Saturday, 30 June 2012

Play suspended, fans kept from course

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) ? Even with Tiger Woods in the hunt, Saturday figures to be awfully quiet at Congressional for the third round of the AT&T National.

Because of a powerful wind storm that uprooted dozens of trees, including a 75-foot tree that crashed across the 14th fairway, the tournament was closed to spectators and volunteers for safety reasons. Mark Russell, the PGA Tour's vice president of rules and competition, could not remember another time when a tour event did not allow fans.

"It's too dangerous out here," Russell said. "There's a lot of hanging limbs. There's a lot of debris. It's like a tornado came through here. It's just not safe."

The first order of business was getting Congressional in shape for the players.

The third round was delayed six hours, with the hope it could start at 1 p.m. in threesomes going off both tees.

Much of the damage was caused by a weather phenomenon called a derecho (duh-RAY'-choh), a long-lived straight line wind storm that sweeps over a large area at high speed. Stewart Williams, the PGA Tour's meteorologist, said the wind reached 80 mph Friday night, and the derecho was capable of doing the same amount of damage as an F-1 tornado.

The storm itself lasted just under an hour and dumped barely more than a quarter-inch of rain on the course. But it took out power to more than 400,000 customers in the area, uprooted trees and blew away some of the smaller tents. Before workers could start cleaning up Congressional, they had to clear away four large trees blocking the entrance.

The maintenance crew worked through the night, with a shorter staff. At big PGA Tour events like the AT&T National, the course superintendent often relies on the staff from area golf courses to help out during the week. On Saturday, many of them had to tend to their own courses. Plus, the cleanup was slowed by not having power at Congressional.

At least 40 trees were uprooted, and limbs large and small were scattered along the golf course. The 11th fairway was littered with branches for some 300 yards.

That would be time-consuming to clear. The more jarring images were large trees that had been cracked at the trunk, some of them crashing on top of the ropes that had lined the fairways. The 75-foot tree on the 14th was about 75 yards beyond the area where players hit their tee shots. One worker arrived with three small chain saws in the back of his cart. Given the size of the tree, it was akin to bringing a garden hose to put out a bonfire.

On Friday, Woods played a risky shot off the pine straw around a 60-foot tree toward the green on the par-5 sixth. A day later, that tree was on its side, cracked at trunk.

The wood signs on nearly every tee box had been ripped from the sign posts, and the trailers that house the PGA Tour's communications system, such as Shotlink scoring, narrowly escaped severe damage. Workers had to repair cables that provide the wireless signal, which would have delayed the reporting of scores.

Television coverage was scheduled for its normal hours, though CBS Sports was not going beyond its 6 p.m. time slot, and Golf Channel could not pick up the rest of the third round because of its obligation to the LPGA Tour.

Hunter Mahan was at 7-under 135 and had a two-shot lead. Woods, who had a 68 on Friday, was five shots behind.

Several players were having breakfast in the dim clubhouse at Congressional, which was getting its power from a generator. Eighty players made the cut, though the tour hoped to be able to complete the third round.

Saturday tickets would be honored on Sunday.

Even so, it figured to be an eerie scene in the third round with Woods, Mahan, Adam Scott and Vijay Singh on the golf course, and hardly anyone watching them.

"It was an easy decision," Russell said of the plan to keep spectators away. "Everything inside the ropes was thrown outside the ropes."

The only other recollection of a tournament with no fans was in 2000 for a Champions Tour event in St. Louis, when Arnold Palmer played. The King can draw a gallery anywhere, but storms that week caused such a problem with traffic that no one could get to the golf course.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/play-suspended-fans-kept-course-112215605--golf.html

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Implementation of WHO India Country Cooperation Strategy to Improve Health and Equity in India

WHO

Saturday, 30 June 2012 00:44

Written by Jatinder Kaur

?
New Delhi (ABC Live) Paving the way for a strategic partnership aimed at unleashing the role of India in the global health scene with the continued pursuit of health improvement in the country, the Union Minister for Health & Family Welfare Mr.? Ghulam Nabi Azad today launched WHO?s new Country Cooperation Strategy with India (2012-17). ?

?

Speaking on the occasion, Mr.? Azad said, ?In the context of the opportunities and challenges that we face, the well being of Indian citizens will depend on a number of strategic choices related to health and equity, that must be made in the next few years. Not only our health, but our children?s health too depends on these strategic choices and the collaborations between the critical constituents of our health system?.

?

?Mr.? Azad congratulated both the ministry officials and WHO?s entire team led by Dr Nata Menabde, who were behind the development of the document and exhorted upon all concerned to work towards realization of the objectives set out in this document. ?We are sure that implementing the strategy will make India healthier and more equitable,? he added.

?

Reflecting the shared vision of the two partners, it is for the first time that the Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) has been developed jointly by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), Government of India and the WHO Country Office for India (WCO). To contribute meaningfully to the national health policy and government?s health agenda, the CCS has identified three strategic priorities and the key focus areas under each priority:

?

Supporting an improved role of the Government of India in global health

?

International Health Regulations: Ensuring the implementation of International Health Regulations and similar commitments


Pharmaceuticals: Strengthening the pharmaceutical sector including drug regulatory capacity and, trade and health


Stewardship: Improving the stewardship capacity of the entire Indian health system

?

Promoting access to and utilization of affordable, efficiently networked and sustainable quality services by the entire population

?

Financial Protection: Providing universal health service coverage so that every individual would achieve health gain from a health intervention when needed


Quality: Properly accrediting service delivery institutions (primary health care facilities and hospitals) to deliver the agreed service package

?

Helping to confront the new epidemiological reality of India

?

Health of Mothers and Children: Scaling up reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health services

?

Combined Morbidity: Addressing increased combinations of communicable and non-communicable diseases

?

Transitioning Services: Gradual, phased ?transfer strategy? of WHO services to the national, state and local authorities without erosion of effectiveness during the transition period

?

Outlining the strategic framework, Secretary, MoHFW?? Mr.? P K Pradhan said, ?We hope this strategy will facilitate joint action with the stakeholders concerned ? national as well as international, public and private ? for improving health and equity in India while fostering our contribution to global health. We see the CCS as a guide for partnership, planning, budgeting, and resource allocation,? he added.

?

In her message, Dr Margaret Chan, Director-General, WHO said, ?This Country Cooperation Strategy is our contribution towards health progress in this extraordinary country. We are convinced, India will continue improving the health of its people and this will have a global impact.?

?

Incorporating valuable recommendations of key stakeholders, the CCS balances country priorities with WHO?s strategic orientation of contributing optimally to national health development.? Elaborating on the theme, Dr Nata Menabde, WHO Representative to India, said, ?In the CCS we have agreed on a number of inter-sectoral actions on the broad determinants of health as well as necessary health system reforms for providing better services to individuals and communities, and jointly achieving greater health impact.?

?

