Tuesday, November 16, 2010

His heart is in Deer Park ..;


Andy Pettitte said he's currently leaning towards retirement.

Don't read too much into it at this point. Pettitte said he's "going to wait and see what my heart wants me to do," but that "right now" his heart is in Deer Park, Texas, where he lives during the offseason.

The lefty said that if he does return for 2011, it will be for the Yankees, and it will definitely be his final season. Pettitte is coming off an All-Star campaign that saw him post an 11-3 record to go along with a 3.28 ERA and 1.27 WHIP over 129 innings.

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Monday, November 1, 2010

Houston murders may be work of a serial killer


by Michelle Homer / khou.com
khou.com
Posted on November 1, 2010 at 1:38 PM
Updated today at 1:42 PM


HOUSTON – Police are looking into a possible link between the strangulation murders of at least three women since June.
The most recent cases involved homeless women. The body of Carol Flood, 62, was found on Oct. 10 in a stairwell behind the old YMCA building. She was partially nude. On Sept. 30, Retia LaFaye Long, 52, was found dead behind the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart at 1700 San Jacinto.

Now police believe the same killer may have strangled Raquel Mundy last June 17, then dumped her body in a field in the 300 block of St. Charles.
Mundy, 24, was murdered after accepting a ride from a stranger when she was stranded downtown.

She had dropped her mom and two kids off at the Greyhound bus station downtown around 1:30 a.m. Thursday. She then discovered her car had been towed from a McDonald’s parking lot across the street.
Mundy tried to call friends and relatives, but couldn’t find anyone to give her a ride to the tow lot. Witnesses saw her get into a grey car with an unknown man, according to police.

Mundy later sent a text message to her mother saying she thought she was in danger and feared the man was going to hurt her.
Angela Collins was still on the bus to California with her two grandchildren when she got the disturbing message.

She tried frantically to reach Mundy. Collins then called several relatives and asked them to try to find Mundy.
By the time the bus arrived in California, there was still no sign of her daughter.
"Next call we got, they had found the body. It was my baby, Collins said as she choked back tears. "This man took away my baby."
An autopsy revealed Mundy had been strangled.

READ THE FULL STORY HERE AT KHOU

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Deer Park couple first to have baby through egg freezing,


MELISSA WILSON
Health Reporter

DEER PARK, Texas - A couple from Deer Park is the first in Texas to deliver babies through a fertility treatment known as "egg freezing". This is a brand new option that doctors hope will help women undergoing cancer treatments and also women who just want to wait until later in life to have a baby.

Many couples dream of bringing a baby into the world. Christopher and Ivonne Pena sure did. Ivonne already had children from a previous marriage, but she and Christopher wanted a child of their own -- but she delivered two!

"It's a double the blessing," says Christopher.

After having problems getting pregnant, the Penas first looked into in-vitro fertilization. Then, they found out from Dr. Laurie McKenzie at Houston I-V-F, they could also help a lot of others by participating in a study. This is a new technique using new technology. Doctors have been able to freeze sperm and embryos for years but not oocytes, or eggs.

"This is a very new technique, simply because the egg is a very unique cell. This is the largest cell in the body and with traditional freezing techniques, there have been issues with ice crystals forming inside the cell which damages the cell and renders it unusable," explains Dr. McKenzie.

Read The Full Story HERE

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

9-11 call - backfires because of open laptop.


by Courtney Zubowski / 11 News
khou.com
Posted on October 12, 2010 at 11:37 PM
Updated today at 9:54 AM

HOUSTON -- A woman who called 911 to anonymously report a crime says she’s in fear for her life after the man she turned in called her just minutes after she placed the call.

According to the woman, who does not want to be identified, on Oct. 1, she was driving near Beltway 8 and Veterans Memorial Drive when she witnessed a man in the car next to her beating his passenger. She did not know either one of them.

“I saw him hitting her and he was taking his fist and he was just hitting her, aside her, just hitting her and I’m like this is crazy,” said the woman.

She placed the 911 call at 1:28 p.m. and thought that would be the end of her involvement, but 30 minutes later she learned it was just the beginning.

“About 1:54 p.m. my phone rang back and it was the suspect,” she said. “He was asking me ‘Who was this, who is this’ and I am like, ‘Who is this, you called my number,’ and then he hung up."

After that call came another, and this time it was a woman’s voice, she said.

“She called me just as he hung up and it was like, ‘Ma’am, are you the concerned lady that called about my welfare,’ and I am like,

‘Excuse me,’ and she said, ‘Well I’m OK,’ and I said, ‘Excuse me,’” said the woman.

She received another call the next morning from the Harris County Jail where the suspect was in custody. He was arrested for outstanding warrants, but never charged with assault.

“My phone rings again and it says, ‘You have a call from Harris County processing jail,’ and I immediately hung up,” she said.
“I will never, ever get involved with anything else again, not when it comes to me being fearful of the surroundings in my life.”

A spokesperson for the Harris County Sheriff’s Office says as far as she knows, this is the first time something like this has happened in their department.

HCSO spokesperson Christina Garza said the suspect was put in the back of a Harris County patrol car while the deputy talked to the woman he was accused of hitting. It was then he was able to read the woman’s phone number off of a laptop computer the deputy had left open in the front seat.

“It’s a very unique situation,” Garza said. “It’s never happened and we certainly don’t want this to discourage her, or anybody, from reporting crime to authorities.”

Garza said it’s common practice to keep laptops closed, but it’s not policy. In some situations, deputies are forced to rush out of cars quickly.

”If anyone is to blame in this situation, it’s the suspect who violated such important information and took it upon himself to do this,” said Garza.

Garza said the department is sending out e-mails to all deputies to remind them to keep their laptops closed.

The suspect is not facing charges for memorizing the information, or calling the woman. Garza said there is no proof that he ever threatened the woman.


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The 911 caller disagrees.

“I was threatened,” she said. “I was threatened when he received my information. My information should have been protected. I was threatened at that point, so what point of threat do they not understand?

Thursday, October 7, 2010

No waiting: Houston ship channel back in business


UPDATE 1-Coast Guard says no wait to exit Houston Channel

HOUSTON Oct 7 (Reuters) - The U.S. Coast Guard said no ships were waiting Thursday morning to leave the Houston Ship Channel, and 33 ships were lined up to enter the waterway to the busiest U.S petrochemical port after a three-day outage, which ended on Wednesday.

As many as 67 ships were waiting to enter or exit the waterway by the time early on Wednesday that workers had removed a leaning electrical highline tower that threatened to tumble into the waterway after being struck by a barge on Sunday morning.

Four Houston refineries were unable to receive crude oil by ship during the closure, but none said prodcution was cut during the wait that ended Wednesday when the first ships up the channel were crude tankers.

About 44 ships were waiting to enter the channel when it reopened on Wednesday morning and it might appear only 11 have moved up the channel, but the Coast Guard said several ships were added to the line waiting in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday.

"It's a consant flow," said a Coast Guard spokesman.

There are about 12 ships more than on a average day waiting to move into the channel, the spokesman said. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by John Picinich)


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Drug deal goes bad - two shot - one dead.


khou.com
Posted on October 7, 2010 at 7:26 AM
Updated today at 8:45 AM

HOUSTON—A 24-year-old man was killed and his brother injured after the two were shot in what appears to be a drug deal gone bad Wednesday evening, according to HPD Homicide detectives.
Police officers responded to a home on Winter Briar at Winter Seasons in southwest Houston for reports of a drive-by shooting.

They arrived around 9 p.m. to find two brothers had been shot. They said the actual shooting took place at another location about a half-mile away, but the brothers somehow made it back home.
Police believe the brothers drove their Cadillac a few blocks from their home to meet a group of men and purchase drugs. Some sort of altercation occurred and one of the men opened fire on the brothers.

