Saturday, February 23, 2013

Reformer's drive to change Indonesia state firms hits roadblocks

JAKARTA (Reuters) - On an overcast Saturday in early January, the man in charge of modernizing Indonesia's state companies suddenly lost control of his prototype electric sports car and ploughed into the side of a mountain in East Java.

State-Owned Enterprises Minister Dahlan Iskan was unhurt, but the $300,000 bright red "Tucuxi", dubbed "Indonesia's Ferrari" by local media, was a write-off.

It looks like his chances of pulling off an ambitious reform of the bloated state sector are heading the same way.

More than a year after his appointment, most of Iskan's initiatives to fix state firms have either been revoked or blocked by parliament or remain stuck in ministries, according to government and parliamentary documents obtained by Reuters.

"The political challenge is still huge," said Iskan, who started his career as a journalist and still writes a regular column in his newspaper, in an interview. "Life is like that. It's difficult to make this country better."

Iskan has abandoned plans to start mass production of the privately funded Tucuxi, named after a type of dolphin.

But criticism over the crash -- he is being investigated by police for driving an unlicensed car on public roads, although no charges have been filed -- dented his reputation and further sapped his political capital, making it even tougher for him to battle powerful vested interests.

It is a frustration that, according to those close to him, is motivating the media mogul to consider standing as a candidate in next year's presidential election despite being viewed as a rank outsider.

"I would lie if I say I don't want to, I want to," Iskan said, when asked if he wanted the presidency.

He conceded he held only a small chance of winning, and declined to discuss his reasons for running because he was still a serving minister. But several people close to him said he saw the presidency as the only way to achieve change.

"Iskan is impatient over the lack of action just like any private sector guy. He's frustrated with the political pressure especially from the parliament," said a source close to Iskan who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

REFORM PRIORITY

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, two-thirds of the way through his second and final five-year term, has made reform of state companies a priority in developing the G20 economy.

Yudhoyono turned for help to Iskan, who made his reputation turning the near-bankrupt Jawa Pos Group into one of Indonesia's biggest media companies.

Just over a year since his appointment in late 2011, Iskan has struggled to implement any of his ambitious plans. On January 23, he announced that he might have to cancel all his planned initial public offerings (IPOs).

It is not the first time Yudhoyono has picked a reformist and then failed to give them protection. His highly respected finance minister, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, became so exhausted by relentless politically motivated criticism she left in 2010.

Indonesia's 140 state-controlled firms account for a huge chunk of Southeast Asia's biggest economy -- their total revenues are estimated to have hit 1,500 trillion ($155 billion) last year, or nearly a fifth of gross domestic product.

Several of the companies have complete or near control of key industries such as energy, power and agriculture that underpin Southeast Asia's biggest economy.

"There is an ownership fetish -- the state wants to act as a entrepreneur," said James Castle, chairman of CastleAsia, one of Indonesia's leading consultancies for foreign firms.

"They are everywhere, acting like private companies, and they crowd out the private sector."

ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN

Even Iskan's attempt to take control of the appointment of senior state company managers has largely failed.

In November 2009, Yudhoyono, criticized over repeated power cuts, gave Iskan the job of heading state electricity monopoly PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) and agreed to allow him to choose his own board. The appointment was seen as a success.

As state-owned enterprises minister in 2011, he wanted similar freedom to make appointments free of political considerations. He discovered quickly that wasn't so easy.

Executives connected to political party chiefs and the presidential palace are on the board of more than half of the top 25 state firms, according to state-owned enterprises ministry data and the companies documents from 2012.

Two presidential decrees, issued in 2005 a year into Yudhoyono's first term, gave the authority to choose top managers of state firms to a "Final Assessment Team" (TPA) led by the president.

"These are, of course, assignments ... they are missions from the government," Firmanzah, a special advisor to the president with responsibility for administration and financial matters, said in defense of presidential staff appointments.

"This is to push for good governance."

ENEMY OF THE HOUSE

Iskan has also antagonized members of two parliamentary commissions with oversight of state companies.

"He is not an expert in bureaucracy, politics and lobbying. He's a businessman," said Muhammad Said Didu, chief commissioner of state planter PT Perkebunan Nusantara IV.

He faced a setback only a few months into the job when he was forced to revoke his first decree to give more flexibility to executives in state firms to take major business decisions.

Parliament warned Iskan the decree, which gave his ministry such powers as deciding share buy backs, was illegal.

"My questions are: Does he have the authority to do that? And is it in line with the state-firms law?" said Harry K. Harman, vice chairman of one of the parliamentary commissions overseeing state firms, who is from Yudhoyono's party.

