Monday, December 31, 2012

Exclusive: Huawei partner offered embargoed HP gear to Iran

(Reuters) - A major Iranian partner of Huawei Technologies offered to sell at least 1.3 million euros worth of embargoed Hewlett-Packard computer equipment to Iran's largest mobile-phone operator in late 2010, documents show.

China's Huawei, the world's second largest telecommunications equipment maker, says neither it nor its partner, a private company registered in Hong Kong, ultimately provided the HP products to the telecom, Mobile Telecommunication Co of Iran, known as MCI. Nevertheless, the incident provides new evidence of how Chinese companies have been willing to help Iran evade trade sanctions.

The proposed deal also raises new questions about Shenzhen-based Huawei, which recently was criticized by the U.S. House Intelligence Committee for failing to "provide evidence to support its claims that it complies with all international sanctions or U.S. export laws."

At least 13 pages of the proposal to MCI, which involved expanding its subscriber billing system, were marked "Huawei confidential" and carried the company's logo, according to documents seen by Reuters. In a statement to Reuters, Huawei called it a "bidding document" and said one of its "major local partners," Skycom Tech Co Ltd, had submitted it to MCI.

The statement went on to say, "Huawei's business in Iran is in full compliance with all applicable laws and regulations including those of the U.N., U.S. and E.U. This commitment has been carried out and followed strictly by our company. Further, we also require our partners to follow the same commitment and strictly abide by the relevant laws and regulations."

In October, Reuters reported that another Iranian partner of Huawei last year tried to sell embargoed American antenna equipment to Iran's second largest mobile operator, MTN Irancell, in a deal the buyer ultimately rejected. The U.S. antenna manufacturer, CommScope Inc, has an agreement with Huawei in which the Chinese firm can use its products in Huawei systems, according to a CommScope spokesman. He added that his company strives to comply fully with all U.S. laws and sanctions.

Huawei has a similar partnership with HP. In a statement, the Palo Alto, Calif., company said, "HP has an extensive control system in place to ensure our partners and resellers comply with all legal and regulatory requirements involving system security, global trade and customer privacy and the company's relationship with Huawei is no different."

The statement added, "HP's distribution contract terms prohibit the sale of HP products into Iran and require compliance with U.S. and other applicable export laws."

Washington has banned the export of computer equipment to Iran for years. The sanctions are designed to deter Iran from developing nuclear weapons; Iran says its nuclear program is aimed purely at producing domestic energy.

CLOSE LINKS

Huawei and its Iranian partner, Skycom, appear to have very close ties.

An Iranian job recruitment site called Irantalent.com describes Skycom as "a leading telecom solution provider" and goes on to list details that are identical to the way Huawei describes itself on its U.S. website: employee-owned, selling "solutions" used by "45 of the world's top 50 telecom operators" and serving "one-third of the world's population."

On LinkedIn.com, several telecom workers list having worked at "Huawei-skycom" on their resumes. A former Skycom employee said the two companies shared the same headquarters in China. And an Iranian telecom manager who has visited Skycom's office in Tehran said, "Everybody carries Huawei badges."

A Hong Kong accountant whose firm is listed in Skycom registration records as its corporate secretary said Friday he would check with the company to see if anyone would answer questions. Reuters did not hear back.

The proposal to MCI, dated October 2010, would have doubled the capacity of MCI's billing system for prepaid customers. The proposal noted that MCI was "growing fast" and that its current system, provided by Huawei, had "exceeded the system capacity" to handle 20 million prepaid subscribers.

"In order to keep serving (MCI) with high quality, we provide this expansion proposal to support 40M subscribers," the proposal states on a page marked "HUAWEI Confidential."

The proposal makes clear that HP computer servers were an integral part of the "Hardware Installation Design" of the expansion project. Tables listing equipment for MCI facilities at a new site in Tehran and in the city of Shiraz repeatedly reference HP servers under the heading, "Minicomputer Model."

The documents seen by Reuters also include a portion of an equipment price list that carries Huawei's logo and are stamped "SKYCOM IRAN OFFICE." The pages list prices for HP servers, disk arrays and switches, including those that already are "existing" and others that need to be added. The total proposed project price came to 19.9 million euros, including a "one time special discount."

The proposed new HP equipment, which totaled 1.3 million euros, included one server, 20 disk arrays, 22 switches and software. The existing HP equipment included 22 servers, 8 disk arrays and 13 switches, with accompanying prices.

Asked who had provided the existing HP equipment to MCI, Vic Guyang, a Huawei spokesman, said it wasn't Huawei. "We would like to add that the existing hardware equipment belongs to the customer. Huawei does not have information on, or the authority to check the source of the customer's equipment."

Officials with MCI did not respond to requests for comment.

In a series of stories this year, Reuters has documented how China has become a backdoor for Iran to obtain embargoed U.S. computer equipment. In March and April, Reuters reported that China's ZTE Corp, a Huawei competitor, had sold or agreed to sell millions of dollars worth of U.S. computer gear, including HP equipment, to Telecommunication Co of Iran, the country's largest telecommunications firm, and a unit of the consortium that controls TCI.

The articles sparked investigations by the U.S. Commerce Department, the Justice Department and some of the U.S. tech companies. ZTE says it is cooperating with the federal probes.

TCI is the parent company of MCI.

(Additional reporting by Grace Li and Chyen Yee Lee in Hong Kong and Marcus George in Dubai; Edited by Simon Robinson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-huawei-partner-offered-embargoed-hp-gear-iran-230633426--finance.html

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In your town: What's going on in your community

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Source: http://www.app.com/article/20121230/NJNEWS/312300031/1070/NEWS02&source=rss

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Accounting for Non-Profit Organizations

Do you wonder if there?s any difference between non-profit accounting and for-profit bookkeeping? There are similarities, of course, but there is a distinct difference between these two forms. Read on to find out all about accounting or non-profit organizations.

Accounting for Non-Profit Organizations
A non-profit organization?s primary goal is not making profits. It does, however, need to generate enough income to allow it to operate and successfully manage its expenses. All the transactions a non-profit organization makes goes through careful tracking for different purposes, such as tax filing, cash flow management, third party auditing, and ensuring financial stability.

Accounting is a process that includes recording monetary and economic activities. It is a process that helps manage a company or entity?s records by interpreting, summarizing, and analysing data. Accountants involved with non-profit organizations often use their skills for the benefit of many.

Non-profit organizations have a set of accounting rules that generally do not apply to other businesses. They, of course, answer to the government just like any other business, but they also are directly under the supervision of granting agencies, boards of directors, and other governing bodies. Other businesses usually do not.

Most non-profits get their funds from multiple sources, which include any of the following: investment income, fundraisers, multiple grants, memberships, and financial contributions. They also take in-kind contributions like hours of work or expertise. Keeping track of all these can be hard work, requiring large amounts of paperwork in addition to annual government reporting and basic accounting.

Do you wonder what method non-profit accounting agencies use to keep track of all those records? To accurately keep track of corresponding grant periods, non-profit accountants use the accrual accounting method. This method allows them to accrue expenses against each source of funds, pay them off the following month, and charge each expense in the month it accrued.