"The exact circumstances are unclear as to what transpired a t the two locations, but we have one dead," said Sgt. Thomas Biggs, HPD Homicide Division. "We believe we have all of the players in custody.

The bullet traveled completely through one of the brothers. Police said he was shot in the chest or the back, but it is unclear which point is the entry and exit.
The other brother was shot in the foot. He was taken to Southwest Memorial Hermann Hospital, where he was treated and released. He returned to the scene to talk to police.
Several suspects were taken in for questioning and police said they definitely know one of them is the shooter.


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Monday, October 4, 2010

Man charged with killing his parents ..


PATTIE SHIEH
Reporter


FOX 26
DEER PARK, Texas - He called police with a stunning admission. Now, Steven Fontes has been charged with capital murder.

Fontes, 55, contacted 911 Friday night around 9 p.m. He told the operator he had killed his parents. His 80-year-old father and 78-year-old stepmother were found shot to death in their Deer Park home. He walked outside and was arrested.

A neighbor had just arrived home with her family when she saw all the police cars and heard officers yell, "Get down, get down!"

"I saw police officers. They had him down and I noticed what was going on. I said, 'Hurry, hurry, hurry get in the house!' Got in and as we were pulling in, they picked him up. He was handcuffed and they put him in the car."

Neighbors say Fontes had not seen his father in years. He moved in almost a year ago and kept to himself. His father and stepmother were different.

"We moved here about 7, 9 years ago. She was the first to greet us. Very neighborly. She was a wonderful lady," the neighbor told FOX 26 News.

On one quiet street, residents understandably have a tough time dealing with the violence that has come to their doorstep. They had never seen trouble at the home before. The woman who spoke with FOX 26 described the elderly couple this way: "They were just good neighbors."

Fontes is being held in the Harris County jail without bond.


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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

High speed chase in Pasadena


by khou.com staff
khou.com
Posted on September 28, 2010 at 7:40 AM
Updated today at 8:23 AM

PASADENA, Texas –One man was taken into custody early Tuesday after leading police on a high-speed chase in Pasadena.
Pasadena police were responding to a disturbance with a weapon call around 1:30 a.m. While enroute, they got word that the suspect had left the scene.

One unit spotted the passing suspect based on a vehicle description and attempted to pull him over, but the suspect refused to stop.
The suspect led police on a short, high-speed chase down Viceroy until he crashed into a street light and stop sign at the Parkcrest intersection.

He then bailed out of the vehicle and fled on foot.
HPD assisted Pasadena police in locating the suspect about 45 minutes later.



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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

9/11 contrail explained.


No - it wasn't aliens - or "chemtrails" or fighters on patrol on the anniversary of 9/11 - but rather a NASA high altitude research aircraft that caused the "mysterious" contrails over the Houston area Saturday.

Houston Airport Systems spokeswoman Marlene McClinton told Local 2 that NASA's WB-57 is a high-altitude aircraft, operating out of Ellington Field.
"It is taking air samples between 45,000 and 51,000 feet," said McClinton.

According to McClinton, it was a normal operation, but due to atmospheric conditions, the contrails were extremely visible.

Many callers said the plane looked like a big commercial passenger plane with the NASA oogo on it.
"It was just circling," said Cindy Hamilton who lives in Friendswood.
She saw the plane around 6:30 p.m. on Saturday.

"It would go north and just circle back to the south. I was just concerned because of what day it is. Seeing the plane brought back memories," Hamilton said.
Karon Wisdom saw the plane in Channelview circling for hours.

"Because its 9/11, everyone's keeping their eye on the sky," she said. "I thought either someone was watching out for us on the Gulf Coast, or something weird was happening."

NASA officials said the aircraft was testing out a new instrument and that "they have made several flights this week. It's unfortunate for the atmospheric conditions that made it very visible on 9/11."
Officials said it was nothing to be alarmed about.


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Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Houston man charged in cold case murders.


by khou.com staff
khou.com
Posted on August 25, 2010 at 10:22 AM
Updated today at 10:54 AM
HOUSTON – A man long-suspected of killing a Houston woman and an infant in 1984 was finally arrested and charged this week.

Charles Leon Smith, 56, is charged with capital murder in the slayings of 23-year-old Pamela Clarence and 1-month-old Tashona Clarence.

Twenty-six years have passed since the young mother and her baby were killed in their home in the 4300 block of Rogers, but even after the case went cold, investigators never gave up.

The murders occurred on August 2, 1984. Police said Smith and Clarence were in a relationship at the time and had recently had a child together.
But that night, when Smith went to visit his girlfriend, investigators believe Pamela Clarence confronted Smith about another relationship.
Police said Clarence had discovered Smith had another girlfriend, who’d just given birth to Smith’s son.

When Clarence told Smith they should end their relationship, police believe he snapped.
Investigators said Smith strangled Pamela Clarence with an electrical cord and then smothered Tashona with a pillow.

The bodies were later found by concerned family members.
From the beginning of the investigation, police said they thought Clarence knew her killer, and they originally identified Smith as one of two suspects in the murders.
But investigators were unable to collect enough evidence to charge either suspect, and case went cold, lost among more than 700 other killings in Houston that year.

Then, when HPD cold case investigators reviewed the murders this year and again identified Smith as a suspect, things changed.
Police said Smith was taken into custody on August 23 and confessed to his role in the crimes.
He was scheduled to appear in court Wednesday morning, and was behind held in the Harris County Jail without bond.


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Friday, August 20, 2010

Marathon & Dominion to pay 6 million


HOUSTON -- Marathon Oil and Dominion Oklahoma Texas Exploration and Production will pay $6.9 million to resolve claims the two Houston-based energy companies separately underpaid natural gas royalties to the government and Native Americans.

The Justice Department announced the settlement Friday in Washington. Dominion Oklahoma Texas Exploration and Production Inc. will pay $2.2 million and Marathon Oil Co., $4.7 million.
Most of the settlement money will be distributed to federal, state and American Indian accounts affected by the underpayments. More than $1.8 million will go to heirs of a whistleblower who filed the suit in Beaumont.
Companies are required to report to the Interior Department the value of natural gas produced from their federal and Indian leases monthly. A percentage of that value is paid as royalties.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Houston Area Forecast: 100% Chance of Meteors


After a week-ling lead-up, tonight, August 12/13, 2010, is finally the peak of the Perseid Meteor Shower. Wit this event, meteor season 2010 will kick off in a big way.

Every August, Earth passes through the stretch of space junk shed by comet Swift-Tuttle, reaching the deepest concentration of debris tonight. According to some estimates, under ideal conditions (dark country skies), one can expect to see 60 meteors per hour. The reason the meteors are called Perseids is because the meteors seem to radiate from the constellation Perseus. The best time to view the shower is in the pre-dawn hours, with 3-5am being best.

Don't want to stay up that late? Don't worry, Perseus rises in the Northeast around midnight and will climb higher as the night progresses. However, unless one lives out in the country, the early post-midnight hours will probably involve Perseus being low in a light pollution dome. To improve odds of seeing meteors, travel out of light-polluted Cleveland and to the suburbs or, even better, the country if you can. In the suburbs, just going from the front to back yard can make a dramatic difference as this will eliminate glare from those pesky street/house lights to a large extent.

Two things can ruin the meteor shower: clouds and the Moon. The clouds? Well, that's a regional thing. Check your local Clear Sky Clock to see what the clouds have in store for your location tonight. For us Northeast Ohioans, tonight is looking good. As for the Moon, that's an Earth-wide issue. The good news is that, this year, the Moon is just a few days past new, which means that there will be no Moon up during the time of the meteor shower. There will be a slight lunar glow in the South (opposite Perseus), but this will disappear about midnight, which is about the time Perseus clears the Northeast horizon.

So how about viewing tips?