Differences of interpretation and overlapping, sometimes conflicting, laws also hinder Iskan's attempts at major reform and can make executives afraid to act for fear of prosecution.

In 2012, he planned five state firm initial public offerings. Only one, builder PT Waskita Karya, went to the market and that had already been approved by parliament back in 2008, before he came into office.

Last month, he announced that all IPO and rights issue plans by state firms would probably be postponed because of technical and regulatory issues.

He declined to discuss a plan to create one of the world's largest palm-oil and rubber firms with $5.6 billion in assets, which had once been set for completion in March 2012.

"Changing the law in this country is like changing the Koran," senior Iskan aide Wahyu Hidayat told Reuters. "Next to impossible." ($1 = 9,680.5 rupiah)

(Additional Reporting by Fathiya Dahrul and Neil Chatterjee; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Alex Richardson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reformers-drive-change-indonesia-state-firms-hits-roadblocks-030514701.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Congratulations to our Broker, Marc Rasmussen! - Sarasota Real ...

clhms125tm_125Since Marc is so quick to post exciting things all of his agents are doing, their accomplishments, and their praising testimonials, I thought it was about time someone did it for him. ?Congratulations to DWELL broker/owner Marc Rasmussen for becoming a Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist and a member of the prestigious Million Dollar Guild!

Marc went down to Miami to a conference at the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing, which exists to help real estate professionals provide high quality service to buyers and sellers of the luxury market.? The 2-day intensive-study course covered topics such as trends and amenities in today?s luxury market and creating marketing plans for multi-million dollar property, meaning that DWELL is even better equipped now to serve million dollar buyers and sellers.? Laurie Moore-Moore, President of the Institute and author of Rich Buyer, Rich Seller!? The Real Estate Agents? Guide to Marketing Luxury Homes, said that ?Marc Rasmussen is an example of a broker who works to hone the special skills and competencies necessary to provide exceptional service in the fine homes and estates marketplace.??? Now there?s a ringing endorsement!

The designation Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist (or CLHMS designation) is given to agents and brokers who have documented performance in the Top 10% of their market, and have successfully demonstrated their expertise in the luxury home and estate market.? Marc has been selling real estate since 2000 and opened his brokerage DWELL Real Estate in 2011.? He truly made waves this past year in the Sarasota real estate market, seeing as his brand-new firm sold a whopping $36,000,000+ in their first full year of existence, and has multiple agents who have sold million-dollar-plus properties.? ?Marc himself is a member of the prestigious Million Dollar Guild, a special designation of the CLHMS, which recognizes performance that includes at least two single-family property closings at $1,000,000 and above per year.?

Marc is a go-to person when the news needs a real estate market update; he?s the professional from whom professionals go to seek advice.? (Did I mention he?s just a lovely boss?)?? Now he adds to that list the CLHMS designation.? Congratulations on your hard work, Marc!

And just because I?ve got your attention: if you are a luxury home buyer or seller, please get in touch with us here at DWELL, 941.822.0708, to help with any of your needs.? We?re especially suited to assist you and work every day to better our qualifications to serve the luxury Sarasota market!

Cheers,

molly_173

Molly Russo, Sarasota Lifestyle Guru

Source: http://www.luxurysarasotarealestate.com/blog/congratulations-to-our-broker-marc-rasmussen.html

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Source: Boeing to propose 787 battery fix to FAA

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Boeing has developed a plan that it intends to propose to federal regulators to temporarily fix problems with the 787 Dreamliner's batteries that have kept the planes on the ground for more than a month, a congressional official told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Boeing Commercial Airplanes CEO Ray Conner is expected to present the plan to Michael Huerta, head of the Federal Aviation Administration, in a meeting on Friday, the official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly.

Boeing Co. spokesman Marc Birtel said the company doesn't talk in advance about meetings with federal officials.

"Everyone is working to get to the answer as quickly as possible, and good progress is being made," Birtel said.

The FAA and overseas aviation authorities grounded all 50 of the planes in service worldwide after a lithium ion battery caught fire on a plane parked in Boston and a smoking battery led to an emergency landing by another plane in Japan. The 787 is Boeing's newest and most technologically advanced plane. It was supposed to exemplify the future of commercial aviation, but the groundings have been a major public black eye and financial drain for Boeing, which vies with Airbus for the position as the world's largest commercial aircraft maker.

The plane is also the first airliner to make extensive use of lithium ion batteries to help power its electrical systems. Lithium ion batteries weigh less, charge faster and hold more energy than other batteries of comparable size. But they are also more susceptible to short-circuiting that can cause fires if they are damaged, have manufacturing flaws, are exposed to excessive heat or are overcharged.

