Acaba ventured outside the international space station Saturday for a six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk aimed at easing the workload of future spacewalkers. But the excursion was not a complete success: the pair completed only some of the tasks on their orbital to-do list.

Crawling hand over hand, Swanson and Acaba made it all the way to the end of the station's power-grid framework and loosened bolts holding down batteries that must be replaced during the next shuttle visit to the station in June.

They also installed a second Global Positioning Satellite antenna on the Japanese Kibo laboratory that will help a Japanese cargo ship dock with the lab in September. In addition, the astronauts photographed a damaged radiator with an infrared camera.

But a problem prevented the full deployment of a cargo storage platform on the station's power truss and scrapped plans to unfold another. Swanson also had trouble reconfiguring connectors that power some of the station's gyroscopes, and only managed to partially complete the job.

Still, NASA applauded the tasks that were accomplished and recognized it was a tough day for the spacewalkers. "We sure appreciate the hard work you did for our beautiful space station," commander Mike Fincke radioed the spacewalkers at the end of the walk. "You guys proved that flexibility is definitely key."

It was the Discovery crew's second spacewalk in three days, bringing the total time spent outside the orbiting complex during the mission to 12 hours and 37 minutes. The spacewalk was the fourth for Swanson and the first for Acaba, a former teacher at Melbourne High in Brevard County, Fla.

The mission's final spacewalk is planned for Monday.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

While Swanson and Acaba toiled in the void of space, astronauts inside the station were also busy, testing a replacement part on the station's new water recycling unit that turns urine and sweat into clean drinking water. The original part failed shortly after it was installed late last year. Recycling urine is critical to NASA's long-range plans to support a full-time crew of six on the space station.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Shuttle Discovery will depart the space station Wednesday.

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© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Obama's Special Olympics joke creates a stir around the nation

By Rob Hotakainen

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ It seemed like a harmless remark.

In an appearance Thursday night on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno," President Barack Obama made a joke about his lackluster bowling skills by saying: "It was like Special Olympics or something."

But the comment caused an immediate stir in Washington and around the nation.

Appearing at the White House after meeting with Obama to discuss roads and bridges, California Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he knew Obama meant nothing by it.

"I know where his heart is at," said Schwarzenegger, who considers the Special Olympics his favorite charity, appearing at major competitions and raising money around the world. "He loves Special Olympics, and he will do everything he can to help Special Olympics. And every one of us sometimes makes a mistake. Something comes out of your mouth and you say, 'Oops, I wish I wouldn't have said that.' I've had many of those."

Earlier in the day, California first lady Maria Shriver _ whose mother, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founded the Special Olympics movement in 1968 _ said that while she was confident Obama didn't intend to offend anyone, the remark "demonstrates the need to continue to educate the non-disabled community on the issues that confront those with a developmental disability."

Alaska Republican Gov. Sarah Palin said she was "shocked to learn" about Obama's comment.

"This was a degrading remark about our world's most precious and unique people, coming from the most powerful position in the world," said Palin, whose son, Trig, was born with Down syndrome last year. "These athletes overcome more challenges, discrimination and adversity than most of us ever will.''

"By the way, these athletes can outperform many of us and we should be proud of them," said Palin, who appeared in a video promoting this year's winter Special Olympics games in Boise, Idaho. "I hope President Obama's comments do not reflect how he truly feels about the special needs community."

The White House sought to explain Obama's comment by calling it "an offhand remark."

"The president made an offhand remark making fun of his own bowling that was in no way intended to disparage the Special Olympics," said White House spokesman Bill Burton. "He thinks that the Special Olympics are a wonderful program that gives an opportunity to shine to people with disabilities from around the world."

Obama issued his apology to Special Olympics Chairman Timothy Shriver, the brother of Maria Shriver. Timothy Shriver said Obama "was sincere and heartfelt" in his apology, but added, "Words hurt and words matter."

Shriver, noting that Special Olympics operates more than 30,000 events a year in more than 180 countries, said Obama's comments provided "a teachable moment for our country."

