Archive for April, 2011

GCN Talk Host Joe Mazza Dies

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

By Rachael Woodhouse
GCN Live.com

GCN’s dearly-loved Joe Mazza of the famous late night talk radio program, “The Joe Mazza Show” passed away suddenly on Tuesday, April 27th. As a nostalgia-themed talk show host, Joe enjoyed reminiscing about the good ol’ days with many guest stars over the years.

Joe was born in Waltham, Massachusetts, September 8, 1944.

From Remembering Joe Mazza:

He was employed for many years as an independent sales representative for home improvement through A&M of Revere. On weekends, for over twenty years, he was a syndicated late night radio talk show host whose programs were broadcasted, and well-known to night-owls, throughout the country. His studio was most often in the comfort of his home, but he also widely travelled to do shows from the bright lights of Las Vegas to the Minnesota outback. Joe was well known in Hingham for his friendly, outgoing manner and his sharing coffee with the locals. During the 50s and 60s, he organized and played guitar for The Caravans, a popular New England band who often played at the Beach Casino in Hampton, NH.

We encourage our listeners who loved their Sunday late nights with Joe to leave comments here.

GCN News interviewed Joe Mazza’s brother Jim on Friday. Look for “The Life And Times Of Joe Mazza” to appear on GCN Live.com on Sunday, and be sure to listen live to the special “best-of” show that will air Sunday night.

Sarah Palin Turns Heads At Tammy Haddad’s Brunch

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

By Patrick Gavin
Politico

Excerpt:

And is Palin looking forward to bumping into Donald Trump, another of the weekend’s most-buzzed-about guests, at some point?

“He’s our buddy! We appreciate and respect Donald Trump,” she said.

Once inside, guests of all stripes angled to get a picture with Palin, including astronaut Buzz Aldrin.

The hubbub was enough to cause one reporter to quip: “Look at all these reporters who typically rip her a new one mosey on up to her, desperate to get a photograph.”

Continue reading here.

High Radiation Levels Found at Ohio Nuclear Plant

Friday, April 29th, 2011

Express India

Cleveland, OH – Cleveland High radiation levels recorded at a nuclear reactor in northeast Ohio have prompted a special inspection by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Workers at the Perry Nuclear Power Plant immediately evacuated it on April 22 when radiation levels rose while it was shutting down for a refueling outage, the commission said yesterday. Plant officials don’t believe workers were exposed to radiation levels “in excess of NRC limits,” the commission said.

“The plant is in a safe condition and there has been no impact to workers at the plant or members of the public from this issue,” the commission said in a statement.

Radiation levels rose while workers were removing a monitor that measures nuclear reactions during start-up, low-power operations and shutdown, the commission said.

The highest radiation exposure to any of the workers was 98 millirems, which is equivalent to two or three chest X-rays, a spokesman for the plant’s owner said.

The NRC’s limit for radiation exposure in a year is 5,000 millirems, he said.

The commission, which began inspecting the plant on Monday, did not say how high the radiation levels were or how often such inspections occur.

Continue reading here.

Huge Crowds Expected for Shuttle Endeavour’s Final Launch

Friday, April 29th, 2011

VOA News

Space Shuttle Endeavour sits on Launch Pad 39-A during fueling at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, April 29, 2011

Large crowds are expected Friday for the second-to-last launch of the United States’ space shuttle program.

Officials are anticipating as many as 750,000 spectators near the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the afternoon launch of Space Shuttle Endeavour. The crowd will include U.S. President Barack Obama, his wife Michelle and their two daughters.

The mission will be the 25th and final one for Endeavour, which will be decommissioned and put on permanent display at the California Science Center in Los Angeles upon its return to Earth.

During its two weeks in space, Endeavour and its six-man crew will deliver a $2 billion scientific instrument to the International Space Station (ISS). The instrument is designed to search for cosmic rays throughout the universe.

Continue reading here.

ExxonMobil’s Earnings: The Real Story You Won’t Hear in Washington

Friday, April 29th, 2011

By Ken Cohen
Exxon Mobil Perspectives

Big numbers make headlines – like our announcement of $10.7 billion in earnings for the first quarter of 2011. What may not make the headlines is the context surrounding that number, so I thought I would share with you what I told reporters following the announcement:

We understand that it’s simply too irresistible for many politicians in times of high oil prices and high earnings – they feel they have to demonize our industry.

Predictably last week the Administration established a task force to investigate oil and gas markets, now a time-honored tradition when prices increase.

And we’re seeing a return to the now-familiar misinformation about the oil industry’s taxes.

Over the last week as earnings season has approached, the Democratic Party leadership again talked about removing what they call $4 billion in oil industry subsidies. But what they really mean is that they want to increase our taxes by taking away long-standing deductions for our industry while leaving these same deductions in place for other sectors of the economy. The simple truth is that these are legitimate tax provisions to keep U.S. industry internationally competitive – to keep jobs from being exported to other countries.

Unfortunately, this false discussion about oil industry subsidies also reinforces another falsehood making the rounds: that ExxonMobil doesn’t pay its fair share of income taxes in the United States.

Let me state it unequivocally. Last year, our total taxes and duties to the U.S. government were $9.8 billion, which includes an income tax expense of $1.6 billion. Over the past five years, we incurred a total U.S. tax expense of almost $59 billion, which is $18 billion more than we earned in the United States during the same period.

And during the first quarter of this year, we incurred tax expenses in the United States of more than $3.1 billion on U.S. earnings of $2.6 billion.

So we have seen the predictable political positioning but no action to actually help bring down energy prices. In fact the government has chosen not to help increase supply by refusing to open up the vast energy resources in this country that are off limits to our industry.

Continue reading here.
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Exxon Mobil Profit Nears $11 Billion, Beats Target
By Steve Gelsi
Market Watch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Exxon Mobil Corp. said Thursday its first-quarter profit rose to $10.65 billion, or $2.14 a share, from $6.3 billion, or $1.33 a share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose to $114 billion, from $90.3 billion. Wall Street analysts expected Exxon Mobil to earn $2.04 a share on revenue of $112.6 billion, according to a survey by FactSet Research. “Exxon Mobil’s earnings reflect continued leadership in operational performance during a period of strong commodity prices,” the company said.