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The WUOG News staff

Obama hails tougher hate crimes law

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:29 pm

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says a newly expanded hate crimes law will allow the nation’s people to “live and love as we see fit.”

The law extends federal hate crimes to include those perpetrated against people because of sexual orientation, gender identity or disability. It also removes restrictions on when the federal government can intervene in investigating and prosecuting hate crimes.

Obama signed the bill into law earlier in the day. He held a separate White House ceremony to celebrate it with joyous supporters.

Advocates hail the law as major step toward more freedom and against bigotry.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

WUOG.org Forecast 10/28/09

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:29 pm

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 52. West wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 73. East wind around 5 mph.

Thursday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers after 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57. East wind around 5 mph.

Friday: A chance of drizzle before 2pm, then a slight chance of showers after 2pm. Areas of fog before 2pm. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 68. East wind between 5 and 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 59. East wind around 5 mph.

Saturday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 77.

Saturday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a low around 60. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Sunday: A slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 72. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 48.

Monday: Sunny, with a high near 69.

Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 46.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 69.

Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 44.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 68.

Ga. suspect makes fake 911 call to ditch police

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:27 pm

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Police say a Georgia man suspected of peeking into parked cars tried to shake pursuing officers by calling 911 and reporting a fake shooting.

The Athens Banner-Herald reports Wednesday that 26-year-old Jovan Shanta Campbell’s trick didn’t work.

He was arrested Tuesday and charged with loitering and prowling, falsely reporting a crime, giving false information to police and obstruction.

Police were called about a prowler at a Country Inn & Suites around 2 a.m. Tuesday and say Campbell ran when he saw them.

Dispatchers alerted officers during the chase that a shooting had been reported nearby. Officers checked Campbell’s phone and saw he had just placed a call to 911.

Campbell was charged with kicking and spitting on an officer when he was arrested for public intoxication in 2006. That same officer helped chase him down Tuesday.

___

Information from: Athens Banner-Herald, http://www.onlineathens.com

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

State to take over Georgia insurance company

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:25 pm

ATLANTA (AP) — A judge has approved a state takeover of an Atlanta-based worker’s compensation insurer at the center of one of the largest insurance failures in Georgia in the last decade.

The order Wednesday concludes that Southeastern U.S. Insurance Co. is “insolvent” and gives Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine the authority to liquidate the company.

Company officials did not immediately return phone calls on Wednesday, but the commissioner’s office says it had 209 policyholders, roughly half of them government entities such as cities and counties. The company’s Web site said it represented about 60,000 employees.

Oxendine says that the company’s clients are being sent termination notices to find insurance elsewhere.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Feds to eye failed repair of Bay Bridge

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:20 pm

JOHN MARSHALL,Associated Press Writers
LISA LEFF,Associated Press Writers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The Federal Highway Administration sent engineers Wednesday to investigate what caused repairs to fail on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and drop 5,000-pounds of metal into rush-hour traffic lanes.

The agency said it had not inspected the Labor Day weekend repairs made to the heavily used span.

Engineers from the federal agency will assist the state in determining why the fixes failed Tuesday, injuring one person and damaging three cars.

“That’s the primary task at hand,” said Nancy Singer, a spokeswoman for the highway administration.

High winds were hampering efforts to make repairs and reopen the bridge that carries about 280,000 cars each day.

Construction crews working through the night fought winds that gusted to 35 mph as they brought in heavy machinery to try to move the metal and make repairs.

“We have several thousand pounds of steel we have to place hundreds of feet off the deck, so worker safety is a concern,” said Bart Ney, a spokesman for the state Transportation Department

There was a chance the bridge could reopen Thursday, he said, noting wind was a contributing factor in the failure of the rods.

Traffic was jammed on other San Francisco-area highways, as commuters s looked for alternatives to the bridge.

The pieces that broke were part of major repairs done last month after crews discovered a cracked link during an earthquake safety upgrade. The rods that broke were holding a saddle-like cap that had been installed over the cracked link.

When a rod snapped about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, it brought down a steel patch roughly three feet long, authorities said.

“It’s a very fortunate situation,” said California Highway Patrol Sgt. Trent Cross. “It was in the heart of the evening commute and you had a 5,000 pound chunk of metal fall approximately 100 feet.”

Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, a civil engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who has spent 20 years studying the Bay Bridge, called the initial crack a warning sign of potentially bigger safety issues with the bridge.

“The repair they were doing was really a Band-Aid,” said Astaneh-Asl, who criticized Caltrans at the time for rushing to reopen the bridge.

Astaneh-Asl said the failure of the repair job demonstrates the need for a longer-term solution. The age and design of the bridge make it susceptible to collapse, especially if commercial tractor-trailers are allowed to continue using it, he said.

“I think Caltrans is putting public relations ahead of public safety,” he said.

