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Today's Topics:

   1. Apple Announces New 8GB Model of iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED
      Special Edition (Monty Solomon)
   2. American, others look to add WiFi at airport (Monty Solomon)
   3. An urban fiber-optic challenge / Verizon to use Dorchester as
      a test site for bringing high-speed Net into cities (Monty Solomon)
   4. Starbucks loses laptops with worker data (Monty Solomon)
   5. Miles away, 'I'll have a burger' / Fast food drive-throughs
      go long distance (Monty Solomon)
   6. New museum showcases phones, switchboards & tools from
      1876-1980 (George Antunes)
   7. Starbucks Loses Laptops With Worker Data (George Antunes)
   8. Tidal Energy Companies Staking Claims (George Antunes)
   9. Professor's Bigfoot Research Criticized (George Antunes)
  10. Nielsen Shelves Rating System for Ads (George Antunes)
  11. The People's Commissary (Wal-Mart) announces price cuts on
      electronics (George Antunes)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2006 02:15:19 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Apple Announces New 8GB Model of iPod nano
        (PRODUCT) RED Special Edition
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


Apple Announces New 8GB Model of iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED Special Edition

CUPERTINO, California-November 3, 2006-Apple today announced a new 
8GB model of the iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED Special Edition in response 
to outstanding customer demand. The new 8GB iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED 
Special Edition holds up to 2,000 songs and is available for $249, 
joining the 4GB model priced at $199. Both models come in a beautiful 
red aluminum enclosure and feature 24 hours of battery life, Apple's 
innovative Click Wheel and an incredibly thin and light design. Apple 
will contribute $10 from the sale of each iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED to 
the Global Fund to help fight HIV/AIDS in Africa.

...

http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/nov/03nano.html




------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2006 14:44:33 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] American, others look to add WiFi at airport
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


American, others look to add WiFi at airport

By Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff  |  November 4, 2006

Wireless Internet access appears poised to take off at Logan 
International Airport after federal regulators this week thwarted a 
two-year effort by airport officials to shut off private alternatives 
to airport-controlled $8-a-day WiFi service.

American Airlines , the biggest carrier at Logan by passenger volume, 
will "move as fast as we can" to resume offering WiFi at its Admirals 
Club lounge in Terminal B, an American spokesman, Ned Raynolds, said 
yesterday . Service was being offered there by T-Mobile USA before 
the Massachusetts Port Authority , which runs Logan, ordered it shut 
off. T-Mobile, which American would most likely use, charges $6 for 
an hour, or $30 for a monthly subscription that offers access at 
thousands of sites nationwide.

JetBlue Airways said it will look into offering free WiFi to 
passengers in Terminal C. JetBlue currently offers free WiFi at John 
F. Kennedy International Airport in New York and the Long Beach, 
Calif., airport.

...

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/11/04/american_others_look_to_add_wifi_at_airport/




------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2006 14:44:33 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] An urban fiber-optic challenge / Verizon to use
        Dorchester as a test site for bringing high-speed Net into cities
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


An urban fiber-optic challenge
Verizon to use Dorchester as a test site for bringing high-speed Net 
into cities

By Keith Reed, Globe Staff  |  November 2, 2006

Verizon Communications Inc. is installing fiber-optic Internet 
service in Dorchester, using Boston's biggest, and one of its most 
diverse neighborhoods, as a test site for the challenges the company 
will face in bringing "FiOS" to urban areas nationwide.

But relatively few Dorchester residents will be able to get the 
high-speed service, which promises download speeds up to 10 times 
faster than Verizon's popular digital subscriber line service, any 
time soon. Verizon says installation is moving at a snail's pace 
because it's harder to run lines in an urban setting than in the 
neat, suburban grids where most of the more than 100,000 
Massachusetts residents live who already subscribe to FiOS.

...

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2006/11/02/an_urban_fiber_optic_challenge/




------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2006 14:44:33 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Starbucks loses laptops with worker data
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


Starbucks loses laptops with worker data

By Elizabeth M. Gillespie, AP Business Writer  |  November 5, 2006

SEATTLE --Starbucks Corp. said Friday it had lost track of four 
laptop computers, two of which had private information on about 
60,000 current and former U.S. employees and fewer than 80 Canadian 
workers and contractors.