?Closely aligned to ongoing WHO reforms globally, this new CCS will also mark a transition on how WHO plans, works, organizes itself and delivers measurable results towards ensuring better health for all Indians in collaboration with the Government and other partners,? she added.

?

The CCS will be implemented on the basis of two-year Action Plans? developed by the WCO in consultation with the MoHFW taking due consideration of the health priorities envisaged? by the 12th Five Year Plan.

Our valuable member Jatinder Kaur has been with us since Thursday, 10 March 2011.

Show Other Articles Of This Author

Source: http://www.abclive.in/health/who/3477-implementation-of-who-india-country-cooperation-strategy-.html

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Kate Upton Photo Shoot: Too Hot For Santa Monica Pier!


Kate Upton's recent photo shoot for GQ (and likely Terry Richardson's personal use) was so risque, she was asked to leave the famed Santa Monica Pier.

The 20-year-old stunner and her photo crew were asked by security officials to leave after the Cat Daddy video vixen suffered a wardrobe malfunction.

The Sports Illustrated cover model was at the pier and amusement park when her skimpy bathing suit snapped in mid-ride ... as almost seen here:

"We were on a ride where the seat spins while the actual ride is spinning, and I’m wearing a one-piece. And all of a sudden the whole entire top falls off!" Upton recalled.

"I’m holding myself, laughing, turning bright red, but a lot of people are watching, so they kicked us out of the Santa Monica pier – it was so embarrassing."

"You wouldn’t think that would happen with a one-piece!"

You wouldn't, no. But so it goes. Follow this link for the Kate Upton bikini photos that resulted from the shoot before she was shown the exit.

Oh, and watch more behind-the-scenes video below, too:

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/06/kate-upton-photo-shoot-too-hot-for-santa-monica-pier/

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Friday, 29 June 2012

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Kendra Wilkinson on Jenny McCarthy Playboy Spread: You Go Girl!


Count Kendra Wilkinson as a fan of the Jenny McCarthy Playboy cover.

K-Dubs doesn't plan on baring it all anymore, but she has a message for McCarthy, who, at 39 years old, stripped down for the latest issue of the mag.

That message is simple: Way to be!

Clothed Jenny McCarthy PicKendra Wilkinson Cleavage

"Good for her," Kendra, who's posed for her share of Playboy spreads and starred on Hugh Hefner's TV shows. "She definitely has it, why not flaunt it?"

Jenny McCarthy, the 1993 Playmate of the Year, returns to nude form on the cover of the July/August double issue, which hits newsstands this week.

The cover, featuring Jenny McCarthy nude, is already out.

"She looks great," the Kendra on Top star said at Las Vegas' Pure Nightclub. "If that gives her confidence at almost 40 years old, why not do it?"

McCarthy has maintained humor about her Playboy return, recently saying she wanted to pose once more "before everything really falls apart."

[Photos: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/06/kendra-wilkinson-on-jenny-mccarthy-playboy-spread-you-go-girl/

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Nissan to produce Sentra at Canton; add jobs

CANTON, Mississippi (Reuters) - Japanese automaker Nissan Motor Co said it will add workers and start production of the Sentra compact sedan at its Canton plant in Mississippi later this year.

Adding Sentra production along with two previously announced vehicles by the end of the year will mean 1,000 more jobs at the plant, Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant said at an event held at the Canton plant on Thursday.

Nissan officials said 400 of those jobs have already been added to prepare for production of the Xterra mid-sized SUV and the mid-sized pickup truck Frontier, which is starting in November.

Total employment at the Canton plant will rise to 4,500 by year's end, Nissan officials said.

The move comes amid efforts already under way by the United Auto Workers union to organize the existing 3,900 workers at the Nissan plant.

The UAW, along with some Mississippi politicians and the head of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), early this month announced an effort to organize the Canton Nissan workers.

THE SENTRA DRIVE

The Canton plant near the Mississippi state capital of Jackson is also the production site of Nissan's best-selling Altima mid-sized sedan.

The Sentra will be the second all-new model to hit U.S. dealerships in the next 15 months, Nissan said. Sales began a few weeks ago for the 2013 Altima, the first of those five new vehicles.

By the year's end, seven different vehicles will be made at the Canton plant, which Bryant said was a "remarkable" accomplishment.

Bill Krueger, vice chairman of Nissan Americas, said that in 2011, 69 percent of the Nissans sold in the United States were made in North America, and that by 2015, that figure will rise to 85 percent.

Prior to the announcement on Thursday of the addition of Sentra production, Nissan had invested $2.06 billion at the plant, which opened in 2003. Krueger said Nissan will spend more than $20 million on capital improvements at the plant to add the new production.

Production at Canton by next year will be 450,000 vehicles annually, up from the current capacity of 400,000, Krueger said.

Last year, when Toyota Motor Corp opened a new plant near Tupelo in northern Mississippi, Bryant, then governor-elect, said he would resist UAW efforts to organize auto workers. He took the same stance on Thursday in Canton, but said that he will not spend state money to do so. Rather, he will support professional organizations that resist the union.

"I don't believe, personally, that we'd see this growth in the automobile industry to include Toyota and Nissan and the many suppliers if we had union growth in the state of Mississippi," Bryant told reporters at the Canton plant.

The UAW has tried unsuccessfully to organize Nissan workers before. In 2001, workers at Nissan's Smyrna, Tennessee plant voted overwhelmingly against joining the union.

Companies looking to hire workers who are likely to be wooed by union organizers will carefully screen applicants, said Kristin Dziczek, labor relations expert at the Center for Automotive Research.

"It is typical for firms to work very closely to screen their new workers for skills and characteristics," Dziczek said on Thursday.

"I would expect these new workers to be screened for characteristics like gender balance and diversity and be screened for their union proclivities. The union knows it. The company knows it," said Dziczek.

Nissan's Krueger said: "We're looking for great workers with a great attitude and willingness to learn, that's really the key."

NISSAN U.S. SALES

Nissan is aggressively adding to its production of vehicles at the Canton plant, its plant in Smyrna, Tennessee and in Mexico to boost the No. 2 Japanese automaker's profile in the competitive U.S., Canadian and Mexican markets.

Nissan's goal is to achieve a 10-percent market share, up from 8.2 percent in 2011 and 6.2 percent in 2006, Krueger said.

The Sentra for the North American market is now made at the Nissan plant in Aguascalientes in Mexico. Production of the Sentra will continue at Aguascalientes, Nissan officials said.

Sentra sales fell 18 percent in the United States through May this year to 46,773, while Altima sales rose 21 percent to 135,289. Overall, Nissan sales, including its luxury Infiniti brand, rose 12 percent through May, less than the auto industry's gain of 13 percent.

In the United States, Nissan is the sixth-largest automaker and the third-biggest import brand after Japanese automakers Toyota Motor Corp and Honda Motor Co Ltd.

