Thursday, March 15, 2012

Luck is on his side

Eight years ago, Jeff Bunn rolled up his sleeves and announced that he was going into business for himself. He made the bold move after many years of working for other companies in Texasand Indiana installing workstation systems for offices. During what he calls his "learning years," Bunn traveled around the country for five and six weeks at a time.

The result was long, tedious hours of learning the different manufacturers workstation systems and how to set them up. With that amount of expertise under his belt, it took very little contemplation before he opened his own doors.

Today, Professional Systems Installations Inc. is installing thousands of modern workstations across …

Russia says Georgia pullback finished

Russia's defense chief says the country's military has completed its withdrawal of forces from most of Georgian territory.

Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov says the pullback into separatist South Ossetia was finished late Friday evening. He spoke after columns of Russian tanks and troops were seen leaving key positions in Georgia. They were headed for the …

Land use bill back on the table: ; Measure would support; planning for post-mining property development

Southern West Virginia lawmakers are expressing urgency inpassing a resurrected measure that would bolster planning for post-mine land use and development in regards to mountaintop mining.

Originally backed by Gov. Joe Manchin, the post-mine land usebill is one of the governor's key proposals that fizzled out on thefinal day of the regular 60-day legislative session.

It's back for consideration among more than a dozen other billsthis week as lawmakers have reconvened for a special session.

The proposal would enhance the utilization of master land useplans in counties affected by surface mining, and require theadoption or approval of master land use plans by …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Govt. Wants More Crash Tests for Cars

WASHINGTON - The government's crash-test program should take into account collision avoidance technologies and make the results more meaningful for new car buyers, safety officials said Wednesday.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration held a daylong hearing with automakers, suppliers and safety advocates to discuss changes to the New Car Assessment Program, called NCAP, which grades new vehicles on a scale of up to five stars.

Traffic safety officials said the program, started in 1979, has helped speed the implementation of safety technologies into new cars. But they want to improve frontal, side-impact and rollover testing while measuring emerging …

Blackhawks beat Ducks 3-2 in shootout

CHICAGO (AP) — Patrick Kane scored the winning goal in the shootout and had two assists in regulation, lifting the Chicago Blackhawks to a 3-2 victory over the Anaheim Ducks on Tuesday night.

Marian Hossa and Patrick Sharp scored for Chicago, which has …

Solar plane lands after completing 24-hour flight

An experimental solar-powered plane landed safely Thursday after completing its first 24-hour test flight, proving that the aircraft can collect enough energy from the sun during the day to stay aloft all night.

Pilot Andre Borschberg eased the Solar Impulse aircraft onto the runway at Payerne airfield about 31 miles (50 kilometers) southwest of the Swiss capital Bern at exactly 9 a.m. (0700 GMT; 3 a.m. EDT) Thursday.

Helpers rushed to stabilize the pioneering plane as it touched down, ensuring that its massive 207-foot (63-meter) wingspan didn't touch the ground and topple the craft.

The record feat completes seven years of planning and brings …

Nutritional Quality and Price Of University Food Bank Hampers

Abstract

Purpose: Food insecurity appears to be a growing problem for post-secondary students, but little study has been made of the 51 campus-based food banks that exist. In 2003-04, the University of Alberta Campus Food Bank (CFB) distributed hampers intended to supply four days of food to 630 unique clients, of whom 207 (32.8%) were children. The nutritional adequacy of food hampers and cost saving to students were evaluated in the current study.

Methods: Hampers prepared for one adult, and for one adult with one child, were nutritionally evaluated and scored for number of servings according to Canada's Food Guide to Healthy Eating. Two types of hampers were evaluated: …

World Under-20 Ice Hockey Championship Results

Results Monday from the Under-20 World Ice Hockey Championship:

Group A

Sweden 4, Czech Republic …

Video doesn't lie

Now, let there be no more thought as to why communities don't trust or respect police officers.

An insane judge threw out evidence that surely paved the way for this cop, John Ardelean, to walk while the families of the victims in the car crash receive no …

Where they stand: Mich. gubernatorial candidates on LGBT equality

SPEAKOUT

Though the campaign for governor of Michigan has been underway for almost two years, most voters are only now beginning to pay attention. However, before citizens decide whom they want to serve as governor next year, the two parties have to select their candidates. Democratic and Republican voters will go to the polls on Aug. 3 to choose their parties' nominees for the state's highest office. Several of these columns this year have focused on the 2010 political races in Michigan and the importance of the LGBT community's involvement in the electoral process. Now, with less than a month until the primaries, it's time we focus more intently on the gubernatorial contenders …

Survey: Americans make 41M fewer air trips

Nearly half of American air travelers would fly more if it were easier, and more than one-fourth said they skipped at least one air trip in the past 12 months because of the hassles involved, according to an industry survey.

The Travel Industry Association, which commissioned the survey released Thursday, estimated that the 41 million forgone trips cost the travel industry $18.1 billion _ including $9.4 billion to airlines, $5.6 billion to hotels and $3.1 billion _ and it cost federal, state and local authorities $4.2 billion in taxes in the past 12 months.

When 28 percent of air travelers avoided an average of 1.3 trips each, that resulted in 29 million …

Spanish league to play at noon to boost TV money

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — In hot and humid Spain, football has traditionally been played after the sun goes down. That is now set to change so the financially troubled Spanish league can boost its international television revenues.

The Spanish league announced on Tuesday that in the first two weeks of the season from Aug. 20 games will played on Sunday at noon and then be staggered throughout the day.

Like last season, Saturday's games will start at 18:00 local time, with one game still reserved for Monday night.

The new schedule should equal more income from TV, but it may also mean a culture shock for Spanish football fans.

University of Barcelona finance professor …

Teen takes to skies before roads

A teenager from Street has learnt to fly a glider solo - severalmonths before he can learn to drive a car.

Sixteen-year-old Kyle Johnston was due to take his flight - andgain his glider licence earlier in the year on his 16th birthday,but bad weather delayed his first solo flight until Sunday.

He has been flying with Mendip Gliding Club for the last year,after getting a first taste of the skies as part of an open day.

His mum, Sharon, said: "He was looking for something to do, and Isaw an advert in the press for the club and we went along to have alook.

"He really enjoyed his trial flight and since then he's up at theclub every chance he gets.

"When you consider that he won't be able to drive a car foranother year, it's an amazing thing he's achieved."

Kyle is believed to be one of the youngest people in the area tohold a glider licence, and has been training with the club for thelast year.

The club also helped out with a bursary which allowed him to keeptaking lessons.

"I'll never forget the day I had my first solo flight," Kylesaid.

"I took off from the gliding club, which is based near RodneyStoke

"I released from the winch, turned left and flew downwind - atthis point I think I was gliding at around 900 feet.

"I did a 360 degree turn to take me down to 700 feet and thenlanded.

"I've been flying with the club for just over a year and when Istarted, I was lucky enough to get a Pounds 200 bursary from theclub that has helped me fly.

"I'm so grateful to everyone who helped me with my training andhelped me to get my licence, especially the people who helped on theday and those who continue to inspire me in the gliding club."

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Los Angeles school year shortened in teachers deal

The Los Angeles teachers union says it has reached a deal with the school district that would shorten the school year by at least five days, as officials cope with a $640 million budget deficit.

United Teachers Los Angeles spokeswoman Marla Eby says under the agreement reached Saturday, teachers will take five unpaid furlough days this year and seven next year, saving the nation's largest school district $180 million.

The deal would allow schools to maintain class sizes and save more than 2,000 jobs, including those of 284 librarians, nurses and counselors threatened with layoffs this summer.

The agreement still has to be approved by members of the teacher's union.

I'll tell you how 'Sesame' got to Highland Park

Look deep into the Cookie Monster's eyes, as they jiggle andbounce and roll every which way. Peer into his soul. There's a Zen-like calm amid the chaos.

"As long he has a cookie somewhere in sight, he's happy," saidHighland Park's David Rudman, who knows better than anyone else."It's kind of a nice way to go about life. One thing to make himhappy, that's all he needs."

Rudman should have an acute sense of what's going on inside CookieMonster because he's inside Cookie Monster.

For the past five years, the 40-year-old North Shore father offour has been the primary puppeteer for the shaggy blue "SesameStreet" star.

He fills in for Frank Oz, whose work as a feature film directorhas made him increasingly unavailable over the years for the Muppetroles he originated -- including Grover, Bert and Cookie Monster --on the cornerstone PBS children's series, which begins its 35thseason with an anniversary special at 7 p.m. Sunday on WTTW-Channel11.

Rudman, who grew up watching the Muppets like everyone else, hasbeen working with them since he was 18. He started on "Sesame Street"at 22 and, besides Cookie Monster, he's responsible for voicing suchstandout characters as Two-Headed Monster, Davey Monkey, SonnyFriendly and Baby Bear.

"Baby Bear had a very strong year," Rudman said by way ofexplaining his first Daytime Emmy nomination as outstanding performerin a children's series.

His work this past season as Cookie Monster and Baby Bear will beup against Jeff Corwin of NBC's "Jeff Corwin Unleashed," MichelleTrachtenberg of Discovery Kids' "Truth or Scare," the late LynneThigpen of Disney Channel's "Bear in the Big Blue House" and fellow"Sesame Street" puppeteer Kevin Clash, the man behind Elmo, on May 21at New York's Radio City Music Hall.

Rudman leases an apartment in New York, commuting from suburbanChicago during the three months a year that "Sesame Street" tapes atQueens' Kaufman Astoria Studios. He also returns for work on "Street"home videos, specials and other related work.

The rest of the year he runs his own local production company,Spiffy Pictures, and lives with his wife, Caren, and two sons and twodaughters -- ages 3, 6, 9 and 11 -- in Highland Park, the town wherehe grew up, the son of a Smith-Barney financial consultant whoencouraged his artistic bent.

"I was interested in television and film as a kid, but I was alsointerested in sculpture," said Rudman, whose off-the-"Street" workhas included the role of Fingerman in ads for Ziploc storage bags."When I saw the Muppets, it was a combination of all that. They werethese amazing works of art that were on television. ... There wasacting and character design. It was everything I liked to docombined."

Right around the time Rudman's mother died, when he was a studentat Highland Park's Elm Place Middle School, he and a pal worked up apuppet show and began taking their act around.

"Every weekend we were booked," he said. "We'd do four birthdayparties a weekend and we were making, like, 50 bucks a party. So wewere 11 years old and making all this money, but we were having somuch fun doing it. ... They weren't kiddie type shows. They were moregeared to middle-school kids."

When they got to Highland Park High, the shows became geared totheir high-school classmates, with Rudman writing the act andcreating his own puppets. "They were funny and the music was reallygood," he said. "I kept getting great support from the high schooland from the kids. They just seemed to love these shows and I loveddoing it. That's how I got a job with Henson."

What happened is the teen badgered the folks at the Jim HensonCo., not taking "We're not hiring anyone" or "We don't have interns"for an answer. He eventually broke down their resistance and wound upwith an internship, helping build Muppets between his high schoolgraduation and freshman year at the University of Connecticut.

When the internship ended, he left behind a tape of his charactersand puppetry for Muppet-master Henson, who had been in London allsummer making "The Dark Crystal." An impressed Henson called about ajob a month later.

"I said, 'All right, I think I've had enough of college,' but ...he said, 'Don't quit college. You can work for us during your breaks.Whenever you have a vacation coming up, just give us a call and letus know. If we have things going on, you can come out and work onstuff,' " Rudman recalled.

"So I would spend summer vacations in New York. I did 'The MuppetsTake Manhattan' when I was 19. I did 'Labyrinth' when I was 21. ...It was a nice way to go to college, knowing I had a job when Igraduated. A dream job. I learned a lot and I worked with Jim a lot,and he was great. He was not only a creative genius, but he was agreat teacher, too."

His first day on "Sesame Street," he was assigned to be a right-hand man, supplying the right hand for a character while a moreexperienced puppeteer was to work the head and left hand. But RichardHunt, one of the main Muppet performers at the time, had confidencethat the youngster could do more.

"I'd already worked with the Muppets on a couple things beforethat and he really wanted me just to jump in," Rudman said. "Richardsaid, 'You know, I'm not feeling too well. I'm going to go home. Whydon't you just do it?' I was like, 'Um, OK.' So he gave me thischaracter."

Suddenly, Rudman was playing a dentist and singing "Who Are thePeople in Your Neighborhood" with Bob McGrath, the "Sing Along WithMitch" alum who has been with "Sesame Street" since its Nov. 10,1969, debut.

"That was a surreal experience," Rudman said. "But it was great.It threw me right into the mix at the beginning. It was a goodexperience."

It still is. He has the job he's always wanted, where he gets tobe silly and sing the occasional duet with a Norah Jones, Sheryl Crowor B.B. King. In short, it's good to be Cookie Monster.

"I just probably came the closest to capturing who Cookie is, thereal Cookie," said Rudman, who was handpicked by Oz for the role."Cookie's complex. He's got a lot of stuff going on there. He'sobsessed with cookies, obviously. He's got that language of 'Me lovecookies,' but he also occasionally throws out these big words like,'It's a bit esoteric, but me thinks me can do it.'

