Army engineer charged with passing secrets to Israel in ’80s

The News Review:

- Army engineer charged with passing secrets to Israel in ’80s
- Bloomberg.com: Investment Tools
- Kazakh Salesman Aims to Be Rockefeller of Uranium (Update1)
- Local universities bridge academic fields to address sustainability

Army engineer charged with passing secrets to Israel in ’80s
International Herald Tribune – Apr 22, 2008
The company is now known as Israeli Aerospace Industries. From July 1980 through November 1985 the agent worked for the Israeli government as the consul for science affairs at the Israeli consulate in Manhattan. The two men were introduced by Kadish's brother who at one time worked with the agent at the manufacturing plant in Israel. The research center where Kadish worked on the Army base housed a library of documents including many with classified information related to U. From 1979 through 1985 Kadish signed out at least 35 classified documents according to the complaint.

Bloomberg.com: Investment Tools
Bloomberg – Apr 22, 2008
In North America Ford has agreed to supply Tanfield with a range of its F-Series commercial vehicles as the chassis cabs for our US-specific commercial vehicles. This will include the F350 F450 F550 and F650 vans and trucks providing us with vehicles that will be recognisable to and readily accepted by American customers. The requisite design engineering work to bring these vehicles to market is underway and we displayed a pre-production all-electric F650 truck at the CV Show. We are working through the necessary legislative requirements for vehicle type approval in North America with support from Ford and expect to commence US manufacture in the second half of 2008. Following the development of our relationship with Ford in the USA we have re-examined our options for the manufacture of vehicles in North America. As a result the Board has identified several potential sites in North America for the production of commercial electric vehicles and we will provide further detail in due course. Edison and Newton are both attracting buyers outside of their core market of urban delivery vehicles.

Kazakh Salesman Aims to Be Rockefeller of Uranium (Update1)
Bloomberg – Apr 22, 2008
of Roswell Georgia projects that globalnuclear fuel demand will grow 29 percent to $26. Dzhakishev says he wants a third of that. “I'm optimistic about Kazatomprom meeting the objectives''says Ux Consulting analyst Masha Katsva who returned April 8from an inspection of the state company's mines. Critics say Kazatomprom's nuclear ambitions heighten thedangers posed by the proliferation of bomb-making technology. Nazarbayev Regime Success would also enrich the regime of Dzhakishev's bossPresident… When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 Dzhakishev had justfinished a Ph. in law at the Moscow Physics EngineeringInstitute and was weighing an offer to lead a police academy backhome. Instead he and friends launched an import sales company. With no sales training beyond the Russian-language memoirsof former U. automobile executive.

Local universities bridge academic fields to address sustainability
Houston Chronicle – Apr 22, 2008
But it’s not a joke. To tackle environmental problems professors at universities throughout Houston are reaching out to unlikely colleagues and breaking down barriers that separate academic disciplines. In Patrick Peters’ design workshop at the University of Houston’s Hines College of Architecture visiting artists are teaching students a new way to develop land. Matt Coolidge artist and founder of Center for Land Use Interpretation took the architecture students on a tour through the Houston Ship Channel pointing out the juxtaposition of exquisitely beautiful native birds and waste dumped from a water treatment plant… To tackle environmental problems professors at universities throughout Houston are reaching out to unlikely colleagues and breaking down barriers that separate academic disciplines. In Patrick Peters’ design workshop at the University of Houston’s Hines College of Architecture visiting artists are teaching students a new way to develop land. Matt Coolidge artist and founder of Center for Land Use Interpretation took the architecture students on a tour through the Houston Ship Channel pointing out the juxtaposition of exquisitely beautiful native birds and waste dumped from a water treatment plant. “It’s not the standard way the artist and architect interact” Peters said. “We’re learning from the way they perceive the landscape. Seeing beauty within an industrialized landscape is helping the students redesign a section of the bayou’s ridge in cooperation with Buffalo Bayou Partnership. The idea is to turn the bayou’s natural beauty into an amenity despite the industrial environment Peters said.

Written by admin on April 22nd, 2008 with no comments.
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