The data, which includes names, addresses and Social Security 
numbers, is about three years old, dating prior to December 2003, 
said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman for the Seattle-based coffee 
retailer.

...


http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2006/11/05/starbucks_loses_laptops_with_worker_data/




------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2006 14:44:33 -0500
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Miles away, 'I'll have a burger' / Fast food
        drive-throughs go long distance
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


Miles away, 'I'll have a burger'
Fast food drive-throughs go long distance

By Jenn Abelson, Globe Staff  |  November 5, 2006

NASHUA -- When Jairo Moncada pulled up to the drive-through at 
Wendy's in Burbank, Calif., for his usual cheeseburger, fries, and 
soda, he knew things looked different. There was an extra lane.

But the 25-year-old could not see the biggest change: The woman 
taking his lunch order was sitting 3,000 miles away at a computer 
terminal in Nashua, and fielding calls from Wendy's customers at 
drive-throughs as far away as Florida and Washington, D.C.

...

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/11/05/miles_away_ill_have_a_burger/




------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 15:02:22 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] New museum showcases phones, switchboards & tools
        from  1876-1980
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

Nov. 4, 2006, 12:56AM

Houston Telephone Museum
Say hello to a hidden treasure
New museum showcases phones, switchboards and tools spanning era from 1876 
to 1980

By ALLAN TURNER
Houston Chronicle

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/4309944.html


The Telephone Museum

? What: The Houston Telephone Museum

? Where: 1714 Ashland, second floor.

? Hours: 9 a.m.- noon, Tuesdays. Special tours by appointment.

? Admission: Donations




The metal frame, leather straps, wooden box and weird Bakelite cylinder 
might have come from some primitive, sadistic dental office. Or it might 
have been created to support an injured neck or been a kerosene-lamp-era 
design for a space helmet.

Grim images all. But the truth was far worse.

The headset, easily weighing 7 or 8 pounds, was the daily wear of female 
telephone operators in the days when cars and telephones had cranks.

Welcome to the Houston Telephone Museum, a place that celebrates an era 
when telephonic communication sometimes relied on the caller's lung power 
and the words, "Hello, Central," were on every lip.

"This museum is Houston's greatest hidden treasure," boasted Oleta Porter, 
official greeter and wife of C.E. "Doc" Porter, museum curator and 
self-described "scrounge."

Doc Porter, who spent 37 years with Southwestern Bell, first as a lineman, 
then as a station installer, cable splicer and, finally, PBX repairman, is 
a walking encyclopedia of telephone arcana.

Ask how many wires were crammed into the bulging metal "sleeves" displayed 
in the museum, and the 77-year-old Porter answers in an eyeblink ? 50,000.

"I call this museum the 'telephone museum in the age of wire,' " Porter 
said. "It covers a period from 1876 to about 1980."

Included in the displays are replicas of Alexander Graham Bell's first 
telephone, early switchboards from Houston and other Texas cities, poles, 
lines, tools, advertising materials and photos and dozens of telephones 
ranging from crank devices to early cordless models.

Children, especially, are intrigued with the parade of the obsolete. "They 
look at the phones," Porter said, "and want to know where the buttons are."

The museum is operated by the San Jacinto Chapter of Pioneers of America, 
an organization of retired telephone employees, and most of the items were 
donated by its members.

"People in the business would save this stuff when they retired," said 
Porter. "We tell them that their kids aren't going to know what this junk 
is. It's likely to get thrown away. They should donate it us so that it can 
be preserved and everybody can enjoy it."

The museum occupies a large room on the second floor of the AT&T building 
at 1714 Ashland. A second room, honoring museum benefactor Howard Tellepsen 
Sr., will be dedicated in ceremonies today. Tellepsen, Porter said, 
provided workers to convert vacant offices into exhibit halls.

The Pioneers' museum was a long time in developing. First discussed at a 
group meeting in 1935, smaller versions of the museum occupied a series of 
obscure buildings before opening at its present site in 1996.

"I kind of staggered into it," said Porter, a Pearland resident who retired 
in 1984. "We put the first phone display together, and the rest kind of 
evolved."

The result of the work of Porter and his colleagues is remarkably professional.

The museum features cases of glass insulators and rows of telephones, to be 
sure. Inside its galleries, country scenes are re-created complete with 
telephone poles and virtual spaghetti bowls of wires.

