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Friday
Mar092012

Tennessee Man Drives Coast to Coast on Almost No Gasoline

(MURFREESBORO, Tenn.) -- It turns out that Cliff Ricketts, the Tennessee agriculture professor who tried to drive across the country on 10 gallons of gasoline, overestimated.  He’s completed his trip, from Tybee Island, Ga. to Long Beach, Calif., on just over two gallons of gas.

“Everything went right,” said Ricketts, by cellphone from Long Beach, where he reported he was in view of the Pacific Ocean. “That’s the bottom line.”

Ricketts, 63, who teaches at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tenn., said he wanted to help show how the U.S. could make it self less vulnerable to world oil shocks. He said he has been concerned since the 1979 Iran hostage crisis, when, after militants in Tehran seized the U.S. embassy there, gasoline prices in America tripled.

“In case there was a national emergency now, it wouldn’t be unrealistic for gas to go to $10 or $15 a gallon in the U.S.,” Ricketts said when we first spoke with him, not long after he’d started his trip.  ”If that happens, people will go, ‘What do we do?’ Well, we’ve got a backup plan.”

So he assembled a little fleet — a Toyota Prius refitted to use hydrogen instead of gasoline, a ’94 Tercel that also used compressed hydrogen, and a second Prius that ran either on batteries or a mix of 95 percent ethanol and 5 percent gasoline. He made allowances for tanks that wouldn’t maintain pressure, hoses that might leak, and so forth, but found that things worked.  Add up the numbers from the three vehicles, and Ricketts says he went 2,582 miles, using 2.15 gallons of regular gasoline.

In fairness, his experiment used a good deal more gas, because he had a small convoy with him as he drove westward. Five MTSU students, two graduates and a retired engineer drove a pickup truck and a van in case he needed help, towing the cars he wasn’t using behind them — and carrying his fuel as well. You can’t easily find hydrogen filling stations along Interstate 40.

His was a low-budget operation. “I didn’t get a lot of big grants,” he said. The state of Tennessee provided some of his funding, he said, and MTSU matched it.

One other frustration, he conceded, is that he would have liked using cellulosic ethanol, made from plant waste (remember President Bush talking about fuel from switch grass in 2006?) — but he couldn’t find a company in the U.S. that makes and sells it.

Still, Ricketts said he made his point: “We made it and we far exceeded our expectations.”  He crossed the country without needing imported petroleum.

How to celebrate? After getting some rest in Los Angeles, Ricketts says they’ll make a stop in Las Vegas on the way home.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

Friday
Mar092012

Authorities Warn of Disaster Fraud Activity

(WASHINGTON) -- Federal authorities are warning the public to beware of fraudulent activity pertaining to recovery efforts following the recent tornadoes that hit the Midwest and southern parts of the country.

The Department of Justice, the FBI and the National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) issued a news release Thursday reminding people of the potential for disaster-related fraud following natural disasters such as the recent storms. Officials say such suspected fraudulent activity should be reported to the NCDF hotline at (866) 720-5721.

Officials are also advising that the following guidelines be taken into consideration before making donations to help victims:

  • Be skeptical of individuals claiming to be victims or officials asking for donations online.
  • Do not be pressured into making contributions; reputable charities do not use coercive tactics.
  • Avoid cash donations if possible.  Pay by debit or credit card, or write a check directly to the charity.
  • Beware of organizations with copycat names similar to but not exactly the same as reputable charities.


Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

Thursday
Mar082012

TVA Use Explosives to Repair Lines Damaged by Storms

(KNOXVILLE, Tenn.) -- The Tennessee Valley Authority used shielded explosives to repair power lines affected by last week’s storms.

At least 13,000 customers lost power on Friday due to the storms, which passed through several states. Crews began repairing lines and residents in Limestone County heard loud explosions.

The company confirmed explosives were being used to repair damaged lines, reports the News-Courier.

Repairs were completed on Wednesday.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

Thursday
Mar082012

State Rep. Jimmy Naifeh Announces Retirement

(NASHVILLE, Tenn.) -- State Rep. Jimmy Naifeh announced on Thursday that he will not be seeking re-election this year, The Chattaooga Times Free Press reports.

Naifeh was elected to the House in 1974 and re-elected 18 times. The 72-year-old Democrat was the longest serving House speaker in Tennessee history.

He is the fifth House Democrat to announce he will not seek re-election after the passage of a Republican redistricting plan.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

Thursday
Mar082012

Aspiring Actress from Tenn. Goes Missing in Calif.

(LOS ANGELES) -- Five years after arriving in Los Angeles from Tennessee with dreams of being an actress, Satara Stratton has not starred in any major movies. Instead, she is in the California Missing Persons database.

Los Angeles police are looking for 24-year-old Stratton. She disappeared last November. Her mother, Sharon Stratton, fears that she is under the influence of a registered sex offender and addicted to drugs.

Though Sharon said she has not heard from her daughter since November, the Los Angeles Police Department missing persons department did not officially start investigating until February. They are currently looking for Satara, who is listed as “Voluntarily Missing,” along with 46-year-old Paul Constantinescu, who is wanted for questioning.

Satara’s mother said she believes that Constantinescu, who is registered as a sex offender on California’s Megan’s Law website, has kept her daughter from contacting her, either through psychological abuse or by drugging her.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Satara met Constantinescu while making a film last year. Sharon says both Constantinescu and another acquaintance have forced drugs onto her daughter on different occassions.

Sharon said the only recent contact from her daughter was an email that was sent to her boyfriend that didn't sound like her daughter’s “voice,” but asked for help and said that there was a hit man in Tennessee, where Sharon currently lives.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio