2013年3月18日星期一

in 2005

APNewsBreak: Celeb fracking group not registered

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Dozens of celebrities may be running afoul of the law as they unite under the banner of one group that is seeking to prevent a method of gas drilling in New York state.

Artists Against Fracking opposes hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and boasts members including Yoko Ono and actors Mark Ruffalo and Susan Sarandon.

The group says forcing water and chemicals deep into shale deposits to extract gas threatens drinking water and the environment. The group's website implores, "Tell Governor Cuomo: Don't Frack New York."

But the group and nearly 200 entertainers who are gaining attention and support in the dispute, which is splitting New Yorkers, aren't registered lobbyists, according to a search by The Associated Press of the database of the state Joint Commission on Public Ethics. State law is designed to disclose who is trying to influence government action, how much money they are spending and where the money's going.

"You spend money lobbying, you have to register," said David Grandeau, former executive director of the state lobbying commission and now an attorney representing lobbyists and clients.

There's no public record of how much money Artists Against Fracking has spent, but its website contains links for visitors to make donations, which are directed to the Sustainable Markets Foundation. Although the foundation is an established charitable organization and its donations are recorded publicly, it isn't registered with New York as a lobbying client, either.

Under New York law, however, it appears Artists Against Fracking is required to be a registered lobbyist because the law hinges on spending over $5,000. The group hasn't filed lobbying reports, so the amount it has spent and what it was spent on isn't known publicly. Experts in Albany say the website and public events appear to have cost well over $5,000.

The group hasn't responded to requests for comment in the past two weeks. The group's account executive at its public relations firm, Fenton of New York City, didn't respond to a request for comment.

The group includes Ono and Sean Lennon, the widow and son of musician John Lennon. They recently attended an anti-fracking event in Albany with Ruffalo, actors Zooey Deschanel, Alec Baldwin and Hugh Jackman, and singer Lady Gaga, along with other longtime activists such as David Crosby and Paul McCartney. None of them are registered to lobby in New York.

A week ago, Artists Against Fracking widely released a music video done through Skype from various locations featuring dozens of entertainers singing a Sean Lennon song, "Don't Frack My Mother." In it, Ono sings part of the chorus, "Don't frack me!"

Failing to register as a lobbyist is not a criminal offense. Commonly, when a person new to lobbying is believed to have failed to lobby as required by law to track the influence of money on public policy, that person is given a chance to submit a lobbing form and pay a $200 fee.

One of the main players supporting fracking, the Independent Oil & Gas Association of New York, is registered.

Lobbying is big business in New York. The New York Public Interest Research Group reported that more than $220 million was spent lobbying in 2011 — and that was before the fracking debate really heated up.

The biggest penalty for failure to follow the lobbying law resulted in a $250,000 fine against Donald Trump and others over casinos in 2000, and the Philip Morris tobacco company was hit with a $75,000 fine in 1999.

Over the years, several celebrities or their groups have been required to register as lobbyists. But whether celebrities must register hinges on its specific circumstances. The line between lobbying and free speech isn't bright or clear, and the Joint Commission on Public Ethics wouldn't comment; it referred the AP to the law for clarification.

Under state law, a lobbyist is defined as any person or organization "employed, retained" in "any attempt to influence the passage or defeat of any legislation ... or approval or disapproval of any legislation by the governor." That can include nonprofit groups and their unpaid advocates.

In the fracking case, the Assembly and the Senate Independent Democratic Conference have introduced laws that would delay a pending decision on drilling by Cuomo.

Grandeau was in charge when, in 2005, the lobbying commission accepted a $5,000 payment to settle a case against a coalition that included hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, former NAACP head Benjamin Chavis and the former federal housing secretary — Andrew Cuomo.

The commission had insisted The Coalition for Fairness, which aimed at relaxing long sentences for drug offenses, was lobbying, while the coalition said it was exercising its right to free speech.

Earlier in 2005, an appellate court ruled Simmons and Chavis had failed to disclose how much they spent on a 2003 rally against the drug laws.

The ethics commission "does not comment on or confirm matters that may or may not be before it," said spokesman John Milgrim. "But laws requiring lobbyists and their clients to publicly disclose their lobbying are well known and the commission expects compliance."

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Backed by financial support from the Indianapolis-based Lumina Foundation for Education

Colleges track former students to boost degrees

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Carmen Ricotta knows being a college graduate could mean higher pay and better job opportunities, and it's not like St. Louis Community College hasn't been practically begging her to wrap up her two-year degree.

The school has been calling and emailing the 28-year-old electrician's apprentice to get her to return and complete her final assignment: an exit exam. But life has gotten in the way and Ricotta has been too busy to make the 30-minute trip from her suburban home near Fenton to the downtown St. Louis campus.

St. Louis Community College is among 60-plus schools in six states taking what seems like an obvious but little-used step to boost college graduation rates: scouring campus databases to track down former students who unknowingly qualify for degrees.