First, plan to stay out awhile, as it takes the human eye about 15 minutes to get optimal night vision capability. The bad news is that, even one bright flash of white light will wipe out night vision, requiring you to start the process all over again. Next, grab a lawn chair or, even better, a lounge-type chair. Trying to lean back with a straight-back lawn chair can be a pain in the neck, literally! Eyes ready for dark and with something to sit/lay on, settle in for a night of hopeful meteor watching (or at the very least, stargazing), just try not to fall asleep and don't forget the bug spray!

Besides meteors, tonight can be a great time for binocular viewing, owing to your use of a chair. Under suburban (maybe) or rural skies (definitely), a pair of medium power (10x50) binoculars can yield some stunning wide-angle sights. For someone truly dedicated, why not try and keep a tally of how many meteors you see for every complete hour? Really ambitious? Why not try photographing the meteors?

Whatever you plan to do tonight, good luck and clear skies!

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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

AG seeks civil penalties against BP for leak



By T.J. Aulds
The Daily News

Published August 10, 2010
TEXAS CITY — The Texas attorney general on Monday charged BP’s Texas City refinery with violations of state air-quality laws over a 40-day release that sent more than 500,000 pounds of chemicals — including large amounts of benzene — into the air during April and May.

The legal action is the second by the state against BP since 2009. A Texas Commission on Environmental Quality investigation in July found the release was an “excessive emissions event” and referred the case to the attorney general’s office.

“The state’s investigation shows that BP’s failure to properly maintain its equipment caused the malfunction (that) could have been prevented,” Attorney General Greg Abbott said in a release. “BP’s own self reporting date indicated that seal filters protecting the compressor failed because of an iron sulfide buildup, likely because BP failed to properly maintain these devices.”

The attorney general also alleges that BP ignored the large amount of emissions.

“BP made very little attempt to minimize the emissions of air contaminants caused by its actions, once again prioritizing profits over environmental compliance.”

The lawsuit pinpoints six contaminants that were released by BP including benzene, volatile organic compounds, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and carbon monoxide as violations.

The lawsuit seeks up to $25,000 a day per contaminant plus attorneys fees as penalties for the emissions, attorney general spokesman Tom Kelley said. That could cost BP as much as $6 million.

The company has argued its air testing at the fence line and monitors maintained by the state did not show high levels of emissions during the 40-day period that started April 6 and continued through May 16.

BP adamantly denied any dangerous levels of toxins could be found in the community and insists residents were never at risk.

“We will continue to cooperate with the attorney general’s office and the TCEQ to resolve their concerns,” BP spokesman Michael Marr said Monday.

BP would not directly comment on the attorney general’s actions but defended its air quality measures at the refinery.

“Independently verified air-monitoring data from our Texas City refinery clearly indicates a substantial and sustained improvement in air quality since 2004,” Marr said in July.

“BP Texas City is also moving forward with a number of measures that will further improve environmental performance and reporting. These measures include industry leading technologies and programs.”



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Friday, August 6, 2010

Thousands sign on for $10 billion BP suit



By MONICA HATCHER
HOUSTON CHRONICLE

TEXAS CITY — The revelation that BP's Texas City refinery emitted toxic benzene for more than a month has ignited a furor in the port community that has suffered its share of deadly industrial accidents and toxic spills.
Thousands of residents who fear they may have been exposed to the known carcinogen released at the oil refinery from April 6 to May 16 have been flooding parking lots and conference halls where local trial attorneys hosted information sessions and sought clients for class-action lawsuits against the oil giant.

BP faces the new challenge just as it is reaching a key milestone in another crisis — plugging the Gulf of Mexico well that blew out in an oil spill disaster that is costing the company billions of dollars.

On Wednesday, more than 3,400 people lined the hallways and sidewalks around the Nessler Center to sign on to a $10 billion class-action lawsuit filed Tuesday in Galveston federal court by Friendswood attorney Anthony Buzbee.
The lawsuit alleges the release of 500,000 pounds of chemicals - including 17,000 pounds of benzene - has jeopardized the health and property values of people who live and work in the area.

At the nearby College of the Mainland, a separate town hall meeting drew a crowd of 600.
"I've never seen anything like this," Buzbee said, looking at the lines waiting to enter a large room at the civic center where lawyers helped people fill out paperwork. "I can't believe this is mass hysteria and that everybody here is a faker," Buzbee said.
Webster-based lawyer Chad Pinkerton said he's met with about 8,000 residents over the past week. "I believe this is probably the largest prolonged release in Texas history and many, many people are sick," he said.
Word of the lawsuits spread this week, propelled in part by rumors that BP was cutting checks to head off the benzene claims from the $20 billion fund established to pay claims related to the oil spill.

BP spokesman Michael Marr said those rumors are untrue.
On Wednesday afternoon, a family used a convenience store copy machine to make dozens of copies of legal contracts. A clerk said the machine had been in constant use by would-be plaintiffs.
Lluvia Briones, 19, who signed up to join the lawsuit, said her colleagues at a Texas City fast-food restaurant were caught up in the fervor. "Everybody at work was like, 'go, go, go,' " she said.

Dozens of people the Chronicle interviewed complained of allergic reactions, sinus infections, headaches, nosebleeds and other symptoms consistent with exposure to noxious substances.
Linda Laver, 55, a former nurse, said she's enjoyed near-perfect health until she recently suffered an abscessed sinus infection, gall bladder failure and pneumonia.
"I told my doctor, 'You've known me for all these years and now all of a sudden I'm having all these things,' " Laver said as she stood in line at the Nessler Center.
Laver said she "freaked out" when she saw a Buzbee Law Firm newspaper ad describing the symptoms of benzene exposure. "It confirmed all my suspicions," she said.

Only two weeks before the well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico killed 11 workers and triggered the oil spill, BP was experiencing problems with a hydrogen compressor at the Texas City plant - itself the site of a deadly explosion in 2005 that killed 15 people.
The trouble started April 6, when the company said a fire compromised a seal on an ultracracker's hydrogen compressor. The malfunction forced the company to flare off gases. It reported the "emissions event" to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality the following day. As it worked to fix the unit over the next 40 days, the plant released 538,000 pounds of pollutants into the air, BP told regulators.

BP said it operated the ultracracker at minimal capacity, reducing production and emissions. Buzbee says the unit should have shut down completely.
Information about the release became public when BP submitted a final incident report to regulators June 4.

After investigating, the environmental commission cited BP for an "excessive release" and, two weeks ago, referred its findings to the state attorney general for possible litigation.
"Based on a review of the incidents that occurred during the past year, there appears to be a pattern of poor operation and maintenance practices" at the plant, the report said.
The report said chemical concentrations in the air did not exceed state or federal standards, but that the commission could not determine the short-term health effects of the chemicals.

Coming on the heels of the oil spill, the lawsuits add new woes for BP and may aggravate an old one: BP North America - the company's refining division - is on federal probation for a felony environmental conviction related to the 2005 explosion, which also caused a massive release of benzene and other toxins.

Any further violations could be grounds for prosecutors to ask a judge to revoke BP's probation.
Already, lawyers representing victims of the 2005 blast have said a court should revoke BP's probation based on a complaint by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration that BP has failed to comply with safety agreements it made after explosion.
The company denies OSHA's claims, and a hearing is scheduled for later this month.

As to the recent emissions, BP's Marr said in an e-mail that community air quality and fence line monitors, which measure for the presence of benzene and other substances, did not show elevated readings or ground-level impact.
Other monitoring by environmental specialists similarly found that the emissions did not exceed exposure limits set by the government, he said.

"BP does not believe there was a health impact associated with this event," Marr said.
Many residents are skeptical of that claim, and are angry that the chemicals were released for 40 days without public disclosure, even to Texas City's emergency management coordinator, Bruce Clawson. Even though BP complied with state reporting requirements, under an agreement with the city, the company should have alerted officials to the situation. Clawson said he's now dealing with irate residents calling the city for details he doesn't have about the release.
Chronicle reporter Lise Olsen contributed.