(Additional reporting by Bijoy Koyitty in Bangalore; Editing by Maju Samuel, Supriya Kurane; editing by Carol Bishopric)

(bernie.woodall@thomsonreuters.com; +1 313 443 8844))

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nissan-produce-sentra-canton-plant-163702527--finance.html

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Thursday, 28 June 2012

NASA cancels climate study project in Thailand

(AP) ? The United States says it won't be able to carry out a climate study this year because Thailand has postponed granting NASA permission to use a key naval air base.

The American space agency's request to use Thailand's U-Tapao air base has faced opposition from critics who say it could be a cover for military purposes.

The Thai Cabinet decided on Tuesday to have lawmakers debate the issue after Parliament reconvenes Aug. 1, a month after a deadline NASA had set.

U.S. Embassy spokesman Walter Braunohler said Thursday that NASA can't wait because the climate study focuses on regional weather patterns that occur only in August and September.

He says it is too early to say whether NASA will revisit the project next year.

Associated Press

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Obamacare Survives

In a 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court has upheld President Obama?s health care reform, including the individual mandate. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the four reliably liberal-leaning justices to affirm that Congress can require people to purchase health insurance without violating the Constitution. The only wrinkle was the justification. The majority opinion held that the individual mandate is justified not under the Commerce Clause but as a kind of tax that Congress can levy.?

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EU's changing faces raise doubts for future

FILE- This is a Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011 file photo of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, right, as they shake hands after a news conference at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer, File)

FILE- This is a Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011 file photo of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, right, as they shake hands after a news conference at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer, File)

FILE -- This is a Friday, June 22, 2012 file photo of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, as she talks with Italian Premier Mario Monti during a joint press conference with Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy and French President Francois Hollande in Rome. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, File)

FILE - This is a Monday, March 1, 2010 file photo of Germany's chancellor Angela Merkel as she shakes hands with Spain's prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero prior to the German-Spanish Consultations in Hanover, northern Germany. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Heribert Proepper, File)

FILE -This is a Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012 file photo of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, and the Prime Minister of Spain, Mariano Rajoy, left, as they address the media during a joint news conference at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File)

FILE - This is a Feb. 6, 2012 file photo of France's President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, as he bids farewell to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, after a French-German cabinet meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris. Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits is not the continent's dreadful financial crisis. It's getting to know the people around the table. The group of national leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep difficulty. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

(AP) ? Often these days, the first order of business at European Union summits isn't the continent's dreadful financial crisis.

It's getting to know the people around the table.

The group of leaders that will meet this week in Brussels is a much different crew from the one that met in October 2009, when the crisis in Europe first erupted with the news that Greece was in deep trouble.

Gone is the colorful and sometimes embarrassing Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi, replaced by the technocratic Mario Monti. Europe has said "au revoir" to hyperkinetic French President Nicolas Sarkozy and "bonjour" to the altogether more sedate Francois Hollande. The glower of Britain's Gordon Brown has given way the youthful countenance of David Cameron.

At this summit, leaders had been preparing to shake hands with new Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras ? until emergency eye surgery forced him to send regrets.

The revolving door of European leaders raises the question of how Europe can implement bold and swift decisions when it's not even clear who'll be in charge a few months from now.

Carefully cultivated alliances can get swept away in the swirl of parliamentary politics. How, the pundits ask, can Europe come together on a united vision for the future when instability lies at the very heart of the continent's democratic system?

Of the 27 countries in the EU, 14 have switched leaders since the crisis began a little over two and a half years ago. Only one major national leader has remained a constant throughout the crisis: German Chancellor Angela Merkel. And her staying power, at the top of Europe's biggest economy, has bolstered Germany's dominant role in European decision-making.

After all, it's safe to say that few people are waiting for Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov to lead the way.

It seems that almost every time the leaders meet, which is often, there's a new face. At the most recent summit, in May, it was Hollande. Late last year, leaders had to acquaint themselves with Italy's Monti, Spain's Mariano Rajoy and Greece's Lucas Papademos, all in the space of a couple of months.

Beyond fanciful notions of presidents and prime ministers needing name tags or surreptitiously peeking at the cheat sheets (with photos) that the EU helpfully prints out for journalists, the rapidly changing cast of characters has caused many to ask: Has it slowed the response to the financial crisis?

Perhaps. Summit diplomacy is to a large extent about building personal relationships.

"The men and women in the highest circles of international politics are people readers rather than paper readers, and therefore place more faith in their own direct personal impressions than in more traditional, written forms of diplomatic communication," Jan Melissen, of the Clingendael international relations institute in the Netherlands, wrote in a study of summit diplomacy.

The bottom line is that it takes time for the leaders to size each other up and to earn each other's trust. Merkel and Sarkozy, for example, had difficulties working together in the early months of the financial crisis. Sarkozy criticized Germany in public for its failure to act. And when Sarkozy led camera crews into a meeting, Merkel reportedly told him, "I won't let you do this to me," and made them leave.

But with the passage of time, and under the pressure of the crisis, they developed such a close partnership that they came to be dubbed "Merkozy."

As leaders of the European currency union's biggest economies, the two regularly met before each EU summit to hash out common positions. They then presented their decisions to other leaders pretty much as a fait accompli. And during the French presidential campaign this year, Merkel declared her support for Sarkozy ? refusing to meet with Hollande.

Now that relationship's gone. Merkel and Hollande sharply disagree about the way forward for Europe ? with the German leader sticking by austerity and the French one championing growth. The divergence at the center of Europe has created fresh worries about the continent's fate.

Observers say it can take time to rebuild carefully nurtured national alliances.

"Through their personal exchanges at summit meetings, leaders familiarize each other with the domestic political pressures and constraints they face back home," said David Shorr, an expert on summitry at the Stanley Foundation, an Iowa-based organization that promotes multilateralism. "The personal trust piece of this has to be established freshly with each new leader who joins the club."

But Shorr noted that personal chemistry may count for little when nations start pulling apart on the issues.

"You don't need to know President Hollande well to recognize the French elections themselves as a pretty clear weather vane for the shifting political winds," he said.

___

Don Melvin can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin

Associated Press

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Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Bill Gates's Giving Priorities Won't Change Until He's Achieved ...

Bill Gates, America?s most prominent evangelist for philanthropy, told The Chronicle of Higher Education that his foundation probably won?t change its grant-making priorities for at least a decade.

?We want to learn, make mistakes, try new things out, find new partners,? says Mr. Gates, whose foundation works to improve health and reduce poverty in the neediest countries, and to improve education in the United States. ?And so until we?ve done something quite dramatic, which in the best case would be in 10 to 20 years, we?re not going to move on and do something else.?

In an interview, Mr. Gates stressed his foundation?s emphasis on measuring results. That focus has been criticized by some nonprofit leaders, who say universities, international aid groups, and other charities shouldn?t be run like businesses. But Mr. Gates says it?s important to get a clearer picture of, for example, why some universities succeed in graduating more students than others.