"It's kind of funny that he's not just this monster who has thiscookie obsession. There are other things. He somehow knows a lot."

The eyes may wander, but they see all.

Air quality issues on composting horizon

FLUX CHAMBER VS. OPEN PATH LASER TESTING

South Coast Air Quality Management District and the California Integrated Waste Management Board seek solution to controlling emissions from composting and mulching operations while maintaining waste diversion.

THE SOUTH Coast Basin is a 12,000 square mile area in southern California that includes Los Angeles and Orange counties and parts of San Bernardino and Riverside counties. The South Coast Basin is an extreme nonattainment area for ozone and a serious nonattainment area for PM10 (particulate matter less than 10 microns) as determined by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) air quality standards. Composting facilities and related operations handle materials that emit volatile organic compounds (VOC), ammonia (NH3) and dust, which are precursors to the formation of ozone and PM10.

The South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD), the local air pollution control authority, is responsible for implementing emission reduction requirements to achieve clean air standards and is targeting emissions from composting and cocomposting operations. Originally, in August 2001, the SCAQMD proposed a rule that would require all composting facilities to be enclosed with emissions vented to a biofilter.

Based on further technical assessment and on subsequent input from stakeholders including industry, local government, and the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB), SCAQMD is now proposing to develop a series of rules, rather than a single rule, to assess and control VOC, NH3, and PM10 emissions from composting facilities and related operations. This series of proposed rules (PR) will include PR 1133, defining registration and reporting requirements for all facilities; PR 1133.1, establishing requirements for chipping and grinding operations; PR 1133.2, establishing requirements for cocomposting facilities; and PR 1133.3, establishing requirements for green waste (yard trimmings) composting facilities. Currently, SCAQMD has issued draft language for three of the rules in the series, PR 1133, PR 1133.1, and PR 1133.2, and has scheduled a board hearing for adoption on December 6, 2002. PR 1133.3 for green waste composting facilities will be addressed in 2003.

This paper discusses emission testing by SCAQMD and CIWMB that has been conducted at composting facilities and related operations associated with the development of the proposed rules. SCAQMD and CIWMB are working together to develop a solution to the multimedia environmental concerns of air quality and waste diversion from landfills. The answer is an emissions control strategy for composting facilities that will result in improved air quality while maintaining responsible management and operation of composting facilities, a solution that protects AB 939 waste diversion mandates in California. (AB 939 mandated all jurisdictions in California to achieve 25 percent diversion of waste from landfills by 1995 and 50 percent diversion by 2000.)

BASELINE EMISSIONS FOR COCOMPOSTING

SCAQMD conducted assessment tests at the source to determine existing baseline emissions of VOC, NH^sub 3^, and PM10 from composting facilities and related operations. Tests were conducted in 1995 and 1996 at three cocomposting facilities - EKO Systems in Corona, Rancho Las Virgenes Municipal Water District in Calabasas, and San Joaquin Composting, Inc. in Lost Hills - that process biosolids along with green waste and other bulking agents. These three facilities are described below:

EKO Systems composts in windrows that are turned one to three times per week using a Scarab. Feedstocks include manure, biosolids, wood chips, agricultural residues, stable waste, and bulking agents such as green waste and other organics. Typical composition is 20 percent biosolids and 80 percent manure by weight. Active composting in windrow piles is typically 50 days. Tests (using flux chambers) were conducted by SCAQMD in November 1995 and January 1996.

Rancho Las Virgenes Municipal Water District's composting facility uses U.S. Filter agitated composting bins enclosed within a large building that is vented to a biofilter for odor and emission control. Typical feedstocks are biosolids and wood chips. There are a total of eight bins and two mechanical agitators, which turn the material approximately once per day. Newly mixed material is added at one end of the bin as material is removed from the building at the other. Temperature controlled forced aeration is provided by blowers underneath the material. The 46-day cycle yields a product that is in compliance with EPA 503 regulations for Class A. Tests were conducted by SCAQMD in December 1995.

San Joaquin Composting, Inc. composts in windrows that are turned using a Scarab one to three times per week. Typical composition of feedstock is 50 percent biosolids and 50 percent green waste by weight. The latter includes yard trimmings from curbside recycling programs and municipal tree and shrub trimmings from the Los Angeles area. Active composting is achieved in windrow piles for typically 57 days. Tests were conducted by SCAQMD in February 1996 and March 1996.

Emission results from the tests conducted at these three cocomposting facilities and reported in the SCAQMD Source Test Reports are summarized in Table 1.

BASELINE EMISSIONS FOR GREEN WASTE COMPOSTING

In its original form, PR 1133 was based on the source tests summarized in Table 1. Since SCAQMD had not measured emissions from green waste composting sites, additional testing was warranted at facilities that produce compost from green waste only and do not handle biosolids. In September 2001 (summer conditions) and November-December 2001 (winter conditions), SCAQMD conducted more source assessment tests to determine existing baseline emissions of VOC, NH^sub 3^, and PM10 from green waste composting facilities.

The tests were conducted at the Inland Composting and Organics Recycling (ICOR) facility in Colton, also known as Inland Empire (the site currently is closed). ICOR occupied approximately 40 acres of land in San Bernardino County and received feedstock from Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The site processed 800 to 900 tons/day - 80 percent curbside green waste and the remainder wood waste. End products included alternative daily cover (ADC) at landfills and various grades of compost. Fresh green waste was received, litter was sorted out, materials were screened and the fines used for ADC. The coarse fraction was ground and composted. Compost was stored in static piles, some measuring nine feet in height and 25 feet in width. Some of the piles were turned with a front loader. The compost was screened on a time schedule with the fines marketed as various grades of composts. Screening overs were typically set aside for further processing. Typical duration of composting was about 45 days, although some materials (e.g., the overs) were composted for about 90 days.

For the September 2001 tests, SCAQMD measured emissions using the USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber. For the November-December 2001 tests, SCAQMD used an indirect, line-of-sight open path laser technology to measure the concentration of emission gases, NH^sub 3^ and methane (CH^sub 4^), and optical scintillation to measure the flow rate. For the most part, the laser tests were used to develop the emission factors reported by SCAQMD in the Source Assessment Report for ICOR, December 2001 and summarized in Table 2. The lasers can produce a continuous measurement of a single component, such as NH^sub 3^, but cannot accurately measure the combination of several components such as VOCs. Therefore, SCAQMD set one laser to measure NH^sub 3^ and the other laser to measure methane (CH^sub 4^).

The CH^sub 4^: VOC ratio, measured with an isolation flux chamber, was used to estimate VOC emissions based on laser readings of CH^sub 4^. The November-December 2001 testing occurred at ICOR with joint testing being conducted simultaneously by CIWMB using the USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber.

Emission results from the ICOR testing were reported in SCAQMD Source Test Reports and are summarized in Table 2. CIWMB results are discussed later in this paper.

CIWMB TESTS

As mentioned above, CIWMB also conducted emission tests at mulching and green waste composting facilities in southern California in December 2001 and encouraged SCAQMD's simultaneous participation in the testing efforts. The three green waste processing sites selected were ICOR in Colton and two facilities owned and operated by the City of Los Angeles - the Anchorage composting facility near San Pedro Harbor and the Van Norman mulching facility in the San Fernando Valley. The following are descriptions of the Anchorage and Van

Norman sites:

Anchorage: The Anchorage facility is located in southern Los Angeles County near San Pedro Harbor. It receives materials from the nearby Harbor facility, which takes in approximately 60 to 80 tons/day of mostly residential green waste along with some material from the Department of Parks and Recreation and the Harbor. Feedstocks are preprocessed through a litter picking line, screening, and grinding, then transferred to the nearby Anchorage facility where they are composted in windrows for about 21 days. These materials are used to produce various grades of mulch and compost.

Van Norman: Green waste is processed but not stored at the Van Norman facility (i.e. it is chopped and shipped as mulch). The site is on approximately 20 acres in northem Los Angeles County near the Van Norman Lakes Reservoir. Van Norman processes roughly 300 tons/day of green materials comprised of an estimated 50 percent curbside-collected yard trimmings and 50 percent brush and logs. The raw feed is processed through various sized screens to produce different grades of mulch product.

TEST METHODOLOGY

Tests were performed by Dr. Chuck E. Schmidt, an independent CIWMB consultant, in partnership with the City of Los Angeles. CIWMB developed test protocols prior to conducting the tests, with input from Dr. Schmidt, and technical staff from both the City of Los Angeles and SCAQMD. A consensus was reached on the following protocols:

* Surface area emissions measured using USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber and USEPA testing standards to evaluate NH^sub 3^, CH^sub 4^, and VOC compounds; Analysis of NH^sub 3^ by impinger sample collection from the flux chamber and NMAM 6015 analytical method;

* Analysis of CH^sub 4^ and VOC as total nonmethane hydrocarbons (TNMHC) by tedlar bag collection samples from the flux chamber and Method 25C;

* Hydrocarbon speciation analysis via grab samples and composite sample collections for analysis by USEPA Method TO-15 for VOC and SCAQMD Method 25.3 for condensable and volatile organic compounds (analyzed by SCAQMD lab);

* Side-by-side testing with the SCAQMD staff at the ICOR facility to ensure common sampling integrity and to develop a correlation between the open path laser technology employed by SCAQMD and the traditional flux chamber sampling techniques employed in the CIWMB tests;

* Testing of an entire 90-day life cycle composting process as well as a chipping and grinding and mulching process as simulated by the Anchorage and Van Norman facilities. Tests were taken on compost that ranged in age from 1-day old to 90-days old, e.g. 1-day, 3-day, 7-day, 14-day, 28-day, 60day, and 90-day. This was done to observe a 90-day emission profile; and

Advective flow measured by recovery of a tracer gas (carbon monoxide) added to the flux chamber sweep air (recovery used to adjust the emissions estimate for volumetric flow into the chamber).

CIWMB tests were done on December 3, 2001 at the Anchorage facility, December 6, 2001 at the ICOR facility, and December 7, 2001 at the Van Norman facility. At ICOR, a total of 14 surface flux measurements were taken on five material types - raw green waste materials, 17-day old static pile, 45-day old compost, 90-day old "overs," and screened product fines. The highest average NH^sub 3^ measurement was from the 17day-old static pile compost; the highest average VOC measurement was from the 90 day-old "overs" compost.

At the Anchorage facility, a total of 18 surface flux measurements were taken at multiple locations on green waste materials and compost/mulch. The highest average measurement from all materials tested on site occurred within the first seven days after grinding. The highest average NH^sub 3^ measurement was from Day 1 mulch; the highest average VOC measurement was from Day 3 mulch. At the Van Norman facility, a total of 24 surface flux measurements were taken at multiple locations on green waste materials and mulch products. The highest average NH^sub 3^ measurement was from Day 3 coarse mulch; the highest average VOC measurement was from Day 1 coarse mulch.

CIWMB TEST RESULTS

The test results, shown as flux measurements from samples taken at all three green waste processing facilities, included a wide range of values that varied by several orders of magnitude. The flux measurements represent 54 data points that depict a full spectrum of facility types, feed compositions, operating conditions, compost ages, product grades, and climatic conditions as related to wind velocities and moisture.

Table 3 provides an overview of the statistical analysis approach. Descriptive statistics are shown for the entire data set, all three facilities combined, and also for the individual facilities. The mean indicates the numerical average of the numbers in each data set; the median indicates the midpoint of each data set (the point at which one-half of the data lies above and one-half of the data lies below); quartiles divide the data into four parts with each sector containing one-quarter of the data; and standard deviation is a measure of data dispersion determined as a square root of the variance. As shown in most of the data sets, a large standard deviation compared to the mean indicates high variability in the data set. The median, not influenced by extreme values and outliers, may be more indicative of the data set than the mean.

The data set provides a representative grouping suitable for statistical analysis to determine universal NH^sub 3^ and VOC emissions from green material composting processes. Statistical analyses were conducted on the entire data set to show normal distribution of the data, data centralities, variability, and potential outlier data. Basic statistical analysis presents the following results: NH^sub 3^ emissions = 0.002 lb/hr1,000ft^sup 2^ mean with standard deviation of +/- 0.006; NH^sub 3^ emissions = 0.000 lb/hr1,000ft^sup 2^ median (Note: 34 out of 54, or 63 percent of the samples were below the detection limit); VOC emissions = 0.19 lb/hr1,000ft^sup 2^ mean with standard deviation of +/- 0.34; and VOC emissions = 0.025 lb/hr1,000ft^sup 2^ median.

SCAQMD AND CIWMB SIMULTANEOUS SAMPLING

The simultaneous tests conducted by SCAQMD and CIWMB at the ICOR facility in December 2001 presented an opportunity to compile two data sets into one larger data set. All of the CIWMB tests were conducted using the USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber. The results of these tests are shown in Table 3.