At NFP Partners, we make sure to enhance your non-profit organisation?s financial management experience. With our experience and understanding of accounting, we will help you meet each challenge and increase your capacity to deliver valuable results. Call us today so we can help you.

Source: http://www.nfppartners.com/accounting-for-non-profit-organizations/

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Your Nostalgic Refreshment - ArticlesWide.com - iaginmo's posterous

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Traveling back to the 1930's, when home refrigerators were rare and today's electronic kitchen gadgets didn't exist. Ice was sold to homes and businesses in blocks of ... HOME :: Shopping and Product Reviews :: Electronics ...

Source: http://www.articleswide.com/article/12167-Your_Nostalgic_Refreshment.html

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Source: http://iaginmo.posterous.com/your-nostalgic-refreshment-articleswidecom

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Tigers making comeback in Asia

Camera trap images reveal tiger numbers rebounding across Asia, especially in southwestern India, where young tigers are leaving protected reserves due to population pressure, according to the Wildlife Conservation Society.

The WCS attributes the rise in different tiger groups to better law enforcement and protection of additional habitat. For example, a notorious poaching ring was busted in Thailand last year, and the gang leaders have been given prison sentences of up to five years ? the most severe punishments for wildlife poaching in Thailand's history, the conservation group said in a statement.

Tiger numbers have been rising steadily in Thailand's Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary since 2007, with a record 50-plus tigers counted last year, the WCS said. The sanctuary is part of the country's Western Forest Complex. This core spans 7,000 square miles (18,000 square kilometers) and is home to an estimated 125 to 175 tigers.

In India's mountainous landscape of Nagarahole and Bandipur national parks, tigers have reached saturation levels, with more than 600 individuals caught on camera trap photos in the past decade. Young tigers are leaving the parks along protected corridors and entering a landscape with a population of a million people, the group said. [In Images: Tigers Rebound in Asia]

Conservationists also worked with government officials in Russia to create additional protected areas for tigers. The country declared a new corridor, called the Central Ussuri Wildlife Refuge, on Oct. 18. The refuge links the Sikhote-Alin tiger population in Russia ? the main group of endangered Amur tigers? with tiger habitat in China's Heilongjiang Province in the Wandashan Mountains. The refuge ensures that tigers can move across the border between Russia and China in this region.

An estimated 3,200 tigers are living in the wild, with only 2,500 breeding adult pairs, according to TRAFFIC, a monitoring group funded by the World Wildlife Fund and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Tigers have lost 93 percent of their historical range, which once sprawled across Asia from Turkey to Russia and south to Bali, according to the group.

"Tigers are clearly fighting for their very existence, but it's important to know that there is hope. Victories like these give us the resolve to continue to battle for these magnificent big cats," Cristi?n Samper, WCS president, said in a statement.

Reach Becky Oskin at boskin@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @beckyoskin. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tigers-making-comeback-asia-144611814.html

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China requires real names for internet and phone sign-ups, handovers for illegal posts

Beijing Big Brother

It's no secret that China keeps a tight lid on internet freedoms, and it's not about to lighten up today. The government has passed regulations requiring that locals use their real names whenever they sign up for internet- and phone-based services (not just the access itself); while those were already common practices, there's now the real threat of punishment behind them. Anyone who clears those hurdles also has to be more mindful of what they write. If a page or post is deemed "illegal information," service hosts now have to delete its public presence, archive it and pass the content along to authorities. The state unsurprisingly argues that those who already stay on the sunny side of the law have nothing to fear from the new measures (where have we heard that before?), but the reassurances won't be much help to privacy advocates or those challenging corruption.

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Comments

Source: Bloomberg, Reuters

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/28/china-clears-rules-requiring-real-names-for-internet-sign-ups/

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House to return to session Sunday evening (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273425489?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Production Control Manager ? All jobs (page 1)


Kawneer North America is the leading manufacturer of architectural aluminum building products and systems for the commercial construction industry. Providing single-source responsibility, our comprehensive product portfolio includes entrances, framing systems, windows and curtain wall systems. Kawneer products are used on a myriad of high- mid- and low-rise buildings such as stadiums and sports facilities, office buildings, schools and universities, retail construction and healthcare.

In 2010, Traco, a premier manufacturer of windows was acquired by Alcoa and is now a division of Kawneer. Traco continues to provide customers with innovative, high performing windows, which are ideal for both renovation and new construction.

Facing the challenges of today's complex business environment, Kawneer balances experience with change and ongoing improvement. We are committed to responding to the industry's needs in every way possible - through rigorous testing, meticulous engineering and product design, focus on sustainability and dedicated partnership. As we renew and re-engineer our capabilities, our commitment to quality, reliability and innovation has remained constant since 1906 when our architect founder invented the first metal molding for storefronts.

Kawneer North America is based in Norcross, Georgia, and operates strategically located manufacturing facilities and fabricating service centers throughout the United States and Canada. Our company is part of Alcoa's global Building and Construction Systems (BCS) business.

The Production Control Manager will be based in Cranberry Township, PA and will report to the Plant Manager. The Production Control Manager will be responsible for the following:

? Provide leadership and coordinate strategic business initiatives required to drive process improvement throughout the manufacturing operations in pursuit of operational excellence.
? Apply knowledge and skills in EHS to drive disciplined systems in support of an injury free work culture.?
? Provide overall leadership and strategic direction to the Fabrication and Assembly department managers and subsequent department supporting staff.
? Apply knowledge in quality systems and ABS to drive disciplined systems, robust processes, and focused standardization of best practices; in conjunction manage a cohesive set of key performance metrics that provide objective insights into the health and effectiveness of business operating systems.?
? The manager will focus on productivity, order fulfillment, schedule adherence, process control and inventory management to ensure customer satisfaction, product quality and the smooth flow of material within the operation.
? Conduct deep dives to identify the root cause of manufacturing issues and bring them to successful resolution.?
? Engage the workforce in problem solving initiatives and ensure the discipline execution of manufacturing processes and procedures.?
? People Development: Build a high performance support team by actively managing the hiring, on-boarding and development strategy. Utilize a strategy that enhances a diversity of cultures, thoughts and perspectives through the quality team. Manage the development of all quality talent with a focus on individual development and succession opportunities with Alcoa Inc.
? Develop a structure to identify and deploy best practices for the core process areas (saw, fabrication and assembly).

Source: http://www.miscojobs.com/jobs/job_597773.htm

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

New turmoil hits Egypt's tourism

CAIRO (AP) ? At Egypt's Pyramids, the desperation of vendors to sell can be a little frightening for some tourists.

Young men descend on any car with foreigners in it blocks before it reaches the more than 4,500 year-old Wonder of the World. They bang on car doors and hoods, some waving the sticks and whips they use for driving camels, demanding the tourists come to their shop or ride their camel or just give money.