?It?s amazing how little effort?s been put into this,? he says of efforts to assess why some universities perform better than others. ?Of saying, OK, why are some teachers at any different level way better than others? You?ve got universities in this country with a 7-percent completion rate. Why is it that they don?t come under pressure to change what they?re doing to come up with a better way of doing things??

He says that ?if you?re against completion and measuring completion then, yeah, we?re a real problem. Because we?re saying, Hey, maybe we ought to look at that. Because budgets are so tight we?re going to have to find best practices there, and if you?re engaged in some inefficient practice, maybe that?s a bad thing.?

Mr. Gates says universities are typically evaluated on the competitiveness of their admissions, not their success at preparing young people.

?You?d think people would say, ?We take people with low SATs and make them really good lawyers,? ? he says. ?Instead they say, ?We take people with very high SATs and we don?t really know what we create, but at least they?re smart when they show up here so maybe they still are when we?re done with them.? ?

Mr. Gates also discussed some of the directions he believes universities are headed toward. One approach he mentioned was the use of a ?flipped? classroom in which college students watch videotaped lectures of star professors and use class time to study in small groups.

In the interview, Mr. Gates, who left his full-time job at Microsoft in 2008 to focus on the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, emphasized that his philanthropy seeks to finance ?change agents? with good ideas, not to dictate how its money ought to be spent.

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Vizio XVT CinemaWide TV goes on sale, 21:9 movie purists celebrate the end of black bars

Vizio XVT Cinemawide TV at CES 2012

It's been a long, long wait for Vizio's ultrawidescreen LCD TV to show its face: the company was promising such sets starting around this time last year that ultimately missed the October and subsequent March targets. Vizio is one to eventually make good on a promise, though, and has just started shipping the first XVT series CinemaWide set. The lone 58-inch model's focus remains on that 2560 x 1080p screen, whose stretchy 21:9 aspect ratio fits what you often see at the movie theater without having to crop or adjust like you would with a typical 16:9 set. Whether or not you have a chronic aversion to black bars, the CinemaWide is still a respectable set in its own right, with edge-based LED backlighting, a 120Hz refresh rate, a Bluetooth remote and the common host of Vizio internet apps. The TV maker must be doing a form of penance for taking its time on the 21:9 display: the $2,800 regular price is a lot lower than the originally quoted $3,500, and you can pick up the CinemaWide TV for $2,500 if you act quickly.

Vizio XVT CinemaWide TV goes on sale, 21:9 movie purists celebrate the end of black bars originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jun 2012 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wall Street edges up on durable goods data

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Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Record heat hampers efforts to fight wildfires

A plume of smoke rises above the Waldo Canyon wildfire west of Manitou Springs, Colo., on Monday afternoon, June 25, 2012. The fire, one of at least eight wildfires in Colorado on Monday, has blackened 5.3 square miles and displaced about 6,000 people since it started Saturday, June 23, but no homes have been destroyed. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

A plume of smoke rises above the Waldo Canyon wildfire west of Manitou Springs, Colo., on Monday afternoon, June 25, 2012. The fire, one of at least eight wildfires in Colorado on Monday, has blackened 5.3 square miles and displaced about 6,000 people since it started Saturday, June 23, but no homes have been destroyed. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

A firefighting helicopter flies past a plume of smoke on its way to refilling its bucket while battling the Waldo Canyon wildfire west of Manitou Springs, Colo., on Monday, June 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

A plume of smoke rises above the Waldo Canyon fire west of Manitou Springs, Colo., on Monday, June 25, 2012. The fire, one of at least a half-dozen wildfires in Colorado on Monday, has blackened 5.3 square miles and displaced about 6,000 people since it started Saturday, June 23, but no homes have been destroyed. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

Chunk Lance comforts neighbor Kellie Sanderson Monday, June 25, 2012, after they viewed an area in central Utah that was devastated by a wildfire. Lance's cabin in the Oaker Hills neighborhood of Sanpete County was destroyed but Sanderson's survived. (AP Photo/Lynn DeBruin)

A golfer tees off as his partner watches a wildfire burning in the Scratchgravel Hills on Monday, June 25, 2012, in Helena, Mont. Scorching heat and high winds caused wildfires to break out across southwestern Montana, forcing the evacuation of more than 200 homes. (AP Photo/Matt Volz)

(AP) ? Air Force Academy officials were evacuating roughly one-third of households on the school's grounds Tuesday night as heavy smoke billowed from a wildfire that has burned homes near Colorado Springs.

The school said it was evacuating 693 residents in Pine Valley Housing, but an area of the 28-square-mile campus that houses cadets wasn't immediately evacuated. A new class of cadets is still scheduled to report on Thursday.

Fire officials had issued a pre-evacuation notice for the academy earlier Tuesday.

Fire information officer Greg Heule said earlier Tuesday that the fire was less than five miles from the southwest corner of the academy's campus.

Television images showed homes burning, and the Flying W Ranch southwest of the Air Force Academy said on its website that the ranch had burned to the ground.

Meanwhile, authorities in central Utah found one woman dead Tuesday when they returned to an evacuated area, marking the first casualty in a blaze that consumed at least two dozen homes and appears to be taking a turn for the worst.

Throughout the interior West, firefighters toiled in searing, record-setting heat that refused to relinquish its grip, as they struggled to contain blazes in Colorado, Utah and other Rocky Mountain states Tuesday.

Colorado has endured nearly a week of 100-plus-degree days and low humidity, sapping moisture from timber and grass, creating a devastating formula for volatile wildfires across the state and punishing conditions for firefighters.

"When it's that hot, it just dries the fuels even more. That can make the fuels explosive," said Steve Segin, a fire spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service.

All of Utah and much of Wyoming, Colorado and Montana were under a red flag warning, meaning conditions were hot, dry and ripe for fires.

Tuesday was the fifth consecutive day with temperatures of 100 degrees or higher in Denver, tying a record set in 2005 and 1989. On Monday, Denver set a record with 105 degrees. The previous record for June 25 was 100 degrees in 1991.

Other areas of the state also topped 100 degrees Tuesday, including the northeastern Colorado town of Wray, which hit 108, the National Weather Service said.

What the nation is now seeing is "a super-heated spike on top of a decades long warming trend," said Derek Arndt, head of climate monitoring at the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C.

The U.S. set 107 new temperature records Monday and in the past week has set 782 of them, which are large numbers but hard to put in context because the data center has only been tracking the number of daily records broken for little more than a year, Arndt said.

But what's truly impressive, Arndt said, is that in the past three days in Colorado and Kansas, nine sites have set records regardless of the date. Usually hottest-ever marks are set in the scorching months of July and August.

The scorching heat doesn't appear to be letting up soon. Segin said such prolonged heat is "extremely taxing" physically on firefighters, who are working long days and carrying heavy gear.

Television video from the 7-square-mile Waldo Canyon fire west of Colorado Springs, Colo., showed smoke and flames close to houses in a forested neighborhood northwest of Colorado Springs.

