The Salt
6:07 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Water, Water, Everywhere, But Not Enough To Waste

Here's a fact worth pondering: Farming accounts for 70 percent of all the water that's used for any purpose, worldwide. And demand for it is growing, along with the planet's population and our increasing appetite for meat. That's according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which recently published this poster and others in a striking series on the vital role of water in growing our food.

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Local Interest
5:38 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Fall 2011 A to Z program underway at Museum

COMMERCE - Under the sponsorship of Hunt Regional Healthcare, the fall class of Healthy Kids from A to Z will begins Wednesday at 10:00 AM at the Northeast Texas Children's Museum.

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It's All Politics
5:00 am
Wed September 28, 2011

As Anita Perry Hits The Campaign Trail, Five Things You Should Know

Credit Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images
Anita Perry is increasingly stepping out from behind her husband, Republican presidential candidate and Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Wednesday she'll campaign solo in Iowa. Here they greeted supporters together during a rally on Sept. 8 in Newport Beach, Calif.

When Texas Gov. Rick Perry announced plans to run for president, he made a point of noting that it was his wife, Anita, who urged him to go for it, to get out of his "comfort zone."

Step into the fray, she urged.

That fray in recent days has taken a toll on Perry, who had a roundly-panned performance at GOP presidential debate last week followed by a surprising drubbing in Saturday's Florida Republican presidential straw poll.

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-Local News
5:00 am
Wed September 28, 2011

CISD refinances CHS bond, saves over $728K

COMMERCE - Commerce taxpayers are poised to save over $728,000 over the life of a bond recently refinanced by the school district.

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-Local News
5:00 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Barney Bray chosen as newest PJC Regent

PARIS - The Paris Junior College Board of Regents Monday approved the appointment of their newest regent, Barney Bray. The District 6 seat became vacant with the resignation of Rachel Braswell.

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Europe
3:26 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Will U.S.-Russia Reset Survive A Putin Presidency?

Credit Yekaterina Shtukina / AP
Russia's leading political party, United Russia, called for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (left) and and President Dmitry Medvedev to effectively switch jobs when Russia holds elections next year. Putin previously served as president from 1999-2008.

Vladimir Putin's planned run for the presidency next year comes as no surprise to U.S. policymakers. But it may make their lives more complicated and signal a return to more troubled times in U.S.-Russian relations.

Russia's dominant political party, United Russia, nominated Putin as its presidential candidate on Saturday. That virtually assures him that he will return to his old job, which he held from 1999 to 2008. The current president, Dmitry Medvedev, will be the candidate to replace Putin as prime minister.

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Business
3:26 am
Wed September 28, 2011

'Lean Startup' Advice: Think Big, Start Small

Credit Oli Scarff / Getty Images
Small startup companies have an advantage, says author Eric Ries: they can test innovative ideas quickly. Here, workers in London talk at TechHub, an office space for technology entrepreneurs.

Some of our best ideas supposedly come to us in the shower: a business to start, an industry to shake up. Or maybe not, says entrepreneur Eric Ries.

"When we're in the shower, when we're thinking about our idea — boy, does it sound brilliant. But the reality is that most of our ideas are actually terrible," he says. "But it's hard to know which are the brilliant ones, and which are the crazy ones, until we actually test them against reality."

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Economy
3:26 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Recession A Tougher Hit For The Middle-Aged

Credit Chris Hondros / Getty Images
Job seekers participate in a career counseling session targeted to an over-50 demographic in the Harlem neighborhood of New York. Human resources professionals say there are fewer leadership positions available, so it may take middle-aged workers longer to find a good job.

Joblessness can be particularly tough for those in middle age. The recession hit this age group hard, and they aren't getting rehired as quickly during the sluggish recovery.

Middle-aged workers face more financial demands than other age groups and are too young to retire, yet they also don't have as much time to work their way up again from the bottom rung like younger workers.

Networking For A New Job

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Latin America
3:25 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Education Is Latest Casualty In Mexico's Drug War

Credit Pedro Pardo / AFP/Getty Images
In Acapulco, Mexico, teachers are out on strike at more than a hundred schools because of spiraling violence related to the country's drug war. Here, a child looks at a sign announcing the closure of a school in Acapulco, Sept. 1.

In the coastal Mexican city of Acapulco, teachers are out on strike — not over wages, working conditions or pensions, but because of crime.

Teachers say they're being extorted, kidnapped and intimidated by local gangs and they're refusing to return to their classrooms until the government does something to protect them. Over the last two years, drug cartels fighting for control of Acapulco have terrorized the once-popular tourist resort.

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Life In Retirement: The Not-So-Golden Years
3:24 am
Wed September 28, 2011

Boomers 'Delusion' About Health In Retirement

Credit Julie Rovner/NPR
Seniors at the Greenspring Village Retirement Community in Springfield, Va., play Wii bowling.

Most baby boomers say they're planning on an active and healthy retirement, according to a new poll conducted by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health. And, in a switch from earlier years, more than two-thirds recognize the threat of long-term care expenses to their financial futures.

But some experts worry that when it comes to their health, boomers are still woefully unprepared — or worse, in denial.

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