In the southern city of Aswan, tour operator Ashraf Ibrahim was recently taking a group to a historic mosque when a mob of angry horse carriage drivers trapped them inside, trying to force them to take rides. The drivers told Ibrahim to steer business their way in the future or else they'd burn his tourist buses, he said.

Egypt's touts have always been aggressive ? but they're more desperate than ever after nearly two years of devastation in the tourism industry, a pillar of the economy.

December, traditionally the start of Egypt's peak season, has brought new pain. Many foreigners stayed away because of the televised scenes of protests and clashes on the streets of Cairo in the battle over a controversial constitution.

Arrivals this month were down 40 percent from November, according to airport officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.

Tourism workers have little hope that things will get better now that the constitution came into effect this week after a nationwide referendum. The power struggle between Islamist President Mohammed Morsi and the opposition threatens to erupt at any time into more unrest in the streets.

More long term, many in the industry worry ruling Islamists will start making changes like banning alcohol or swimsuits on beaches that they fear will drive tourists away.

"Nobody can plan anything because one day you find that everything might be OK and another that everything is lost. You can't even take a right decision or plan for the next month," said Magda Fawzi, head of Sabena Management.

She's thinking of shutting down her company, which runs two hotels in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh and four luxury cruise boats on the Nile between the ancient cities of Luxor and Aswan. In one hotel, only 10 of 300 rooms are booked, and only one of her ships is operating, she said. She has already downsized from 850 employees before the revolution to 500.

"I don't think there will be any stability with this kind of constitution. People will not accept it," she said.

Tourism, one of Egypt's biggest foreign currency earners, was gutted by the turmoil of last year's 18-day uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Scared off by the upheaval, the number of tourists fell to 9.8 million in 2011 from 14.7 million the year before, and revenues plunged 30 percent to $8.8 billion.

This year, the industry struggled back. By the end of September, 8.1 million tourists had come, injecting $10 billion into the economy. The number for the full year is likely to surpass 2011 but is still considerably down from 2010.

For the public, it has meant a drying up of income, given that tourism provided direct or indirect employment to one in eight Egyptians in 2010, according to government figures.

Poverty swelled at the country's fastest rate in Luxor province, highly dependent on visitors to its monumental temples and the tombs of King Tutankamun and other pharaohs. In 2011, 39 percent of its population lived on less than $1 a day, compared to 18 percent in 2009, according to government figures.

For the government, the fall in tourism and foreign investment since the revolution has worsened a debt crisis and forced talks with the International Monetary Fund over a $4.8 billion loan.

Morsi has promised to expand tourism, but hotel owners and tour operators say he has yet to make clear any plans.

Their biggest fear is new violence causing shocks like December's. Ibrahim, of the Eagle Travels tourism company, said that because of this month's protests, two German operators he works with cancelled tours. They weren't even heading to Cairo, but to the Red Sea, Luxor and Aswan, far from the unrest.

But some in the industry fear that, with the constitution's provisions strengthening implementation of Shariah, Islamists will ban alcohol or restrict dress on Egypt's beaches, which rival antiquities sites as draws for tourism. Officials from the Muslim Brotherhood, from which Morsi hails, are vague about any plans.

Ultraconservative Salafis, who are key allies of Morsi, have been more direct.

Nader Bakkar, spokesman for the Salafi Nour Party, told a conference of tour guides in Aswan earlier this month that tourists should not be allowed to buy alcohol but could bring it with them and drink it in their rooms. Tourists should also be encouraged to wear conservative dress, he said.

"We welcome all tourists but we tell them ... there are traditions and beliefs in the country, so respect them," he said. "Most tourists will have no problem if you tell them" to bring their own alcohol.

One Salafi sheik earlier this year said the Pyramids and Sphinx should be demolished as anti-Islamic ? like Afghanistan's then-Taliban rulers destroyed monumental Buddha statues in 2001. Bakkar dismissed the comments as the opinion of one cleric.

But tour guide Gladys Haddad sees the Salafis' attitude as a threat, saying the constitution should have said more to protect Egypt's pharaonic heritage. "We are talking about a civilization that they do not acknowledge. They see it as idolatrous."

"Why would a tourist come to a resort if he can't drink?" said Fawzi, of Sabena Management. "People are coming for tours and monuments, and to relax on the boats. If they feel that restriction, why should they come?"

Nahla Mofied of Escapade Travels said the Islamists might restrict what tourists can "wear and do" but, given its importance to the economy, "they may not destroy tourism fully."

Complicating attempts to draw tourists back is the lawlessness gripping Egypt the past two years. With police supervision low, tourist touts increasingly assault guides and even tourists to demand business. In September, 150 tour guides held a protest against attacks by vendors.

"We have struggled with this problem since before the revolution, but now the situation is completely out of control," Ibrahim said.

At the Giza Pyramids, police seem indifferent to the touts. Camel-riding police even join in, pushing tourists to take rides.

Gomaa al-Gabri, an antiquities employee, was infuriated at the sight, shouting, "You sons of dogs" and a slew of other insults at a policeman trying to get money off a tourist.

"They're trying to take away my income," said the father of 11. "In Mubarak's time we wouldn't dare talk to them like this. Now I can hit him with a shoe on his head and he can't speak."

For some tourists at the Pyramids, the chaos is part of the experience.

"I just love it," British tourist Brian Wilson said. "You can't blame people wanting to make money."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turmoil-hits-egypts-tourism-175701229.html

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Video: Dog reunited with 7-year-old owner

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/50300442/

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Friday, December 21, 2012

Ask Slashdot: How Would You Build a Microsatellite?

Yeah, you can have omnidirectional antenna coverage for both uplink and downlink.... This is the preferred method if you can close your link and data budgets because it makes the system vastly simpler and inherently fail safe.... A secondary directional downlink may be reasonable if you have very high data requirements (e.g. streaming video or ultra high definition imagery)

Most commercial and military satellites have a low-bandwidth omnidirectional uplink and downlink for control. USAF satellites used to have (and may still have) almost a complete separation between the "bus" and "payload" sides, with the "bus" side on omni antennas. At the ground end, the USAF had big steerable dishes at about six tracking stations around the world. The spacecraft was piloted through those. Command and control of most USAF satellites were run from the Blue Cube in Sunnyvale until that operation was moved to Falcon and Vandenberg AFBs.

Once the spacecraft was in the desired orbit and oriented, directional antennas were used by the payload to communicate with the payload user's control center. With directional antennas, smaller ground-side dishes could be used. The big steerable dishes were a scarce resource needed for multiple satellites, so tying them up for payload data like imagery was avoided.

Back in the early 1980s, one of the amateur radio satellites was incorrectly commanded to transmit on its own control receive frequency. This blocked the receiver from receiving further commands. To recover the satellite, the Stanford Dish [wikipedia.org] was used. That 46 meter steerable radio telescope had, left over from old USAF work, a 3MW transmitter. The combination of a huge dish and a high powered transmitter allowed focusing enough power on the satellite to get through to the receiver and tell the satellite to change its transmit frequency. It took two tries (the first time the codes sent were wrong) but on the second try it worked.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/Sc8VAdp2KEA/story01.htm

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Britain's energy market is not working in the public interest - Flint

20 December 2012

Caroline Flint

Caroline Flint MP, Labour?s Shadow Energy and Climate Change Secretary, commenting on the publication of the Energy and Climate Change select committee?s Consumer Engagement with Energy Markets report and consumer group Which??s The Imbalance of Power report, said:?