During the simultaneous testing, SCAQMD primarily focused on testing using the open path laser technology; however SCAQMD also collected a limited number of samples using the USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber, SCAQMD used the ratio of CH^sub 4^ to total VOCs, as determined by the SCAQMD Test Method 25.3 results, to predict total VOCs from the CH4 laser readings. Speciation samples were taken and analyzed by USEPA Method TO-15 and SCAQMD Test Method 25.3 to determine the various components of VOCs and their respective concentrations. It is important to note that the speciation samples indicate a high degree of variability for the CH^sub 4^ to TNMHC (VOCs) ratio. The ratio of CH^sub 4^ to total TNMHC (VOCs) varied from 0.19 to 54. Given this variation, it may be difficult to predict VOCs accurately using this method. Additional considerations when using laser technology are the difficulties in assessing if the lasers are capturing the target plume from the study source, or including additive background emissions from adjacent windrows as the wind blows across the pile or windrow that is being tested.

COMBINING SCAQMD AND CIWMB FLUX CHAMBER DATA

The December 2001 tests taken by SCAQMD are the first emission tests that used indirect open path laser technology instead of the more traditional USEPA isolation flux chamber method of testing. Because CIWMB had some concerns regarding the accuracy of the results using the open path laser technology, it completed a data evaluation exercise to combine the two data sets obtained with the USEPA surface emission isolation flux chamber.

For the ICOR facility, CIWMB tests included a total of 14 flux chamber results and SCAQMD tests included a total of four flux chamber results. CIWMB flux chamber samples were analyzed for VOC and NH^sub 3^; SCAQMD flux chamber samples were analyzed for VOC only. CIWMB analyzed for VOC using Test Method 25C. SCAQMD used a different test method to measure VOC emissions, SCAQMD Test Method 25.3, which they prefer because it measures VOC emissions including the condensable fraction that Method 25C does not account for. CIWMB test protocol prescribed Test Method 25C for VOC analyses because there were no laboratories available to run SCAQMD Test Method 25.3 at the time of the tests, except the SCAQMD lab. Typically, a simultaneous sampling event would result in a higher number for VOCs by Method 25.3 (due to the condensable fraction) than would be measured by Method 25C.

To produce combined emission results representing both CIWMB and SCAQMD measurements, a test method correlation was developed that presents all data on the same basis. Based on available simultaneous sampling data, a multiplier of 1.16 can be applied to Method 25C results to provide data results on the same basis as SCAQMD Method 25.3. After the VOC data were normalized to the same test method, SCAQMD Method 25.3, then CIWMB and SCAQMD data were combined and statistical analyses performed on the data sets.

Table 4 summarizes the results. Basic statistical analysis of the data sets indicate the following results: NH^sub 3^ emissions are in the range of 0.002 to 0.007 lb/hr-1,000ft^sup 2^ (mean values); and VOC emissions are in the range of 0.013 to 0.17 lb/hr-1,000ft^sup 2^ (mean values).

Most of the data sets in Table 4 show a standard deviation that is less than or equal to the mean which indicates reasonable grouping of the data within the data set. The exception to this observation is the VOC statistical result for the windrows grouping. The standard deviation is almost two times larger than the mean, which indicates high variability of the data within the data set or a possible outlier that is affecting the statistical calculations. Therefore, for the windrows VOC grouping, the median, which is not as influenced by extreme values and outliers, may be more indicative of the data set than the mean.

FLUX CHAMBER VS. OPEN PATH LASER RESULTS

Using the mean values from the statistical analysis, Table 5 presents a comparison of the combined data (SCAQMD and CIWMB emission results) with the data reported in the SCAQMD Source Assessment Report for the ICOR facility. As shown in Table 5, and Figures 1 and 2, the NH3 emissions are lower for the CIWMB flux chamber data than the NH^sub 3^ emissions reported in the SCAQMD Source Assessment Report. For the most part, the VOC emissions for the combined CIWMB and SCAQMD flux chamber data are also lower than the VOC emissions reported in the SCAQMD Source Assessment Report, with the exception of the windrow tests. However, the windrow tests have limited data points that include a likely outlier since the standard deviation is twice the mean for that data set. Additional baseline emission tests will provide a higher degree of confidence in the data sets and insight into the discrepancy between combined CIWMB and SCAQMD data and SCAQMD Source Assessment Report data.

While SCAQMD and CIWMB tests have looked at baseline emissions, SCAQMD has not set an acceptable emissions level to date. The approach currently being considered is to set a percentage reduction once a control technology has been put in place (e.g. 70 percent reduction in VOC and 65 percent reduction in NH^sub 3^ from the baseline) - versus stating an absolute threshold of "x" tons/day VOC and "x" tons/day NH^sub 3^.

EMISSION CONTROL STRATEGIES, BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES

Initially, SCAQMD proposed emission control strategies to implement a 75 percent reduction in NH^sub 3^ and a 90 percent reduction in VOC over existing baseline emissions. The prescribed control strategies defined in the original drafts of PR 1133 for cocomposting and green waste composting facilities specified enclosure of all or a portion of the composting facility with negatively aerated static piles (ASP) and emissions vented through a biofilter. Various scenarios of this emission control strategy were evaluated by SCAQMD along with emission reduction effectiveness, costs, and affordability impacts to the industry. The estimated financial impact of complying with enclosure, ASP, and biofilter control requirements could be devastating to the composting industry that has a minimal profit margin, especially in the case of green waste composting facilities competing with landfill tipping fees for feedstock. SCAQMD acknowledged the financial impacts of emission control strategies in its Technical Assessment Report to its board on April 5, 2002 and is currently considering alternative control strategies in its rulemaking process.

CIWMB and local jurisdictions are concerned about the subsequent impacts on waste diversion in California if the composting industry is negatively impacted by SCAQMD emission reduction requirements. CIWMB has proposed best management practices (BMPs) as a more cost-effective way to reduce emissions from composting facilities. BMPs are operational procedures that achieve optimal composting conditions. They can include simple practices - like controlling feedstocks, pH and moisture, and aeration by turning piles - to more sophisticated systems like negative-ASP with biofilters. CIWMB is planning to work with SCAQMD to conduct additional testing at composting facilities to quantify emission reductions attributable to various BMPs. Testing likely will be conducted this fall in support of SCAQMD's development of PR 1133.2 for cocomposting facilities and PR 1133.3 for green waste composting facilities.

[Sidebar]

The CIWMB testing included an entire 90-day life cycle composting process as well as a chipping and grinding and mulching process.

[Sidebar]

Considerations when using laser technology are the difficulties in assessing if the lasers are capturing the target plume from the study source, or including additive background emissions from adjacent windrows.

[Sidebar]

CIWMB has proposed best management practices as a more cost-effective way to reduce emissions from composting facilities.

[Reference]

REFERENCES

[Reference]

Schmidt, Dr. C.E., Technical Memorandum: Reporting of Ammonia and TNMHC Emission Factors from the Surface Flux Chamber Testing Conducted at the Anchorage, Van Norman, Inland Empire, and LACSD Scholl Canyon Landfill Green Waste Facilities Located in Southern California, May 2002.

Schmidt, Dr. C.E., Technical Memorandum: Results of the Surface Flux Chamber Testing at the Inland Composting and Organic Recycling Facility Located in Colton, California, February 2002.

[Reference]

Schmidt, Dr. C.E., Technical Memorandum: Results of the Surface Flux Chamber Testing at the Anchorage and Van Norman Green Waste Facilities in Southern California, February 2002.

Smyth, Brenda K., California Integrated Waste Management Board, Technical Summary Report: Air Emissions Tests Conducted at Green Material Processing Facilities by California Integrated Waste Management Board, February 2002.

Smyth, Brenda K., California Integrated Waste Management Board, Technical Summary Report: Test Method Correlation and Air Emissions Based on Combined Data for Tests Conducted by California Integrated Waste Management Board and South Coast Air Quality Management District at a Green Material Composting Facility, June 2002.

Stedwick, Wayne A., South Coast Air Quality Management District, Source Test Report

[Reference]

01-171 Conducted at Inland Empire Composting, Ammonia and Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) Emissions from Greenwaste Composting Operations, 2002.

Wang, Mei, South Coast Air Quality Management District, Source Test Report 01-176 Conducted at Inland Empire Composting, Remote Sensing Tests for Ammonia and Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) Emissions from Greenwaste Composting Operations, 2002.

Willoughby, Carey, South Coast Air Quality Management District, Source Test Report 95-0032/96-0003 Conducted at EKO Systems, Characterization of Ammonia, Total Amine, Organic Sulfur Compound, and Total Non-Methane Organic Compound (TGNMOC) Emissions from Composting Operations, May 17, 1996.

Willoughby, Carey, South Coast Air Quality Management District, Source Test Report 95-0034 Conducted at Rancho Las Virgenes Municipal Water District, Characterization of Ammonia, Total Amine, Organic Sulfur Compound, and Total Non-Methane Organic Compound (TGNMOC) Emissions from Composting Operations, May 15, 1996.

Willoughby, Carey, South Coast Air Quality Management District, Source Test Report 960007/96-0008/96-0009 Conducted at San Joaquin Composting, Inc., Characterization of Ammonia, Total Amine, Organic Sulfur Compound, and Total Non-Methane Organic Compound (TGNMOC) Emissions from Composting Operations, November 16, 1996.

[Author Affiliation]

Brenda Smyth is a senior integrated waste management specialist in the Organics and Business Resource Efficiency program at the California Integrated Waste Management Board. Chuck Schmidt is an independent consultant working under contract to CIWMB.

Lawmakers seek pardon of terrorists

Three House Democrats are asking President Clinton to pardon 15imprisoned Puerto Rican members of a terrorist group that killed fivepeople and injured dozens in the late 1970s in order to claim PuertoRico's independence.

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), Rep. Jose Serrano (D-New York)and Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-New York), all of Puerto Rican descent,signed the letter and requested a meeting with Charles Ruff, counselto President Clinton. The prisoners were members of the Armed Forcesof National Liberation, known by its Spanish acronym FALN.

"Most of these prisoners have served more than 18 years inprison," the three wrote in a March 11 letter to Ruff. "Studies showthat this time is excessive given the crimes they were convicted ofcommitting."The issue is uniting political leaders who can't agree on otherissues, like the status of Puerto Rico, said Billy Weinberg, presssecretary for Gutierrez.Jim Kennedy, a spokesman for Ruff in the White House, said hereceived the letter but no meeting has been scheduled.Former President Jimmy Carter supports the release of theprisoners because they have served long sentences, said Harry Barnes,chair of the human rights commission at the Carter Center in Atlanta."My impression is the matter is being treated very seriously in theJustice Department," Barnes said.The Justice Department will submit its recommendation on thepresidential pardon to the White House. No deadline has been set.

Lowe's leads Braves past Marlins 5-1

ATLANTA (AP) — The Braves moved closer to their first playoff berth since 2005, beating the Florida Marlins 5-1 Wednesday to complete a three-game sweep behind Derek Lowe's fifth win of September and Brooks Conrad's three-run homer.

In its final season under manager Bobby Cox, Atlanta began the day 1½ games ahead of San Diego in the NL wild-card race.

Atlanta (90-69) reached 90 wins for the 15th time in 25 years under the 69-year-old Cox, who is retiring after the season. The Braves won 14 straight division titles under Cox but have missed out on the playoffs for four straight seasons.

Atlanta closes at home against NL East champion Philadelphia with a three-game series starting Friday night.

Pitching on three days' rest, Lowe (16-12) gave up one run and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings and struck out nine. He is 5-0 with a 1.17 ERA this month with 29 strikeouts and three walks in 30 2-3 innings, and his 16 wins matched Tim Hudson for the team high.

Conrad, a 30-year-old rookie, homered in the third off Andrew Miller (1-5). Conrad made his second straight start after Martin Prado sustained a torn oblique muscle and a bruised hip Monday. Prado, an All-Star with a .307 batting average, will miss the playoffs if the Braves advance.

Conrad, usually a pinch-hitter and defensive substitute, has eight homers — all before Wednesday were from the seventh inning on.

David Ross, starting because catcher Brian McCann was rested, had three doubles and an RBI.

Miller gave up four run, four hits and four walks in three innings as the Marlins lost their fourth straight. He has allowed four or more runs in five straight starts, going 0-5 with a 12.74 ERA in that span.

Atlanta, bouncing back from a 4-5 trip, went ahead 4-0 in the third when Matt Diaz and Derrek Lee walked, Ross doubled to left and Conrad homered into the left-field seats.

Mike Stanton hit an RBI single in the sixth.

Pinch-hitter Freddie Freeman doubled in the ninth and scored on Steven Cishek's bases-loaded walk to Eric Hinske.

Notes: Braves RHP Jair Jurrjens, who hasn't pitched since Sept. 14 because of an injured right knee, threw in the bullpen before the game. Jurrjens said the discomfort was "not as bad" and he may be available to pitch behind rookie RHP Brandon Beachy if needed on Friday. Jurrjens hopes to be available to start if the Braves make the playoffs. "We'll see how it rebounds tomorrow," he said. ... Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez said OF Cameron Maybin felt better on Wednesday but "more than likely" will miss the rest of the season with a lower back injury sustained when he crashed into the wall Tuesday. Rodriguez said Maybin couldn't sleep Tuesday night. ... RHP Takashi Saito (sore right shoulder) also threw in the bullpen and said he's ready to pitch.