The fire was 5 percent contained.

Two specially equipped Air Force C-130 cargo planes were helping fight the fire, and a third was expected later in the day.

With the nation's privately owned fleet of heavy air tankers already in use or unavailable, U.S. Forest Chief Tom Tidwell said his agency had to call on the military to help.

Tidwell told The Associated Press in a phone interview Monday that about half of the nation's personnel who are usually assigned to large fires are working in Colorado right now.

"It's just because it's so dry," Tidwell said. "Not unlike New Mexico ? they saw very low snowpack, especially in that lower country. Hot, dry winds with dry fuels, you get the ignition, and this is what we see."

At the 136-square-mile High Park fire in northern Colorado, authorities increased the number of homes destroyed to 257, saying they found nine homes that hadn't been counted earlier. The total was already the highest of any wildfire in state history.

That fire was 55 percent contained.

In Utah, Sanpete County sheriff's officials haven't identified the body found or explained where the remains were found Tuesday morning while assessing damage in the area.

On Tuesday morning, officials announced that the 60-square-mile Wood Hollow Fire was 15 percent contained and lifted some evacuation orders amid predictions they'd contain the blaze even further. But winds fanned the flames again by afternoon, forcing authorities to shut down part of U.S. 89 near Indianola amid fears that the fire would jump the highway.

Evacuations were called for Fairview, a town of about 1,100 residents near the blaze, as the fire grew larger and more erratic.

Elsewhere in the West:

? A fire that charred nearly 70 square miles west of Ruidoso, N.M., was 90 percent contained, with many residents allowed to return home.

? A wildfire north of Helena, Mont., destroyed four homes and forced additional evacuations. Gov. Brian Schweitzer issued a state of emergency for four counties.

? A wildfire in the Bridger-Teton National Forest grew from about 300 acres to 2,000 acres Tuesday, marking the first major wildfire of the season in western Wyoming.

___

Lynn DeBruin reported from Indianola, Utah. Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, N.M., and Rema Rahman in Denver; and AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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Steve Brown: The Grown-Up?s Platform (Offthekuff)

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SpaceGhostPurrp And A$AP Rocky Rift: Beyond Repair?

It was all good just a week ago, but now SpaceGhostPurrp and A$AP Rocky are at odds.
By Rob Markman


SpaceGhostPurrp
Photo:

It was all good just a week ago, but now SpaceGhostPurrp and his Raider Klan have fallen out with A$AP Rocky and the A$AP Mob.

Purrp — who was responsible for producing Rocky's "Keep It G" and "Pretty Flacko" and rhymed alongside Rock on "Purple Swag: Chapter 2" — sat with MTV News in May and broke down his relationship with the A$AP Mob, but last week, he revealed in a YouTube video that their union is no longer.

"We Raider Klan, man. We got our own sh-- going on. And that's how the f--- it is. We ain't A$AP," SpaceGhost said in the video, which has since been taken down. "I showed love to them n---as last year and some sh-- went down and we don't f--- with each other no more."

It was a different story from the one Purrp told MTV News when he sat down with us in May. "Me and the Mob, we reached out to each other through the Internet. We showed love to each other. We had a good time," he said of his A$AP relationship, which has since soured. "I came up to New York and met up with him, we got to know each other real well, and then we just became a little family.

"I'm affiliated with A$AP. If I see him, we still do our handshake, we still got love, we're real close homeys," he added.

Still, Purrp — who released his debut album, Mysterious Phonk: The Chronicles of SpaceGhostPurrp, last week — has always made a clear distinction between the A$AP Mob and his Raider Klan crew, which originated in his hometown of Miami.

The beef is said to have started after Rocky's groupmate, A$AP Twelvyy, got into an altercation with Matt Stoops from Purrp's Raider Klan. Music site Mostly Junk Food has posted screen shots of deleted SpaceGhost tweets in which he accuses Twelvyy of attacking Stoops.

While the beef does sound serious, Purrp told MTV News of a misunderstanding that he and Wiz Khalifa had prior to working together on Wiz's Taylor Allderdice mixtape. Maybe after a conversation, he and Rocky can reach a similar accord.

Do you believe SpaceGhostPurrp and A$AP Rocky can work out their differences? Let us know in the comments.

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Monday, 25 June 2012

Dunbar v. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort ... - Recreation Law

Dunbar v. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Corporation, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25807

Camie R. Dunbar and Douglas Dunbar, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Corporation, a Wyoming Corporation, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 03-8057

United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25807

December 14, 2004, Filed

Prior History: [*1] Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming. (D.C. No. 02-CV-123D).

Disposition: Reversed.

Counsel: Robert E. Schroth Sr. (Robert E. Schroth Jr. and W. Keith Goody, with him on the briefs), Jackson, Wyoming, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Mikel L. Moore (James K. Lubing, Jackson, Wyoming, with him on the brief), Christensen, Moore, Cockrell, Cummings & Axelberg, P.C., Kalispell, Montana, for Defendant-Appellee.

JUDGES: Before SEYMOUR, HENRY, and LUCERO, Circuit Judges.

OPINION BY: LUCERO

OPINION: LUCERO, Circuit Judge.

While skiing at the Jackson Hole Mountain Ski Resort, Camie Dunbar fell approximately twelve feet into a snowboard half-pipe, suffering severe injuries for which she alleges negligence on the part of Jackson Hole. At the time of her accident, Dunbar was attempting to exit a specially designated ski and snowboard terrain park. Finding that Jackson Hole did not owe Dunbar a duty of care for risks inherent to her chosen recreational activity under the Wyoming Recreational Safety Act, the district court granted summary judgment for the resort. Dunbar now appeals, arguing that the risks inherent to alpine skiing do not include the risk of falling into the side of a snowboard [*2] half-pipe when following a Jackson Hole employee?s instructions on how to exit the terrain park. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. ? 1291 and REVERSE.

I

In March 2001, Camie Dunbar suffered the stated injuries when she skied off a snow ledge in a specially designed ?terrain park? at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. A 33-year-old self-described intermediate skier from South Florida, Dunbar skied into the terrain park area with other members of her group who were part of a promotional ski trip sponsored by her employer Clear Channel Communications.

Containing various man made features such as a table top jump and a snowboard half-pipe, the Jackson Hole terrain park is designed for advanced skiers and snowboarders who choose to recreate in a very challenging risk-filled environment. The terrain park is separated by a fence and a boundary rope from an intermediate ski run. To enter the terrain park, skiers must pass through a gate marked with a warning sign, alerting them that they are entering an advanced ski area where ?serious injuries, death, and equipment damage can occur.? At the time of the accident, the terrain [*3] park had been relocated to its position in an intermediate ski run, and did not appear on the Resort?s trail maps.