?Britain?s energy market is not working in the public interest. For too long energy companies have been able to get away with ripping people off.?

?The time has come for a complete overhaul of our energy market. Labour would abolish the regulator Ofgem and create a tough new watchdog with powers to force energy companies to pass on price cuts and clamp down on abuses by the energy giants.??

?Families struggling to heat their homes this winter need a One Nation Labour government to break the dominance of the energy giants, simplify tariffs and protect vulnerable customers from being ripped off.?

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/LabourPartyNews/~3/DcRoWiuMd5Y/britains-energy-market-is-not-working-in-the-public-interest,2012-12-20

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

What Is Your Internet Marketing Plan For Your Online Business ...

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

When it comes to internet marketing, you need a plan of attack. This means you need to have a steady strategy that will allow you to enter into a niche and start seeing progress right away. The best way to come up with a good internet marketing plan is to write out your plans for the week.

Think of it as if you were preparing dinner for the week. On Monday you could have Chinese food. On Tuesday you could have pizza. On Wednesday you could have tacos. On Thursday you could have steak and potatoes. On Friday you could go out for dinner. On Saturday you could have rice and beans. And on Sunday you could host a family dinner.

And all of these things happen each and every week without fail. You have to look at your internet business in the same way too. For everyday of the week, implement some marketing strategies. You have to have more than 1 strategy also because at anytime online a strategy could just stop working for you ? or it may work, but won?t work as

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Source: http://www.thmg.com/ppc-tips/what-is-your-internet-marketing-plan-for-your-online-business/

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The Culture Gabfest: Stow Your Blunderbuss Edition

Listen to Culture Gabfest No. 211 with Nitsuh Abebe, Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, and Julia Turner by clicking the arrow on the audio player below:

And join the lively conversation on the Culturefest Facebook page here:

The sponsors of today?s show are Stamps.com and the Emmy-winning PBS series Independent Lens. Go to Stamps.com and use the promo code ?CULTUREFEST? for your no-risk free trial and bonus offer. To watch acclaimed documentaries from previous seasons of Independent Lens at 50% off, just go to iTunes and enter ?Independent Lens? ? that offer is running through October only.

Culturefest is on the radio! ?Gabfest Radio? combines Slate?s Culture and Political Gabfests in one show?listen on Saturdays at 7 a.m. and Sundays at 6 p.m. on WNYC?s AM820.

On this week?s Culturefest, our critics discuss the movie Looper and whether it succeeds in answering?or even asking?thought-provoking questions about the intricacies of time travel. Then, on the 30th anniversary of the premiere of the classic sitcom Cheers, the Gabfesters discuss the series, how it holds up in 2012, and what makes sitcoms timeless or useless after all this time. Finally they are joined by New York pop critic Nitsuh Abebe to discuss his profile of the band Grizzly Bear and what it means to find success in the world of indie rock.

Here are some links to the things we discussed this week:

  • Dana Stevens on Looper for Slate.
  • ?The Most Awkward Action-Star Transformations? by Katie Kilkenny for Slate.
  • Other movies that play with time and perception, Christopher Nolan?s Memento and Inception.
  • Gordon-Levitt?s earlier work, including the 2004 movie Mysterious Skin and the TV series 3rd Rock From the Sun.
  • Looper director Rian Johnson?s earlier movie starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Brick.
  • The 1962 French sci-fi short by Chris Marker, La Jet?e, which was the inspiration for Terry Gilliam?s 1996 apocalyptic drama 12 Monkeys.
  • ?Four Quartets? by T.S. Eliot.
  • The movies The Terminator and My Dinner With Andre.
  • The classic post-apocalyptic movie Blade Runner.
  • The New York Times Magazine feature on Looper director Rian Johnson.
  • The 1985 Harrison Ford movie Witness.
  • GQ?s oral history of the sitcom Cheers.
  • The script for ?Give Me a Ring Sometime,? the Cheers pilot episode.
  • Various sitcoms including Bewitched (1964), I Dream of Jeannie (1965), The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970), The Bob Newhart Show (1982), Seinfeld (1989), and 30 Rock (2006).
  • Gabfester favorite sitcoms and TV series The Simpsons, The Larry Sanders Show, Frasier, Sports Night, and Freaks and Geeks.
  • The real life inspiration for Cheers? Sam Malone, former Major League Baseball pitcher, Bill ?Spaceman? Lee.
  • Explanations of Cheers? influence on Parks and Rec from its showrunner Michael Schur in New York and its star Amy Poehler in GQ.
  • ?Down and Out in the Top Ten,? Nitsuh Abebe?s profile of the band Grizzly Bear and account of their indie rock stardom for New York.
  • Liz Phair?s 1999 album Exile in Guyville and her subsequent ill-fated attempt to re-cast herself as an Avril Lavigne-esque pop star.
  • Indie rock darlings Bon Iver.
  • Legendary producer Steve Albini on ?The Problem With Music? for Maximumrocknroll,
  • Forrest Wickman for Slate on why indie rock bands don?t get rich anymore.
  • PBS Independent Lens feature No Subtitles Necessary, the documentary about the Hungarian cinematographers and friends Laszlo Kovacs and Vilmos Zsigmond who between them shot a slew of classic 1970?s cinema including The Deer Hunter, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, Five Easy Pieces, Heaven?s Gate, and Easy Rider.
  • Deyrolle, Wes Anderson?s favorite shop of taxidermy and curiosities of the natural world, located in Paris.

Dana?s pick: The Evolution Store, the SoHo boutique for all things insects, bugs, natural history, fossils and minerals.

Julia?s pick: The novel that?s probably already been pressed evangelically into your hands, Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell.

Stephen?s pick: The poem ?Ego Dominus Tuus? by W.B. Yeats.

Outro: Bon Iver's "Bruised Orange (Chain of Sorrow)."

You can email us at culturefest@slate.com.

This podcast was produced by Dan Pashman. Our intern is Sally Tamarkin.

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American Society for Bone and Mineral Research Annual Meeting Oct. 12-15

American Society for Bone and Mineral Research Annual Meeting Oct. 12-15 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 2-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy E. Goetz
agoetz@asbmr.org
312-673-5824
Burness Communications

This year's annual meeting, being held in Minneapolis, Minn., USA, Oct. 12-15, 2012, brings together an estimated 5,000 researchers and clinicians from more than 60 countries

(Washington, DC) The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) 2012 Annual Meeting is the largest scientific meeting in the world on bone and mineral metabolism, offering an exceptional scientific program on innovative research, technology and new clinical treatments in bone diseases and disorders of mineral metabolism.

This year's Annual Meeting, being held in Minneapolis, Minnesota USA, October 12 15, 2012, brings together an estimated 5,000 researchers and clinicians from more than 60 countries.