Police blotter

Man was burned

at city gas station

A Fayette County man who was burned when a Charleston gasolinepump caught fire was in guarded condition today at a Pittsburghhospital. Christopher Mooney of Montgomery was transferred to theburn unit at Western Pennsylvania Hospital after he was injuredWednesday night while pumping gasoline at an Exxon station onMacCorkle Avenue in Kanawha City.

Fire investigators at the scene of the accident Thursday wereunsure what sparked the fire.

"There's a lot of things that can cause that gas to ignite," saidDavid Erwin of the Charleston Fire Department. "Something as simpleas static electricity can build up and something as simple as layinga hand on your car can cause a discharge."

Erwin said the fire also could have been sparked by a cigaretteor a cell phone.

"If you're standing talking on the cell phone at the same timeyou're filling up your tank, you're creating an inherent problemwith gas vapors," he said.

Nitro taxi driver

reports robbery

A Nitro taxi driver was robbed by one of his passengers, policesaid.

Timothy W. Mills, an employee of Gary's Taxi, picked up twopassengers, a female and a male, in St. Albans at 6:30 a.m.Thursday, said Sgt. Rick Westfall of the Charleston PoliceDepartment.

The woman was dropped off in Jefferson on the way to Charleston,Westfall said.

The remaining passenger told Mills that he would shoot him in thehead if he didn't give him his bag, Westfall said. Mills gave himthe bag, which contained about $200, and jumped out of the car in analley between Hunt Avenue and Florida Street in Charleston, Westfallsaid.

No detailed description of the suspect was available.

Bolton beats Sunderland; Villa held 0-0 by Fulham

Bolton rallied to beat Sunderland 4-1 Saturday and heap more pressure on manager Roy Keane as he took charge of the team for the 100th time, and Aston Villa was held to a 0-0 draw by Fulham in the Premier League.

Johan Elmander scored twice for Bolton, which also got goals from Matthew Taylor and Gary Cahill. Djibril Cisse scored for Sunderland.

"It was very poor again. Individual mistakes have cost us for three of the four goals and obviously it is a very hard one to take again," Keane said. "We are giving teams a helping hand and maybe one or two players lost confidence in the second half."

Villa was unimpressive up front with Gareth Barry squandering three good chances. Goalkeeper Brad Friedel twice denied Fulham's Clint Dempsey as the American didn't concede for a third straight match on his record 167th consecutive Premier League appearance.

Also, Wigan came from behind to beat bottom-place West Bromwich Albion 2-1 and win back-to-back league games for the first time under manager Steve Bruce. Newcomers Stoke and Hull played to a 1-1 draw, while Middlesbrough and Newcastle failed to score in a 0-0 draw in the northeast derby.

Cisse gave Sunderland a perfect start in the 11th minute, scoring off the post after being fed by Steed Malbranque, but Taylor rose above Pascal Chimbonda a few minutes later to meet Gretar Steinsson's cross with a looping header and equalize.

Cahill put Bolton ahead in the 21st when Kevin Davies headed down Andy O'Brien's free kick, and then had referee Chris Foy to thank for keeping the lead intact. Kenwyne Jones headed off the crossbar and Cisse volleyed in the rebound, but Foy disallowed it, ruling that Jones had pushed Jlloyd Samuel.

Slack defending from Danny Collins allowed Bolton to take a 3-1 lead when Elmander scored from a tight angle in the 39th.

Elamander's second goal came in similar fashion in the 55th. Dean Whitehead stumbled over a clearance, allowing Kevin Nolan to feed the Sweden striker to complete a miserable day for Keane, whose side is 18th in the 20-team standings.

"We are very concerned and as manager it's my job to put it right," Keane said.

Villa failed to build on its recent victory over Arsenal and draw against Manchester United and squandered a chance to move into third place.

Ashley Young and Stiliyan Petrov came close several times, but were frustrated by Fulham goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer.

"It's a couple of points dropped no doubt about that," Villa manager Martin O'Neill said. "It was a frustrating day after the great exploits of the last couple of weeks and maybe a bit disappointing. It was a difficult game for us."

Marlon King scored just before halftime for Hull, swiveling and curling in his fourth goal of the campaign. But Hull goalkeeper Boaz Myhill fouled Ricardo Fuller, who converted from the penalty spot in the 73rd.

"We've been robbed by a poor decision," Hull manager Phil Brown said. "It was a very theatrical dive."

West Brom lost a fourth straight match despite Ishmael Miller scoring the club's first goal in 344 minutes in the 47th after Wigan defender Titus Bramble failed to clear.

West Brom's Paul Robinson failed to pick up Henri Camara's run and Emile Heskey was able to put the ball back into the striker's path to equalize in the 61st.

With three minutes left, Emmerson Boyce scored Wigan's winner when he headed home a corner from substitute Jason Koumas.

Newcastle moved out of the relegation zone with its point at Middlesbrough, a day after manager Joe Kinnear was given a contract until the end of the season.

In foggy conditions, Obafemi Martins hit the crossbar for Newcastle in the 35th, while Magpies goalkeeper Shay Given saved well from Justin Hoyte with 15 minutes left.

On Sunday, Chelsea hosts an Arsenal side in disarray as it bids to break away from Liverpool at the top the standings, with the Reds not in action until Monday against West Ham.

Also Sunday, Portsmouth hosts Blackburn and Everton is at Tottenham.

In the second-tier League Championship, Birmingham missed a chance to close the gap on leader Wolverhampton Wanderers when the teams drew 1-1 at Molineux.

Pursuing Upper Functions

Sportswear shows evolution in three directions: (1) the challenge to records and the limits of the self; (2) health-oriented sports; and (3) self-expression by sports mix. As for the "challenge to records and the limits of the self," a shift to high functions as competition wear and moves to pursue "upper functions" are also visible.

In the case of short-distance races and swimming as well, a high degree of functions have become imperative for sportswear in order to shorten 0.01 second. As for "health-oriented sports," people consider sports as the means to attain satisfaction in the aspect of mentality. This is where people call the "wellness market." As for the "self-expression by sports mix," lifestyle product groups have expanded and they have taken firm hold. People request sportswear as wear to express their lifestyle rather than as sports-oriented wear.

Sports have spread deeply into the living scene of a wide spectrum of people and each individual has a unique way to enjoy sports in the region of "an individual." The product planning of sportswear takes two directions: the pursuit of "functional properties" and the pursuit of "sensitivity." The combination and fusion of these two directions are most like to become visible from now on.

Ichiro Yoshii, General Manager, Polyester Filament Division, Asahi Kasei Fibers Corporation has defined "fusion and cross conditioning" as the theme of the development of active wear materials for the spring/summer 2006 season.

This definition refers to four sets of crossings: (1) dry � cool, (2) soft � airy, (3) fit � support and (4) wind � rain. (1) refers to comfort materials with perspiration-absorbing / quick drying and UV (ultraviolet rays)-cut properties, which the company's sophisticated polyester yarn "Technofine" can achieve. The combination of "Technofine" and "Cupro" further enhances moisture-absorbing/releasing property and comfortability.

(2) refers to the pursuit of lightweight, compactness and comfortability, which the company's lightweight woven fabric "Impact" can achieve. (3) refers to high function stretch made of the company's spandex "Roica" and PTT (polytrimethylene terephthalate) fiber "Solotex". PTT fiber is a variation of polyester, but offers form stability surpassing polyester, softness like nylon plus stretchability. It is dyeable under normal and high pressures and the option has expanded in the aspect of dyeing.

This is the way of manufacturing athletic wear, swimwear and fitness wear at Asahikasei, but the company is also developing a new application called "lifestyle casualwear."

(4) refers to weather control materials that fuse windproof, moisture permeable and water repellent functions. The company's fabric that utilizes 66-nylon brand "Leona" has expanded variations.

Concrete and Understandable Functions

Yasunari Hotani, Team Leader, Sports Fabrics Team, Sports & Intimate & Lining Textiles Sales Department, Teijin Fibers Limited will review the past trend of the sportswear market and propose "concrete and understandable functions" and "designable functions."

Hotani says he wants to use the power of textile materials to show the direction (vector) of new sports and lifestyles. It has become important to have sportswear that people can choose freely to match individual lifestyles and feelings to satisfy the way of enjoying sports deeply rooted in the living environment, an orientation toward health, healing-oriented mentality and the way of wearing sportswear with a sense of street wear.

Teijin has chosen a highly breathable woven fabric as its priority promotion material. This fabrics offers a higher degree of breathability than conventional woven fabrics and shows excellent perspiration-absorbing property. Some knits appealed to high breathability, but a woven fabric appealing to breathability gives fresh impression. This fabrics called "AirImpression" offers high breathability of 150 cc/cm^sup 2^ just like cotton polo shirts, even though this is polyester. Even so, the texture is not coarsewoven. This fabric offers high breathability with a sufficient density of woven fabrics. Teijin has acquired the process patent for this fabric.

Naoto Yoshida, Manager, Apparel Textiles Department, Toyobo Co., Ltd. has carried out the development of products by extensively utilizing varied cooling theory based on an axis of sports comfort science theory. It takes three directions: (1) to release body heat effectively; (2) to lower the feel of the skin temperature; and (3) to shut the heat from the outside. (1) refers to "water-absorbing/releasing and heat releasing" functions to accelerate the heat of vaporization, "breathable / heat-releasing" functions obtainable by materials with less fluffs, "ventilating/heat-releasing" functions by means of the fluttering effect of wear and "heatconductive / heat-releasing" functions by means of materials with a high degree of heat flow. (2) refers to the function to "lower the humidity within clothing" to reduce the humidity inside clothing by absorbing "perspiration in the gaseous phase." (3) refers to the function to cut heat radiation (infrared rays) by means of materials to cut infrared rays.

Monday, March 12, 2012

President gives ABC's The View its best interview - EVER

Barack Obama spent an hour with the ladies of "The View" last week, much to the chagrin of many stuffy old media types who felt that the office would be 'diminished' by the president spending time with a bunch of female talking heads. The results of the interview itself were not shocking. President Obama was his typical affable if not a little stiff self, and he answered questions with grace, sincerity and when he could humor. The truly shocking part of the of interview was that the depth and variety of questions offered the president were SO much better than much of what we've heard from the 'mainstream' press throughout much of the year.

One of the largest challenges that anyone has observed that has faced Obama is the fact that he seems to be criticized no matter what he does. No matter what he is selling, or for how much or how long the press, both the right and the moderate left seem to want to take a pound of flesh from him every time he is on the air. To be fair, his record of failures, mistakes or even out and out lies is not insignificant.

Guantanamo Bay is stil! up and running un-abated. the Afghanistan War is continuing with no end of slowdown in troop deaths in sight, he's maintained just about all of George Bush's Orwellian security measures from wire-tapping to secret prisons, and let's not forget about Shirley Sherrod.

But these are things that most people, with any degree of political sophistication should have expected. There was no way that Obama was going to give away all of the extra-constitutional toys that Bush had left him under the presidential Christmas tree, and we will be committed to wars and occupations in the middle east for at least another decade.

However, these are not the issues that the president is often criticized about, these are not the issues that drive much of the nightly news coverage, even though they represent clear examples of him either breaking campaign promises or it least failing to go through with them in any meaningful way. Instead Obama gets press criticism for the very things that he's actually accomplished even though they might not have gone as far as many on the left in particular would have liked. When you consider the president has been in office for about 18 months he has done much of what he said he would do.

He passed a stimulus package that has saved millions of jobs if not created new ones (that's subject to debate), he passed a health care bill (that still empowers insurance companies but at least covers more people), he passed Wall Street and Financial reform (which didn't actually change who's in power but gives the government greater leeway to sue them) and lastly he took over and revamped the autoindustry (which by all accounts has done better and has been more profitable since). Not a bad legislative resume for only 1 8 months in office, something that! think objective supporters and adversaries of the president would have to admit off the record.

Ironically, while the talking head press continues to cut through the minutia of these grander bills the oft maligned ladies of "The View" managed to ask the president simple pressing questions that actually matter to most Americans. They asked him what he thought was best about his job, they asked him what mistakes he had made, why his polls numbers were still low and what he planned to do to fix the 9.7 percent unemployment rate.

Aren't these the kinds of questions that regular people want to hear answers to? PersonaJly 1 find it infinitely more informative to hear the president explain how and why he promoted the stimulus package than see the umpteenth video of a screaming Tea Party member on Fox. MSNBC or CNN.

Both "The View" and the president were rewarded for their creative experiment, the show got 6.6 million viewers, the highest ratings ever for a daytime talk show and proba*bly the highest ratings Obama has received for anything in months. The hope is that perhaps seeing the success of this format that he will do more in the future. While journalists may have decried the format he chose every once in awhile it's good to hear a president just answer questions from regular people. and get to give full responses.

The mainstream cable networks shouldn't be so possessive of their presidential interviews, what are they afraid of, that the regular public might prefer straight answers to constant interpretations'? Perish the thought.

[Author Affiliation]

Jason Johnson Ix an assodine professor of political science and communications ai Hiram College in Ohio, where lie teaches courses in campaigns and elections, pop culture and the politica of sports.