"The telephone company created a tool for every job," Porter said, "and 
each tool was good for just one specific job." Typical was the lineman's 
hatchet, an exotic hybrid that was a hatchet-wrench-hammer.

The Houston museum, Porter said, is one of the few places visitors can view 
these tools.

A vast collection of switchboards, starting with the primitive 
electromagnetic "drop leaf" models, also is on display. Included is a 
Braille switchboard formerly used at Lighthouse for the Blind.

A special treasure is a decades-old trailer used to haul equipment into the 
fields. It was found at a ranch in Fredericksburg, where it was being used 
to store farm equipment. Pioneers lovingly restored the trailer, then 
labored to wedge it into the museum's elevator.

"We had to pull the wheels off and turn it on its end," Porter recalled. 
"It wasn't heavy, but it was a tight fit."

Tours of the museum are led by volunteers who once used the equipment on 
display.

Patrons may visit workshops where club members repair cassette recorders 
for the Library of Congress' books on tape program, an effort benefiting 
the blind. Club members also make dolls and small stuffed bears designed to 
comfort distressed children encountered by firefighters or policemen officers.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 7
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 15:07:28 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Starbucks Loses Laptops With Worker Data
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

Starbucks Loses Laptops With Worker Data

Nov 4, 2006  2:58 AM (ET)

By ELIZABETH M. GILLESPIE
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20061104/D8L64GIO0.html


SEATTLE (AP) - Starbucks Corp. said Friday it had lost track of four laptop 
computers, two of which had private information on about 60,000 current and 
former U.S. employees and fewer than 80 Canadian workers and contractors.

The data, which includes names, addresses and Social Security numbers, is 
about three years old, dating prior to December 2003, said Valerie O'Neil, 
a spokeswoman for the Seattle-based coffee retailer.

The company has not received any reports that anyone's personal information 
has been compromised.

"We have no reason to believe these laptops are in the hands of someone who 
wants to misuse them," O'Neil said. "We just want to make every effort to 
protect our partners."

O'Neil said Starbucks was in the process of notifying those affected, 
including an estimated 8 percent of its current work force, which numbers 
about 135,000 worldwide.

Starbucks has been looking for the laptops since early September after 
discovering they were missing from a closet in the corporate support center 
at its south Seattle headquarters, O'Neil said.

The company waited several weeks to disclose it had lost the laptops, 
O'Neil said, because "we wanted to make sure we were thorough before we 
notified people."

In a letter to those potentially affected, Starbucks urged people to 
monitor their financial accounts for suspicious activity and said it was 
offering free credit protection services to help them do that.

"Please know that we are exploring all avenues to locate these laptops, 
including reaching out to law enforcement agencies," the letter stated.

O'Neil said Starbucks was reinforcing its corporate policies and updating 
procedures on protecting the personal information of its employees to 
prevent such data loss from happening again.

Asked if there were any secret recipes on the missing computers, O'Neil 
chuckled and said, "I don't know of any."

---

Starbucks information security help line: 1-800-453-1048.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 8
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 15:41:53 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Tidal Energy Companies Staking Claims
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

Tidal Energy Companies Staking Claims

Nov 3, 2006  6:35 PM (ET)

By JEANNETTE J. LEE
Associated Press




ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - In the quest for oil-free power, a handful of 
small companies are staking claims on the boundless energy of the rising 
and ebbing sea.

The technology that would draw energy from ocean tides to keep light bulbs 
and laptops aglow is largely untested, but several newly minted companies 
are reserving tracts of water from Alaska's Cook Inlet to Manhattan's East 
River in the belief that such sites could become profitable sources of 
electricity.

The trickle of interest began two years ago, said Celeste Miller, 
spokeswoman for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The agency issues 
permits that give companies exclusive rights to study the tidal sites. 
Permit holders usually have first dibs on development licenses.

Tidal power proponents liken the technology to little wind turbines on 
steroids, turning like windmills in the current. Water's greater density 
means fewer and smaller turbines are needed to produce the same amount of 
electricity as wind turbines.

After more than two decades of experimenting, the technology has advanced 
enough to make business sense, said Carolyn Elefant, co-founder of the 
Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition, a marine energy lobbying group formed in 
May 2005.