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Thursday, August 5, 2010

Texas City hires two new coaches




By Evan Mohl
The Daily News

TEXAS CITY — Texas City High School hired two new head coaches this summer to fill vacancies for volleyball and girls basketball.

Christian Dunn, a Clear Creek graduate and club coach, will lead the volleyball program. Jodi Thompson, who spent the last 12 seasons as the La Porte head coach, will take over the reins for the Lady Stings on the hardwood.

A Needed Change

Thompson has spent most of her basketball life at La Porte. She played for the Lady Bulldogs, including a trip to the 1989 state semifinals.

After graduating college, she got her first assistant coaching job at La Porte in 1994 before taking over as head coach in 1998. Thompson guided the Lady Bulldogs to nine postseasons in 12 years, three times advancing to the area round.

Despite the success and coaching where she played, Thompson wanted a change. She felt the need to do something new.

“I’ve always been there, and in some ways you kind of feel like and are treated like a kid — which can be a really good thing,” Thompson said. “I wanted something different, and I think change is good.”

Texas City’s proximity to her home helped.

“It’s a nice community, and it’s not too far,” Thompson said. “It’s a good place to make a change.”

It also will pose a big challenge. The Lady Stings have not advanced to the postseason since 2003.

Though Thompson has not met her team and possesses little knowledge of the Lady Stings — the La Porte-Texas City game got snowed out last year — she hopes she can make Lady Sting basketball competitive again.

Thompson plans to instill excitement and new ideas. Fans, parents and players can expect her traditional high-tempo style: full-court press and pressure defense that leads to offensive fast-break opportunities.

“I hope I can bring in some new blood and excitement,” Thompson said. “We’re going to make things happen.”

A Year-round Activity

For the last 13 years, Dunn coached club volleyball. He guided several teams to the Junior Olympics, including a handful ranked in the top 10 nationally. He sent athletes on to play at all kinds of colleges from Division I to NAIA.

Now, he wants to make volleyball a year-round job.

“I want to build something, and do it every month and every day from the junior high to the high school,” Dunn said. “It’s not just one team at a time and then starting over.”

Dunn started playing volleyball in high school at Clear Creek along Olympian Riley Salmon. He fell in love with what he thought was a girl’s sport because of volleyball’s quickness and speed.

It also helped that he was pretty good.

“It just came natural to me,” Dunn said. “So I thought I would keep doing this.”

Dunn inherits a team that did not make the playoffs last year and has been through four coaches in three years. The Lady Stings also graduated half their varsity roster.

Dunn will preach consistency — in coaching, development and playing style. He plans to teach the junior high players the same skills and system the Lady Stings will employ in a varsity match.

“It’s unlikely this would happen, but you want a seventh-grader to be able to take the place of a senior on the court and not be overwhelmed or confused,” Dunn said. “That’s how you build consistency and ensure growth. There’s a fundamental system that stays the same and that leads to growth — girls don’t have to try to change to adjust to something new all the time.”

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Monday, August 2, 2010

Test your hurricane IQ.




By GREG AINSWORTH


This year's hurricane season in the waters adjacent to the Southeastern United States is drawing more attention than usual, thanks to the oil spill in the Gulf. The National Hurricane Center expects a busier than average year, so it's time to energize our hurricane IQ.
Whether you call them hurricanes, typhoons or cyclones, they are the scourge of tropical locales worldwide. Ocean water temperatures of at least 80 degrees seem to be one of the key ingredients in their formation. Think hot and muggy -- and lots of evaporation. If other conditions are favorable in the atmosphere, winds near the surface may begin to converge, and a low-pressure system may form.


In the Northern Hemisphere, those cyclonic winds spiral in a counter-clockwise direction. All of that water vapor in the atmosphere rises and condenses inside thunderstorm complexes, releasing a great amount of energy in the process. Bands of thunderstorms stretching from the system's outer margins to the center of circulation help feed the massive heat engine with warm, moisture-laden air.

As the system matures, the characteristic cloud-free and relatively calm eye may form at the center of circulation. But surrounding the eye is the eyewall, where the most intense convection and highest wind speeds occur.

Hurricanes pose a major threat to life and property because of their ability to wreak havoc in so many different ways. Perhaps the first thing that comes to mind is wind damage -- not surprising since a storm isn't called a hurricane until it has sustained winds of at least 74 mph. In August 1969, Hurricane Camille made landfall along the Mississippi coast with sustained winds estimated at 200 mph.

An important, but often overlooked hurricane impact is the storm surge. This refers to the ocean water pushed onshore into low-lying areas by hurricane-force winds. Depending on the status of the local tides during landfall, storm surges of 15 to 20 feet are not out of the question. If you happen to live in a near-shore area at say, 10 feet above sea level, the surge can be bad news indeed. Hurricane Opal caused a 24-foot storm surge near Pensacola, Fla., in September 1995.

Even days after landfall, hurricanes, or their remnants, are still capable of producing tornadoes and flooding rains. After slamming into the coast of south Texas in September 1967, Hurricane Beulah spawned more than 100 tornadoes. Tropical Storm Claudette, whose winds didn't reach hurricane strength, nevertheless dropped 45 inches of rain on Alvin, Texas, in 1979.

For further information about these storms, check out the website for NOAA's National Hurricane Center.

Greg Ainsworth keeps an eye on local weather and climate issues. Contact him at ainsworth@theglobal.net.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Pettitte Has Plenty Left in the Tank




BRIAN COSTA

SEATTLE — As Andy Pettitte showered and dressed after Thursday's game, his two oldest sons, ages 15 and 11, sat and waited for him by his locker.

To ease the toll of a major-league season on his family, Mr. Pettitte often takes his children with him on the road. And when the season is over, he may well go back to Deer Park, Texas, with them for good.

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At age 38, Andy Pettitte is 11-2 and headed to the All-Star Game.
But at the moment, he is making it difficult for the Yankees to imagine life without him.

At age 38, Mr. Pettitte is having one of his finest seasons. He is off to an 11-2 start with a 2.70 ERA. And with his family in tow, he was set to travel to Anaheim, Calif., Sunday night as a member of the American League All-Star team for the first time since 2001.

Contemplating retirement has become an annual rite of winter for Mr. Pettitte, and the next offseason will be no different. But he isn't making the decision any easier for himself.

Rather than showing signs of decline, Mr. Pettitte has instead performed better than in recent years, when he was a reliable but not a spectacular pitcher. He allowed only one run in eight innings Thursday against the Mariners in what was perhaps his best outing of the season. And he is on pace to win 20 games for the first time since 2003 and only the third time in his career.

If he does so, he would become only the 13th pitcher in major-league history to win 20 or more games at age 38 or older, according to Stats Inc. The last was Mike Mussina, who won 20 games at age 39 for the Yankees in 2008.

No one expected Mr. Pettitte to pitch poorly this season. But no one expected this, either.

"We always know that Andy is going to compete," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "He's going to find ways to get out of jams. He's going to get double play balls. But I think if someone would have said Andy is going to be 11-2 at the break, it's hard to anticipate that."

There are only three other pitchers in the majors ages 38 or older who have started at least one game this season, and none of them have been anywhere near as effective as Mr. Pettitte.

Phillies lefty Jamie Moyer, 47, is 9-8 with a 4.51 ERA. Red Sox knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, 43, is 3-7 with a 5.22 ERA. And Angels right-hander Brian Moehler is 1-4 with a 4.92 ERA.

It would be an exaggeration to call Mr. Pettitte ageless. He hasn't averaged above 90 mph on his fastball since 2007. And his legs tire earlier during games now than they did when he was younger, to the point that Mr. Pettitte said he modified his between-starts workouts recently to try to improve his stamina. But his age hasn't affected him where it counts.

"I know I'm getting older, because I can tell," Mr. Pettitte said. "It takes more to recover and stuff like that. But it's also a mindset, and I feel good.''