McDonald's Drops Rapper From Tour

NEW YORK - Rapper Twista, who was tapped by McDonald's to perform during its nationwide concert series, has been dropped from the lineup because of his "controversial lyrics," the fast food giant said Monday.

The Chicago rapper is better known for his lightning-fast rap delivery than particularly raunchy content: His hits include "Slow Jamz," with Kanye West and Jamie Foxx, and "Overnight Celebrity." However, he does use explicit language and reference drugs in his some of his rhymes.

McDonald's, which initially signed the rapper to perform in Chicago for its 10-city concert series, said it could no longer support Twista for the Aug. 7 performance.

"Although we respect free speech and artistic expression, we do not condone or perpetuate derogatory language," said spokesman William Whitman in a statement. "We want to ensure these free concerts are fun as well as appropriate for all of our customers."

When asked why they booked the rapper, given his content, the company referred back to the statement.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Twista said that in some ways, he was surprised by the announcement, "especially after hearing from certain people that represented McDonald's that they were fans of the music and they were excited about the whole thing and that they backed me, and then to hear a few a days later that I was actually not on the show."

However, he blamed the increased criticism of hip-hop in the wake of the racial flap over former CBS radio and MSNBC broadcaster Don Imus for putting pressure on the corporate giant to drop him from the series.

"They started hearing things ... feeling like they were getting a little flak, and I felt like rather than stick by me and stick through it, they got scared," he said. "I've been rapping the same way for 15 years. It only became a problem when Don Imus said something negative about black women and they needed a scapegoat."

After Imus was fired for calling the Rutgers University women's basketball team "nappy-headed hos," some critics decried what they considered a double standard for rappers who often use derogatory terms about women. Increased pressure was put on rappers and record labels to clean up offensive content.

Twista said that typically, when he performs at events that are more mainstream and that attract kids, he cleans up his lyrics, and had intended to do so for the Chicago performance.

"I was actually going to have a school with a choir come sing the song 'Hope' with me. So now ... McDonald's have to tell the kids that they can't perform."

---

On the Net:

McDonald's Live Tour: http://www.mcdlive.com

Twista: http://www.twistamusic.com

Ferguson focusing on Barcelona trio ahead of final

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — With the Premier League title almost won, Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson is working on a game plan to stifle Barcelona trio Lionel Messi, Andres Iniesta and Xavi Hernandez in the Champions League final.

Man United was completely outclassed when Barcelona won 2-0 in the 2009 final, and Ferguson is looking to avenge that loss at Wembley Stadium on May 28 to deliver the club's fourth European Cup.

"In the final last time we started off really well, then gave away a bad goal. After that, Barcelona kept the ball very well, as they always do," Ferguson told American satellite radio station Sirius XM on Monday. "What we have to do is find a solution to the Xavi-Messi-Iniesta problem. Everyone is searching for that because they are outstanding footballers.

"We have our share, too. We have players who can cause any team a lot of bother, and hopefully those attacking players will give Barcelona problems that everyone thinks they are going to give us."

Ferguson is frustrated that United has been criticized this season for lacking star quality, despite the team being a point away from winning a record 19th English league title and reaching the Champions League final for the third time in four years.

"Everyone has said this is not a good Manchester United team, that we are not this or that. But we have scored more goals than anyone else (in England)," Ferguson said. "Our home form has been magnificent. We are undefeated in Europe. We are in the Champions League final and we will win the league by getting one more point.

"You have to put all the criticism to one side because I have to be realistic when I look at my team and ask, 'Am I satisfied?' Those players have given me everything."

Some of them will be able to take a two-week break from playing before the final if United earns at least a point against Blackburn on Saturday to win the Premier League with a game to spare.

THE JORDAN WATCH

UPDATE: Jordan went 0-for-3 in Scottsdale's 9-4 loss to Chandler onthe penultimate day of the Arizona Fall League. As the designatedhitter, Jordan struck out swinging in the third, reached base on afielder's choice in the fifth, then stole second base and scored on asingle. He struck out swinging in the seventh inning and waspinch-hit for in the ninth. SEASON TO DATE: Jordan is batting .252 (31-for-123) with 24 runs,four doubles, one triple, no home runs, eight RBI, 16 walks, 34strikeouts and six stolen bases in 10 attempts. He has 44 putouts,one assist and two errors in the outfield.

Containing the nuclear menace

Some people feel that a Senate-approved bill to establish acentralized storage facility for spent-nuclear fuel in Nevada is thewrong answer to the nation's nuclear waste problem.

No one disputes that a problem exists. However, this is anexcellent bill that is backed by Republicans and Democrats, includingSen. Carol Moseley-Braun and Sen. Paul Simon. It also has thesupport of state and local government officials, and business andlabor. In particular, electricity consumers in Illinois wouldbenefit greatly if the House passes the measures and PresidentClinton signs it into law.

Nuclear power supplies 54 percent of the electricity generatedin Illinois. Since 1983, consumers of nuclear-generated electricityin the state have paid $731 million into the federal Nuclear WasteFund to finance nuclear waste management. Nationally, nearly $12billion has gone into the waste fund, but the U.S. Department ofEnergy has little to show for all of the money it has spent over theyears to establish a permanent underground repository for nuclearwaste.

In fact, the opening date for a waste repository is still whatit was in 1983: 16 years away.

Further delay poses a potential danger to public safety, sincethe water pools for spent fuel storage at nuclear power plants werenot designed to hold indefinitely large numbers of used fuel rods.Congress recognized that when it passed the 1982 Nuclear Waste PolicyAct. Last month, a federal appeals court ruled that the act requiresthe federal government to start accepting the spent fuel on Jan. 31,1998.

The Senate-passed bill provides a solution. It directs theEnergy Department to develop a centralized storage facility as atemporary measure until an underground high-level waste repository isoperating, and a transportation network to safely move spent fuelfrom nuclear power plants.

Yet opponents insist that designating the Nevada Nuclear TestSite as the interim waste storage site, as the bill effectively does,will undermine the ongoing evaluation work to determine if nearbyYucca Mountain is a suitable place for a permanent repository.

Never mind that electric utility rate payers - not taxpayers -have paid money into the Nuclear Waste Fund for the sole purpose ofhigh-level nuclear waste disposal. Leave aside the fact that theprogram has used roughly half of the fund to date, leaving a balanceof about $6 billion for use to develop an integrated approach tospent fuel management. It is disingenuous for critics to say thatfinancial resources are not available to complete a scientific studyof Yucca Mountain and develop an interim storage facility at the sametime.

Critics also are perpetuating the false assertion that enactmentof the bill will prejudice the Yucca Mountain decision. The fact is,scientific and environmental consideration of the central storagefacility and waste repository are separate activities under the bill.Both facilities are subject to separate environmental impactstatements and public hearings, and both require separate licensingprocedure by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Most importantly, the Senate bill prohibits construction of thestorage facility at the Nevada Test site until after a viabilityassessment of Yucca Mountain has been submitted to the president.

Opponents seeking to obstruct the establishment of facilitiesfor the centralized storage and permanent disposal of high-levelnuclear waste ignore the reality that maintaining spent fuelindefinitely at more than 70 nuclear plants sites around the countryincreases the risk and is extremely costly. Nuclear plants such asSquad Cities, Byron and Clinton were not designed to be wasterepositories.

Besides, doing nothing compounds the problem; it does not solveanything.

If we do not fix the problem, electricity consumers will paytwice: once to the federal government, then again for continuingon-site storage of spent fuel at nuclear power plants. And we willbe left with de facto high-level nuclear waste sites throughoutIllinois and the rest of the country.

The Clinton administration should keep in mind the seriousnessof the situation - the threat to public safety from indefinitestorage of spent fuel in densely populated areas, the threat to theeconomy if electricity generating plants are forced to close, thethreat to our nation's credibility if we continue to sidestep theproblem - and recognize that we have the technology to dispose ofnuclear waste safety. The only wise course is for the House to passa companion nuclear waste bill and for President Clinton to sign it.

Barclay G. Jones is professor and head of the department ofnuclear engineering at the University of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign.

The people's welfare and the origins of corporate reorganization: The Wabash receivership reconsidered

The 1884 receivership of the Wabash, St. Louis, and Pacific Railway is widely regarded as a turning point in the development of corporate insolvency law. It is said to have created a "new-fashioned receivership," which enabled debtors to initiate and, to a great extent, control receiverships. It is said that these new-fashioned receiverships facilitated reorganization of the insolvent firm at the expense of creditors' rights. An examination of the history of railroad receiverships reveals that for decades before 1884 judges allowed managers to initiate receiverships, appointed managers as receivers, and forced creditors to accept changes in their contractual rights. Judges also refused to extend reorganization procedures to corporations outside the railroad industry, justifying their special treatment of railroads on the grounds that the foremost obligation of railroads was to serve the public. Analysis of railroad bond prices supports the conclusion that creditors' rights were not transformed by the courts in the mid-1880s.

Historians have devoted considerable attention to railroads, not just because of their immense scale and their impact on transportation costs, but also because of their influence on corporate organization, management, finance, and the law.' One area of the law that was transformed by railroads is debtor-creditor law. In 1894, 20 percent of all railroad mileage in the United States was in the hands of receivers.2 Five years later, Edward Meade declared: "The reorganization of American railways is a more noteworthy financial achievement than the payment of the French indemnity or the refunding of the United States debt."3 The insolvency of railroads in the nineteenth century presented novel problems. Their corporate form of organization, their size, and their importance to the public all militated against the piecemeal liquidation provided for by traditional creditors' remedies. Instead of liquidation, courts put insolvent railroads into the hands of receivers, to be reorganized rather than dismantled. In the 1930s, Congress grafted onto the Bankruptcy Act the procedures that courts had developed to deal with insolvent railroads.4 Nineteenth-century railroad receiverships are thus noteworthy not only because of the scale on which they occurred but because they are the source of bankruptcy reorganization law in the United States.

Nineteenth-century legal treatises typically defined a receiver as "an indifferent person between the parties to a cause, appointed by the court to receive and preserve the property or fund in litigation pendente lite, when it does not seem reasonable to the court that either party should hold it."5 How did this legal procedure, originally developed to preserve disputed assets, become a means by which managers could seek to reorganize an insolvent corporation? One possible explanation is that in the late nineteenth century the receivership underwent a revolution that paved the way for modern reorganizations by introducing a new-fashioned receivership.6 In traditional receiverships, creditors sought a receiver to help them obtain the maximum value from the assets of an insolvent corporation.7 In new-fashioned receiverships, debtors could initiate and, to a great extent, control reorganizations, which were undertaken to rehabilitate the insolvent firm rather than simply to protect creditors' rights. The new-fashioned receivership is generally thought to have originated with the 1884 receivership of the Wabash, St. Louis, and Pacific Railway.8

A different view of the origins of corporate reorganization, presented here, holds that there was no revolution and that there was nothing new in the new-fashioned receivership. The Wabash receivership should be viewed as an example of continuity rather than of change. Every important feature of the Wabash had a precedent. Judges were remarkably consistent in their treatment of insolvent railroads throughout the nineteenth century. Although they often stated the importance of protecting contractual rights, they emphasized that this would not be done at the expense of the public. This interpretation of railroad receiverships has much in common with other recent studies of the relation between law and business in the nineteenth century.' These studies call into question narrow economic interpretations of American legal history and suggest that the common law maxims salus populi suprema lex est (the welfare of the people is the supreme law) and sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedes (use your own so as not to injure another) often held the preeminent place in judges' decisions.

The Receivership of the Wabash, St. Louis, and Pacific Railway

The Wabash, St. Louis, and Pacific Railway was widely known to be in poor financial condition by May of 1884.10 Moreover, notes on part of its floating debt were to come due in late May and June. Some of these notes had been personally endorsed by Jay Gould, president of the Wabash, and by Russell Sage, Sidney Dillon, and Solon Humphreys, all directors of the railway. On May 28, Humphreys, a shareholder, a director, and the former president of the Wabash, entered the United States district court in St. Louis, informed Judge Samuel Treat that the railroad was on the verge of insolvency, and asked that a receiver be appointed to administer it. No creditors of the corporation were before the court. The company was the complainant and named ninety defendants, including the trustees of its general mortgage and the trustees of underlying mortgages. It declared that neither a cessation of operations nor the dismantling of the system would be in the interests of the creditors or of the public. Furthermore, it asked that Humphreys and James Tutt, a St. Louis banker, be appointed as the receivers. Judge Treat consulted with Judge Nathaniel Shipman, a United States district court judge in Connecticut. When Judge Shipman approved of the action, Judge Treat consulted with David Brewer, the senior circuit judge, who also approved of the plan. Because such appointments were usually made by the circuit judge, Brewer signed the order.11

Although three federal judges had approved the procedure before it was put into effect, the legitimacy of the receivership did not go undisputed. In 1886, Judge Gresham of the Seventh Circuit Court removed the original receivers, Humphreys and Tutt, of their possession of lines east of the Mississippi, on the grounds that they were not impartial parties.12 In December 1886, Brewer and Treat defended the original appointment of Humphreys and Tutt and assailed the lack of comity displayed by the Seventh Circuit Court.13 They instructed Humphreys and Tutt to turn over to Thomas Cooley, the receiver Gresham had appointed, possession of all lines east of the Mississippi, and the books and accounts related to them, but to retain all the money and rolling stock that were not part of the mortgaged lines east of the Mississippi.