In a statement, Maria Shriver said her mother had dedicated her life "to fighting stereotypes and ridicule for this community, and there is still much work to be done."

"The president's apology for his comments and his commitment to bringing the Special Olympics to the White House are important first steps in shedding light on this important issue," she said. "Oftentimes we don't realize that when we laugh at comments like this it hurts millions of people throughout the world. People with special needs are great athletes and productive citizens, and I look forward to working with the president to knock down myths and stereotypes about this community."

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© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.

Obama gives Treasury secretary vote of confidence during '60 Minutes' interview

By Mark Silva

Tribune Washington Bureau

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ The besieged secretary of the Treasury gets a strong vote of confidence from President Barack Obama in a TV interview to be broadcast Sunday.

In a 90-minute session with "60 Minutes" interviewer Steve Kroft, Obama tells Kroft that if Timothy Geithner were to tender his resignation, he would tell him, "Sorry, buddy, you've still got the job."

The president stressed that neither he nor Geithner has mentioned resignation. But Obama said that criticism is natural, in light of the circumstances.

"It's going to take a little bit more time than we would like to make sure that we get this plan just right," Obama said. "Of course, then we'd still be subject to criticism _ 'What's taken so long? You've been in office a whole 40 days and you haven't solved the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression.' "

The president also discussed the proposed bonus tax for companies that have collected federal bailout money, health care, assistance for automakers, and the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Addressing national security, Obama had an answer for Vice President Dick Cheney's recent contention that the new president has put the nation at greater risk with his plans to close the detention center at Guantanamo Bay and prohibit torture of prisoners.

"How many terrorists have actually been brought to justice under the philosophy that is being promoted by Vice President Cheney?" Obama said. "It hasn't made us safer. What it has been is a great advertisement for anti-American sentiment."

Asked about released prisoners who have returned to terrorist groups, Obama said: "There is no doubt that we have not done a particularly effective job in sorting through who are truly dangerous individuals ... to make sure (they) are not a threat to us."

But the president said the Bush administration's policy on detainees at Guantanamo _ including long incarcerations without trial _ is "unsustainable."

Excerpts from the interview, taped Friday, will air on "60 Minutes" Sunday at 7 p.m. EDT.

___

© 2009, Tribune Co.

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Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Scientists examine how social networks influence behavior


Michael Kearns, a computer scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, is using controlled voting experiments to show how a minority view can change an overwhelming majority. He is shown in Philadelphia, Pennsyvlania, on March 13, 2009. (Tom Gralish/Philadelphia Inquirer/MCT)

By Faye Flam

The Philadelphia Inquirer

(MCT)

PHILADELPHIA _ Conventional wisdom holds that it's not what you know, it's who you know. But now scientists studying networking are starting to realize that when it comes to much in life, it's also who the people you know know, and perhaps also who those people know.

Drawing from computer science, math, sociology and other disciplines, researchers are starting to figure out how those branching thickets of human social networks are shaping our tastes, our purchases, how we vote, and even our health and happiness.

At the University of Pennsylvania, Michael Kearns is using controlled voting experiments to show how a small minority view can win over an overwhelming majority.

Kearns, a computer scientist and expert on machine learning and game theory, examines the connections between networks and human behavior in settings as diverse as voting and the vulnerability of the Internet to terrorism.

His human experiments and others like it could overturn our notion of the way trends and influence spread through society, said Duncan Watts, a physicist and networking expert at Yahoo.

Watts said the marketing field and much of the public have embraced the idea that humanity is run by a minority of well-connected "influentials" who help ideas spread like infectious viruses.

It's an idea popularized by books such as Malcolm Gladwell's "The Tipping Point." But nobody knows if it really works this way, Watts said.

"For all this discussion about influentials and how they drive word-of-mouth, there's no empirical evidence _ no real theory." Penn's Kearns, he said, is starting to bring a more hard-science approach to bear on the issue.