In the last four years, the federal commission has approved nearly a dozen 
permits to study tidal sites. Applications for about 40 others, all filed 
in 2006, are under review. No one has applied for a development license, 
Miller said.

The site that is furthest along in testing lies in New York's East River, 
between the boroughs of Manhattan and Queens, where Verdant Power plans to 
install two underwater turbines this month as part of a small pilot project.

Power from the turbines will be routed to a supermarket and parking garage 
on nearby Roosevelt Island.

Verdant co-founder and President Trey Taylor said the six-year-old company 
will spend 18 months studying the effects on fish before putting in another 
four turbines.

The project will cost more than $10 million, including $2 million on fish 
monitoring equipment, Taylor said.

"It's important to spend this much initially," Taylor said. "It's like our 
flight at Kitty Hawk. It puts us on a path to commercialization and we 
think eventually costs will fall really fast."

If all goes well, New York-based Verdant could have up to 300 turbines in 
the river by 2008, Taylor said. The turbines would produce as much as 10 
megawatts of power, or enough electricity for 8,000 homes, he said.

With 12,380 miles of coastline, the U.S. may seem like a wide-open frontier 
for the fledgling industry, but experts believe only a few will prove 
profitable. The ideal sites are close to a power grid and have large 
amounts of fast-moving water with enough room to build on the sea floor 
while staying clear of boat traffic.

"There are thousands of sites, but only a handful of really, really good 
ones," said Roger Bedard of the Electric Power Research Institute, a 
nonprofit organization in Palo Alto, Calif., that researches energy and the 
environment.

"If you're sitting on top of the best scallop fishing in the world, you 
can't put these things down there," said Chris Sauer, president of Ocean 
Renewable Power Co. in Miami. The two-year-old company is awaiting approval 
for federal study permits in Cook Inlet and Resurrection Bay in Alaska, and 
Cobscook Bay and the St. Croix River in Maine.

Other prime tidal energy sites lie beneath San Francisco's Golden Gate 
Bridge and in Knik Arm near Anchorage, Bedard said.

Government and the private sector in Europe, Canada and Asia have moved 
faster than their U.S. counterparts to support tidal energy research. As of 
June 2006, there were small facilities in Russia, Nova Scotia and China, as 
well as a 30-year-old plant in France, according to a report by EPRI.

"I expect the first real big tidal plant in North America is going to be 
built in Nova Scotia," said Bedard, who led the study. "They have the 
mother of all tidal passages up there."

The industry is coalescing over worries about dependence on foreign oil, 
volatile oil prices and global warming. Many states have passed laws 
requiring a certain percentage of energy from renewable sources, and tidal 
entrepreneurs believe they will be looking to diversify beyond wind and 
solar power.

Elefant said the industry is still trying to figure out how much energy it 
will be able to supply from tides, as well as waves.

"While ocean energy may not power everything in the U.S., it will be 
functioning in tandem with other renewable resources and supplement other 
sea-based technologies," said Elefant, a lawyer in Washington D.C. "The 
most important thing is for the nation to invest in a diverse energy supply."

In the United States, wave energy technology is less advanced than tidal 
and will need more government subsidies, Bedard said, however, the number 
of good wave sites far exceeds that of tidal. Wave power collection 
involves cork or serpent-like devices that absorb energy from swells on the 
ocean's surface, whereas tidal machines sit on the sea floor.

Tidal energy technology has been able to build on lessons learned from wind 
power development, while wave engineers have had to start virtually from 
scratch, Bedard said. But a few companies are working aggressively to usher 
wave power into the energy industry.

Aqua Energy, could start building a wave energy plant at Makah Bay in 
Washington state within two years, said Chief Executive Officer Alla 
Weinstein. Another wave plant, whose backers include major Norwegian energy 
company Norsk Hydro ASA, is under construction off the coast of Portugal.

Miller said the commission has received applications for three wave energy 
permits in Oregon, all filed since July.

With the uptick in interest in tidal and wave energy sites, the Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission is holding a public meeting in Washington on 
Dec. 6 to discuss marine energy technologies. The meeting can be viewed on 
the commission's Web site.