Despite attacks, both in and out of court, the Wabash was eventually reorganized in 1889. The plan called for first-mortgage bondholders to exchange their old bonds, averaging 7 percent interest, for new blanket first-mortgage bonds bearing 5 percent interest. Second-mortgage bonds were likewise exchanged for blanket second-mortgage bonds bearing 5 percent.14 Jay Gould retained control of the reorganized railroad.

It was not until 1892, three years after the reorganization had been consummated, that cases involving the Wabash receivership reached the Supreme Court. The case of Quincy, Missouri and Pacific Railroad Co. v. Humphreys, 145 U.S. 82 (1892), involved questions of the obligation of railroad receivers to pay rent for lines leased prior to their appointment. Chief Justice Fuller began his opinion by describing the principle upon which the receiver was appointed. He observed, "The bill was obviously framed upon the theory that an insolvent railroad corporation has a standing in a court of equity to surrender its property into the custody of the court, to be preserved and disposed of according to the rights of its various creditors, and, in the meantime, operated in the public interest." He also pointed out that one of the counsels opposing the Wabash had described the bill as "without precedent," but he declared that the Court did not need to address that issue. 15 He agreed with the counsels opposing the railroad that it would be "dangerous in the extreme" to give the managers of a railroad the power to issue certificates that had priority over lien holders, but he observed that this had not been done. The receivers had no discretion to issue receivers' certificates but were merely the instruments of the court that had directed the issue of receivers' certificates.

Like many of Jay Gould's activities, the receivership of the Wabash was attacked in the popular and financial press as well as in the courts.16 Bradstreet wondered if the federal judiciary was actually just Jay Gould's law department.17 In August, when the New York Times reported on Gould's proposals for reorganizing the Wabash, it suggested of the Wabash bondholders that "the treatment they are getting may be taken as a sample of what other Gould bonds will get when their turn comes."18

Criticism was not restricted to the popular or financial press but extended to law reviews as well. An 1885 Central Law journal article asked, "What equity has a man who cannot pay his debts to have a court of justice take charge of his property and manage it for the mere purpose of holding his creditors at arm's length?"19 Probably the most cited of the attacks on the Wabash receivership is D. H. Chamberlain's 1896 Harvard Law Review article, "New-Fashioned Receiverships."20 Chamberlain was quite familiar with the Wabash receivership; he had argued against it several times.21 He was one of the attorneys that had sought to have Humphreys and Tutt removed of their possession of the lines east of the Mississippi. He also lost the case before the Supreme Court that disputed the validity of the Wabash receivers' certificates.22 He had declared before the Supreme Court that the appointment was unprecedented, and he elaborated on this theme in his essay on newfashioned receiverships. He denounced the appointment on three grounds: the debtor (not the creditors) had asked for the appointment; the receivers were not disinterested parties; and the interests of the creditors were not the primary concern of the court. He argued that these three features of the receivership were unprecedented and that they deprived creditors of their legal rights and remedies. In what Chamberlain regarded as a traditional receivership, a creditor or group of creditors might ask for the appointment of a receiver to prevent a diminution in the value of the insolvent debtor's assets while the best means to liquidate the estate was being determined. In the newfashioned receivership, the managers of a corporation could ask for a receiver to prevent creditors from exercising their legal rights. They could then force through a reorganization that allowed them to preserve not just the corporation but also their positions within it.

Chamberlain specifically attacked Judge Treat's justification for the appointment. In defense of the original appointment, Judge Treat had explained that the railroad presented a vast system on the verge of bankruptcy and that the corporation had many responsibilities to many groups-a variety of creditors as well as the owners and the public. Furthermore, he argued, "Their primary obligation was to the sovereign who granted them the franchise. They undertook first to pay their dues to the government in the nature of taxes; second they undertook to run a safe operating road,-safe to life and to the transportation of property. Did they do that? Suppose they cannot do it. Then they fall within the judicial administration to compel them to do the best they can. That is all there is to that branch of the inquiry."23 The court had to take into consideration all the interested parties, not just the creditors, and it mattered little who requested the appointment. In Treat's view, a receiver had to be appointed because the foremost obligation of the railroad was to continue to operate.

Judge Treat made the corporation's obligations to the public and to the state the heart of his defense, and Mr. Chamberlain made it the target of his attack. He asked his readers, "Is not the answer to all this obvious and conclusive,-that it is no part of the duty of courts to protect interests of creditors or any other persons or parties, or to enforce duties to the States or the public, except upon due and proper application of the parties or the State." In this case, no one had been before the court except the "defaulting, delinquent corporation." Chamberlain rested his case on the following axiom: "No conception of judicial duty is more clear than that the court must await the coming of the proper suit before exercising its power... courts have no function except to sit still until they are moved by parties having legal rights to assert before them."24

Historians came to agree with Chamberlain's interpretation that the Wabash receivership was unprecedented and that it dealt a blow to creditors' rights. Albro Martin declared that Humphreys' request was made "under a concept of receivership which broke nearly every important precedent of this old branch of equity law."25 Judge Treat's compliance with the request "cast out time honored concepts of the equitable rights of parties," and the equity receivership was "transformed beyond all recognition of what it had been in 1880."26 The receivership was no longer the tool of the creditors but of the managers. Managers were placed in control of the reorganization process, and the preservation of the railroad was placed above its obligations to its creditors. Rather than being an aberration, Wabash is said to have set the standard for the future. Again according to Martin, "The Wabash idea swept all before it, and remains the basis of modern railroad bankruptcy law to this day."27 Gerald Berk has even argued that when Congress enacted the 1898 Bankruptcy Act, "it did so on Wabash principles."28 In his study of the rise of corporations in America, Socializing Capital, William Roy succinctly summarized this view of the Wabash case:

There had been no precedent for receivers to be appointed to a railroad not in default or for managers to be appointed receivers. The prevailing doctrine gave control to creditors and held managers responsible for bankruptcy. The Wabash decision set a precedent by which creditors were stripped of many rights in receivership and the courts gave management the right to reorganize the business under the doctrine that the corporation itself was an entity to be preserved.29

Thus, because the managers of the railway came into court representing the corporation itself, the Wabash receivership can also be seen as part of a transformation of corporate theory in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.30 The corporation was no longer viewed as an association of investors or an artificial entity, but as a natural entity. The managers of corporations became the representatives of these natural entities.31 In short, Wabash is regarded as both the origin of modern corporate reorganization and an important step in the development of the modern corporation.

While there is widespread agreement that the Wabash receivership was unprecedented, there is debate as to why judges would have accepted such a transformation of the law. Chamberlain saw it simply as bad law and a whittling away of creditors' rights.32 Martin has argued that, given the importance of the railroads to the public, judges had no other choice than to accept the new-fashioned receivership.33 Berk has recently argued that the judges did have a choice but were ideologically inclined toward support of large-scale, national businesses.34 Many contemporary observers saw it as just another example of Jay Gould's ability to buy whatever he wanted, including federal judges.

I show that judges generally accepted the Wabash and similar receiverships because they were consistent with a long line of decisions on insolvent railroads. All the important features of the Wabash had precedents. Moreover, the Wabash receivership was consistent with the principle that had governed railroad law since the 1840s: the primary obligation of a railroad was not to its creditors or stockholders but to the public. Creditors took whatever claims they had subject to this constraint.

Railroad Receiverships and the Public Interest

Three features of the Wabash receivership are said to mark it off from previous receiverships: submission of the request by the debtor rather than by a creditor; the appointment of interested parties as receivers; and its secondary focus on the protection of creditors' interests. All three were in fact common features of railroad receiverships prior to 1884 and were defended by judges as responses to the quasipublic nature of railroads.

The first feature of the Wabash receivership that Chamberlain attacked was the source of the request for its creation: the debtor corporation rather than its creditors. It is thus ironic that, in one of the earliest railroad receiverships in the United States, the request for a receiver was made by the corporation. In 1845, the Munroe Railway Company, owner of a Georgia railway of approximately one hundred miles in length, filed a bill for the general liquidation of the corporation, and a receiver was appointed. The railroad was reorganized and operated under the name of the Macon and Western Railway.35

One of the railroad's creditors later challenged the appointment of the receiver, but the appointment was upheld by the Supreme Court of Georgia in 1851. In that court's opinion, written by Judge Lumpkin, it was a well-accepted practice in chancery that an executor or administrator of an insolvent debtor's estate may obtain a receivership restraining creditors from prosecuting their claims.36 This restraint would apply to all creditors, not just to those who may have participated in the request. Lumpkin asked, "What disastrous consequences would have resulted, if each judgement creditor had been allowed to seize and sell separate portions of the road, at different sales in the six different Counties through which it passed and to different purchasers! Would not this valuable property have been utterly sacrificed-the rights and interests of the creditors as well as the objects and intentions of the Legislature in granting this charter entirely defeated?"37 Thus the appointment was not just to benefit the creditors but also to protect the public.

Lumpkin's interpretation of equity jurisprudence stands in stark contrast to that offered by Chamberlain. In Lumpkin's view, the matter of who approached the court was of little concern because receivership proceedings had always affected individuals who did not participate in the request for the proceedings. Furthermore, the objective of equity was to protect all interested parties, not just the creditors who had participated in the request, or even just the creditors as a whole. In particular, the court had to consider the interests of the legislature, which granted the charter, and the public, which depended upon the railroad. The corporation existed by virtue of its charter, which had been granted by the state of Georgia. It had received this charter to serve the people of that state. Judge Lumpkin declared, "This precedent will stand out in bold relief, as a landmark for future adjudication."38

Justice Lumpkin's prediction about the precedent turned out to be prescient. In an 1858 United States Supreme Court opinion, which upheld the appointment of a receiver over a drawbridge in Indiana, Justice Catron declared that "the subject was well examined by the Supreme Court of Georgia in the case of the Macon and Western Railroad Company v. Parker," and he quoted approvingly from Judge Lumpkin's opinion "that the whole of equity jurisprudence does not present a case which made the interposition of its powers not only highly expedient, but so indispensably necessary in adjusting the rights of creditors to an insolvent estate as this did."39 In his Practical Treatise on the Law of Railways, Isaac Redfield, the chief justice of the Supreme Court of Vermont, also cited Lumpkin as an authority on the question of whether a railroad could be sold piecemeal to satisfy its creditors.40

Even if the Munroe Railway receivership was just a curious anomaly, it would be misleading to suggest that corporations had been unable to obtain the appointment of a receiver when they desired one. The use of a friendly creditor was a practice of long standing in AngloAmerican debtor-creditor law. Like the equity receivership, bankruptcy in both the United States and England began as a creditor-initiated proceeding. Even after the discharge of the debtor was introduced into English bankruptcy law in 1705, debtors were unable to commence a bankruptcy proceeding themselves. The first U.S. bankruptcy law, enacted in 1800, did not provide for a voluntary bankruptcy petition.41 With the lure of a discharge at hand, it was not long before a solution was discovered: the "friendly creditor."42 All a debtor needed was one creditor who would agree to institute the case, and all other creditors would be blocked from proceeding outside of bankruptcy.

