AFRIK.com | Africa and South America: A new world order confirmed - Working to integrate South America and AfricaMonday 28 September 2009- At the summit, the leaders agreed to launch a new development bank for South America, the Banco del Sur, with an initial start up investment of $20bn. The creation of a bank for Latin America and Africa will be "an alternative to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank for Southern countries,” while the implementation of a common currency to replace the FCFA will represent a “win-win” commercial exchange. "All the energy infrastructure, both in South America and in Africa, was designed and developed to meet the energy requirements of the industrial powers that our countries were satellites of," said Venezuelan minister of energy and petroleum, Rafael Ramirez...
EARTH'S MAGNETOSPHERE THIS MORNING
Real-time Magnetosphere Simulation | Looks like a Messed Up Monday Magnetosphere right now - September 28, 2009 7am CDT
SINKHOLE PICTURE OF THE MORNING
(This is a picture versus a current news article)
MissouriNet.com | May 2009 - Missouri susceptible to sinkholes

sink-hole
TENT CITY NEWS
AP | Homeless Georgia sex offenders directed to woods

BANKSTER NEWS


King World News | Interview with Gerald Celente on Friday, September 25, 2009 MP3
Goldman Sachs May Benefit From Regulation, Citi Analyst Says
BAILED OUT BANKSTER - INVESTS MONEY IN CHINAGoldman Sachs takes $12B Bailout, Hands out $14B Bonuses You aren't going to read about this in the US press, they are too busy lying about everything they report. We have to read about it in a British newspaper.
BusinessWeek.com | Goldman Sachs investment lifts Chinese carmaker Geely

By CCT
That means Goldman Sachs will hold over 15 percent stake in the Chinese car maker, becoming its second largest shareholder. Earlier, Geely said money raised from the bond sale could be used for potential acquisitions. ...
China Car Times - http://www.chinacartimes.com/
Sunday, September 27, 2009 - Park officials are getting help from hunters in the elk seasons that began in the park this fall. Along with the regular requirement that bagged elk must be checked in with Game, Fish & Parks officers, elk hunters in the park are also being given needles and vials to use to take blood samples immediately after they shoot an elk.
The blood is then tested for a variety of diseases that could be affecting reproductive rates and calf survival.
"We've had a couple years of poor calf production, so we're going to look first at the bulls and later on at the cows," park resources program manager Gary Brundige said. "We don't have an idea that we have a disease issue, other than the fact that we've had poor calf production. We want some idea of why that production is down."
The herd in the park is down dramatically from a high of more than 1,100 elk a decade ago to about 450, based on a survey last February. The 1,100 level was considered to be too many elk, based on the management plan for the herd and carrying capacity of the habitat in the park.

(Tom Herde for The Boston Globe)
Scituate, public works director Albert Bangert was philosophical about the seaweed glut, though, noting that Irish immigrants came to Scituate in the mid-1800s to make a living harvesting seaweed. The “moss’’ industry flourished for about 100 years, with seaweed hauled from the ocean, dried, and shipped out for use in such things as fertilizer, beer, cough syrup, toothpaste, and pudding.
“Now we see it as an inconvenience,’’ he said. Attitudes have “changed; nature hasn’t.’’ Full Story
80% OF MANILA STILL UNDER WATER THIS AM
LATimes.com | Philippine storm leaves 106 dead and missing caused by rainfall that broke all records for a 24-hour period

Motorists drive by vehicles lined up along a road after flash floods caused by Typhoon Ondoy hit Provident Village in Marikina City, Metro Manila September 27, 2009. The Philippines appealed for international aid to help tens of thousands marooned by flashfloods, and apologised for the delays in rescue efforts to avoid potential political fallout from the crisis. REUTERS/John Javellana (PHILIPPINES DISASTER SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)

A Filipino boy is carried to safety through floodwaters brought by Tropical Storm Ketsana in the Quezon City suburb of Manila. At least 73 people have been killed and more than a quarter of a million displaced after the heaviest rain in more than four decades plunged the Philippine capital into turmoil, officials said. (AFP/Jay Directo)

MORE PHOTOS
W STREET IS DOING WELL
New crime has been reported in your area:
REMOVED FRM FRONT YARD OF RESIDENCE CERAMIC GNOMES LAWN ORNAMENTS/YARD SPOTLIGHT | A9-096717 | 5100 BLOCK OF WILSHIRE BLVD | Lincoln PD, NE | 9/27/2009 | Link |
HAPPY STATE NEBRASKA NEWS


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