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Udall and Lujan Garner New Committees

U.S. Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., will begin serving on the Senate Committee on Appropriations in the new year, his office reported Wednesday.
 
“A seat on the Appropriations Committee is very meaningful for New Mexico,” Udall said. “From the labs, to the military bases and our public lands, we have a large federal presence in our state. I have no illusions about the difficult economic times and budgetary constraints our nation is facing, and I am eager to do my best and defend New Mexico through the appropriations process.”
 
Udall was an appropriator in the House of Representatives from
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Metzger’s Donates to United Way

Metzger’s Do It Best Hardware Manager David Jolly presents United Way of Northern New Mexico Executive Director Kristy A. Ortega with a check for $669.59 from sales received during the recent Small Business Saturday event. As this year’s Giving Campaign is winding down, Ortega urges community members to consider donating to the UWNNM’s Community Action Fund, which funds nonprofits that help neighbors in need. Learn more at www.UnitedWayNNM.org or 662-0800. Courtesy/UWNNM
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Local Production of Disney’s ‘The Little Mermaid, Jr.’ Premiere’s This Weekend

Front row from left, Nayeli Marquez, Neha Sadasivan and Rebekah Lockhart. Back row from left, Kezia Tripp (Flounder), Carley Sorenen, Marcie Lee, Joseph Sarrao (Sebastian), Hannah Clegg, Katie Hermmann and Tayra Eidenbnz. Courtesy photo

ACCT News:

Atomic City Children’s Theater (ACCT) invites the community to its premiere performance of Disney’s “The Little Mermaid, Jr.”

Showtimes are 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 14 and 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15 at Duane Smith Auditorium.

Dive into the sea and meet Ariel (Evelyn Wolbier) who wants to be human. Torn between her love Read More

Gell-Mann Presents ‘The Gods Must Be Crazy’

SFI News:

The 2012 Science On Screen series wraps up at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 13, with Murray Gell-Mann’s presentation of Jamie Uys’ groundbreaking 1980 comedy The Gods Must Be Crazy.

The event takes place at the Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail in Santa Fe.

In the movie, a wayward Coca-Cola bottle upsets the balance in a utopian African village, setting off a chain of unlikely events, including bewildering (and hilarious) confrontations with “modern culture.”

Gell-Mann, a Nobel laureate, physicist, complexity pioneer, world traveler, and Santa Fe Institute icon Read More

Cub Scouts Tour Los Alamos Daily Post

Los Alamos Cub Scouts Pack 27, Bear Den 7, front row from left, Malcolm Olsen, 8, Alexander Watts, 8, Marek Jablonski, 8, Nate Golden, 8, Conner Cook, 9, Lance Rivera, 9, and back row from left, Maks Gerashchenko, 8, Keith Bridge, 8, Den Leader Jane Johnson and Erik Leonard, 8, all third graders at Mountain Elementary School or homeschooled, visited the Los Alamos Daily Post World Headquarters today in downtown Los Alamos. In touring the local newspaper offices, the Cub Scouts completed an achievement toward earning their Bear Badge. Photo by Carol A. Clark/ladailypost.com Read More

Money IQ: Are Trusts Just for the Wealthy?

Money IQ
By Dan Monte
 
Are Trusts Just for the Wealthy?

As an attorney who has practiced primarily in the areas of trusts and estates for the past 20 years, I frequently hear people say that they are simply not wealthy enough to have a trust.

There is a very common misconception that somehow the use of trusts in estate planning is only for the wealthy. The intended purpose of this short article is to dispel this misconception.

As each one of us has a unique personality, each one of us has a unique set of circumstances which will dictate the form of our estate plan.

Contrary to common belief, it is not Read More

NNSA, Los Alamos County Revised Fire Protection Agreement a Win-Win

Shaking hands recently on a modified Cooperative Fire Protection Agreement are from left, LASO’s Kevin Smith, Fire Chief Troy Hughes and County Administrator Harry Burgess. Courtesy/LAC

NNSA/COUNTY News:

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and the Los Alamos Fire Department (LAFD) recently modified the Cooperative Fire Protection Agreement to ensure world-class emergency response capabilities for Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and Los Alamos County.

County Administrator Harry Burgess and Manager Kevin Smith of NNSA’s Los Alamos Site Office signed Read More

LANL’s Dr. Wingo Introduces Rotarians to the Power of Domestic Honeybees

Dr. Bob Wingo discusses the power of bees as Rotary President Linda Hull and her husband Robert Hull of Los Alamos Technical Associates (LATA) listen at right. Photo by Carol A. Clark/ladailypost.com

Staff Report

The incredible power of bees as a detection tool was literally the buzz among many Rotarians assembled for a lunchtime presentation Tuesday at the Dixie Girl Restaurant in downtown Los Alamos.

Dr. Robert M. Wingo, the Environmental Science and Engineering Team Leader for the Chemical Diagnostics and Engineering Group at Los Alamos National Laboratory delivered the talk.

Domestic Read More

Taxpayer Losses, Lack of Needed Data Revealed in New Oil and Mining Report

Illustration of an oil rig. Courtesy photo
 
GAO News:
 
WASHINGTON D.C. – A report released this morning by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), originally requested by U.S. Sen. Tom Udall and Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva, D-Ariz., describes glaring shortfalls in the data publicly available on hardrock minerals and highlights lost revenue from extraction on federal lands.
 