The meeting includes lectures and symposia plus more than 1,400 poster presentations and 200 oral presentations.

A Sampling of Highlights

Friday, October 12

  • Gerald D. Aurbach Memorial Lecture: Prospects for Therapies with Adult Stem/Progenitor Cells (MSCs) or Proteins They Produce
    Friday, October 12, 8:15-9:15 am (Main Auditorium)
    Keynote Speaker: Darwin J. Prockop, M.D., Ph.D., Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Medicine
  • Secondary Fracture Prevention Task Force Report An Update, 10 11:00 am (Room 101C)
  • Symposium: Fracture Healing: Creating a Path to Regulatory Success, 1:30 3:00 pm (Auditorium Room 1)
  • ASBMR/ECTS Clinical Debate FRAX Is More Useful than Individual Risk Factors for Identifying Patients who will Experience Larger Reductions in Fracture Risk with Treatment, 3:30 4:30 pm (Main Auditorium)
  • ASBMR Discovery Hall Grand Opening, 5:45 pm (Lobby B)

Saturday, October 13

  • Louis V. Avioli Memorial Lecture: Advanced Bone Imaging in Osteoporosis: Monitoring Disease Progression, Predicting Fracture Risk, and Providing Surrogacy for Fracture Outcome the "Holy Cow" or the "Holy Grail"
    Saturday, October 13, 8 -- 9:00 am, (Main Auditorium)
    Keynote Speaker: Harry Genant, M.D., University of California, San Francisco (USA)
  • Concurrent Oral Session 12: Bone Acquisition and Pediatric Bone Disease (Room 200DE)
    • Effects of a Specialized School Physical Education Program on Bone Structure and Strength: A 4-year Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial, 3:00 3:15 pm
    • Sustained Effects of Physical Activity on Bone Health: Iowa Bone Development Study, 3:15 3:30 pm
    • Does Stage of Sexual Maturation Determine Relationship of Calcium Intake and Physical Activity to Bone Mass Accrual, 3:30 3:45 pm
    • Symposium: Duration of Safety of Osteoporosis Therapy, 4:00 5:30 pm (Main Auditorium)

Sunday, October 14

  • Clinical Roundtable /Case Conference Vitamin D and Repercussions of the IOM Report, 1:30 2:30 pm (Main Auditorium)Concurrent Oral Session 19: Muscle and Bone Interactions, 2:45 4:15 pm (Auditorium Room 1)

Monday, October 15

  • Concurrent Oral Session 30: Bone Acquisition and Pediatric Bone Disease (Auditorium Room 3)
    • Pre-Pubertal Bone Mass Predicts Peak Bone Mass A 28 Year Prospective Observational Study of 214 Children, 10:45 11:00 am
    • Clinical Roundtable/Case Conference: Parathyroid Hormone, Hyperparathyrodism, and Hypothyroidism, 1:30 2:30 pm (Main Auditorium)
    • Concurrent Oral Session 36: Osteoporosis in Special Populations (Auditorium Room 3)
    • Determinants of Low Bone Mineral Density (BMD) in Young Women with Severe Anorexia Nervosa, 5:00 5:15 pm

###

For more media information, please go to http://www.asbmr.org and see "Media" under the ASBMR 2012 Annual Meeting or contact Amy Goetz, ASBMR Marketing & Communications, agoetz@asbmr.org.

NOTE: ASBMR will update its online press room throughout the conference with new releases, conferences highlights and images. For access, contact agoetz@asbmr.org.

The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) is the leading professional, scientific and medical society established to bring together clinical and experimental scientists involved in the study of bone and mineral metabolism. ASBMR encourages and promotes the study of this expanding field through annual scientific meetings, an official journal (Journal of Bone and Mineral Research), the Primer on Metabolic Bone Diseases and Disorders of Mineral Metabolism, advocacy and interaction with government agencies and related societies. To learn more about upcoming meetings and publications, please visit www.asbmr.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


American Society for Bone and Mineral Research Annual Meeting Oct. 12-15 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 2-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy E. Goetz
agoetz@asbmr.org
312-673-5824
Burness Communications

This year's annual meeting, being held in Minneapolis, Minn., USA, Oct. 12-15, 2012, brings together an estimated 5,000 researchers and clinicians from more than 60 countries

(Washington, DC) The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) 2012 Annual Meeting is the largest scientific meeting in the world on bone and mineral metabolism, offering an exceptional scientific program on innovative research, technology and new clinical treatments in bone diseases and disorders of mineral metabolism.

This year's Annual Meeting, being held in Minneapolis, Minnesota USA, October 12 15, 2012, brings together an estimated 5,000 researchers and clinicians from more than 60 countries.

The meeting includes lectures and symposia plus more than 1,400 poster presentations and 200 oral presentations.

A Sampling of Highlights

Friday, October 12

  • Gerald D. Aurbach Memorial Lecture: Prospects for Therapies with Adult Stem/Progenitor Cells (MSCs) or Proteins They Produce
    Friday, October 12, 8:15-9:15 am (Main Auditorium)
    Keynote Speaker: Darwin J. Prockop, M.D., Ph.D., Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Medicine
  • Secondary Fracture Prevention Task Force Report An Update, 10 11:00 am (Room 101C)
  • Symposium: Fracture Healing: Creating a Path to Regulatory Success, 1:30 3:00 pm (Auditorium Room 1)
  • ASBMR/ECTS Clinical Debate FRAX Is More Useful than Individual Risk Factors for Identifying Patients who will Experience Larger Reductions in Fracture Risk with Treatment, 3:30 4:30 pm (Main Auditorium)
  • ASBMR Discovery Hall Grand Opening, 5:45 pm (Lobby B)

Saturday, October 13

  • Louis V. Avioli Memorial Lecture: Advanced Bone Imaging in Osteoporosis: Monitoring Disease Progression, Predicting Fracture Risk, and Providing Surrogacy for Fracture Outcome the "Holy Cow" or the "Holy Grail"
    Saturday, October 13, 8 -- 9:00 am, (Main Auditorium)
    Keynote Speaker: Harry Genant, M.D., University of California, San Francisco (USA)
  • Concurrent Oral Session 12: Bone Acquisition and Pediatric Bone Disease (Room 200DE)
    • Effects of a Specialized School Physical Education Program on Bone Structure and Strength: A 4-year Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial, 3:00 3:15 pm
    • Sustained Effects of Physical Activity on Bone Health: Iowa Bone Development Study, 3:15 3:30 pm
    • Does Stage of Sexual Maturation Determine Relationship of Calcium Intake and Physical Activity to Bone Mass Accrual, 3:30 3:45 pm
    • Symposium: Duration of Safety of Osteoporosis Therapy, 4:00 5:30 pm (Main Auditorium)

Sunday, October 14

  • Clinical Roundtable /Case Conference Vitamin D and Repercussions of the IOM Report, 1:30 2:30 pm (Main Auditorium)Concurrent Oral Session 19: Muscle and Bone Interactions, 2:45 4:15 pm (Auditorium Room 1)

Monday, October 15

  • Concurrent Oral Session 30: Bone Acquisition and Pediatric Bone Disease (Auditorium Room 3)
    • Pre-Pubertal Bone Mass Predicts Peak Bone Mass A 28 Year Prospective Observational Study of 214 Children, 10:45 11:00 am
    • Clinical Roundtable/Case Conference: Parathyroid Hormone, Hyperparathyrodism, and Hypothyroidism, 1:30 2:30 pm (Main Auditorium)
    • Concurrent Oral Session 36: Osteoporosis in Special Populations (Auditorium Room 3)
    • Determinants of Low Bone Mineral Density (BMD) in Young Women with Severe Anorexia Nervosa, 5:00 5:15 pm

###

For more media information, please go to http://www.asbmr.org and see "Media" under the ASBMR 2012 Annual Meeting or contact Amy Goetz, ASBMR Marketing & Communications, agoetz@asbmr.org.