---

On the Net:

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission: http://www.ferc.gov

Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition: http://www.oceanrenewable.com/


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 9
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 15:43:52 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Professor's Bigfoot Research Criticized
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

Professor's Bigfoot Research Criticized

Nov 4, 2006  5:26 AM (ET)

By JESSE HARLAN ALDERMAN
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20061104/D8L66LK80.html


POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) - Jeffrey Meldrum holds a Ph.D. in anatomical 
sciences and is a tenured professor of anatomy at Idaho State University. 
He is also one of the world's foremost authorities on Bigfoot, the mythical 
smelly ape-man of the Northwest woods. And Meldrum firmly believes the 
lumbering, shaggy brute exists.

That makes him an outcast - a solitary, Sasquatch-like figure himself - on 
the 12,700-student campus, where many scientists are embarrassed by what 
they call Meldrum's "pseudo-academic" pursuits and have called on the 
university to review his work with an eye toward revoking his tenure. One 
physics professor, D.P. Wells, wonders whether Meldrum plans to research 
Santa Claus, too.

Meldrum, 48, spends most of his days in his laboratory in the Life Sciences 
Building, analyzing more than 200 jumbo plaster casts of what he contends 
are Bigfoot footprints.

For the past 10 years, he has added his scholarly sounding research to a 
field full of sham videos and supermarket tabloid exposes. And he is 
convinced he has produced a body of evidence that proves there is a Bigfoot.

"It used to be you went to a bookstore and asked for a book on Bigfoot and 
you'd be directed to the occult section, right between the Bermuda Triangle 
and UFOs," Meldrum said. "Now you can find some in the natural science 
section."

Martin Hackworth, a senior lecturer in the physics department, called 
Meldrum's research a "joke."

"Do I cringe when I see the Discovery Channel and I see Idaho State 
University, Jeff Meldrum? Yes, I do," Hackworth said. "He believes he's 
taken up the cause of people who have been shut out by the scientific 
community. He's lionized there. He's worshipped. He walks on water. It's 
embarrassing."

John Kijinski, dean of arts and sciences, said there have been "grumblings" 
about Meldrum's tenure, but no formal request for a review.

"He's a bona fide scientist," Kijinski said. "I think he helps this 
university. He provides a form of open discussion and dissenting viewpoints 
that may not be popular with the scientific community, but that's what 
academics all about."

On campus, Meldrum - himself a hulking figure, with a mop of brown hair, a 
bristly silver mustache, and a black T-shirt with a silhouette of a 
hunchbacked, lurking Bigfoot - gets funny looks and the silent treatment 
from other scientists, and is not invited to share coffee with the other 
science professors.

Over the summer, more than 30 professors signed a petition criticizing the 
university for hosting a Bigfoot symposium where Meldrum was the keynote 
speaker.

He pays for his research with a $30,000 donation from a Bigfoot believer.

Still, Meldrum has a distinguished supporter in Jane Goodall, the 
world-famous authority on African chimpanzees. Her blurb on the jacket of 
Meldrum's new book, "Sasquatch: Legend Meets Science," lauds him for 
bringing "a much-needed level of scientific analysis" to the Bigfoot debate.

"As a scientist, she's very curious and she keeps an open mind," said 
Goodall spokeswoman Nona Gandelman. "She's fascinated by it."

Bigfoot is sort of the Loch Ness Monster of the Pacific Northwest. The 
legend dates back centuries. Indian folklore includes murmurs of a man-ape 
that roams the hidden hollows. Sasquatch is a Salish Indian word meaning 
woodland wildman.

Newspapers began recording sightings of Bigfoot in the backwoods during the 
1920s. But skeptics have challenged the accounts, and practical jokers have 
staged elaborate hoaxes, including grainy film footage of someone in a 
monkey suit and phony footprints stamped into the ground with giant molded 
feet.

Meldrum said it was a decade ago in Walla Walla, Wash., that he first 
discovered flat 15-inch footprints in the woods. He said he thought 
initially that they were a hoax, but noticed locked joints and a narrow 
arch - traits he came to believe could only belong to Bigfoot.

"That's what set the hook," Meldrum said. "I resolved at this point, this 
was a question I'd get to the bottom of."

When not in the lab, he loads his Chevy Suburban with tents and forensic 
gear and heads for the woods of Washington state and Northern California, 
where he has collected what he says are footprints, hair and feces from the 
ape-man. He tests hair samples and uses physics to produce charts that 
purport to show how Bigfoot would walk.