For his most recently published experiment, Kearns created a network from a group of 36 subjects. He put each one at a work station linked to between two and 18 of the others.

They were asked to vote for red or blue. If everyone in the group could agree on the same color within one minute, everyone would get rewarded with money. If they failed to reach consensus, they would get nothing.

But he gave the subjects different preferences. Some were told they'd get paid $1.50 for each round that red won and only 50 cents if blue won. For others the incentive was reversed.

"There's this tension between all of them wanting to collectively agree but selfishly wanting everyone to agree on their preferred color," he said.

One real-world analogy would be the recent Democratic presidential primaries, he said. Many voters passionately backed Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, but worried that split opinion would cause the whole party to lose.

Behind the scenes, Kearns rigged the experiment in different ways, sometimes mixing up the incentives so that some students got only $1.25 for pushing their color on the group and 75 cents if they went the other way.

Despite the short deadline, he said, people came to some agreement in 55 out of 81 separate trials.

He found that sometimes a tiny minority could rule. In the most extreme cases, red won when only six subjects preferred it, the other 30 wanting blue. All the members of the minority needed was "influence" _ that is, more connections within the group than the people they competed against.

" 'Influential' people can determine the outcome to their liking," Kearns said, even if the majority has a strong incentive to go the other way. In this case having lots of connections made a subject influential.

Another surprise was that mixing different financial incentives helped the group to agree more often. "Having some fraction of extremists is actually helpful," he said. If all in the group are too wishy-washy, they will keep switching colors and never agree.

Being unique individuals, the subjects played with different strategies _ some easily swayed by neighbors, others stubbornly holding their preferred color until a win appeared impossible.

When it came to who left with the most money, Kearns found that the spoils went to those who were most stubborn _ but not completely intractable. Since the whole game is lost if there's no consensus, he said, "being too stubborn is fatal."

In real elections, networking is already becoming important, said Kearns. Last year, Obama used networking to rally support, but it had to do more with the use of e-mail and cell phones to recruit new volunteers than with exploiting existing social networks. Future candidates may find much more powerful tools.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Yahoo's Watts said that until recently, most networking experiments used computer models. Kearns, he said, helped pioneer techniques for testing real people.

The next step will be to scale everything up. In a group of 36 people, knowing 20 people might make you well-connected, he said, but what about in a group of 36 million people?

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Watts, who studied nonlinear dynamics _ popularized as chaos and complexity theories _ has found that human networks are surprisingly unpredictable and quirky. Just as a butterfly flapping its wings eventually changes the global weather in unpredictable ways, so the whim of one listener can ripple outward to rearrange the pop charts.

In one recent experiment, Watts used the Web to recruit 14,000 people and had them rank a series of 48 new, unknown songs.

Not surprisingly, when the volunteers knew about choices other people made, they changed their preferences completely to conform to the group. But when he divided the recruits into eight groups, he got radically different results. A song deemed No. 1 by one group would fall to 42nd in the next.

"We assume things are popular because that's what people want," he said. "But this is showing that's wrong _ people have no idea what they want." Popularity seems to come in equal parts from random luck and merit.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Other researchers are also exploring the power of the Web for their experiments. Cornell University computer scientist Jon Kleinberg got a MacArthur "genius" grant in 2005 to study the way ideas and fads spread through the population.

"This is something we see all around us _ but it's been very hard to gather data on how this is happening and why, and what it looks like on a global level."

One way he's approached this is to track e-mail petitions and chain letters. To his surprise, he said, the letters didn't fan out as much as he'd anticipated, considering that we're all only six degrees of separation from everyone else on the planet.

Despite their limited reception, the messages and chain letter he tracked survived longer than expected, perpetuating themselves for months through a small segment of the population.

"The trajectories of these things go much deeper and narrower through the population than you'd expect."

Others are looking at how networks might influence health and happiness.

Using data from a wide-scale Framingham, Mass., health survey, sociologist Nicholas Christakis of Harvard Medical School found that obesity, smoking habits and even self-reported happiness levels spread through social networks. That means your weight, health and happiness may be nudged not only by friends but by friends of friends you don't know.