NOTE: ASBMR will update its online press room throughout the conference with new releases, conferences highlights and images. For access, contact agoetz@asbmr.org.

The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) is the leading professional, scientific and medical society established to bring together clinical and experimental scientists involved in the study of bone and mineral metabolism. ASBMR encourages and promotes the study of this expanding field through annual scientific meetings, an official journal (Journal of Bone and Mineral Research), the Primer on Metabolic Bone Diseases and Disorders of Mineral Metabolism, advocacy and interaction with government agencies and related societies. To learn more about upcoming meetings and publications, please visit www.asbmr.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/bc-asf100212.php

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Obama: 'I'm Just Okay' At Debating - Business Insider

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President Barack Obama lowered debate expectations at a rally Sunday night in Las Vegas, where he is hunkering down for three days of preparation before his first head-to-head with Mitt Romney later this week.

"Governor Romney, he's a good debater," Obama told supporters. "I'm just OK."

The remark was not without a hint of irony, which Obama underscored later when he told the audience that he was not interested in taking down his opponent with "zingers." Romney has reportedly been working for months on memorizing one-liners to use against the president.?

"What I'm most concerned about is having a serious dis?cussion about what we need to do to keep this country growing," Obama said Sunday, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "That's the debate the country deserves."

Obama's campaign press secretary Jen Psaki reiterated this strategy to reporters on Air Force One Sunday afternoon, adding that Obama will be more focused on addressing voters at home than he will be on his opponent on stage.?

"The president and Mitt Romney clearly look at the debates as a very different opportunity," Psaki said, according to the White House pool report. "The president sees this as an opportunity to continue his conversation with the American people as he has been doing over the last several months including at the convention which was probably our largest audience to date."

"This will be a very large audience," she added. "He wants to speak directly to the families of people who are on their couches at home, having snacks, drinking a beer, drinking soda whatever it is, and tuning in for the first time. That's who he is speaking directly to."

"Mitt Romney and his team have been clear that what they need, what they expect from the debates is a game changing performance."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/obama-just-okay-debates-romney-good-2012-10

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First non-game titles now available on Steam, game dev tools lead the charge

First nongame titles now available on Steam,

Valve Software -- maker of the iconic Half-Life series and proprietor of digital storefront Steam -- today released Steam's first non-video game software (originally scheduled to launch in early September). ArtRage Studio Pro, CameraBag 2, GameMaker: Studio, 3D-Coat, 3DMark Vantage, and 3DMark 11 join Valve's own Source Filmmaker in the newly minted software section of the Steam store. All non-Valve software is PC-only for now -- we imagine Mac software will also show up at some point, but nothing's available just yet. Like Steam's games, software titles will receive streamlined updates via the Steam client, and consumers will enjoy similar discount offers to the games section -- the first such sale is already on, with launch day software getting a 10 percent discount until week's end. Bizarrely, the software titles also have Steam achievements. Finally, developers get rewarded for porting their games to Android by something other than crushing piracy!

Continue reading First non-game titles now available on Steam, game dev tools lead the charge

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First non-game titles now available on Steam, game dev tools lead the charge originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Oct 2012 15:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/02/steam-non-game-software-launch/

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Energy firm uses 'land grabs' to secure fracking rights

/

Ranjana Bhandari and her husband, Kaushik De, stand near a Chesapeake Energy gas well in Arlington, Texas, on Sept. 16, 2012.

By Brian Grow, Joshua Schneyer and Anna Driver Reuters

Ranjana Bhandari and her husband knew the natural gas beneath their ranch-style home in Arlington, Texas, could be worth a lot - especially when they got offer after offer from Chesapeake Energy Corp.

Chesapeake wanted to drill there, and the offers could have netted the couple thousands of dollars in a bonus and royalties. But Bhandari says they ultimately declined the deals because they oppose fracking in residential areas. Fracking, slang for hydraulic fracturing, is a controversial method used to extract gas and oil.

Their repeated refusals didn't stop Chesapeake, the second-largest natural gas producer in the United States. This June, after petitioning a Texas state agency for an exception to a 93-year-old statute, the company effectively secured the ability to drain the gas from beneath the Bhandari property anyway -- without having to pay the couple a penny.


In fact, since January 2005, the Texas agency has rejected just five of Chesapeake's 1,628 requests for such exceptions, a Reuters review of agency data shows. Chesapeake has sought the most exceptions during that time -- almost twice the number sought by a subsidiary of giant rival Exxon Mobil, Reuters found.

Chesapeake says it only seeks exceptions to the Texas statute -- called Rule 37 -- as a last-ditch effort, and often because it cannot locate the land owner. The law, company spokesman Michael Kehs said, "protects the rights of the majority of mineral owners."

Not so, say many local residents.

"The principle of it is insane," said Calvin Tillman, a former mayor of Dish, Texas, a small town north of Fort Worth where drilling has been heavy. "Not only can they take your property, but they don't have to pay you for it."

Chesapeake's use of the Texas law is among the latest examples of how the company executes what it calls a "land grab" -- an aggressive leasing strategy intended to lock up prospective drilling sites and lock out competitors.

Chesapeake has become the principal player in the largest land boom in America since the California Gold Rush of the late 1840s and ?50s, amassing drilling rights on more land than almost any U.S. energy company. After years of leasing tracts from New York to Wyoming, the company now controls the right to drill for oil and gas on about 15 million acres -- roughly the size of West Virginia.

More than its rivals, Chesapeake has made land-leasing central to its business model. An analysis by investment research firm Morningstar Inc. shows that the company has spent $31.2 billion to acquire drilling rights on unproven U.S. land in the last 15 years. Exxon -- a company whose revenue was 35 times larger than Chesapeake's last year -- spent $27 billion during the same period.

Chesapeake's rationale is clearly spelled out in company filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

"We believed that the winner of these land grabs would enjoy competitive advantages for decades to come as other companies would be locked out of the best new unconventional resource plays in the U.S.," the company wrote in its 2012 filing.

It has been less forthcoming about the tactics used in implementing that strategy, however.