The first time Mr. Pettitte was an All-Star, in 1996, Mr. Girardi was his catcher with the Yankees. Now, Mr. Girardi said Mr. Pettitte has a better repertoire than he did then. But he hasn't overhauled his mechanics or his pitch selection so much as he has refined both.

"He used to be really a four-seamer, cutter inside or third-base side, and then curveball," Mr. Girardi said. "He threw his changeup, but he didn't have a lot of success with it. He didn't backdoor his cutter to righties like he does now. He didn't really have a sinker. He was more of a three-pitch pitcher. Now he's got four, but he uses them on different sides."

The one constant has been Mr. Pettitte's ability to work out of trouble. Only 18% of base runners have scored against him this season, according to Inside Edge, well below the major-league average of 24%. At some point, maybe a few months from now, Mr. Pettitte will decide he has had enough. He said last week he doesn't plan on pitching much longer.

But as he prepares to play in the All-Star game for the third and perhaps final time in his career, his retirement is the last thing the Yankees want to think about.


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Thursday, July 1, 2010

Freedom Over Texas Fireworks Show!


Houston will set the stage for an extraordinary patriotic celebration at Mayor Annise Parker’s official Fourth of July event, Freedom Over Texas with Fireworks Presented by Shell. Texas singer-songwriter Pat Green will headline the annual event held from 4 to 10 p.m. on Sunday, July 4, with his performance culminating in the nation’s largest land-based fireworks show, presented by Shell Oil Company. Admission to the event is FREE with the donation of one canned item per person to the Houston Food Bank.

"As Americans, I believe it is our civic duty to celebrate the birth of our nation and reflect upon those brave men and women who have made great sacrifices for us to live in a free country," said Mayor Annise Parker. "I invite fellow Texans to join us in honoring our country, respecting the values of the founding fathers and instilling pride in our diverse community.”

Headlining the evening’s celebration on the Freedom Stage is Pat Green (with Cowboy Mouth and Little Big Town), an artist who has blazed his own trail and recorded a total of 10 studio albums. Fifteen of his singles have charted on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, of which the highest-peaking is the #3 "Wave on Wave" from his gold-certified album. Green has toured with many popular country music artists including Keith Urban, Gretchen Wilson, Kenny Chesney, and many more. At this year’s event, Green will be presented by the Texas Music Charts with an award recognizing him as the “Most Played Texas Artist” of the last decade.

When the concert comes to a close at 9:30 p.m., eyes will turn skyward for an extraordinary fireworks spectacular perfectly set to a selection of America’s favorite tunes, from patriotic songs to rock ‘n’ roll hits to classic bestsellers. Shell Oil Company is the underwriter of the 2010 fireworks show for the fifth consecutive year, and with their contribution, the city’s official fireworks show will enliven Houston’s skyline. Producing the show will be world-renowned fireworks artists from Pyro Spectaculars North by Souza.

"For more than 80 years, Shell has been a strong supporter of the Houston community and our nation. As a country, we have much to celebrate, and we at Shell are thrilled to participate in the festivities this year,” said Ben Dillon, Vice President Corporate Affairs, Shell Oil Company.

In addition to this year’s entertainment headliner, the festival will also spotlight a top-notch selection of local and regional music. Throughout the day, four stages will keep toes tapping with music ranging from country western and rock 'n' roll to Latin, R&B, and oldies.

Booth exhibits and family friendly patriotic activities will encompass Buffalo Bayou and Eleanor Tinsley Park:

KBR Liberty Park

Encompassing more than three football fields in length, KBR Liberty Park will showcase military artifacts and vehicles including representation from all five military branches and more. The branches and the Houston Police Department will offer recruiting on site.
The U.S. Army will showcase an Apache Helicopter flight simulator and a 55-ton M-60 Battle Tank.
The Museum of Printing History and the Military Museum of Houston will exhibit historical items that have helped shape our nation’s history in this area.
Bud Light Zone

Cool off with a cold one at the Budweiser Beer Garden, and enjoy a prime view of the sixth annual Bud Light Texas Volleyball Championship Series Finals.
Make a rest stop at the Bud Light Build-A-Bar, which will offer a shaded sitting area equipped with plasma TV screens. Also, don’t miss a sneak peak of an event performer during their official Bud Light Sound Check.

Be sure to stop by the Budweiser Good Sport’s Booth and learn how you can save lives by being a designated driver.

Walmart All American Kids Zone

More than 30,000 square feet of free educational programming and entertainment await children.
Houston Public Library’s HPL Mobile Express computer lab, will teach child how to use a computer.
Houston Fire Department’s Smokehouse will teach kids the importance of fire safety.
Historical costumed characters will talk with children about the documents that defined our government.

Juno Baby will have sing-a-long activities for children and little aspiring stars are invited to perform in the Rising Stars Search contest for a chance to win an all-expense paid trip to San Francisco and be featured in the next Juno Baby production.
Free games, rides, face painting and interactive activities will be open to children of all ages.
Additional activities:

Gexa Energy will be giving US Flag hand fans to the first 30,000 people who enter the gates. Booths will be setup for families to take fun photos with Shrek The Musical characters, enter for a chance to win a trip for two to Hawaii or Cancun, and also for a chance to win a Home Theater System, which includes a Sony Bravia 40’ LCD TV.
Visit KBR’s five primary beneficiaries on site: Career and Recovery Resources, Goodwill Industries, Houston Community College, Soldier’s Angels and Wreaths Across America-Houston.
The 2010 Land Rover models will be on display including the all new 2010 Land Rover LR4 and award winning Range Rover and Range Rover Sport.
Freedom Over Texas with Fireworks Presented by Shell will be simulcast on ABC-13/KTRK-TV from 7-10 p.m. on Sunday, July 4, and will be syndicated statewide from 8-10 p.m. In addition, KILT 100.3 FM will simulcast the music medley specially choreographed for the fireworks spectacular.

With the donation of one canned item per person to the Houston Food Bank, admission for the event is FREE. Without the donation, tickets will be $8 per person. Children two years and under will be admitted free. In keeping with last year’s theme, Freedom Over Texas with Fireworks Presented by Shell will expand its offering of recycling receptacles, encouraging all patrons to recycle.

Freedom Over Texas with Fireworks Presented by Shell sponsors include: Fireworks sponsor: Shell; Anchor Sponsors: Gexa Energy, Bud Light/Silver Eagle Distributors, KBR, Houston Area Land Rover Centres, and Walmart; Co-producers: City of Houston/Mayor’s Office of Special Events; Additional sponsors include Doubletree Hotel Houston Downtown; Houston Chronicle; 100.3 KILT; HOT 95-7; Mix 96-5; SportsRadio 610 and Mega 101 FM; Texas Lottery; Juno Baby; Enterprise Rent-A-Car; Texas Southern University and LifeGift. In-kind sponsors include Houston Dynamo, Houston Rockets, Houston Astros, Houston Aero and Metro. The event benefits Houston Central Improvement, Inc.

For more information, call 832.393.0868 or visit the Freedom Over Texas with Fireworks Presented by Shell Web site at www.freedomovertexas.org or www.houstonspecialevents.org.

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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Teachers prevail in grading law suit


AUSTIN — Texas school districts no longer can force teachers to give students higher grades than they earned on class assignments or on their report cards, a Travis County judge ruled Monday.
Eleven districts — mostly in the Houston area — had sued Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott over his interpretation of the so-called truth-in-grading law that was passed last year. They argued it applied only to assignments and exams and were fighting to keep their policies that ban cumulative report card grades lower than a certain number, typically a 50.

The school districts suing were Aldine, Alief, Clear Creek, Deer Park, Dickinson, Fort Bend, Humble, Klein, Anahuac, Eanes and Livingston.