On the last day of her trip, Dunbar, along with Dave Dresher and Mike Jennings, went up the mountain intending to ?investigate? the terrain park. In proceeding down an intermediate ski run, they skied through an initial gate providing a warning sign that they were entering a double black diamond ?terrain feature trail.? After stopping adjacent to a red tram car which served as the office for the ?pipe and park? crew who were responsible for maintenance of the terrain park, Dunbar observed other skiers and snowboarders maneuver various features in the terrain park.

Based on their observations, Dunbar and her companions decided that they did not want to try any of the features. In her deposition, Dunbar attested to thinking ?this is my last day [and] I want to go home in one piece.? She stated that she did not know that there was a snowboard half-pipe in the terrain park, and believed instead that the area included only the jumps she observed from the red gondola. There is no suggestion by either party that Dunbar intended to jump any of the terrain jumps or intended [*4] to try her hand at stunts as a skier in a snowboard half-pipe. Having decided that she did not want to ski any of the double-black diamond features, she asked a Jackson Hole employee how to exit that area ?if you don?t want to take this terrain park.? She was told either to take off her skis and hike back to the gate through which she had entered or to proceed in the direction of a ?catwalk? to which the employee pointed.

Unbeknownst to Dunbar, the ?catwalk? led to a side entrance to the snowboard half-pipe.

Ms. Dunbar along with her companions skied along the ?catwalk.? Although it is a matter of some dispute between the parties, in order to proceed down the catwalk, skiers had to pass warning signs indicating that they were approaching a snowboard half-pipe area. Both Dunbar and her companions claim not to have noticed the signs. Dunbar and Jennings went along the catwalk, up an incline, across a flat deck, and fell approximately twelve feet into the half-pipe.

Jennings managed to maneuver his snowboard in such a way as to avoid injury.

Dunbar was not so fortunate. As a consequence of her fall into the half-pipe, she suffered severe injuries to her pelvis and thigh requiring surgery [*5] and intensive physical therapy. Dunbar testified that she will neither be able to return to her pre-injury range of motion, nor will she be capable of having a natural childbirth as a result of the injury to her hip.

Asserting that Jackson Hole?s negligence caused her injuries, Dunbar filed suit in district court. Jackson Hole filed a motion for summary judgment and a motion to strike portions of Dunbar?s affidavits as attempts to create sham factual issues in order to survive summary judgment. The district court granted both motions for Jackson Hole on the basis that portions of Dunbar?s affidavit were inconsistent with her deposition testimony. Dunbar now appeals.

II

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standards as the district court pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Chickasaw Nation v. United States, 208 F.3d 871, 875 (10th Cir. 2000). Summary judgment is appropriate ?if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled [*6] to judgment as a matter of law.? Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We must look carefully to determine if existing factual disputes are material, because ?only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry of summary judgment.? Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 91 L. Ed. 2d 202, 106 S. Ct. 2505 (1986). A court may not grant summary judgment when ?a material fact is ?genuine,? that is, if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.? Id. When the moving party has informed the district court of the basis for its motion, however, a nonmoving party may not stand merely on its pleadings, but must set forth ?specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.? Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 324, 91 L. Ed. 2d 265, 106 S. Ct. 2548 (1986) (citing Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e)). In our application of this standard, we view the evidence and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Simms v. Oklahoma ex rel. Department of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Servs., 165 F.3d 1321, 1326 (10th Cir. 1999). [*7] Furthermore, as a federal court sitting in diversity, we must ascertain the applicable Wyoming law as announced by the Wyoming Supreme Court so that the substantive law applied in federal court does not differ from what would apply in state court. Wood v. Eli Lilly & Co., 38 F.3d 510, 512 (10th Cir. 1994).

A

To protect providers of recreational sports and activities from liability for alpine skiing, equine activities, and other outdoor pursuits in the state, the Wyoming legislature limited their duty of care by enacting the Wyoming Recreation Safety Act. Wyo. Stat. Ann. ? 1-1-121 et. seq.; see Sapone v. Grand Targhee, Inc., 308 F.3d 1096, 1101 (10th Cir. 2002). As a matter of common law, in order to prevail in a negligence action, a plaintiff would first have to demonstrate that the defendant owed her a duty to act with reasonable care. See, e.g., Erpelding v. Lisek, 2003 WY 80, 71 P.3d 754, 757 (Wyo. 2003). The Safety Act is designed to limit the duty a provider of recreational sports and activities owes to participants.

Under the Safety Act, a provider of a recreational opportunity has no duty [*8] to protect participants from ?inherent risks? of the particular sport or recreational opportunity. Wyo. Stat. Ann. ? 1-1-123. In relevant part, the act provides:

(a) Any person who takes part in any sport or recreational opportunity assumes the inherent risks in that sport or recreational opportunity, whether those risks are known or unknown, and is legally responsible for any and all damage, injury or death to himself or other persons or property that results from the inherent risks in that sport or recreational opportunity.

(b) A provider of any sport or recreational opportunity is not required to eliminate, alter or control the inherent risks within the particular sport or recreational opportunity.

? 1-1-123. Wyoming defines inherent risks as ?those dangers or conditions which are characteristic of, intrinsic to, or an integral part of any sport or recreational opportunity.? Wyo. Stat. Ann. ? 1-1-122(a)(i). Wyoming further defines ?Sport or recreational opportunity? as meaning ?commonly understood sporting activities,? which include ?alpine skiing.? ? 1-1-122(a)(iii). Thus, for example, a provider of an [*9] alpine skiing opportunity will not be liable for a duty of care with regard to dangers that are ?characteristic of? or ?intrinsic to? or ?an integral part? of the sport of alpine skiing. However, the act does provide for a cause of action based on the negligence of the recreational opportunity provider when the injury is not the result of an inherent risk of the sport or recreational opportunity: ?Actions based upon negligence of the provider wherein the damage, injury or death is not the result of an inherent risk of the sport or recreational opportunity shall be preserved.

. . .? ? 1-1-123(c). Thus, whether a recreation provider owes its patrons a duty of care depends entirely on whether the specific risks can be characterized as inherent to the sport or activity.

What is inherent to a sport or activity, however, is far from self-evident. In Sapone, we defined ?inherent? under the Wyoming Safety Act as either ??those risks which are essential characteristics of a sport and those which participants desire to confront,? or they are undesirable risks which are simply a collateral part of the recreation activity.? Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1103 (citation omitted). We [*10] have further defined a risk that is not inherent as ?a risk that was atypical, uncharacteristic, [and] not intrinsic to the recreational activity. . . .? Id. at 1104. Although equine activities are among those the Wyoming legislature clearly meant to protect, and although horseback riding indubitably involves inherent risks, we have concluded, following the Wyoming Supreme Court, that not all risks of horseback riding are inherent risks. Cooperman v. David, 214 F.3d 1162, 1167 (10th Cir. 2000); Halpern v. Wheeldon, 890 P.2d 562, 566 (Wyo. 1995). Some risks may occur from the choices a recreation provider makes on behalf of the participant and from the conditions in which the recreational opportunity is provided. Thus, atypical or uncharacteristic risks can arise even in those specific sports the Wyoming legislature clearly intended to exempt from liability for inherent risks.