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the battery fire in a Japan Airlines 787 that was discovered shortly after the plane landed at Boston's Logan International Airport on Jan. 7. Japanese authorities are investigating a battery failure in an All Nippon Airways 787 that made an emergency landing nine days after the fire. Investigators have said the batteries experienced short-circuiting and thermal runaway, a chemical reaction that causes progressively hotter temperatures, but they haven't found the root cause of the incidents.

Japan's Transport Ministry said Wednesday its investigation has uncovered a new problem: The aircraft's auxiliary power unit, which contains a lithium ion battery, was improperly connected to the main battery that overheated.

NTSB investigators found the Boston fire started with multiple short-circuits in one of the battery's eight cells. That created an uncontrolled chemical reaction known as "thermal runaway," which is characterized by progressively hotter temperatures. That spread the short-circuiting to the rest of the cells and caused the fire.

The board's findings are at odds with Boeing's initial battery testing before FAA's safety certification of the plane, which concluded that any short-circuiting could be contained within a single cell, preventing thermal runaway and fire from spreading.

Among the measures being discussed to make the batteries safe enough to return the 787 to the skies are adding more ceramic spacers between battery cells to contain any short-circuiting and fire within that cell. That would be in line with Boeing's initial test results.

More ceramic spacers would make the battery larger, which would require a bigger box to contain the battery cells. A more robust box lined with material to prevent any fire from spreading is also under discussion.

"What Boeing is trying to do is fix the battery so that (its initial testing) assumption is now valid," said Jon Hansman, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology aeronautics professor and a member of the FAA's Research and Development Advisory Committee.

"So if you can fix this part, the rest should be ok," he said.

Boeing hasn't said how much the 787 grounding will cost it. Imperial Capital analyst Ken Herbert estimated last week that it could cost Boeing $25 million a month in direct costs, with the total price tag climbing past $1 billion, including spending to fix the problem and expenses for delayed deliveries.

Boeing is still building five 787s each month, and has said it still wants to speed up to 10 a month by the end of the year. The company had orders for 800 of the planes at the time they were grounded.

It would take a delay of more than a couple of months for Boeing to back away from its speed-up plan, UBS analyst David Strauss wrote in a note on Wednesday.

Eight airlines in seven countries have 787s in their fleets. United Airlines, the only U.S. carrier with 787s, has cut its five 787s out of its schedule through the end of March. The grounding has been the most disruptive for Japan's All Nippon Airways, which has 17 of the planes.

LOT Polish Airlines is losing $50,000 a day due to the grounding of its two Boeing 787 Dreamliner planes, according to information made public by the Polish government on Wednesday. One of LOT Polish Airlines' 787s was stranded in Chicago by the grounding. LOT is still waiting for six more 787s to be delivered, several of them early this year.

___

Freed reported from Minneapolis.

___

Follow Joan Lowy on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/source-boeing-propose-787-battery-fix-faa-212304933--finance.html

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It's not just amyloid: White matter hyperintensities and Alzheimer's disease

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

New findings by Columbia researchers suggest that along with amyloid deposits, white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) may be a second necessary factor for the development of Alzheimer's disease.

Most current approaches to Alzheimer's disease focus on the accumulation of amyloid plaque in the brain. The researchers at the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain, led by Adam M. Brickman, PhD, assistant professor of neuropsychology, examined the additional contribution of small-vessel cerebrovascular disease, which they visualized as white matter hyperintensities (WMHs).

The study included 20 subjects with clinically defined Alzheimer's disease, 59 subjects with mild cognitive impairment, and 21 normal control subjects. Using data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative public database, the researchers found that amyloid and WHMs were equally associated with an Alzheimer's diagnosis. Amyloid and WMHs were also equally predictive of which subjects with mildcognitive impairment would go on to develop Alzheimer's. Among those with significant amyloid, WMHs were more prevalent in those with Alzheimer's than in normal control subjects.

Because the risk factors for WMHs?which are mainly vascular?can be controlled, the findings suggest potential ways to prevent the development of Alzheimer's in those with amyloid deposits.

"White Matter Hyperintensities and Cerebral Amyloidosis" was published online today in JAMA Neurology.