___

Associated Press Writers Sudhin Thanawala and Jason Dearen, and Video Journalist Haven Daley contributed to this story.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Wal-Mart starts selling caskets, urns online

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:18 pm

EMILY FREDRIX,AP Retail Writer

MILWAUKEE (AP) — The world’s largest retailer wants to keep its customers even after they die.

Wal-Mart has started selling caskets on its Web site at prices that undercut many funeral homes, long the major seller of caskets.

The move follows a similar one by discount rival Costco, which also sells caskets on its site.

Wal-Mart, based in Bentonville, Ark., quietly put up about 15 caskets and dozens of urns on its Web site last week.

Prices range from $999 for models like “Dad Remembered” and “Mom Remembered” steel caskets to the mid-level $1,699 “Executive Privilege.” All are less than $2,000, except for the Sienna Bronze Casket, which sells for $3,199.

Caskets ship within 48 hours. Federal law requires funeral homes to accept third-party caskets.

The caskets come from Star Legacy Funeral Network, Inc., a company based in McHenry, Ill., that sells the same caskets for about the same price — some less — on its site, along with many others.

Star Legacy CEO Rick Obadiah said the response in the first week has been better than the company or Wal-Mart expected, though he declined to give specifics. A spokesman for Walmart.com also declined to release sales figures and downplayed the venture.

“Several online retailers offer this category on their sites,” spokesman Ravi Jariwala wrote in an e-mail. “We are simply conducting a limited beta test to understand customer response.”

But Obadiah said it is not simply a test. He said more than 200 Star Legacy products, including pet urns and memorial jewelry, and eventually about two dozen caskets, will be sold at walmart.com. The company also supplies similar types of products to online retailer Overstock.com and urns to CostCo’s Web site.

Other parts of the Wal-Mart empire also sell funeral wares. The company’s samsclub.com site sells casket floral arrangements for about $300.

Part of the business model is to get people to plan ahead: Walmart.com is allowing people to pay for the caskets over a period of 12 months for no interest.

The move gives more power to consumers and helps them avoid high mark-ups on caskets, which can often be several hundred percent, said R. Brian Burkhardt, a funeral director who blogs as “Your Funeral Guy.”

“You can get a quality casket for $1,000 rather than pay $2,000, $3,000 or $5,000 in a funeral home. That’s where it helps the consumer,” he said.

The industry is not too concerned about Wal-Mart entering the market, said Pat Lynch, president-elect of the National Funeral Home Directors Association. Consumers have been able to buy caskets online and from other sources for years, with minimal effect on the business, he said.

Wal-Mart’s prices for caskets don’t differ greatly from those offered at funeral homes, most of which range from $500 to $5,000, Lynch said. He declined to give an average price, saying a casket selection is a personal one.

He said Wal-Mart can’t offer one thing funeral directors do have: the ability to comfort someone during a trying time.

“There’s no question in my mind as a funeral director for nearly 40 years that the most critical element is the human contact,” he said.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

NASA’s new moon rocket makes first test flight

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:17 pm

MARCIA DUNN,AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s newest rocket successfully completed a brief test flight Wednesday, the first step in a back-to-the-moon program that could yet be shelved by the White House.

The 327-foot Ares I-X rocket resembled a giant white pencil as it shot into the sky, delayed a day by poor weather.

Nearly twice the height of the spaceship it’s supposed to replace — the shuttle — the skinny experimental rocket carried no passengers or payload, only throwaway ballast and hundreds of sensors. The flight cost $445 million.

NASA said the flight was a tremendous success, based on early indications.

“Oh, man. Well, how impressive is that,” said Jeff Hanley, manager of NASA’s space frontier program, known as Constellation. “You’ve accomplished a great step forward for exploration,” he told launch controllers.

It was the first time in nearly 30 years that a new rocket took off from Kennedy Space Center. Columbia made the maiden voyage for the shuttle fleet back in 1981.

Liftoff, in fact, occurred 48 years and one day after the first launch of a Saturn rocket, a precursor to what carried astronauts to the moon during the Apollo program. The Saturn V moon rockets were the tallest ever built, an impressive 363 feet.

Wednesday’s launch, three years in the making, represented the first step in NASA’s effort to return astronauts to the moon. The White House, though, is re-evaluating the human spaceflight program and may dump the Ares I in favor of another type of rocket and possibly another destination.

The test flight attracted a large crowd.

The prototype moon rocket took off through a few clouds from a former shuttle launch pad at 11:30 a.m., 3½ hours late because of bad weather. Launch controllers had to retest the rocket systems after more than 150 lightning strikes were reported around the pad overnight. Then they had to wait out interfering rain clouds, the same kind that thwarted Tuesday’s try.