Reuters reviewed hundreds of internal Chesapeake emails and thousands of pages of documents, including in-house data that show how Chesapeake evaluates its land acquisitions.

Reporters also examined dozens of lawsuits by land owners in seven states, and interviewed contractors proffering deals for the company.

What emerged were approaches to leasing property that land brokers, land owners and lawyers say push ethical and legal limits. Chesapeake has unilaterally altered or backed out of leases. And in Texas and at least three other states, it has exploited little-known laws to force owners to hand over drilling rights and sometimes forfeit profits.

Some of the company's own contractors have considered the tactics dubious.

"In my entire career, I have never been put in the position that (Chesapeake) has recently handed us," contractor David McGuire wrote to Chesapeake CEO Aubrey McClendon on Aug. 10, 2010. He had just been ordered by the company to reject hundreds of signed leases in Michigan -- through means that McGuire said were "beyond anything I could ever have imagined."

He told McClendon that he regretted ever being part of Chesapeake's land grab. "I simply wish our deal would never have taken place," he wrote in the email.

Some of the methods that Chesapeake has used aren't unique to the company. Nor is the outcome necessarily one-sided. Many land owners have gotten rich on deals with Chesapeake.

"Chesapeake has been successful in our leasing because we strive to fairly compensate the more than one million Chesapeake mineral owners," said spokesman Kehs. "Chesapeake has paid nearly $12 billion in lease bonus payments and nearly $10 billion in royalty payments since 2005."

Critical juncture
How Chesapeake went about its land grab has become increasingly important in the past year, as the company weathers a governance crisis and liquidity crunch.

In April, Reuters reported that McClendon, 53, had arranged more than $1.5 billion in financing by pledging his share of the company's wells as collateral for personal loans. Most of the borrowing came from a firm that also is an investor in Chesapeake, a potential conflict of interest. The report prompted Chesapeake's board of directors to strip McClendon of his chairmanship and hire an independent chairman. Disgruntled shareholders replaced four of its nine directors.

In June, Reuters documented Chesapeake's efforts to team with Canadian rival Encana Corp. to avoid driving up land prices in Michigan. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating whether the companies violated antitrust laws.

Now, as Chesapeake fights to regain its footing, it is looking to execute the last stage in its land strategy: filling out its vast holdings, and then developing or selling them. Where Chesapeake doesn't intend to drill, it intends to sell, according to company presentations.

Much hinges on this next chapter. This year, the company aims to sell $14 billion worth of assets to close a cash-flow deficit.

The real estate strategy has been honed by McClendon, who started his career as a land man, the term for brokers who acquire mineral rights for energy companies.

On April 28, 2010 -- amid one of the biggest land grabs in Michigan history -- McClendon received a flattering email that harkened to his beginnings. It came from contractor McGuire, manager at O.I.L. Niagaran, a local firm that Chesapeake hired to help handle its leasing efforts in northern Michigan.

"To the most successful Landman in the world," McGuire's email began.

McClendon adored the compliment. "That is the nicest title anyone has ever given me," he replied. "I really appreciate that, thanks David!"

McGuire had been hired to serve as Chesapeake's principal outside land man in Michigan, where the company sought acreage in the Collingwood shale formation, then one of the most promising new oil and gas plays in the United States.

After Chesapeake identifies acreage that might hold significant gas or oil, it deploys armies of land men -- some Chesapeake employees, others contractors such as McGuire and his employees. They knock on the doors of land owners to solicit leases. Few regulations govern what they can say or what language can be included in leases.

Chesapeake has, until recently, employed more than 4,000 land men. Often, they are ordered not to disclose that Chesapeake is their client, according to internal emails and interviews with land owners and land men.

"It is critical that we do everything in our power to keep our client's name secret!!!!" wrote Joe McFerron in a Nov. 10, 2010, email to his staff. McFerron was a contractor with RedSky Land, an Oklahoma brokerage hired by Chesapeake in North Dakota and Michigan. McFerron did not respond to requests for comment.

Broker McGuire pursued his task energetically and in secret: Within three months, O.I.L. Niagaran and other subcontractors for Chesapeake had leased about 450,000 acres in Michigan. Chesapeake spent some $400 million there through McGuire and other brokers.

But internal Chesapeake emails show that by August -- a few months after he had called McClendon the world's best land man -- McGuire was troubled by the experience.

At the direction of McClendon and other Chesapeake executives, McGuire was ordered to reject or put on hold hundreds of leases after a Chesapeake test well performed poorly and a major Chesapeake competitor stopped new leasing.

A backlash ensued, and McGuire's company bore the brunt. O.I.L. Niagaran became a defendant in about 150 breach-of-contract lawsuits filed since late 2010 in Michigan state courts.

McGuire referred questions to an attorney, who declined to comment.

Faux deals?
Extricating itself from land leases has sometimes proved as important to Chesapeake as obtaining them.

In lawsuits in Texas, Pennsylvania and North Dakota, land owners allege Chesapeake has treated signed leases as mere placeholders for deals that it may later choose not to honor.

Two state court judges in Michigan ruled early this year that Chesapeake had the right to reject leases at any time before title to the minerals was finalized.

But in the last three months, judges in Louisiana and Texas have awarded nearly $120 million to two land owners -- Peak Energy and Preston Exploration -- after finding Chesapeake breached contracts by walking away from signed deals. Scores of similar cases in Michigan and Texas have been settled this year.

In late 2008, as the financial crisis sent natural gas prices tumbling, Chesapeake began to reevaluate deals it had cut.

One group of land owners caught in these retreats was the Witt family. They own a 33-acre tract above the Haynesville formation of rich gas fields in Harrison County, Texas.

In August 2008, the Witts were approached by land men working for Chesapeake. The offer: to lease mineral rights for the Witts' land for $14,000 per acre, according to an amended complaint filed in May 2012. Instead of checks, Chesapeake issued bank drafts, which can be cashed after an owner's property title is reviewed -- typically 30 to 90 days after a lease is signed.

When the Witts went to cash the Chesapeake bank draft, they were told by bank officials that the payment would not be honored. A hand-written note on one of the Witts' bank drafts rescinded by Chesapeake reads, "Cancelled for renegotiating price (per) acre," according to an exhibit submitted in the family's lawsuit.

The Witts alleged that McClendon told Chesapeake employees "to reduce the already agreed upon bonuses down to no more than $5,000 per acre" and to "take lawsuits" if necessary.

The family claimed they were "cold-drafted," a term used to describe an "unethical practice in the leasing industry" in which the land owner is provided a bank draft "in consideration for a valid, enforceable lease," even though the company's intent is "not to honor the payment obligation."

The practice allegedly enables Chesapeake to lock up property, block rivals, prevent owners from shopping for better offers, and then later decide if it wants to keep the acreage.

"It is unethical by anyone's standards in the energy industry if the intention was not to pay the draft at the time it was issued," said Richard Bate, an oil and gas attorney in Denver. "It is the essence of the land grab because it boxes out the competition without the intention to pay."

