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Coach Huggins called and asked if the Friends of Coal would help make him and West Virginia the “BEST”! By going to this site --- www.espn.com/infiniti/ ---and voting, once a day for the next 7 days, we can help Coach Bob “Huggie Bear” Huggins win $100,000.00 for his favorite charity which is the Norma Mae Huggins Fund, a cancer research endowment at WVU, dedicated to Coach Huggins’ mother.
He’s in the “final four” and as of last night, Coach Huggins had passed the Ohio State coach by 2% and was behind the BYU coach by 1%. Please help put our Mountaineer Coach over the top and show the nation we can support our own better than any other State. It will bring great positive attention to all of us here in West Virginia.
All you have to do is log in to --- www.espn.com/infiniti/ ----- After you vote, you will be asked to register with a name and selected password. Thanks for helping.
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The Friends of Coal is once again joining with the West Virginia Radio Corporation and MetroNews to sponsor the WV Scholars Program. Friends of Coal will be the title sponsor of the scholarship program. The program is a full, four-year scholarship covering the cost of tuition, fees, room and board at West Virginia Wesleyan College. Valued at $125,000, the scholarship will be awarded to one lucky student from West Virginia who is currently a member of the junior class in high school.
You can apply for the scholarship by going towww.wvmetronews.com and click on the “Apply Now Button” for the complete program details.
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Wednesday, February 28th, was “crossover day” in the Legislature, meaning that all bills had to be passed out of their house of origin or they would not be considered this Session. This year’s Regular Session will end next Saturday evening at midnight with the budget session to continue through the next week.
In the Senate:
As of 4:00 p.m., Wednesday, February 29, 2012, the 50th day of the 80th Legislature’s 2nd Regular Session, 174 bills had passed the Senate and will move on to the House for further consideration.
In the House:
As of 4:00 p.m., Wednesday, February 29, 2012, the 50th day of the 80th Legislature’s 2nd Regular Session, 1,348 bills had been introduced in the House. Of those, 120 have passed the House and have moved on to the Senate for further consideration.
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Humans are strange, thrill-seeking creatures. We crave not just a thrill, but something so terrifying that we think, if only for a moment, that we might not actually survive. For those of us not ready for base jumping in wing suits, roller coasters can fulfill that excitement lust. And the amusement park fixtures may never have existed if not for something decidedly unthrilling (though important!): coal mining.
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By Hans A. von Spakovsky
A number of states have joined with industry organizations to challenge new rules from the Environmental Protection Agency on the grounds that they run contrary to the Clean Air Act. Oral arguments began on February 28 before D.C.’s Court of Appeals.
Previous cases have not gone so well. In 2007, in Massachusetts v. EPA, the Supreme Court affirmed the EPA’s authority to regulate carbon dioxide as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. And last year, the Court unanimously threw out a lawsuit, American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, that was brought by eight states. In its decision, the court held that neither states nor private parties could bring a global-warming claim under the federal common-law theory of “public nuisance” because the EPA held authority over this issue. That decision leaves all such regulation solely in the hands of the EPA and threatens the right of plaintiffs even to appeal its decisions.