Meldrum wonders aloud how much longer he will be on the faculty. But he 
said he also dreams of one day bringing back a bone or a tooth or some 
skin, and silencing the "stuffy academics."

"Is the theory of exploration dead?" he asked. "I'm not out to proselytize 
that Bigfoot exists. I place legend under scrutiny and my conclusion is, 
absolutely, Bigfoot exists."

---

On the Net:

Idaho State University: http://www.isu.edu


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 10
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 15:45:20 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Nielsen Shelves Rating System for Ads
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

Nielsen Shelves Rating System for Ads
Associated Press

Nov 3, 2006  2:50 PM (ET)

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20061103/D8L5PR600.html


NEW YORK (AP) - Nielsen Media Research has put off indefinitely its 
first-ever ratings system for commercials, primarily because the people who 
would buy it can't agree on what they want.

The system, which had already been delayed, was scheduled to start 
operation on Dec. 11.

For years, Nielsen's clients had been content to receive ratings 
information on individual shows, which didn't break out specifically who 
was watching during the commercials. Now companies want to know this, 
because digital video recorders give viewers the opportunity to speed 
through commercials and because the Internet offers other advertising options.

"The clients in general agree that the rating of commercial minutes is 
something that is coming and needs to come but the form that it needs to 
take is something that has not been agreed upon," said Gary Holmes, 
spokesman for Nielsen Media Research, on Friday.

The system Nielsen was set to start would measure how many people watched a 
commercial when it was broadcast live or on DVR in the ensuing seven days.

Advertising agencies have resisted this. They prefer to simply see the 
ratings for commercials as they have aired live, as opposed to DVR ratings 
that included commercials that viewers might have sped through. There's 
also an ongoing debate within the industry about whether to include DVR 
ratings at all when setting ad rates. They currently don't.

Broadcast networks are interested in the DVR rates because with more 
measured viewers they would likely get more advertising revenues.

Cable networks prefer ratings without the DVRs. Partly because of the 
preponderance of sports and news on cable, their shows aren't recorded as 
much as shows on broadcast networks.

Before starting the service, Nielsen wants its competing constituencies to 
reach some agreement for which standard will be used, Holmes said. He would 
not say how many entities had already signed up for the service.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 11
Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 16:01:33 -0600
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] The People's Commissary (Wal-Mart) announces
        price cuts on electronics
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed;
        x-avg-checked=avg-ok-56ED659A

[A tip of the hat to Blair Alper who first pointed out the irony that 
almost everything on sale at the very capitalistic Wal-Mart has been made 
in communist China. Blair started referring to Wal-Mart as "The People's 
Commissary" to highlight this bizarre fact. Seems like an appropriate 
nickname to me.]

Wal-Mart announces price cuts on electronics
Retailer has suffered through slow beginning to holiday season
Reuters

Updated: 1:41 p.m. CT Nov 3, 2006

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15548179/


CHICAGO - Wal-Mart Stores Inc. on Friday said it lowered prices on nearly 
100 electronics including plasma televisions, digital cameras and mobile 
phones, getting a jump on the holiday-season price wars.

The world's biggest retailer has vowed to aggressively cut prices this 
holiday season as it tries to lift anemic sales at its U.S. stores. In 
October, it cut prices on a selection of toys and games, which it said 
boosted sales volume.

The latest markdowns include a $500 cut on a Panasonic 42-inch plasma 
television to $1,294. Rival Best Buy Co. Inc. offered a similar Panasonic 
42-inch plasma television for $1,708.99 on its Web site.

Best Buy's stock was off more than 2 percent at $51.88 in midday trading on 
the New York Stock Exchange, after trading as high as $53.71 earlier in the 
session.

Rival Circuit City City Stores Inc. was down 1.4 percent at $25.75 on the 
NYSE, after hitting $26.48 earlier in the day.

Both stocks fell sharply after Wal-Mart's announcement.

Analysts contend that specialty chains can fend off Wal-Mart by offering 
better in-store service as well as in-home installation for sophisticated 
electronics.

Wal-Mart posted disappointing October sales and forecast flat November 
sales at U.S. stores open at least a year, in part because of poor demand 
for trendy apparel and disruption from store remodeling efforts.

Chief Executive Officer Lee Scott told analysts last week that he was not 
satisfied with Wal-Mart's poor sales growth, but expected demand to improve 
during the holiday season.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15548179/



================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

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