The practice of initiating proceedings through a friendly creditor was not isolated to bankruptcy cases but was also a common practice in the administration of the estates of insolvent decedents.43 By the 1880s, the practice was thoroughly established in railroad receiverships. In March 1884, a federal court not only upheld such a friendly receivership but also declared of the collusion that it was "frequently and properly the course in cases of this kind."44 Even after the Wabash case, the use of a friendly creditor remained the most common means by which the managers of a corporation obtained the appointment of a receiver. In the early twentieth century, the use of the friendly creditor was considered the standard practice for an insolvent railroad that wished its property to be placed under a receivership.45

Clearly, the appointment of a receiver at the behest of a corporation did not originate with the Wabash case, but what of the appointment of corporate insiders as receivers? Chamberlain argued that a receiver was to be a disinterested party. In this area he had a great deal of support from legal scholars. Legal treatises routinely referred to receivers as disinterested parties.46 Nonetheless, judges routinely appointed company insiders as receivers of railroads. The Vermont Central Railway is a case in point. The Vermont Central spent most of the late nineteenth century in receivership (1855-84). When it became insolvent in the 1850s, J. Gregory Smith, the president of the company, was appointed as one of the receivers. When the railroad went into receivership again in the 1890s, E. C. Smith, son of J. Gregory Smith and president of the company at the time, was appointed receiver.47

The Vermont Central was not an isolated case. Henry Swain examined 150 railroad receiverships that took place from 1870 to 1898 and discovered that insiders had been appointed in 138 of these cases. The president of the railroad was appointed in eighty cases, the general manger in twenty-five cases, superintendents in seventeen cases, and vice presidents in sixteen cases.48 In 1874, the president of the Erie was appointed as its receiver; in 1875, the president of the Northern Pacific was appointed as its receiver; and in 1880, the president of the Philadelphia and Reading was appointed as one of the receivers of that road.49 On a smaller scale, the president of the Montgomery and Eufala Railway Co. had been appointed as its receiver in 1872, and one of the directors of the Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Lafayette Railroad was appointed receiver of that corporation in 1870.50 Swain stated that the appointment of a company insider was often the most controversial aspect of receiverships, but judges felt they had no other choice.51

judge Brewer clearly believed that appointing an insider was not only appropriate but probably also necessary in the case of a railroad. In defending the appointment of Humphreys and Tutt, he explained: "Mr. Humphreys was named to the court by not only the mortgagor, but by the mortgagees in the general mortgage, and indorsed by a large majority of the trustees in all the mortgages. Doubtless he was suggested to them by reason of his long connection with and knowledge of the affairs of the road, and by his large experience in railroad matters."52

Not surprisingly, review of the major failures that occurred in the wake of the panic of 1873 reveals a pattern of reorganizations initiated and directed by managers. For example, in May 1874, Hugh Jewett, president of the Erie, was appointed its temporary receiver at the behest of the attorney general of New York. The following month, the Farmers' Loan and Trust Co. requested that Jewett be made the permanent receiver, in what the court described as a friendly motion.' The reorganization plan eventually adopted for the Erie called on bondholders to forgo some of their interest payments and reduced fixed charges by $600,000.54

The 1874 receivership of the Northern Pacific is a revealing case, not just because of its size and the severity of its failure but also because it is the firm most closely associated with the panic of 1873. Beginning in 1870, Jay Cooke underwrote the issue of Northern Pacific bonds. Unfortunately for Cooke, the Northern Pacific Company was in financial difficulty almost from its inception. The railroad's financial difficulties eventually led to Cooke's failure, and the failure of Jay Cooke and Co. is widely regarded as a precipitant of the panic of 1873.55

The main features of the 1874 Northern Pacific receivership closely resemble those of both the 1845 Munroe receivership and the 1884 Wabash receivership. By 1874, the Northern Pacific was unable to make the interest payments on its bonds. In May 1874, six stockholders and directors of the railroad, including Frederick Billings, a future president of the company, decided to seek a receivership. Because they also owned Northern Pacific bonds, they were able to form a bondholders' committee, which asked Judge Nathaniel Shipman to appoint a receiver. Judge Shipman appointed George Cass, the acting president of the railway, as receiver. The reorganization plan, developed by Billings, called for bondholders to receive significantly altered terms, such as the exchange of bonds for preferred stock. Common stockholders, including Billings and the other directors, exchanged their stock share for share.56

There is another similarity between the Northern Pacific and the Wabash: the involvement of Nathaniel Shipman, the judge whom Samuel Treat had turned to for advice regarding the Wabash receivership. No one familiar with railroad receiverships in the 1870s and 1880s would have been surprised that Shipman supported Treat's actions. In addition to presiding over the Northern Pacific receivership in the 1870s, the judge had appointed Charles P Clark, president of the New York & New England Railroad Company, as its receiver in 1883. As in the Wabash case, the directors of the New York & New England had decided to obtain a receivership before the company actually defaulted. Unlike the Wabash, the request was formally made on behalf of a creditor, Henry Brassey. On December 31, 1883, the directors of the New York & New England requested a receivership on behalf of Brassey, the owner of five New York & New England bonds and a client of one of the directors.57 Shipman later explained, "The directors owed two duties-one to the public, that this road should be kept in running condition so that it could serve the public; the other to the stockholders and to the bondholders, that if possible the property might be kept intact and preserved, so that finally unsecured and secured creditors might be paid and the stock might be saved, and they were called upon to take all proper measures to discharge these two duties." He argued that when the company fell into financial difficulty the idea of a receivership no doubt occurred to the directors: "It would be natural that the idea of protection to the property and benefit to the public through such an instrumentality should have suggested itself.58 In defending the appointments of receivers at the behest of the corporation and the appointment of company insiders as receivers, judges considered the public interest in railroads. As Chamberlain made clear in his attack on the Wabash, this was truly the core of the matter: Whose interests were to be foremost in the receivership? He argued that, before the advent of the new-fashioned receivership, the creditors' interests were foremost. They were the ones with legal rights; they were the ones with the standing to ask for assistance from the courts. However, as early as the 1840s, courts had emphasized that the interest of the public in railroads raised difficult questions about the enforcement of creditors' rights. One of the questions that troubled Judge Lumpkin in the Munroe Railway case was whether or not creditors of a quasi-public corporation, like a railroad, could obtain the franchise as well as the physical assets through foreclosure.

The problem for creditors of a railroad was that a railroad was not just a set of tracks and equipment; it was also a franchise granted by an act of a legislature, which typically guaranteed special privileges in exchange for providing a public service. The quasi-public nature of the corporation raised questions about how this franchise related to the physical assets. Could these special rights and responsibilities be transferred with the physical assets? Judge Lumpkin was inclined to think that creditors did not have the same rights in railroads that they might in other enterprises. He declared, "Whether a railroad is subject to levy and sale at law, is seriously doubted." However, he also declared that the court did not need to decide that issue.

The court did not have to resolve the issue because the Georgia legislature had already done so. In 1847, it settled the issue by "creating Daniel Tyler, the purchaser [of the assets of the Munroe Railway], and his associates, a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of the Macon & Western Railroad Company, and conferring on them all the powers, privileges and immunities of the old company, with the exception of banking."59 However, the question of what rights creditors had in quasi-public corporations continued to trouble judges dealing with insolvent railroads. Like other creditors, the creditors of a railroad had a right to be paid, but the means by which they could enforce that right was a subject of considerable uncertainty.

When Isaac Redfield, the chief justice of Vermont, considered the rights of mortgagees in the 1859 edition of his Practical Treatise on the Law of Railways, he asked, "as the corporate franchises reside in the shareholders, if the mortgagees foreclose, what title do they obtain and how are they to make it available?"60 He warned: "This is a subject of so much importance and difficulty, in this country at least, and so little has yet been decided in regard to it, that we would desire to speak with the utmost circumspection and reserve, and not to be understood as having formed entirely settled opinions ourselves in regard to it."61 Thus, in the late 1850s, the rights of creditors of railroads remained unclear because of the quasi-public nature of railroads.

The case of the Covington Drawbridge provides an important illustration of the problem of the rights of creditors of quasi-public corporations. Unlike the Wabash, a creditor of the drawbridge had sought the appointment of a receiver. Alexander Shepherd had received a judgment of over $6,000 against the drawbridge company and requested that a receiver be appointed to operate the drawbridge and use the tolls to pay this judgment. The receiver was appointed, and the corporation appealed. The counsel for the corporation argued that a receiver should not be appointed because Shepherd had a legal remedy at law: he could execute the judgment on the property of the corporation; the property of the corporation could be sold at auction to satisfy the judgment. Shepherd's attorney argued that it was facetious to suggest such a sale. The manager of the corporation had admitted that the corporation did not own the land on which it stood but had only an easement, and he believed that the franchise to operate a drawbridge over the river would not transfer with the bridge itself. Thus, the purchasers of the corporation's property would obtain a bridge that they "could not lawfully maintain one hour over or upon that public highway, the Wabash river." He cited in support of his argument both the case of the Macon Railway and a North Carolina decision that "the tangible property of a railroad could be sold, but that its franchise could not."62

The Supreme Court upheld the appointment of the receiver for the drawbridge but left the underlying question unanswered. Justice Catron's opinion described the quasi-public nature of the enterprise and pointed out that it had received a franchise from the state legislature to serve the public. He then declared, "The tolls of the bridge being a franchise, and sole right in the corporation and the bridge a mere easement, the corporation not owning the fee in the land at either bank of the river or under the water, it is difficult to say how an execution could attach to either the franchise or the structure of the bridge as real or personal property."63 For the time being, the Court would leave this to the courts of Indiana to settle if it became necessary. Justice Catron declared it sufficient to decide the case by ruling that the court below had the power to appoint a receiver and that it had done so properly.

Later decisions, including those by the Supreme Court, continued to emphasize that creditors did not have the same rights in quasi-public corporations that they did in other enterprises. These judges also made clear that the remedies available to railroads were not available to corporations in general but were restricted to enterprises that were regarded as quasi-public, such as railroads or drawbridges. It would be left to Congress to make reorganization available to all corporations.

The Supreme Court explicitly stated the supremacy of the public interest in railroad receiverships in the case of Barton v. Barbour (1881), three years before the Wabash receivership. The issue to be settled in the case was whether a receiver could be sued for injuries received by a passenger that resulted from the corporation's negligence. The opinion of the Court, delivered by Justice Woods, declared that the receiver could not be sued and provided a broad defense of railroad receiverships. It stated that, in the case of a railroad, "the cessation of business for a day would be a public injury" It went on to explain: "A railroad is authorized to be constructed more for the public good to be subserved, than for private gain. As a highway for public transportation it is a matter of public concern, and its construction and management belong primarily to the Commonwealth, and are only put into private hands to subserve the public convenience and economy." As for the creditors, the Court declared, "They take their rights subject to the rights of the public, and must be content to enjoy them in subordination thereto."64

Even those who disliked the use of receiverships to reorganize railroads had to admit that it was the common practice. In his dissent in Barton v. Barbour, Justice Miller explained that, in his experience, railroad receiverships for the benefit of the creditors, if they had ever existed, were long gone by 1881: "If these receivers had been appointed to sell the roads, collect the means of the companies, and pay their debts, it might have been well enough. But this was hardly ever done. It is never done now. It is not the purpose for which a receiver is appointed." He went on to complain that, in his experience, railroad receivers typically take control of the property and add to the debt, often to the injury of the prior creditors, rather then paying off the debt. Although Justice Miller had an unfavorable view of railroad receiverships, both he and the justices in the majority believed that the protection of creditors was generally not the first priority of railroad receiverships.

In 1883, Chief Justice Waite used his opinion in the case of Canada Southern v. Gebhard as an opportunity to explain why creditors' rights should be made subordinate to those of the public in railroad receiverships. Canada Southern involved an American creditor's appeal against the 1878 Canada Southern Arrangement Act. In Canada the terms of railroad reorganizations were bargained over privately but finalized through legislative acts. Once enacted, the terms of the arrangement became binding on all parties. Gebhard claimed that he had not consented to the arrangement and therefore should be allowed to attempt to satisfy his claims through U.S. courts. In an opinion that ruled against Gebhard, Justice Waite pointed out that the railroad's creditors had knowingly invested in an enterprise established to serve a public purpose and that continuing to serve the public was the foremost duty of the company. He declared that such regulations as the Arrangement Act do not deprive people of due process but "simply require each individual to so conduct himself for the general good as not unnecessarily to injure another."66 In his opinion, Justice Waite relied upon the maxim sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedes. Creditors, like everyone else in society, were limited in the exercise of their rights by the injunction not to harm others unnecessarily.

Justice Waite was also involved in a case that provides one of the most forthright statements of both the importance of the public interest in railroads and the importance attached to maintaining railroad systems intact. Although he did not write the opinion, Waite was one of three judges that heard Skiddy et al. v. Atlantic, M. ds 0. Railway Co. (1879) while he was riding circuit in Virginia. The case involved a request by groups of bondholders of the Atlantic, Mississippi, and Ohio Railway to forbear their interest payments and issue receivers' certificates in order to prevent attempts at foreclosure on certain lines of the system. The request was opposed by the trustees of the first and second mortgages on the Norfolk and Petersburg division of the system. Judge Hodge issued the following opinion:

Paramount ... to the mere pecuniary interest of the bondholders and shareholders in this line of road and its several divisions, are the public interests connected with it. The court is not unmindful of the fact that the commonwealth of Virginia, in bestowing an expenditure of seven or eight millions of dollars upon the roads constituting this line, intended them to be more than local works, and especially intended that the Virginia and Tennessee road should be more than part of a line of north and south transportation for travel and light freights.... Her intention was to construct a line of east and west transportation that would bring the staple products of the Northwest, the West and Southwest across her territory to her principal cities, and at Richmond and Norfolk would place her merchants in connection with the large commercial operations of the world.

He went on to declare that, given the interest of the state and the public in the railroad, to the extent that it could legally do so, "the court will discourage separate accounts and separate sales of foreclosure in this suit; in order that ... it may enter a decree in foreclosure directing a sale of the whole line as one work under which this line of road may be rendered permanently intact and indissoluble."67 It would be difficult to tell creditors more clearly that their rights were not the first concern in the receivership.

While Judge Hughes emphasized the interest of the public, Judge Bond, the district judge, argued that the maintenance of the system was also to the benefit of the investors. In a concurring opinion, he offered as evidence of the success of the receivership the appreciation in bond prices:

The bonds of the second mortgage on the Norfolk and Petersburg division have appreciated since June, 1876, from sixty-eight cents in the dollar to seventy-eight cents. The bonds of the first mortgage of the Norfolk and Petersburg divisional road have appreciated since June, 1876, from about eighty-six cents in the dollar to about ninety cents. Certain other of the bonds secured on divisional roads have risen as much as thirty cents in the dollar since June, 1876, when the receivers took charge of the consolidated line.