Following the Wyoming Supreme Court in Halpern, we have held that ?where genuine issues of material fact exist, the determination of whether something is or is not an inherent risk is a factual question that must be sent to the jury for determination.? [*11] Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1102.

As a preliminary matter, what sport or activity characterizes Camie Dunbar?s behavior is a matter of considerable dispute. Most generally, she was engaged in alpine skiing ? a sport clearly covered by the Safety Act. If we were to analyze the risk at this level of generality, then it would certainly appear that falling twelve feet into a trench in the middle of an intermediate ski-run would decidedly not constitute an inherent risk of alpine skiing. Such a level of generality, however, is not appropriate. To determine what risk is inherent to Dunbar?s activity, we must go beyond a broad characterization and inquire into the specific circumstances of both her actions and those of the recreation provider.

When the Cooperman court examined the risks of horseback riding in the context of the specific facts of that case, for example, it employed a different analytical framework than if it had merely asked the abstract question whether falling off a horse is an inherent risk of horseback riding. Cooperman, 214 F.3d at 1167. Because a determination of what risks are inherent to a sport or activity may change by descriptive [*12] differences, we have stated that ?when attempting to determine whether a risk is inherent to a sport, we can not look at the risk in a vacuum, apart from the factual setting to which the [participant] was exposed.? Cooperman, 214 F.3d at 1167. Instead, we must analyze the risk ?at the greatest level of specificity permitted by the factual record.? Id. As an example of this principle, we have explained:

If the only fact presented to the court is that the horse bucked while the rider was properly sitting on the horse, we would frame the duty question as whether a bucking horse is an inherent risk of horseback riding. However, if the facts established that the owner of the horse lit firecrackers next to the horse and the horse bucked, we would ask whether a horse bucking when firecrackers are lit next to the horse is an inherent risk of horseback riding. Id.

For instance, in Cooperman, we determined that the risk of a slipping saddle, in light of the lack of scientific precision in hand cinching, is inherent to horseback riding. Id. at 1168. However, in Sapone, we concluded that a child sustaining injuries when falling [*13] from the saddle during a trail-riding lesson was not an inherent risk when there was evidence that the horse was too large, that the instructions were inadequate, that no headgear was provided, and that the route was too dangerous. Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1104. Similarly, in Madsen v. Wyoming River Trips, Inc., 31 F. Supp. 2d 1321, 1329 (D. Wyo. 1999), the district court determined that the risks inherent to white-water rafting did not include risks of injury resulting from the recreation provider?s overcrowding the boat. See also Carden v. Kelly, 175 F. Supp. 2d. 1318, 1329 (2001) (finding a genuine issue of material fact whether, given the actions and inactions of the recreation provider, a horse?s stumbling and falling was an inherent risk of horseback riding).

In the present case, the district court?s order hinged on a determination of where Ms. Dunbar was located when she made her choice to proceed down the catwalk. Thus, not simply a question of alpine skiing, but of alpine skiing in a designated terrain park became the significant ?factual setting? the district court used to examine the inherent risks to which Dunbar was exposed. [*14]

In its order granting Jackson Hole?s motion for summary judgment, the district court stressed, and Jackson Hole urges on appeal, the need to focus on the choices that Dunbar made when entering the terrain park. Reasoning that an inherent risk analysis could not properly be conducted without considering Dunbar?s choices, the district court focused on the facts of Dunbar?s conduct as the recreational participant. Central to the district court?s determination of inherent risk was the simple fact of Dunbar?s choice to enter the terrain park.

The court found that ?a terrain feature such as a half-pipe located within a fenced terrain park is an inherent risk to a skier that voluntarily and knowingly enters that park.? Dunbar v. Jackson Hole, No. 02-CV-123-D, slip op. at 14-15 (D. Wyo. June 16, 2003). Furthermore, the court concludes that having entered the terrain park, Dunbar ?decided to enter the [metaphorical] ?rodeo? and thus assumed the risk associated with that activity.? Id. at 15. We disagree.

First, we note that the plain language of the Safety Act focuses on ?any person who takes part in any sport or recreational opportunity,? Wyo. Stat. Ann. ? 1-1-123 [*15] , and does not mention the location of the sport or activity.

We fail to see how simply being present in the terrain park redefines the sport or activity in which Dunbar is engaged, especially absent further choices to take part in any of the terrain park features. No doubt location may have a bearing on how to characterize a participant?s activity, but it is not automatically determinative as the district court suggests. n1 Indeed, from the record, it is not clear whether the double black diamond designation applied to the area of the intermediate ski run from the putative entrance to the terrain park to the red tram car and from the tram car to the catwalk. There seems to be no dispute that in the areas Dunbar traversed a skier would not confront any unusual risks or features that differed from those elsewhere on the intermediate ski run (at least until the point where Dunbar fell into the half-pipe). Thus it would seem to be an open question whether the warning signs and double black designation properly applied to the area that Dunbar actually traversed or if they were limited to the physical space containing the dangerous terrain features. If the double black diamond designation [*16] applies only to the specific terrain features and if the warnings apply only to those skiers and snowboarders who attempt to maneuver over and among the trail features down the fall line of the mountain, then it may be difficult to conclude that Dunbar assumed a double black diamond risk simply by skiing across the fall line on an intermediate slope to the tram car and then proceeding, as directed, by way of the catwalk. Proper resolution of these factual questions concerning the impact of Dunbar?s specific location on Jackson Hole?s duty, however, are for a jury, not for the court, to decide.

- ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? Footnotes ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - -

n1 As to the issue of whether or not Dunbar had actually entered the park, we note that the district court is itself not descriptively clear, stating at one point that ?she had misgivings about entering and asked a JHMR employee how to get out of the terrain park.? Dunbar, slip op. at 13. Of course, if she had not ?entered? she could not ask how to ?get out.? We conclude from this only that mere presence in the terrain park may be too fine a reed to hang a determination that Dunbar was engaged in a categorically different recreational activity which contained greater inherent risks than does ordinary alpine skiing.

- ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? End Footnotes- ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? - ? [*17]

Second, we conclude that there is a difference between the consequences of conduct chosen by Dunbar, and risks that are inherent to that choice. It does not necessarily follow, as the district court finds, that having entered the terrain park, Dunbar also chose to confront all the features and conditions present within it. Although the district court emphasized the choices and conduct of the plaintiff in determining what risks she assumed, the court makes no distinction between the risks that are inherent to her actual choices ? to ski into the terrain park area, but not to ?take? any of the features ? and risks that are inherent to choices one would make when actually intending to ski over the specific features.