The superintendents say their minimum-grade policies help discourage students from dropping out by giving them a mathematical chance at passing a class, even if they blow one grading period. But teacher groups and the bill’s author, Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound, counter that such policies are dishonest and don’t prepare students for college or the work force.
State District Judge Gisela Triana-Doyal ruled against the districts’ reading of the law, which effectively means that schools across Texas must abolish minimum-grading policies unless the decision is appealed and overturned. The state does not track how many districts have such policies.

May appeal
Richard Morris, the attorney for the school districts that filed the lawsuit, said he would consult with the superintendents about pursuing an appeal or trying to lobby the Legislature for a change.
The judge said the statute was “not ambiguous,” even though it didn’t specifically mention that it applied to cumulative six- or nine-week grades that appear on report cards. But Triana-Doyal emphasized she wasn’t opining whether the law was good or bad education policy, noting that both sides made valid points.

“People have different opinions about what’s in the best interest of kids,” she said.
Nelson, a former teacher, said the ruling was “a victory for Texas teachers, students and parents because now all grades — on class assignments and report cards — will accurately reflect how well students have mastered their course work.”

She said she doubted her colleagues would retreat from the law next session after unanimously passing her bill last year.
Dropout strategy

Clear Creek ISD Superintendent Greg Smith, the only school chief to testify, said the district’s minimum-grading policy has been an effective dropout strategy over the last 13 years. At one high school last year, he said, more than 30 students benefited from the policy and were able to pass.

Without the policy, he said, “I think you close the light at the end of the tunnel for some students.”
For example, if a student earned a 20 grade during one six weeks, he still would fail the semester if he earned a 90 the next two grading periods.

The Texas chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, which intervened in the case on the side of the Texas Education Agency, argued that minimum-grading policies take important authority away from teachers and are “not in the best interest of students in the long run.”
“I feel like it’s unethical,” Mary Roberts, a teacher in Humble ISD, testified about her district’s policy, which bans report card graders lower than a 50.
ericka.mellon@chron.com



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Monday, June 28, 2010

Recovery Effort in Gulf Expected to Continue Despite Storm



By JOSEPH BERGER

A tropical storm moving across the western Gulf of Mexico that is likely to strengthen into a hurricane is not expected to seriously disrupt efforts to capture oil gushing from the stricken BP well, officials of the Coast Guard and BP said Monday.

Adm. Thad W. Allen, of the Coast Guard, who is commanding the federal response to the disaster, said at an afternoon press conference that high seas produced by Tropical Storm Alex should not force the evacuation of rigs and other equipment from the blowout site, which is 50 miles off the Louisiana coast. Should an evacuation take place, he said, it could halt the work of collecting oil and drill relief wells for about 14 days.

“As it stands right now, absent the intervention of a hurricane, we’re still looking at mid-August," to have relief wells shut off the gusher entirely, Admiral Allen said.

However, BP officials said that what could be delayed, even by current wave heights, is an effort to prepare what is known as a “floating riser system” that will help raise the daily total of collected oil from, about 25,000 barrels to as much as 50,000 barrels. At a briefing Monday morning, Kent Wells, a senior vice president of BP who is overseeing BP’s efforts, said the storm is expected to follow a track that will take it well west of the blowout site, but it may produce waves of 10 to 12 feet, which Mr. Wells said was too high for the “very precise work” on the surface needed to prepare the floating riser system.

Mr. Wells said the containment cap and a second system that are collecting 25,000 barrels of oil a day would not need to be disconnected and the drilling of two relief wells should continue on schedule. The first relief well is supposed to pump in heavy mud and shut off the gusher sometime in August.

Tropical Storm Alex is on a course heading for northeastern Mexico and a stretch of Texas. Meteorologists at Accuweather.com said they are anticipating a landfall between Tampico, Mexico and Brownsville, Tex. Wednesday night or early Thursday.

Meanwhile Associated Press reported that BP had filed documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission that indicate the cost of capping and cleaning the spill have reached $2.65 billion. BP has lost more than $100 billion in market value since the drilling platform the company was operating blew up April 20. The costs include spill response, containment, relief well drilling, grants to gulf states, claims paid, and federal costs, but not a $20 billion fund for damages the company created this month.

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Alex may effect Gulf oil production ..


HOUSTON (Dow Jones)--Tropical Storm Alex, expected to become a hurricane Tuesday, seems to be headed on a path away from the bulk of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico's oil and gas production and refining infrastructure. But some production impact will be felt as one of the largest energy producers in the Gulf said Monday it was shutting down several platforms as a precaution.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA) said it had pulled 700 workers from its Gulf operations, and some 835 workers remained offshore. The company is shutting in production from its Western and Central Gulf of Mexico assets to prepare for the potential full evacuation of personnel Tuesday. The company started pulling workers from the Gulf over the weekend. The company didn't specify how much production would be shut or how many platforms were being evacuated.

At 11 a.m. EDT, Alex was located about 85 miles west-northwest of Campeche, Mexico, in the western Gulf of Mexico, and was heading towards southern Texas and northern Mexico. Most U.S. offshore oil and gas platforms are located in the eastern part of the Gulf, far from Alex's forecast path.

Alex "is not likely to have a major impact on production or refining in the U.S.," Doug MacIntyre, senior analyst at the Energy Information Administration, told Dow Jones Newswires Monday. "Alex's current path appears to avoid most of the oil and gas production platforms and any of the major refining centers."

Energy markets Monday seemed to take the storm in stride. Light, sweet crude for August delivery ended 61 cents lower at $78.25 a barrel a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Natural gas for July delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange settled 2.96% lower at $4.717 million British thermal units.

Gulf producers Apache Corp. (APA), Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM), and Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) also said Monday they have started evacuating non-essential workers from the offshore facilities expected to be in the path of the storm but none have so far reported any impact to their production.

BP PLC (BP, BP.LN) said Monday it pulled non-essential personnel from three offshore facilities in the the Gulf, and that production was not affected. The company evacuated workers from Atlantis, Mad Dog and Holstein platforms.

Alex may delay BP PLC's plans to increase the amount of oil collected from a leaking well in the Gulf by a week, a company official said Monday.

While the storm's winds are expected to stay far to the west of the Deepwater Horizon spill, high seas are likely to become an issue this week, said Kent Wells, a senior vice president with BP, in a press briefing. Waves up to between 10 feet and 12 feet would prevent BP from hooking a third rig up to an underwater containment system, a process that needs three days of good weather, Wells said.

Two rigs, the Discoverer Enterprise and Q4000, are already collecting between 20,000 and 25,000 barrels of oil a day from the well, which has gushed ever since a rig working at the site caught fire and sank in April.

Chevron Corp. (CVX) and ConocoPhillips (COP) said that they have not evacuated workers, but that they are closely monitoring the forecast for Alex.

A hurricane watch was issued for parts of the south Texas Gulf coastline area and parts of northern Mexico, the National Hurricane Center reported Monday on its website.

The NHC, in its advisory, also said Alex likely will become a hurricane Tuesday and has increased in strength, now with winds of 60 miles per hour.

The watch area for the U.S. extends from south of Baffin Bay to the mouth of the Rio Grande in Texas, with Mexico issuing a hurricane watch from the Rio Grande to La Cruz.


-By Isabel Ordonez, Dow Jones Newswires; 713-547-9207; isabel.ordonez@dowjones.com

(Brian Baskin and Angel Gonzalez contributed to this article

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Monday, June 21, 2010

Triple the love 3 sets of triplets born on same day mark a milestone - turning 1



By JENNIFER LATSON
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
June 21, 2010, 6:39AM

Brett Coomer Chronicle

BY THE NUMBERS
At 1 year old, each set of triplets has gone through roughly:
7,300 diapers
4,745 bottles of formula
730 loads of laundry
$18,000 in expenses, not including nanny services or one-time costs such as strollers, cribs, etc.
Source: estimates by the three families

They didn't unwrap ties or enjoy breakfast in bed — no time for that. They didn't even get a day off from diaper duty: When you change 20 or more a day, there's never a break from diapers. But for three Houston-area dads, Father's Day brought at least three big reasons to celebrate.
Hugo Estrada, Justin Lacombe and Troy Elmore each spent the holiday with their own set of triplets, all born just over a year ago on the same day - June 11. In the past year, their triple-bundles of joy have taught them lessons about patience and time management. On Father's Day, the dads said the greatest gift was that their babies are healthy and thriving.