He went on to explain:

The experience of all railroad management, in this country and elsewhere, is, that lines of a road broken into parts under disjointed management, cannot be conducted with economy, efficiency, or success; and are incompetent to compete with rival lines for the business of the country.68

In the view of Judge Bond, and others, the preservation of the system was not only necessary to protect the public; it was necessary to protect the creditors.69

Railroad bondholders also saw their contractual rights altered in cases involving receivers' certificates. Receivers' certificates were one of the most contentious issues in railroad receiverships. Beginning in the early 1870s, courts sometimes empowered receivers to issue certificates in order to borrow funds necessary for operating the railroad. Some of these certificates had priority even over first mortgage bonds. Opinions involving receivers' certificates demonstrate the emphasis that judges placed on protecting the public. They also demonstrate that judges allowed receivers' certificates based on the quasipublic nature of railroads rather than on their status as corporations or as large enterprises.

In one of the earliest decisions in support of the use of receivers' certificates, Meyer v. Johnston (1875), the Alabama Supreme Court relied upon a public interest justification. The Court declared that neither it nor other courts had been forced to determine the extent of a receiver's powers before: "But these properties with their appurtenances, vast in extent and value, yet very perishable if unused and neglected, existing as the estate of private individuals associated into corporations, but essentially public works, in whose operations the public and the state are concerned, when drawn into litigation must be dealt with by the courts according to the nature and circumstances of the subject."70 Like the earlier opinions written by Judge Lumpkin and Justice Catron and the later opinions written by Judge Treat, the Alabama Court emphasized the importance of protecting not just the creditors but also the public and the state.

The U.S. Supreme Court expressed similar views regarding receivers' certificates. In Wallace v. Loomis (1877), the Court upheld the issuance of receivers' certificates with priority over mortgage bonds.71 In 1886, the Court decided a group of cases in which bondholders of the Illinois Midland Railway Company disputed the priority given to receivers' certificates of the insolvent railroad. In his opinion for the Court, Justice Blatchford pointed out that a railroad was peculiar in several ways. He first observed that, unlike a piece of land, a railroad would lose much of its value if left idle. Even more important, however, was the fact that a railroad was a matter of public concern. Justice Blatchford declared:

The franchises and rights of the corporation which constructed it were given not merely for private gain to the corporators, but to furnish a public highway; and all persons who deal with the corporation as creditors or holders of its obligations, must necessarily be held to do so in the view, that, if it falls into insolvency and its affairs come into a court of equity for adjustment, involving the transfer of its franchises and property, by a sale, into other hands, to have the purposes of its creation still carried out, the court, while in charge of the property, has the power, and, under some circumstances, it may be its duty, to make such repairs as are necessary to keep the road and its structures in a safe and proper condition to serve the public.72

There were no dissenting opinions in the case.

Similar to the Supreme Court's views on receivers' certificates were its views on the priority given to the repayment of certain unsecured loans to railroads. In Turner et al. v. Indianapolis, B. and W Railway Co. et al. (1878), a federal appeals court upheld the priority of certain unsecured loans, and in Fosdick v. Schall (1879), the Supreme Court upheld the priority of unsecured loans that were necessary for the maintenance of the railroad.73 When the issue arose in the Wabash case, Judge Brewer explained:

For underlying the rule which the supreme court has laid down in respect to the payment, by receivers when they take possession of railroad property, of prior unsecured debts recently accrued, runs the thought, as expressed by the supreme court, that a railroad corporation owes a duty to the public which has given it its franchise and enabled it to construct its road; the duty of operating that road for the benefit of the public.74

The distinction between quasi-public corporations, like railroads, and other corporations was also made explicit in the special treatment given to railroad receivers' certificates. Only the certificates issued by receivers of railroads were given priority over secured debt by the courts. Receivers' certificates of other types of corporations were not so privileged.75 Most states passed legislation that put the problem of insolvent corporations into courts of equity and empowered the courts to appoint receivers to oversee the liquidation of the firm.76 Receivers were appointed for insolvent corporations in manufacturing, mining, and trade, but these receivers were not allowed to issue certificates with priority over secured creditors. Receivers of private corporations were expected to liquidate the firm's assets and distribute them among the creditors, in contrast to railroad receiverships whose primary objective was to continue to operate the road. Decisions rejecting attempts by receivers of purely private corporations to issue receivers' certificates emphasized that the difference between the two was the quasi-public nature of railroads.77 The courts declared it their duty to protect the contractual rights of creditors, a duty that was only outweighed by the interest of the public in the case of railroads.78 The issuance of receivers' certificates to facilitate the reorganization of an insolvent corporation in manufacturing required the consent of all the creditors.79 Denial of the right to issue receivers' certificates made clear that rehabilitation of the firm was not yet the primary goal in the case of industrial receiverships.

Although the courts continued to distinguish between railroad and other receiverships, James Rosenberg speculated that all that was needed was the failure of a large-enough firm for the courts to uphold the issue of receivers' certificates for industrial corporations. 80 Although courts did not put railroad and industrial corporations on the same footing, Congress did. With the additions of section 77 and 77b to the Bankruptcy Act in 1933 and 1934, and following the Chandler Act, which was enacted in 1938, reorganization became a part of federal bankruptcy law.81

In practice, even after these amendments, judgments about the public interest continued to influence the fate of an insolvent corporation. Arthur Dewing described the operation of corporate bankruptcy in the 1940s as follows:

If the going or coming of an enterprise carries slight social or economic significance the courts will exert little effort to preserve the integrity of the business. They will permit its liquidation for the benefit of its creditors; and this is true whether it is a little railroad no longer of economic importance to the region or a millinery factory which made peek-a-boo hats when the ladies preferred cartwheel sailors. On the other hand, they will preserve even at the sacrifice of underlying creditor interests, a business-whether it is a railroad, a chemical works or a steel foundry-if they are convinced it subserves an important social or economic need.82

Despite the many changes that had taken place, including a shift from judge-made law to statute, judges' conceptions of the public interest still remained at the core of corporate reorganization.

The Wabash Case and Railroad Investors

The foregoing analysis of receivership proceedings suggests that investors in 1884 should not have been surprised that the directors of a railway were able to obtain the appointment of a receiver of their choosing at a time of their choosing. Nor should they have been surprised if courts then altered their contractual rights during the course of the receivership. Federal appeals courts and the U.S. Supreme Court had repeatedly informed them that they held their rights subject to the interest of the public in the continued operation of railroads.

The treatment of the Wabash receivership in the press also suggests that, although it may not have been approved of by all investors, it hardly shocked them. On May 13, two weeks before the receivers were appointed, the New York Times reported that a spokesperson for Jay Gould had announced that "it had been determined to temporarily put the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway in the hands of a receiver."83 It also stated that Solon Humphreys was suggested as the potential receiver. The article pointed out that although no default on the bonds could take place until June 1, the appointment might be sought on the floating debt. Rather than reacting with shock to the announcement, the Times reported, "The Street took the announcement of the proposed appointment of a receiver for the Wabash with great equanimity on the whole."84 Thus, the statement by the president of a railroad, which was not in default, that he planned to have one of his business partners appointed as receiver was no surprise to investors. When the announcement was made on May 29, the Times described it as the "long awaited appointment."85

Evidence from railroad bond markets also indicates that investors did not regard the Wabash receivership as a legal innovation or as a decrease in the rights of bondholders. Surprisingly, previous studies of the Wabash case have not examined its effect on the market for railroad bonds. Numerous studies have found significant effects on financial markets from changes in legal rules.86 If the Wabash receivership were an important legal innovation that diminished the rights of railroad bondholders, then its impact should have extended beyond the bonds of the Wabash itself. One would expect all railroad bonds-as well as the railroad bond market-to have been observably affected. The yield on a railroad bond, like other corporate bonds, is equal to the risk-free rate of return plus a risk premium. The risk premium is a function of the likelihood of default and the expected payoff if the railroad does default. If the Wabash receivership adversely affected railroad bondholders, then it must have done so by increasing the probability of default or by decreasing the expected payoff in the event of default. If managers were less likely to be displaced after the Wabash decision, they may have become more likely to default on bond payments. If it were easier to obtain a friendly receiver and if the contractual rights of bondholder were less likely to be enforced after the Wabash case, bondholders might have perceived that their bargaining position in reorganizations was diminished, and they would have expected lower payoffs after default did occur. Either way, if the Wabash receivership adversely affected railroad bondholders, they should have asked for higher yields to compensate them for the greater risk.

Figure I shows three measures of the yield on railroad bonds. The Macaulay series is the average yield of railroad bonds calculated by Frederick Macaulay.87 The Macaulay yields do not include railroads that are in default, so the risk premium on them reflects investors' expectations about the probability that default will occur and about their ultimate returns in the event of default. The Carty series is the average coupon rate for new issues of railroad bonds collected by Lea Carty.88 The Edelstein series is Michael Edelstein's yield series for U.S. railroad bonds traded on the London market.89 Although the three series were derived from different sources, they track each other closely. The correlation coefficient of the Macaulay and Carty series is 0.87, and that of the Macaulay and Edelstein series is 0.91.

Contrary to what one would expect if the Wabash receivership had altered bondholders' rights to their disadvantage, the risk premium on railroad bonds decreased after the Wabash receivership. The price of railroad bonds increased and the yields fell. Not only did the yields fall but, more critically, they fell relative to the yields on less risky bonds. Figure 2 plots the yield spread as the difference between the Macaulay series and British consols and New England municipal bonds. Thus, the yield spread rather than increasing was actually decreasing in the years immediately following the Wabash decision, despite the fact that railroads went into receivership more frequently in 1884 and 1885 than at any time since the early 1870s.91

Conclusion

In retrospect, judge-made law, even that which is made with the discretion given to judges in courts of equity, does not seem a likely place to find a revolution. Neither the response of the markets nor the historical record suggests that the Wabash receivership relied on a novel interpretation of receivership or significantly altered the rights of bondholders. The elements of the Wabash receivership that have traditionally been singled out as innovations all existed well before 1884. judges routinely declared that these enterprises had a duty to the public, a concept that was invoked when the railroad receiverships were introduced and was reiterated when receivers' certificates were first issued and the Wabash receiver was appointed. In the 1930s, Congress extended the reorganization procedures developed for railroads to other corporations, but, even then, judges' perceptions of the public interest continued to influence the outcomes of cases.

Given the evidence that the Wabash receivership was not revolutionary, what explains the widespread acceptance of the interpretation D. H. Chamberlain gave to the case over one hundred years ago? Chamberlain was, after all, on the losing side in the Wabash case. Some of the success may be attributable to the notoriety of Jay Gould. Despite attempts to rehabilitate his image, Gould remains the archetype of the robber baron.92 While the prominence of Gould and the Wabash may help to explain the initial attention given to the receivership, the continuing vitality of the story appears to be attributable to its adaptability. The Wabash receivership has been offered as evidence to support a wide variety of arguments: It has been an example of bad judicial decision making.93 It has been a case of successful institutional change in response to dramatic economic developments.94 it has been an illustration of a judicial ideology that fostered the growth of a national economy at the expense of local economies.95 It has been a turning point in the transformation from a contract theory of the corporation to an entity theory of the corporation.96 It has been the model for future corporations in financial difficulty.97 Although the authors of these arguments may be at odds with each other, they all agree that a revolution took place in American business in the last two decades of the nineteenth century and that the Wabash receivership was an important part of that revolution.

Although the evidence I have presented does not support the view that the Wabash receivership initiated a revolution, it does tend to support Albro Martin's argument that judges' rulings were based on their beliefs about the importance of railroads to the public. Reorganization was not restricted to large, interstate systems. Judges supported the preservation of local systems when they believed this to be in the public interest. Judges did not see reorganization as an option available to corporations generally. Corporations in other industries were put into receivership, but judges refused to alter the contractual rights of bondholders in the way they did with railroads.

Judge Treat's argument in support of the appointment, far from being an aberration, was consistent with the opinions of the Supreme Court and other federal courts. More broadly, the development of railroad receiverships was consistent with much of the development of common law and equity in the nineteenth century. William Novak has recently argued that nineteenth-century judges were not hesitant to regulate economic activity in the name of the people's welfare.98 He argues that the common-law maxims of salus populi suprema lex est and sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedes were the philosophical foundations upon which judges tried to create a well-regulated society.99 Chief Justice Waite expressed just such a philosophy in his decision in the Canada Southern case when he issued this declaration: "Every member of a political community must necessarily part with some of the rights which, as an individual, not affected by his relation to others he might have retained. Such concessions make up the consideration he gives for the obligation of the body politic to protect him in life, liberty and property."100 This philosophy governed the development of railroad receiverships throughout the nineteenth century.

[Author Affiliation]

BRADLEY HANSEN is assistant professor of economics at Mary Washington College, Virginia.

I wish to thank Mary Eschelbach Hansen for her careful reading of several drafts and for the numerous suggestions that she offered. I also wish to thank participants at the Economics Department Seminar at the College of William and Mary, Walter Friedman, and the anonymous referees for their helpful comments.