In response to the suit, Chesapeake said it "was simply under no contractual obligation to pay lease bonuses" to the Witts, according to court records. The company said the leases were "not signed by Chesapeake," though copies show they were taken in the name of a Chesapeake subsidiary, Chesapeake Exploration.

Terry Rhoads, an attorney for the Witt family, said their lawsuit was settled on Aug. 17. Terms were t disclosed.

No refusing
Some landowners oppose fracking, and New York, Vermont and Maryland have all refused to grant fracking licenses. The technique's effects on groundwater are still under review by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

But Chesapeake and other energy companies, which view fracking as safe, are now using state statutes to access the minerals under unleased land even if owners object to the drilling technique.

If property owners refuse deals, Chesapeake and its land men have made clear their plans to take the oil and gas from beneath the land by using little-known laws in Texas, Ohio and other states. The terminology varies from state to state -- a Rule 37 exception in Texas, mandatory pooling or unitization in Ohio. But the result is often the same: getting state regulators to enable the company to drill, sometimes against the owner's will.

The economic argument for granting access to unleased land is logical. Difficulty in stitching together large plots leaves holes in drilling units that can make development less profitable. Large, contiguous plots enable drillers to pump more oil and gas. Allowing companies to access remaining land means that property owners who want to sell their mineral rights aren't shortchanged by a few holdouts.

"Under Ohio law, it's not legal for one or a few landowners to keep the vast majority of landowners from exercising their rights to develop their minerals and get the benefits," said Heidi Hetzel Evans, a spokeswoman with the state's Department of Natural Resources, which rules on such requests.

Chesapeake has based some of its petitions on just such a premise: that it is protecting the rights of people who want to drill, rather than succumbing to the will of holdout landowners.

That marks a turnabout in Texas. When the state passed the Rule 37 statute in 1919, it was meant to prevent excessive drilling of oil wells and to protect the mineral rights of small landowners, say legal experts. The rule prohibits companies from drilling too close to unleased properties.

Today, Rule 37 exceptions "seem to be a new creative use of the statute in a way that was not intended when it was designed," said Matthew Festa, an associate professor of law at South Texas College of Law. "It's possible that this amounts to the transfer of private property from one private entity to another private entity."

Since Jan. 1, 2005, three of the largest oil and gas drillers in Texas have applied for 3,595 exceptions to Rule 37, according to a Reuters review of Texas Railroad Commission data. Chesapeake has been the most active. It has applied for 1,628 exceptions, compared with 1,073 for rival EOG Resources and 894 for XTO Energy, a unit of Exxon Mobil.

Chesapeake and its rivals almost always win. Energy companies only have to notify land owners that they intend to apply for a Rule 37 exception. If the owner doesn't protest, commission guidelines require the petition be granted.

Texas Railroad Commission spokeswoman Ramona Nye said the agency believes there is no evidence that fracking is unsafe. And evaluating the fairness of Rule 37 exceptions is not part of the commission's mandate, she said.

"We are charged by the Legislature to make sure hydrocarbons don't stay underground and go to waste," she said. "It becomes a balancing act. Do we allow two or three landowners to prevent a majority from developing those minerals?"

Energy companies and their executives are the dominant contributors to the election campaigns of railroad commission members and candidates, according to a Reuters review of Texas Ethics Commission data. For example, Chesapeake was among the largest donors last year to the campaign of the commission's chairman, Barry Smitherman, who is seeking reelection this year. The company contributed $25,000.

?Whatever we want?
In Texas, Arlington resident Bhandari is resigned to losing future income from the gas beneath the couple's land. "We decided not to sign because we didn't think it was safe," Bhandari said. But "the railroad commission doesn't seem to care about whose property is taken."

They aren't the only owners facing a similar scenario.

Ohio's Utica shale formation is a cornerstone of Chesapeake's plan to drill for more oil, which is fetching a premium at a time of rock-bottom natural gas prices. The company has already leased more than 1 million acres of land in the state. It wants more.

One result: Dozens of Ohio land owners interviewed by Reuters say Chesapeake land men are raising the prospect that their land will be "force pooled" -- a term for using state law to mandate that unleased property be included in drilling units.

That contention is supported by a tape recording of land man Nate Laps, who worked for Chesapeake in Ohio through subcontractor Kenyon Energy. The recording was made by David Kennedy, a landowner in Stark County, Ohio. Kennedy later signed a lease with Chesapeake, receiving a bonus of $9,900 for his 11-acre property. He said he feels that Laps gave him a "fair shake."

The recording indicates that not all landowners are as fortunate.

In a portion of the recorded conversation, Kennedy asked Chesapeake land man Laps: "Mandatory pooling -- what is that?"

Laps responded: "We don't like to talk about this because we won't want to come across as it's our way or no way. ? But since you mentioned it -- if properties don't want to sign, if we have 90 percent secured of the well that we need, we have the power to put these people in the lease without their permission."

Kennedy: "Do you still have to pay 'em?"

Laps: "All you do is pay them the royalties. ? We can do whatever we want."

Laps did not respond to emails and phone calls seeking comment. But state records in Ohio show Chesapeake is doing precisely what Laps said, and with the blessing of regulators.

Unlike Rule 37 in Texas, Ohio statutes allow that landowners could receive royalties. Hetzel Evans said the DNR receives "a few dozen or more" forced-pooling applications per year. The DNR has approved most of them, she said, but only when a driller shows "there's no other option."

Asked about the comments by Laps to landowner Kennedy, she said: "It does concern us if we're being portrayed as allowing an operator to just come in and do what they will. A comment like that makes it sound like we don't have a framework in place."

State Rep. Mark Okey, a Democrat who represents nearby communities, has unsuccessfully sponsored legislation to govern the conduct of land men. He said his constituents have singled out Chesapeake's brokers as the most forceful. Their land men have even sought to lease his property, he said.

"They believe in intimidation tactics. They threaten you. They will yell at you. ? It's all about getting you to sign," Okey said. "You don't sign? We'll go around you. You don't sign? You'll not get anything out of your mineral rights. You don't sign? Then you're going to pay the price because we're going to take those minerals from you."

Chesapeake declined to comment.

David and Catherine Conrad live just outside the town of Hartville, Ohio, near Akron. They said they refused to sign a lease with Chesapeake last year because they, too, oppose fracking. But a Chesapeake well will soon snake beneath the Conrad home.

Chesapeake requested in November that the couple's land -- and the land of 48 other property owners -- be included in an area where Chesapeake plans to drill six wells. Chesapeake's application was reported by the Columbus Dispatch.

On July 10, officials with the DNR approved Chesapeake's request. "I don't think the state should be able to take a landowner's rights to generate a profit for a private company," Conrad said.

In its petition, Chesapeake told regulators its proposed drilling unit could produce 4.5 million barrels of oil and 3.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas -- if the plots of the 49 landowners who didn't lease their property to Chesapeake were included.

If not, Chesapeake said, the unit would be 75 percent less productive and would miss out on an additional $71 million in revenue, according to its application. That math carried the day.

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/02/14183177-energy-firm-uses-land-grabs-to-secure-fracking-rights-from-reluctant-landowners?lite

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