That effort, known as Project Win-Win, has helped community colleges and four-year schools in Florida, Louisiana, Missouri, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Virginia and Wisconsin find hundreds of ex-students who have either earned enough credits to receive associate degrees or are just a few classes shy of getting them.

Backed by financial support from the Indianapolis-based Lumina Foundation for Education, the pilot project began several years ago with 35 colleges in six states. As it winds down, some participating schools plan to continue the effort on their own.

Ricotta said at this point, she's not sure if getting her two-year degree is all that necessary.

"It's a pain," she said. "I don't feel like going down to the college to take a test I don't need. Yeah, I don't have the degree, but I still took all the classes."

Her seeming indifference to retroactively obtaining her degree points to just one of the challenges facing two-year schools in particular as they strive to fulfill President Barack Obama's challenge of raising college completion rates to 60 percent by 2020: convincing not just the public, but even some of their students, of the value of an associate's degree.

At central Missouri's Columbia College, the hunt for students on the verge of graduating worked so well that the school plans to broaden its efforts to find bachelor's degree candidates who are just one class shy of donning the cap and gown. The private liberal arts college has already awarded nearly 300 retroactive degrees, including one given posthumously to the mother of a deceased former student. Another two dozen students returned to campus to finish up after hearing from the school.

"If this was being done nationwide, it could make a difference," said Tery Donelson, Columbia College's assistant vice president for enrollment management.

Like his counterparts in St. Louis, Donelson and his team of transcript detectives also encountered skepticism, if not outright disbelief, from some of the prospective degree awardees.

"If you received a letter saying, 'Congratulations, you've earned a degree,' what would you be thinking?" he said. "That this is a scam. We had to get beyond them.

"We told them they earned a degree, and all they had to do was acknowledge it," Donelson continued. "We didn't want to send a degree to anybody who didn't want it."

Participating schools pared down their initial lists by eliminating students who received degrees elsewhere or were currently enrolled. Expired addresses or disconnected phone numbers eliminated many more.

The Institute for Higher Education Policy, which oversaw the project, initially estimated a potential increase of 25,000 new degrees if its efforts took hold nationwide. But most schools found the exercise more difficult than expected, said Cliff Adelman, a senior associate with the Washington-based policy group.

"It ain't as easy as you think," he said. "You can't use a magic wand and have this kind of thing happen."

In Oregon, a review of more than 6,000 students' academic records at the state's 17 community colleges found 109 degree-eligible students and another 905 who might qualify. Virginia's Tidewater Community College awarded 34 degrees and convinced 15 more students to return to campus from its initial pool of 651 prospects.

Four-year schools could follow the lead of the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, which used the program to connect with dropouts who might still be interested in a two-year diploma. Or they could link up with neighboring community colleges in what are known as "reverse transfer" agreements.

Those agreements allow students to receive their associate's degrees if they earned enough credits toward them but didn't actually obtain them before heading to a four-year school. The two-year schools, in turn, can boost their completion rates — a critical measure for accrediting agencies and lawmakers looking for results.

One student happy to hear about what amounts to a free degree is Corey Manuel, 34, an Air Force veteran who expects to receive a bachelor's degree in management information systems from Columbia College. He took his classes at a Denver-area branch campus.

Manuel said his educational journey includes nearly 200 credits from five different schools, including a one-year stint straight out of high school playing basketball at Missouri Valley College in Marshall, Mo., and a pair of stops at Louisiana State University's community college in Eunice.

Now an information technology manager at defense contractor Raytheon, Manuel nonetheless still craves the credential he was too busy to pick up along the way.

"I wanted to make sure I had that box checked," he said.

___

Alan Scher Zagier can be reached at http://twitter.com/azagier

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The Kurdistan Workers Party

Kurdish legislators meet jailed rebel chief

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — A group of Kurdish legislators traveled to a prison island off Istanbul on Monday to confer with rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, who is widely expected to call a cease-fire ordering his rebels to stop fighting as part of efforts to end a bitter three-decade-old conflict with Turkey.

The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party officials have said Ocalan — who is serving a life sentence for leading the Kurdish insurgency — is expected to call for a truce and maybe even ask several thousand fighters to withdraw from Turkey to coincide with a spring festival celebrated by Kurds on Thursday.

Three legislators from the Peace and Democracy Party were allowed to travel to Imrali island to meet with Ocalan and were expected to relay a message from him.

The Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, has declared cease-fires in the past but these were largely ignored by Turkey which refused to talk to the rebels and vowed to continue to fight the group they until lay down arms. This time, the government has acknowledged that is it holding talks with Ocalan with the aim of persuading the PKK to disarm and the cease-fire declaration and the rebels' retreat would constitute a major step toward ending the conflict.

The government has yet to reveal details of the peace talks, but Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has indicated the rebels would withdraw fighters from Turkey and disarm as part of the peace efforts.