In 2011, Udall and Grijalva requested the report from GAO to identify the amount and estimated dollar values of minerals extracted from federal land.
 
The report examined available data on minerals
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Local Cartoonist Signing Books Dec. 17

Local cartoonist Stephen McCranie will be hosting a release party for his new book at the Los Alamos County Library 4-6 p.m. Monday, Dec. 17.

The new book, Belly Flop!, is the third volume of an all-ages graphic novel series called Mal and Chad. McCranie will give a short talk and will be available afterwards to chat and sign books.

Books can be purchased for $10.

McCranie graduated from Los Alamos High School and attended the University of New Mexico. While there, he began working on a comic strip called Mal and Chad about a boy genius and his talking dog for the UNM school newspaper.

An editor from Penguin Read More

NNSA Completes Removal of All HEU From Austria

Anne Harrington

NNSA News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRI), the Vienna University of Technology, and the Government of Austria Tuesday announced the successful return of all remaining U.S.-origin highly enriched uranium (HEU) nuclear reactor fuel from Austria to the United States.

This makes Austria the 22nd country that has worked with GTRI to remove all HEU from its territory.

“The completion of this project with Austria is another important step in the global effort to minimize the civilian use of Read More

Letter to the Editor: Local Businesses Show Generosity

By Diana Martinez
Senior Program Director
The Family YMCA

Local businesses field requests all year for support of worthy causes. My experience is that our local businesses are often more generous than the corporate giants.

I hope our community remembers this and buys gifts and certificates locally not just at Christmas, but all year. The Y’s latest event was a half marathon and 5K race and many businesses came though yet again, but so many more give in other events to other charities.

Thank you to our business community. And special thanks to this event’s sponsors: Alpine Laser Dental, McDonalds, Read More

Public Invited to Discover ‘The Truth About Santa’

LALT News:

Los Alamos Little Theatre will host “The Truth About Santa,” at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 22

“The Truth About Santa” is a PG-13 melodrama about troubles at the North Pole and will be performed by the Southwest Rural Theatre Project.

The Story:

Santa Claus is tired of the lies. Like the gods of old, he, too, has his mortal mistresses. This Christmas Eve he will bring Mary, his favorite earthly consort, and Luke and Freya, their illegitimate, semi-divine children, back to his North Pole compound to live with him—forever!
 
Not surprisingly, Mrs. Claus resists.
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Children’s Christmas Bazaar Draws 160 Local Shoppers

Shoppers get busy selecting Christmas gifts for family members Dec. 4 during the Children’s Christmas Bazaar at Trinity on the Hill Episcopal Church. Courtesy/TOTH

Children take a break from shopping to sign holiday cards for soldiers as part of the ‘Mail for Heroes’ program. Courtesy/TOTH

TOTH News:

This year’s Children’s Christmas Bazaar at Trinity on the Hill Episcopal Church Dec. 4 drew 160 shoppers, 76 volunteers and a large gathering of parents waiting while their children shopped.

The event also included the signing of 105 cards sent to the American Red Cross for Read More

Council Approves Phased N.M. 502 Project

Councilors vote 6-1 to direct staff to proceed with the phased N.M. 502 Improvements Project, with Alternative D, expressing the need to strike the best possible balance in the timeframe available to ensure state and federal funding is received. Councilor Vincent Chiravalle voted against the measure. From left, Councilor Fran Berting, Councilor Mike Wismer, Council Vice Chair Geoff Rodgers, Council Chair Sharon Stover, Councilor Vincent Chiravalle, Councilor David Izraelevitz and Councilor Rick Reiss. Photo by Carol A. Clark/ladailypost.com Read More

Public Weighs in on N.M. 502 Improvements

Audience members at tonight’s County Council meeting at which several spoke during public comment on the N.M. 502 Improvements Project. Frustration was expressed with traffic noise and the endurance of road construction for extended years. A woman asked that trucks be made to take the truck route to lessen the traffic noise to homeowners. Another resident asked that if the speed limit is reduced to 35 mph along a portion of East Road that it be enforced by police around the clock. Several Councilors also expressed concern with widening the roadway, thus increasing danger to children Read More

Council Repeals Youth Advisory Board

Los Alamos County Administrator Harry Burgess, left, listens as County Attorney Becky Ehler to his left, presents an ordinance repealing Article XV of Chapter 8 of the Los Alamos Code of Ordinances in its entirety dealing with the Youth Advisory Board. Councilor Mike Wismer explained that he introduced the idea of a Youth Advisory Board five or six years ago to give the youth of the community a new voice concerning issues and items the group felt were important. Since that time, however, other community organizations have emerged that provide opportunities for youth involvement in community Read More

County Administrator Discusses Belt Tightening Measures

Los Alamos County Administrator Harry Burgess, third from right, explains to Council that it’s prudent to anticipate less GRT revenue likely coming to the County from Los Alamos National Laboratory in the coming years and to look ahead for ways to reduce costs. He would like to see the current Council hold off on some of the multi-million dollar projects where possible and has scheduled a mid-year budget review for the Jan. 29 Council meeting. He told Councilors that there is enough reserve funding to carry the County through three budget cycles but wants to find ways to conserve money where Read More

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