People build air supported domes like the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome for two reasons: They are quick and they are cheap. The whole stadium was an exercise in cheapness, being described in Wikipedia by one official as a place to “get fans in, let ‘em see a game, and let ‘em go home.” I didn’t think … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Images via Yanko Design File this under “random yet practical.” It is a stretcher for sea turtles. The design, called Tuto and created by 2Y1DEA , is intended to help rescue workers, marine biologists and conservationists work with sea turtles — saving them, tagging them, or monitoring their health — without additional risk to the turtle. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Julian Assange, founder of whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, has been granted bail with strict conditions by a London court. The 39-year-old Australian
Continue reading …Russian entrepreneur Mikhail D. Prokhorov may have big plans for moving the Nets downtown and turning them into the Brooklyn New Yorkers, but another of his big plans will stay a little closer to home. Well, his home anyway. It’s the
Continue reading …Massive firefighting plane was offered to Israel on blaze’s first day but rejected, company rep says
Continue reading …photo: Oregon DOT / Creative Commons Next time someone bemoans the fact that even all the renewable energy manufacturing is heading overseas, point this next report out: According to new industry analysis carried out by GTM Research for SEIA , the US is a net exporter of solar power products, to the tune of $723 million in 2009. Here are more of the key points from the
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Surprising the media that had been persistently reporting that he had decided against running (perhaps because, as Neal Cavuto says, no one in his party likes him), Michael Steele announced on Monday that he was planning on running for a second term as RNC Chair . Michael Steele said Monday night that he would fight to remain chairman of the Republican National Committee next year, ignoring calls from some in the party for a new leader to help unseat President Barack Obama in 2012. Mr. Steele notified fellow RNC members during a conference call that he will seek a second two-year term in the Jan. 20 election, participants said. The announcement ends weeks of speculation in which the 52-year-old former lieutenant governor of Maryland kept an unusually low profile.[..] His decision could spark a contentious fight to lead the committee as the party gears up for the next presidential primary season and its effort to defeat Mr. Obama. Four candidates have already announced their intention to replace Mr. Steele, and others could enter the race.[..] The announced candidates are Saul Anuzis, a former Michigan Republican Party chairman; Maria Cino, a veteran of the Bush administration, who claims the backing of former Vice President Dick Cheney and former RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie; Reince Priebus, chairman of the Wisconsin GOP; and Ann Wagner, a former U.S. ambassador to Luxembourg. As chairman, Mr. Steele presided over the biggest Republican gains in decades. The party netted 63 House seats in last month’s midterm elections, regaining the majority, and gained seven Senate seats, including one in January. Despite those gains, critics complained that Mr. Steele spent lavishly, neglected the party’s biggest donors and failed to prove he can raise the money necessary to deny Mr. Obama a second term. The RNC raised $192 million during his tenure as chairman and spent $206 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. That left the committee with more than $15 million in debt, according to its latest filing with the Federal Election Commission. On Monday, Mr. Steele promised to “streamline the RNC” and told members that the committee had already begun implementing a new accounting system to track fundraising and spending. He trumpeted the committee’s expanded base of small-dollar donors and, in a direct nod to his critics, acknowledged that “a significant number” of major donors “have migrated to other organizations led by former RNC chairmen…that are not bound by the same laws as the RNC.” I think I can speak for comedians and liberals when I say, “Go Steele!”
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