"We've come a long way," said Elmore, who doesn't even remember last Father's Day. He was caring for his oldest daughter, 5-year-old Brooke, while his wife remained hospitalized and the triplets - Reagan, Paige and Kara - were in intensive care after being born six weeks premature.
This Father's Day, Elmore played with all four girls in a corral constructed of couches at his mother-in-law's Deer Park home. He and his wife, Heather, are staying here while they have a home built in Friendswood.

"From them being in the hospital last year to having our dream house built - it's a great Father's Day," Elmore said.
Today, the staff who cared for all three families at The Woman's Hospital of Texas will host a birthday party for the babies, who weighed between 3 and 5 pounds when they were born at 34 weeks, all by cesarean section.
Parents are a team
Though the mothers get credit for most of the hard work in bringing the babies into the world - each endured some form of bed rest before the babies were born and suffered complications from high blood pressure to partial paralysis - the fathers do their share of the daily work of triplet-rearing.

"We're outnumbered," Stephanie Lacombe said. "You kind of have to work on it as a team."
At bathtime, one parent holds the babies while the other washes, she said, then one dries and one puts on the diapers. At meals, one parent prepares the food and the other one feeds it to the babies.

Now that the triplets sleep for longer stretches and eat less frequently, it's a little easier, said Justin Lacombe, the father of a girl and two boys: Emma, Noah and Carter.
"The first three months was a blur. We did feedings every three hours, and the feedings take 30 to 45 minutes," Lacombe said. "I don't even know how we made it on three to four hours of sleep a night, not to mention teething and reflux."

The trick is a combination of military discipline and laissez-faire flexibility: You have to schedule strictly and plan diligently but not be fazed when nothing goes according to plan.

"We just try to say it's controlled chaos," Lacombe said. "It's like working security at a rock concert: Even if they're all screaming, it doesn't matter. It's all fun."
Babies in rhythm
Some things are easier with triplets. They can entertain each other endlessly, and their biological clocks tend to sync up: They eat at the same times and nap at the same times, which is when parents can catch a rare moment of quiet.

"It's a lot of work, but I enjoy every minute of it," said Estrada, who spent Father's Day watching his three boys - Robert, Brian and Anthony - play at their Porter home while the TV broadcast a World Cup game.

"Last year the babies were still in the hospital. I wanted to hug them, but they were in the incubator and couldn't be touched," he said. "Now we can hug and play and everything."
jennifer.latson@chron.com

Monday, June 14, 2010

Texas governor says state a model for clean air



(AP) – Jun 2, 2010
DEER PARK, Texas — Texas Gov. Rick Perry says the state should not be threatened with a takeover of its air quality program but instead be lauded as the poster child for regulating pollution.
At a news conference Wednesday in a Houston suburb, Perry said the federal government should stop what he called a "power grab" by the Environmental Protection Agency. Last week, the EPA's regional director threatened to remove Texas' regulatory authority by midsummer if the state fails to comply with the Clean Air Act.

The state and EPA disagree over the way Texas issues emissions permits.
Standing inside a warehouse that makes fluid sealing products for the petrochemical industry, Perry said the Texas program for permitting pollutants from petrochemical plants has helped improve air quality.

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Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Armand Bayou Nature Center to host artist exhibit




By Armand Bayou Nature Center
Special to The Daily News
Published June 2, 2010

PASADENA — Four artists will show their work at the Armand Bayou Nature Center’s Second Saturday event from 10 a.m. to noon June 12.

At 11 a.m., wildlife artist and author Doug Hiser will discuss how an idea becomes a piece of art with his slide presentation, “From Pencil to Paint — Wildlife Art — ALIVE.”

Hiser, the author of 18 books, is working on a book from A to Z of unusual animal close-up portraits. His website, art-escape.com, has 14 galleries showcasing his work.

Nassau Bay resident Kelly Halbach has been sketching since she first picked up a pencil as a child on a West Texas dairy farm.

Her paintings reflect her travels in South Africa, Europe, New Mexico, the Southwest United States and San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.

Now living on the Texas Coast, she’s inspired by the shorebirds and scenery found along the coastline and birding trails.

Her website is kellyhalbachart.com.

James D. Phillips was taught to draw as a child by his mother, Geraldine Bova Phillips, but it was only four years ago when he taught himself to sculpt.

He’s becoming a celebrity as an artist who turns the remains of trees lost in Hurricane Ike into works of art. He prefers marine life subjects.

Award-winning Bejat McCracken, a muralist, photographer and nature artist, spent her early childhood on a small farm in Ohio.

She travels often to the Ecuadorean Amazon to paint. Some of her work can be seen at the Bradford Gallery in Kemah.

For more about her art, visit her website at bejat.com.

There also will be activities for young artists to add their personal touch to line drawings by Hiser.

A door prize drawing will be held for one of Hiser’s prints.

There also will be a guided trail hike through the forest.

Admission is free to members, $3 for nonmember adults and $1 for children ages 4-12 and seniors 60 and older.

Call 281-474-2551.


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Friday, May 28, 2010

Texas Gulf Waits & Worries


LAPORTE -- Richard Arnhart spends much of his days monitoring wind trajectories, scientific bulletins and TV newscasts.

Parts of an oily blob three times the size of Rhode Island -- and growing -- are believed by many experts to be lumbering closer to the Texas Gulf, and Arnhart is part of the first line of defense.
As a regional director for the Oil Spill Prevention and Response Program in the Texas General Land Office, Arnhart is paid by the state to fight oil spills, and he's heavily involved in state and federal contingency planning for any possible impact on Texas from the massive oil spill lurking in the Gulf of Mexico.

Communities all along the Texas coast are making similar preparations as they join the rest of the world in tracking daily developments in one of the worst oil spill disasters in history.
No one knows for sure if remnants of the spill, which was about 160 miles east of the Lone Star State late last week, will reach Texas waters. The consensus seems to be that if there is an impact it will be in the form of tar balls or a frothy substance resembling chocolate mousse. Experts don't expect any residue to hit this far west for several weeks.

Beyond that, just what threat the spill poses for a region of the state whose economy and culture is tied to the gulf is difficult to gauge. Environmentalists warn of possibly irreversible damage to the state's fragile ecosystems and endangered wildlife. Others worry about potential losses to fishing and tourism, though local officials say they have yet to see any signs of an economic backlash.
"It's going to have an impact one way or another," said state Rep. Aaron Pena, D-Edinburg, chairman of the state House Select Committee on Emergency Preparedness, which has scheduled a Monday hearing in McAllen to examine Texas preparations for the spill. "We swim in that ocean. We eat the food that comes out of that ocean. It's part of our [committee's] charge to be prepared for emergencies, and this is certainly an emergency that Texas should be prepared for."
'No news is good news'

Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, whose office would be in charge of fighting residue from the spill and enforcing the cleanup, took steps late last week to calm fears about the oil slick.

"We're watching and waiting, but it's just not time to go to general quarters," said Patterson, who is scheduled to testify at Monday's hearing. "No news is good news."

Patterson sought to dispel TV reports that tar balls from the spill are already showing up on Texas beaches. Although tar balls occasionally wash ashore along the Texas Gulf, they may be decades old and could come from natural seepage or earlier spills, the land office said. An analysis on tar balls collected from Jamaica Beach on Galveston Island last week proved conclusively that the substance did not come from the oil slick in the gulf, said Cmdr. David Berliner of the Coast Guard.
Nevertheless, an out-of-control underwater gusher dumping more than thousands of barrels of oil into the gulf each day is impossible for Texans to ignore. Houston area residents watching TV last week, for example, might have seen ads aired by attorney Jim Adler offering his service to victims of the spill.