Reports indicate that, in return, Turkey is expected to enact reforms to boost the rights of Kurds, including a new constitution that would amend the way all citizens are defined as "Turks" and grant more powers to local authorities. Turkey is also expected to change its legislation to allow the release of hundreds of Kurdish activists jailed for alleged links to the PKK.

In an important symbolic gesture, the rebels last week released eight captive Turkish soldiers and officials they had been holding in bases in northern Iraq.

Kurds make up an estimated 20 percent of Turkey's population of around 75 million. The rebels took up arms in 1984 for self-rule; Turkey and the West label the PKK a terrorist organization.

Murat Karayilan, who took over the PKK's command after Ocalan's capture and imprisonment in 1999, said in an interview with Firat News, a website close to the rebels, that his group has decided to support the peace initiative although the PKK has some unspecified reservations and concerns about the process.

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2013年3月14日星期四

the end of February に も&quot

Japan-Taiwan fisheries agreement to prepare to join "the end of February に も",ipad2 ケース おすすめ 本体サイズは約W190×D120×H35mm、重量は約650g; Taiwan Taiwan の Ministry of Foreign the Ministry of (Ministry of Foreign Affairs に quite) の Xiaji Chang reported official は 19 red Okinawa Prefecture · tip Court islands waters of weeks vicinities の 扱 い が focus と な ru Japan-Taiwan fisheries agreement のthen open に け た 2 back to prepare rendezvous を late February early から 3 め に も Kanto region し た on い た "と state べ.し て い る down are interrupted in 2009,17409, Japan and Taiwan to open fisheries agreements の に ke ta I prepared to join the Tokyo the で open か れ て に は November 30 last year dynasties, Kanto な い さ れ て い. The (Taipei Yoshimura Takeshi)

2013年3月13日星期三

マジコン 招致は

【東京五輪招致】官房長官「内向きの日本に夢と希望と明るさを」菅義偉官房長官は4日午前の記者会見で、2020年夏季五輪の東京招致について「国を挙げて全力で取り組みたい,~ 【特集】今、ここにある「バブル」~生かされぬ教訓と性。少子高齢化社会で低迷し、内向きの日本に夢や希望、社会に明るさを取り戻すために、(招致は)大きな意義がある」と述べた。同時に「東日本大震災があったにもかかわらず、復興に向けて国民が一つになって取り組んでいる姿を世界に発信したい」と強調した,今年の新作コレクションからも目が離せない

ブランソン モンクレール 共同

「神の法の下で死刑だ」 反政府指導者の殺害促す エジプト聖職者の逮捕命令 11日の中東通信によると、エジプト検察は、エルバラダイ国際原子力機関(IAEA)前事務局長ら同国の反政府運動指導者の殺害を促すファトワ(宗教見解)を出したとして、イスラム教聖職者マハムード・シャーバン師の逮捕を治安当局に命じた, 昨年11月中旬に店内で置引事件が発生。 シャーバン師はテレビ番組で、イスラム勢力出身のモルシ政権を批判するエルバラダイ氏らについて「神の法の下で死刑だ」と発言。エルバラダイ氏は「(モルシ)政権の沈黙は、イスラムの名による反政府勢力殺害にお墨付きを与えるものだ」と述べ、同師逮捕を求めていた。 野党指導者暗殺事件が起きたチュニジアでは、イスラム政党主導の政府がイスラム過激派の暴力的な言動を毅然と取り締まらなかったことが、暗殺事件を招いたと批判が広がっている,11日・ボディメーカーコロシアム。(共同)

フェンディ バッグ うか

【手帖】第1回「ありがとう大賞」受賞作刊行〈今年一番の“ありがとう”を読む〉をコンセプトとして昨年新設された第1回「ありがとう大賞」の受賞作2作が単行本化され、3月2日にPHP研究所から全国発売される,ガスは星を成長させるへその緒のようなものだという。 北林雨夏(うか)著『金色(きんいろ)の笑顔』、山本高史(たかし)著『リトル』の2作(ともに1千円)。 北林さんはドラマの脚本家であり、「終末医療」がテーマのドキュメンタリーの構成も手がけてきた。受賞作では高校2年生の主人公・小麦が両親の離婚、学校でのいじめ、末期がんを患う祖父との関係を通じて成長していく姿を描いた。 山本さんは広告業界の第一線で活躍する51歳のクリエーティブディレクター、コピーライターで、関西大社会学部教授も務めている,グッチ 長財布。受賞作では実体験をもとに、リトルという子犬を育て始めた主人公とその家族の9年間にわたるパートナーシップを綴(つづ)った。 両作品とも「家族」と「いのち」が題材だ。 同賞は東日本大震災を経て、改めて気づかされた感謝の気持ちの大切さ、「ありがとう」を体現するアワードとして昨年1月創設。心からの感謝の気持ちをテーマに書かれた小説作品を対象に公募し、約100作品が寄せられた。最終審査員はクリエーティブディレクターの大石真規子、編集者の高橋克佳、モデル・女優の高橋マリ子、ブックディレクターの幅允孝(はば・よしたか)の各氏が担当した。