Kearns said the networking site Facebook also offers potential for insight. He often assigns his students problems that involve sorting and analyzing their own Facebook networks.

But Facebook networks are not always what they appear to be. Most of Kearns' students have accounts with several hundred so-called friends, while a few are bristling with thousands of connections.

That doesn't necessarily mean those heavily friended are influential, however, holding the power to start a new footwear fad or catapult a new artist to stardom. "They may just be more promiscuous about who they include as a friend."

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© 2009, The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Visit Philadelphia Online, the Inquirer's World Wide Web site, at http://www.philly.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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PHOTO (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): SOCIALINFLUENCE

Palin criticizes Obama for Special Olympics quip

By Erika Bolstad

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin on Friday criticized President Barack Obama's gaffe about the Special Olympics, calling his off-handed remark on the Tonight Show "degrading," especially since it was "coming from the most powerful position in the world."

"These athletes overcome more challenges, discrimination and adversity than most of us ever will," Palin said in a statement released Friday. "By the way, these athletes can outperform many of us and we should be proud of them. I hope President Obama's comments do not reflect how he truly feels about the special needs community."

Obama apologized for his remark shortly after his Thursday night appearance on NBC's Tonight Show with Jay Leno. His gaffe came toward the end of the interview, when the Tonight Show host ribbed Obama about his less-than-stellar bowling skills, which were derided on the campaign trail. Obama joked he had been practicing and recently bowled a 129. Leno offered tongue-in-cheek praise, saying "that's very good, Mr. President."

"It's like _ it was like Special Olympics, or something," Obama responded.

Palin, whose son, Trig, was born with Down syndrome last year, appeared in a video promoting this year's winter Special Olympics games in Boise, Idaho. In it, she held Trig and talked about how important participating in the Special Olympics will be to her son's future happiness, especially in a sports-loving family.

"Thanks to Special Olympics, we know for certain that Trig is going to have every opportunity to enjoy sports and competition that all of our other children have," Palin said in the video. She riffed on her infamous hockey-mom-and-lipstick line from when she was introduced last summer to the nation as Sen. John McCain's vice presidential running mate.

"You know what the difference is between a hockey mom and a Special Olympics hockey mom?" Palin said. "Nothing."

The president's hasty apology came shortly after the Tonight Show was taped in California. White House spokesman Bill Burton released a statement while the president was flying back to Washington D.C. on Air Force One.

"The President made an offhand remark making fun of his own bowling that was in no way intended to disparage the Special Olympics," Burton said. "He thinks that the Special Olympics are a wonderful program that gives an opportunity to shine to people with disabilities from around the world."

En route to Washington, the president also called and offered an apology to the chairman of the Special Olympics, Tim Shriver, whose mother Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded the Special Olympics in 1968. Shriver told "Good Morning America" that there's a Special Olympics athlete from Detroit who has bowled three perfect games and would be thrilled to offer the president some tips.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger also weighed in. His wife, Maria Shriver, is Tim Shriver's brother; both Schwarzenegger and his wife have served as Special Olympics ambassadors.

"I know where his heart is at," Schwarzenegger said of the president, outside the White House Friday afternoon. "He loves Special Olympics, and he will do everything he can to help Special Olympics. And every one of us sometimes makes a mistake. Something comes out of your mouth and you say 'Oops, I wish I wouldn't have said that.' I've had many of those."

Maria Shriver was a little more critical: "Oftentimes we don't realize that when we laugh at comments like this it hurts millions of people throughout the world," she said. "People with special needs are great athletes and productive citizens, and I look forward to working with the president to knock down myths and stereotypes about this community."

Friday afternoon, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs repeated the president's apology during his daily briefing.

"I know that the president believes that the Special Olympics are a triumph of the human spirit, and I think he understands that they deserve a lot better than _ than the thoughtless joke that he made last night, and he apologizes for that," Gibbs said.

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© 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at www.mcclatchydc.com.