Indeed, a reasonable person who entered the general area of the terrain park would stop first to view the features and decide whether or not to attempt to maneuver over or through any of them. In fact, Jackson Hole?s warning signs, the presence of which figure prominently in this dispute, direct skiers and snowboarders to ?please observe terrain features, their risks, and their degree of difficulty before using.? That is precisely what Ms. Dunbar did. She chose to enter [*18] the area of the terrain park ? if not the terrain park itself ? but specifically chose not to ?use? or ?take? any of the terrain park features after doing exactly what Jackson Hole?s signs advised her to do: ?observe . . . before using.? Presumably, Jackson Hole does not wish to claim that it operates like the Hotel California ? where you can check in any time you like but you can never leave. Accordingly, it was error for the district court to conclude that having followed Jackson Hole?s instructions, having assessed the risks and decided not to use the terrain features, that there is no material issue of fact concerning whether a skier could leave without accruing those very risks. Having ?entered? the terrain park, Dunbar did not ?use? the terrain park as a terrain park?viz., she did not attempt to jump the table top jump nor did she attempt to do stunts in the snowboard half-pipe. She attempted to exit the terrain park without ?taking? any of the features, and followed instructions from a Jackson Hole employee on how to exit the park. Given the specific factual setting of this case, what risks are associated with Dunbar?s actual choices and what duty Jackson Hole owed her are [*19] properly questions for the jury.

Accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred when it found that the risk of falling twelve feet into a snowboard half-pipe was an inherent risk of Dunbar?s alpine skiing when she had stopped and observed double diamond terrain features and had chosen not to ?take? those features. When, as is here, genuine issues of material fact exist, it is properly a question for the jury to determine whether dangers that are ?characteristic of? or ?intrinsic to? or ?an integral part? of the sport of alpine skiing evaluated under the specific factual circumstances of this case include those encountered by Dunbar in skiing from the main intermediate run to the tram car and from the tram car along the catwalk. Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1102 (?whether something is or is not an inherent risk is a factual question that must be sent to the jury for determination?); see also, Dillworth v. Gambardella, 970 F.2d 1113, 1123 (2d Cir. 1992) (holding under a Vermont statute similar to Wyoming?s, that determination of inherent danger ?is a question of fact properly submitted to the jury?).

B

As we have observed, inquiry into what [*20] dangers constitute an inherent risk under the Safety Act is inextricably intertwined with an inquiry into what duty the recreation provider owes to the participant, and whether that question is properly one for the judge or jury. If Dunbar?s accident was not the product of an inherent risk of her recreational activity, then a question remains for the fact finder concerning what duty was owed her and whether Jackson Hole fulfilled that duty. We conclude that the district court improperly analyzed the issue of Jackson Hole?s duty.

When the issue of duty involves questions of fact, as is the case with ?inherent risks,? the Wyoming Supreme Court has held that the question of a defendant?s duty should be resolved by a jury. Halpern, 890 P.2d at 565. However, in certain instances where no material questions of fact exist ? e.g., if the risk is clearly one inherent to the sport ? the district court may decide as a matter of law that a provider does not owe a duty to the participant under the Safety Act. Halpern, 890 P.2d at 566 (noting that ?in appropriate cases where no genuine issues of material fact exist, the district court may decide as a matter of [*21] law that the provider does not owe a duty to the participant.?). Such was not the case here.

How the district court framed the statement of Jackson Hole?s duty is crucial to a proper disposition of this case. It has become something of a standard analysis in this line of cases for a district court to frame the question of duty, in addition to the question of inherent risk, in the form of a fact-specific inquiry. Indeed, as the district court noted in another Safety Act case, ?the Court cannot stress how important it is to frame the duty question correctly. If the duty question is framed incorrectly, the legislature?s intent to allow a cause of action for negligence will be lost.? Madsen, 31 F. Supp. 2d. at 1329.

In the present case, the district court framed the question of duty as follows:

Whether Camie Dunbar?s injuries occurred as a result of the inherent risk of alpine skiing when this thirty-three year-old experienced skier knowingly entered a specially designated terrain park, skied past five warning signs, made the choice not to exit by way of the gate she entered understanding that she would encounter expert and double expert terrain features, [*22] skied up the visible half-pipe wall, and across a fourteen-foot platform.

Dunbar, slip op. at 14. We have already concluded that Dunbar?s mere presence in the entrance area of the terrain park does not give rise as a matter of law to a heightened risk above what is normal to alpine skiing. We now conclude that the question of Jackson Hole?s duty was improperly framed because it employs facts in dispute, and does not view the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.

Specifically, the district court?s finding that Dunbar chose not to exit the terrain park area via the gate by which she entered understanding that she would encounter expert and double expert terrain features is itself a fact open to dispute. Whether or not her choice was made with that understanding is a disputed fact, and read in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the district court improperly incorporated a disputed fact in a light favoring the defendant. Second, the district court frames the duty question by stating that Dunbar ?skied up the visible half-pipe wall.? Id. Whether or not what she skied up was in fact visibly a half-pipe wall is itself a disputed fact, and inclusion [*23] of this fact in a light most favorable to the defendant was improper.

Finally, the district court states that Dunbar ?skied past five warning signs,? which although perhaps true (though contested), shades the ?duty question? in a way that ignores the factual issues of the content and import of each of those signs in the context of the Jackson Hole employee?s instructions on how to exit the park. Given the fact that we have previously held that the question of a provider?s duty is partially determined by a fact-specific framing of inherent risk, we conclude that the district court erred in making factual findings that are properly findings for a jury. See Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1102.

Finally, we note that whatever risks Dunbar assumed herself, it seems clear that she did not also assume the risk of needing to interpret the delphic statements of Jackson Hole?s employees. Both Jackson Hole and the district court focus on the issue of choices that Dunbar made, ignoring the choice that Jackson Hole made for her in directing her to exit the terrain park area by either hiking out the main entrance or skiing along the catwalk. We have made clear that a duty of care may arise [*24] from choices made for the participant by the recreation provider. Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1104; see also, Madsen, 31 F. Supp. 2d at 1328-29; Carden, 175 F. Supp. 2d. at 1328-29. Absent from the district court?s order is any recognition that once Dunbar asked a Jackson Hole employee how to exit the terrain park area without ?taking? any of the features, Jackson Hole owed a duty to provide her with appropriate instructions, which might have included a specific warning to beware of the drop into the half-pipe at the end of the catwalk. Whether or not they fulfilled that duty is a question for the jury. Accordingly, the district court erred when it framed the question of Jackson Hole?s duty by incorporating facts in dispute and when it failed to submit the question of duty to the fact finder pursuant to Wyoming Supreme Court precedent.

On appeal, Dunbar also raises as error the district court?s granting Jackson Hole?s motion to strike portions of her affidavit as creating sham factual issues to survive summary judgment. Those supposed sham facts dealt with Dunbar ?s understanding of whether she had entered the actual terrain park (the [*25] area including the jumps) when located at the tram car. Because we conclude that summary judgment was inappropriate, the issue of Dunbar?s affidavit is now moot.

III

For the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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