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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Small fire at Shell Oil


NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Shell Oil Co. on Monday said a small, early day fire at an unspecified location at its joint venture, Deer Park, Texas, oil refinery was quickly extinguished.

For competitive reasons, the company wouldn't provide details on the operational status of the plant.

"There was no impact to employees, the surrounding community or industry neighbors," company representative Ted Rolfvondenbaumen said.

The Deer Park refinery has the capacity to process 340,000 barrels of crude oil a day. It is jointly owned by a unit of Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA, RDSB) and Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex.

-By Rose Marton-Vitale, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2146; rose.marton@ dowjones.com



Read more: http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/stock-market-news-story.aspx?storyid=201005171230dowjonesdjonline000279&title=shellsmall-fire-at-deer-park-refinery-quickly-extinguished#ixzz0p3BWvPB1

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Oil spill threatens Gulf Coast


(CNN) -- A huge oil spill oozing toward the Gulf Coast on Thursday threatens hundreds of species of wildlife, some in their prime breeding season, environmental organizations said.
The Coast Guard said Wednesday that the amount of oil spilling from an underwater well after an oil rig explosion last week has increased to as many as 5,000 barrels of oil a day, or 210,000 gallons, five times more than what was originally believed.

Although efforts to minimize the damage are under way and options under consideration include asking the U.S. military for assistance, wildlife conservation groups say the oil could pose a "growing environmental disaster."

"The terrible loss of 11 workers (unaccounted for after the rig explosion) may be just the beginning of this tragedy as the oil slick spreads toward sensitive coastal areas vital to birds and marine life and to all the communities that depend on them," said Melanie Driscoll, director of bird conservation for the Louisiana Coastal Initiative, in a statement.
Coastal areas of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida could be at risk, the organization said.

"For birds, the timing could not be worse; they are breeding, nesting and especially vulnerable in many of the places where the oil could come ashore," she said. "The efforts to stop the oil before it reaches shore are heroic, but may not be enough. We have to hope for the best, but prepare for the worst, including a true catastrophe for birds."

"The best case is, the wind shifts and the oil doesn't hit," said Tom MacKenzie of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "I'm not real confident about that. ... We're doing everything we can to prevent it, but it could be a bad one."

It's not just birds that could be affected, although they are usually the first to feel the effects, said Gregory Bossart, chief veterinary officer for the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta. The birds are right at the surface, get covered in the oil and swallow it, causing liver and kidney problems.

"They need to be rescued and cleaned," he said.
But the coastline of Louisiana, with its barrier islands and estuaries, "is a very unique ecosystem. It's very complex," Bossart said.
Plankton found in the estuaries nourish organisms all the way up the food chain. Crabs, mussels, oysters and shrimp feed on the plankton, he said. Oil smothers the plankton, meaning they cannot eat.

Also, "the estuaries here are a nursery ground, literally a nursery ground, for the entire fish population in this area," Bossart said.

River otters in the region eat mussels and other animals. And "we know, in this area right now, that there are sperm whales. There are dolphins right in the oil slick," he said.
If an oil spill is small enough, animals can leave the area.
"Some of them can get away," Bossart said. "It's totally dependent on the size of the slick, and this is huge."

Exposure to the oil for a prolonged period of time can result in a toxic effect on the skin, and mammals can suffer lung damage or death after breathing it in, Bossart said.
"When the oil starts to settle, it'll smother the oyster beds. It'll kill the oysters," he said.

The Audubon Society, which is affiliated with the Louisiana Coastal Initiative, is recruiting volunteers in Florida and making its Center for Birds of Prey available for bird cleansing and rehabilitation. Elsewhere, Audubon said it was gearing up to mobilize volunteers and provide assistance as the oil reaches land.

The spill also threatens the Louisiana and Mississippi fishing industry, as crab, oysters and shrimp along the coast could be affected, along with numerous species of fish. Gulf shrimp are in their spawning season.

More than 400 species are threatened by the spill, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported Thursday, citing the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.
"When you stop and begin considering everything that this could impact, it really is stunning," Karen Foote, biologist administrator with the department, told the newspaper.

A handful of "Important Bird Areas" -- designated because of their value to bird species -- face immediate threat from the oil, the initiative said. They include the Chandeleur Islands and Gulf Islands National Seashore areas in Louisiana and Mississippi, along with the Active Delta area in Louisiana, which includes Delta Island National Wildlife Refuge and the Pass-a-Loutre Wildlife Management Area.

Several species of birds are cause for special concern, the Louisiana Coastal Initiative said. They include the brown pelican, the state bird of Louisiana, which nests on barrier islands and feeds near shore. The brown pelican's breeding season just began, according to the Initiative, and "many pairs are already incubating eggs."

The species was taken off the federal endangered species list last year, but "their relatively low reproductive rate means any disruption to their breeding cycle could have serious effects on the population."

More than 800 brown pelicans died when a smaller oil spill hit Louisiana's Breton Island National Wildlife Refuge a few years ago, MacKenzie said.

Species of beach-nesting terns and gulls, beach-nesting shorebirds, large wading birds, marsh birds and ocean-dwelling birds are also at risk, along with migratory shorebirds and songbirds, the Initiative said.

The migratory songbirds move across the Gulf during a two-week period from late April to early May, for instance.

"The journey across 500 miles of open water strains their endurance to its limits," the Initiative said. "They depend on clear skies and healthy habitats on both sides of the Gulf in order to survive the journey."

According to a 1998 study by Louisiana State University, more than 500 million birds fly over the Gulf and enter the United States along coastal areas in Louisiana and Texas each spring.
The barrier islands east of Louisiana's Lake Pontchartrain have still not recovered from the blow dealt by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Bossart said, and a spill such as this one could seriously threaten their recovery.

"I think at this point it would be wrong to say it's catastrophic, because it really hasn't hit any area except out in the Gulf proper," he said. But "it's certainly a very serious thing" that could pose a long-term environmental challenge.

Plans have been under way to protect wildlife since the spill was discovered, MacKenzie said. "We know what we're doing to try to protect those key assets. ... A lot of people are leaning forward in the foxhole to address this."

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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Auto Show set for May 7



April 27, 2010 9:02 am Greg May wrote:
The Motorhead Maniacs Auto Show returns to the city of La Porte from 4-9 p.m. May 7 at Five Points Town Plaza.

In addition to the unjudged show of cars that has been on display in the past, this year’s show will also feature a judged car section, as well as vendors and live entertainment from two bands, Red Box Harbor and JJ Dynomite.

The bands will perform at the plaza beginning at 4:30 p.m.

The show is free and open to the public.

Unjudged cars will be displayed up and down Main Street, while the judged cars will be featured on Broadway in front of the Five Points Town Plaza.

To register a vehicle

All vehicles must be pre-registered to be considered for judging.

There is no entry fee for unjudged vehicles, but vehicle owners will be required to check in before being granted entry to the show.

Check-in for unjudged vehicles will begin at 2 p.m. May 7 at La Porte Community Church, 200 South First St.

No vehicles will be granted access if they have not been checked in and received a vehicle identification card from event staff the day of the show.

There is a $15 entry fee for judged cars. Judged vehicle owners must check in before they will be granted entry to the show.

Check in for judged vehicles is from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. May 7 at Wayne Wicks & Associates, 110 N. Broadway.

In addition to live entertainment and a car show, there will be a raffle the day of the show.

The $5 raffle tickets will be available at the event at the check-in locations.

Proceeds will benefit Boys & Girls Harbor. The city is still seeking donations for the raffle; items will be accepted through May 3.

For more information, visit the event Web site at www.motorheadmaniacs.com.

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