The ballistic flight did not come close to reaching space and, as expected, lasted a mere two minutes. That’s how long it took for the first-stage solid-fuel booster to burn out and separate from the mock upper stage 25 miles up. But it will take months to analyze all the data from the approximately 725 pressure, strain and acceleration sensors.

Parachutes popped open and dropped the booster into the Atlantic, where recovery ships waited.

The upper portion of the rocket — all fake parts — were hurtled to an estimated altitude of 28 miles and then fell uncontrolled into the ocean. Those pieces were never meant to be retrieved.

It was all over in six minutes.

“Think about what we just did. Our first flight test and the only thing we’re waiting on was weather,” launch director Ed Mango told his team.

NASA contends the Ares I will be ready to carry astronauts to the International Space Station in 2015, four to five years after the shuttles are retired. But a panel of experts said in a report to President Barack Obama last week that it will be more like 2017, and stressed that the entire effort is underfunded.

The first Ares moon trip would be years beyond that under the current plan.

No matter what direction the Obama administration takes, NASA managers expect to learn a lot from Wednesday’s experimental flight, even if it’s for another type of rocket. They said they already have learned a lot.

Hanley, for one, does not want to hear anymore about the cloudy, electrically charged conditions — triboelectrification — that made it so difficult to get this test rocket off the ground. Future rockets will have proper protection.

“Whatever we end up flying, this will not be a problem,” he promised.

___

On the Net:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/aresIX

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Swine flu prompts hundreds of schools to close

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 28 2009 5:12 pm

DON BABWIN,Associated Press Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — The number of students staying home sick with the flu is multiplying nationwide and normally quiet school nurses’ offices suddenly look like big city emergency rooms, packed with students too ill to finish the day.

The federal government has urged schools to close because of the swine flu only as a last resort. But schools are closing by the dozens as officials say they are being hit so hard and so fast by the H1N1 virus that they feel shutting down for a few days is the only feasible option.

“There was nothing else we could do,” said Michael Frechette, the superintendent of Connecticut’s Middletown Public Schools where a middle school closed for the rest of the week after 120 students stayed home sick Monday and another 25 were sent home by noon. “The only way to stop that transmittal was to keep the kids home for the rest of the week.”

At least 351 schools were closed last week alone — affecting 126,000 students in 19 states, according to the U.S. Education Department. So far this school year, about 600 schools have temporarily shut their doors.

The number of closures this year appears on target to surpass the roughly 700 schools closed last spring when the swine flu outbreak first hit.

“This is scary,” said Kathryn Marchuk, a nurse whose son attends St. Charles East High School outside Chicago, which closed for three days last week after about 800 of its 2,200 students called in absent. “So many people are sick. It’s just everywhere.”

Many school officials said they were afraid the virus would spread faster if they stayed open.

“Students are in such close proximity (to each other) and they’re in two or three classrooms a day at two or three different desks,” said Donna Lovell, director of pupil personnel for Berea Community Schools in Kentucky, which closed for four days last week after 20 percent of its students called in sick. “It’s an incubator situation.”

Whether it is all effective is debatable, with some experts saying that closing schools merely spreads the number of cases over a longer time.

But school officials like Frechette disagree, saying students who get sick this week while they’re at home cannot infect nearly as many people as they were if they were walking the hallways of schools.

“Nobody’s at school so they’re not infecting each other,” he said. Besides, he said, “kids are dying (and) it’s just four days.”

With such a surge of sick students, many schools are also scrambling to come up with ways to keep kids on top of their studies.

The U.S. Education Department recommended districts and schools provide ill students with remote learning opportunities such take-home assignments or posting homework and class lessons on the Internet.

Though some schools are doing that — including Keigwin Middle School in Middletown, Conn., where assignments are posted on its Web site and students are asked to read 20 minutes a day — others say assigning sick students homework is a wasted effort.

“If you want to make a kid really hate school … the most effective thing you could do is to make them do their homework and school work when they have a fever and are not feeling well,” said Nancy Kalish, an education writer who co-authored a book, “The Case Against Homework.”

Jim Blaney, a spokesman for the district that includes St. Charles East High, said that although parents or healthy students could come to the school to pick up books, the days the school was closed were not the time to push ahead with lesson plans.

“We wanted the kids to get healthy, stay home, rest,” he said.

Though there is no way to know how many children actually had swine flu, the deaths so far of roughly 1,000 people in the U.S. — some of them children, including a 14-year-old in Ohio and another in Illinois this month — have cast a shadow on school districts.

“We’re a small community where everybody pretty much knows everybody,” said Jon Hussman, a principal in Culdesac, Idaho, a town of fewer than 500 residents. “(And) when you have the possibility of death in that community, that’s something you want to avoid.”

The way Steve Bianchetta sees it, there is no incubator like a high school, a view that helps explain why the central Illinois superintendent closed Watseka High School for two days last week after a third of the school’s 330 students were absent.