###

Columbia University Medical Center: http://www.cumc.columbia.edu

Thanks to Columbia University Medical Center for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 36 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126928/It_s_not_just_amyloid__White_matter_hyperintensities_and_Alzheimer_s_disease

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Vandals anger Sacred Heart Church parishioners by decapitating statue

by Brix Fowler / KENS 5

Bio | Email | Follow: @kens5brix

kens5.com

Posted on February 19, 2013 at 10:37 PM

Updated yesterday at 10:37 PM

"It just seems like somebody has it against Jesus Christ," says Deacon Rudy Rodriguez.

Rodriguez is a deacon at Sacred Heart Church near downtown San Antonio. In his 15 years there, he never thought he would see the day somebody would decapitate the church's most revered statue.

"To do damage to a statue that sacred? I can't imagine that," Rodriguez said.

Along with cutting off the the head of the statue of the Sacred Heart, whoever committed the crime also chopped off some of the statue's fingers, and that has angered parishioners.

"In all those years, there was no fear anything would happen, so people are very emotional about it and very upset about?who did it and why," Rev. Walter D'heedene said.

The church's priest sounded stunned, but he sees the act as a sign from above.

"The fingers that remain are touching the heart and it's almost like the heart, the symbol of love God saying, in spite of it all, that I still love you and come back to me," D'heedene said.

But just in case the vandal does come back, he's going to have a tougher time vandalizing the statue. D'heedene plans to move it to a more secure area inside of the church's fences.

"Obviously, after 50 years you think it's safe here, but it isn't," he said.

?

Source: http://www.kens5.com/news/local/Vandals-anger-Sacred-Heart-Church-parishioners-by-decapitating-statue-191931251.html

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Golf-Play suspended at Match Play due to snow

MARANA, Arizona | Thu Feb 21, 2013 12:12am IST

MARANA, Arizona Feb 20 (Reuters) - Play was suspended at 11.07 local (1807 GMT) because of driving rain and snow in the opening round of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship on Wednesday.

Just over three-and-a-half hours of golf was possible on a bitterly cold and breezy morning at Dove Mountain before officials halted the action at the elite World Golf Championships (WGC) event as ice began to form on the greens.

Rain, wind and the chance of further snow showers have been forecast for the rest of the day in Arizona's high desert.

In the early matches, Australian Jason Day was in full command against American Zach Johnson, four birdies in the first eight holes helping him go 6up after 10.

American Bo Van Pelt was 5up on Australian John Senden after 12 holes, defending champion Hunter Mahan was 4up on Italy's Matteo Manassero after nine and American Matt Kuchar was 3up on Japan's Hiroyuki Fujita after 14.

Northern Ireland's world number one Rory McIlroy, beaten by Mahan 2&1 in last year's final, and three-times champion Tiger Woods were among those yet to start their first-round matches.

McIlroy has been drawn to play Irishman Shane Lowry in the opening round while Woods will face fellow American Charles Howell III. (Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Steve Keating)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/INgolf/~3/m_7sktvrjjs/golf-pga-matchplay-suspension-idINL1N0BK0D020130220

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Archaeologists believe wine press found

Israel Antiquities Authority

This ancient installation found under Tel Aviv's streets could be part of a 1,500-year-old wine-making factory.

By Megan Gannon
LiveScience

Archaeologists have revealed what could be part of a 1,500-year-old wine-making factory underneath a street in the ancient city of Jaffa, now part of Tel Aviv, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced.

Researchers think the installation dates back to the second half of the Byzantine period, around the sixth to early seventh centuries A.D. Its smooth, mosaic surfaces suggest it was used in the production of some kind of liquid.

"Due to the mosaic's impermeability, such surfaces are commonly found in the press installations of the period, which were used to extract liquid," Yoav Arbel, director of the IAA excavations, said in a statement. "Each unit was connected to a plastered collecting vat. The pressing was performed on the mosaic surfaces whereupon the liquid drained into the vats."

These archaeological features are often identified as wine presses, used to squeeze juice from grapes. But Arbel told Israel's Haaretz newspaper that wine presses generally have larger collecting pits than this one. It is possible then that the installation could have been used to make wine or alcoholic beverages from smaller fruits, such as pomegranates, figs or dates. Alternatively, it could have been used to make paint, Arbel told Haaretz.

Arbel said he believes the section discovered could be a small part of a much larger installation that may be uncovered with further excavations along nearby streets later this year.

"This is the first important building from the Byzantine period to be uncovered in this part of the city," Arbel said in an IAA statement. He added that the installation is relatively far outside of Jaffa's ancient archaeological mound, which "adds a significant dimension to our knowledge about the impressive agricultural distribution in the region in this period."

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/20/17032105-fruits-of-their-labor-archaeologists-believe-ancient-wine-press-found?lite

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