“They’re not as hygienic as the younger kids,” he said. “They hold hands, they drink out of each other’s sodas.”

Some officials say another reason for shutting down was that sick kids were still showing up.

Closing school “took the pressure off,” said Katy DeSalvo, whose daughter, Amy, a 17-year-old senior at St. Charles East had been home sick and worried that missing school would hurt her grades. “She wants to go to Duke (and) all the kids, particularly the higher-achieving kids, want to go back. And they’d infect everybody.”

Some districts closed even for small numbers of sick students. In Traverse City, Mich., the school district closed every one of the 18 schools even though the number of absentees at some was not close to 20 percent.

“It was in the best interest to do so,” said Jayne Mohr, the associate superintendent for the 10,000-student district. “You could see it spreading, making its way across the 300-square mile district.”

Not everyone believes shutting down is the best option.

Some children, especially in low-income districts, depend on schools for free lunch and parents can’t always take off work to stay at home. Plus, shutting school doesn’t always keep kids from spreading the virus.

“If kids were isolated in their homes it may help,” said Julie Pryde, administrator in Illinois’ Champaign-Urbana Public Health District. But “kids congregate at malls, at each other’s homes, they go to movies — and that is not helpful.”

___

Associated Press writers David N. Goodman in Detroit, Jessie L. Bonner in Boise, Idaho, and Maria Sudekum Fisher in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Flood Warning 10/27/09

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 27 2009 8:36 pm

FLOOD WARNING
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PEACHTREE CITY GA
934 PM EDT TUE OCT 27 2009

…THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN PEACHTREE CITY HAS ISSUED A FLOOD
WARNING FOR THE FOLLOWING RIVER IN GEORGIA…

OCONEE RIVER NEAR PENFIELD AFFECTING CLARKE…GREENE AND OCONEE
COUNTIES

.RECENT HEAVY RAINFALL AND SIGNIFICANT RUNOFF HAVE CAUSED THE OCONEE RIVER TO RISE. SOME POINTS ALONG THE RIVER WILL EXPERIENCE FLOODING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

ALL PERSONS WITH INTERESTS ALONG THE RIVER SHOULD MONITOR THE LATEST
FORECASTS…AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE NECESSARY PRECAUTIONS TO PROTECT
LIFE AND PROPERTY. DO NOT DRIVE CARS THROUGH FLOODED AREAS. IF YOU
SEE FLOOD WATERS…REMEMBER TO TURN AROUND AND DO NOT DROWN.

THE LATEST STAGE DATA WAS FURNISHED IN COOPERATION WITH THE UNITED
STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY.

&&

GAC059-133-219-281534-
/O.NEW.KFFC.FL.W.0124.091028T1549Z-091029T1830Z/
/PNFG1.1.ER.091028T1549Z.091029T0000Z.091029T1230Z.NO/
934 PM EDT TUE OCT 27 2009

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN PEACHTREE CITY HAS ISSUED A
* FLOOD WARNING FOR
THE OCONEE RIVER NEAR PENFIELD
* FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING UNTIL THURSDAY AFTERNOON.
* AT 8 PM TUESDAY EVENING THE STAGE WAS 7.5 FEET…AND RISING.
* MINOR FLOODING IS FORECAST.
* FLOOD STAGE IS 11 FEET.
* THE RIVER IS EXPECTED TO RISE ABOVE FLOOD STAGE BY WEDNESDAY LATE MORNING AND
CONTINUE RISING TO NEAR 12 FEET BY WEDNESDAY EVENING. THE RIVER
WILL FALL BELOW FLOOD STAGE BY MID THURSDAY MORNING.
* AT 11 FEET…FLOOD STAGE IS REACHED. MINOR FLOODING OCCURS. THE
RIGHT BANK BEGINS TO OVERFLOW INTO AGRICULTURAL LANDS AND PASTURES.
* THIS CREST COMPARES TO A PREVIOUS CREST OF 14.2 FEET ON SEP 29 1992.

$$

WUOG.org Forecast 10/27/09

Posted by: jamesb
Oct 27 2009 6:56 pm

Hazardous Weather Outlook
Short Term Forecast

Tonight: A chance of showers before 2am, then a chance of rain or drizzle after 2am. Cloudy, with a low around 52. East wind around 5 mph becoming southwest. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Wednesday: A chance of drizzle before noon. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 73. Calm wind becoming west around 5 mph.

Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 51. West wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Thursday: Partly sunny, with a high near 72. East wind around 5 mph.

Thursday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 56. East wind around 5 mph.

Friday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 70.

Friday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 60.

Saturday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Some of the storms could produce heavy rain. Cloudy, with a high near 75.

Saturday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a low around 50.

Sunday: Partly cloudy, with a high near 70.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 45.

Monday: Sunny, with a high near 66.

Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 45.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 67.

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