четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Patient gets drunk on sanitizer in Aussie hospital

SYDNEY (AP) — A man who drank six bottles of alcohol-based hand sanitizer while being treated in an Australian hospital for alcoholism has sparked calls for the anti-bacterial gels to be better secured.

Doctors said in a letter published Sunday in the Medical Journal of Australia that they were stunned to discover the man had downed six 375-milliliter (12.7-ounce) bottles of hand sanitizer, giving him a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.271 percent. That's more than five times higher than the 0.05 percent legal limit for driving in Australia.

Dr. Michael Oldmeadow, an internist at The Alfred hospital in Melbourne city, said that although the incident was not the first of its …

English Football Summaries

Summaries of Saturday's English Premier League football games (home teams listed first):

Bolton 0, Fulham 0

Attendance: 22,289.

Burnley 2, West Ham 1

Burnley: David Nugent (14), Danny Fox (55).

West Ham: Ilan (81).

Attendance: 21,001.

Hull 2, Manchester City 1

Hull: Jozy Altidore (31), George Boateng (54).

Manchester City: Emmanuel Adebayor (59) .

Attendance: 24,959.

Liverpool 1, Everton 0

Liverpool: Dirk Kuyt (55).

Attendance: 44,316.

Bartok the bat flies solo in new movie

HOLLYWOOD Audiences went batty over the impish Bartok in Fox's1997 animated musical "Anastasia."

In fact, the white, wisecracking, diminutive bat was such afavorite of children and adults that he is now starring in his ownmovie, "Bartok the Magnificent," currently on video and DVD (Fox, $20for video; $30 for DVD).

"Once we thought about a lot of ideas, our favorite idea was theone you see," says Chris Meledandri, president of 20th Century FoxAnimation. "We watched so many audiences watch the movie, it wasclear that there was this great affinity for Bartok."

Hank Azaria reprises his role as the voice of Bartok, who is senton a quest to save the young Prince …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Latest developments in Arab world's unrest

A look at the latest developments in political unrest across the Middle East on Tuesday:

___

LIBYA

A rebel military leader complains that NATO is not doing enough to batter Moammar Gadhafi's forces and break the siege of Misrata, the last rebel outpost near Tripoli. NATO says nearly a third of Gadhafi's heavy weapons have been destroyed in airstrikes, but Gadhafi's army drives rebels out of the vital oil port of Brega again. In a new tactic, Gadhafi forces move heavy weapons into the city in an attempt to protect them from NATO airstrikes.

___

YEMEN

An exchange of fire develops as leaders of President Ali Abdullah Saleh's tribe meet with a senior army …

Japan posts first trade surplus in 5 months

Japan posted its first trade surplus in five months in February, though the total plunged from a year earlier, the Finance Ministry said Wednesday.

The country's trade surplus for the month was 82.4 billion yen ($841 million), down 91.2 percent from last year. But it broke a run of four straight months in the red, and was an improvement from January's trade deficit of 952.6 billion yen _ the biggest negative trade balance since the government began compiling such data in 1979.

Reality television champ admits guilt in tax, drug case

BOSTON - The winner of the CBS reality show "Big Brother 9"pleaded guilty Monday to a drug charge and for failing to file a taxreturn for the year he won the show's $500,000 prize.

Adam Jasinski, of Delray Beach, Fla., was arrested outside Bostonlast October and charged with attempting to sell 2,000 pills ofoxycodone, the main active ingredient in OxyContin and otherpainkillers.

He had originally pleaded not guilty to possession with attemptto distribute oxycodone but changed his plea to guilty during ahearing Monday in U.S. District Court in Boston. He also pleadedguilty to the tax charge, which was added Monday by prosecutors.

Sentencing is not …

Criticism Mounts Over Tiger's New Event

PALM HARBOR, Fla. - Saying he was "insulted" by the prospect of Tiger Woods' new tournament being treated like an invitational, Rich Beem said he would rally players against the PGA Tour to make sure the event had a full field.

"It's the most totally wrong thing I've heard of in a long time that's sticking it to the players," Beem said Thursday.

PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem has said that the AT&T National, to be played July 5-8 in Washington with Woods as the host, likely would be considered along the lines of tournaments run by Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer that have limited fields.

The Memorial Tournament has a minimum of 105 players, while the …

Football player, actor Bosworth arrested for DUI

Former NFL player-turned-actor Brian Bosworth has been arrested in Hollywood on suspicion of driving under the influence.

Los Angeles police Sgt. Alex Ortiz says Bosworth was arrested early Friday. The 43-year-old Bosworth was being held on $5,000 bail.

Bosworth played for Oklahoma before …

AIDS burden puts hospitals in cash bind

Large numbers of AIDS patients are concentrated in a smallnumber of hospitals, threatening those facilities with financialdisaster, a new study says.

The survey of 322 facilities, conducted by the private NationalPublic Health and Hospital Institute in Washington, found that morethan half of the patients diagnosed with acquired immune deficiencysyndrome are being treated in just 5 percent of the nation'shospitals.

Because many AIDS patients are either uninsured or covered byMedicaid, which pays only a portion of the costs of treatment, thehospitals lost an average of more than $3,500 per AIDS patient.

While every hospital in the survey lost money …

Brazil's President Revives Rhetoric

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Facing a surprisingly rough campaign, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has revived the populist rhetoric he had largely shed since taking office.

Fiery speeches contrasting the lives of Brazil's poor with the wealthy elite have left many Brazilians wondering whether he would push the country to the left if he wins a second four-year term in Sunday's runoff election.

Silva, a former union firebrand and Brazil's first working-class president, faced similar fears four years ago, but calmed them by adhering to market-friendly, pro-business policies that won praise even from conservatives.

But with his administration engulfed in corruption …

Pa. man fires cannon, hits neighbor's house

A Pennsylvania history buff who recreates firearms from old wars accidentally fired a 2-pound cannonball through the wall of his neighbor's home.

Fifty-four-year-old William Maser fired a cannonball Wednesday evening outside his home in Georges Township that ricocheted and hit a house 400 yards away.

The cannonball, about two inches in diameter, smashed through a window and a wall …

Storm victims: some portraits by friends, kin

Authorities Wednesday night said 25 people had been killed byTuesday's tornadoes. Friends and survivors described the followingvictims.

Sister Mary Keenan, 47, was principal at St. Mary ImmaculateSchool. A native of Canada, she had been at the school 10 years andtaught 5th grade. Her body was found next to a statue of the BlessedVirgin Mary outside her office. "She loved kids," said St. MaryImmaculate Church deacon Jim Sossong. "She was a very sweet lady andwe're going to miss her terribly."

Gloria Sanchez, in her 20s, was music director at St. Mary forthe past year. She stayed at the school after a teachers' meetingTuesday. "A lot of parishioners' children …

Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales

illustrated by various artists

W.W. Norton, November 2002

$24.95, ISBN 0-393-05212-5

Nelson Mandela devoted his life to dismantling apartheid in South Africa, his birthplace. In 1998, he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his courageous efforts, and later served a five-year term as South Africa's first black president. Mandela's pride in his country stems from his elders, who -- in their oral tradition -- passed on to him the history of Africa and white colonialism as well as the country's rich folklore. Mandela so enjoyed his ancestors' folktales as a child, he decided to select 32 of his favorites to pass on to young readers everywhere.

These clever and humorous stories, 16 in all, examine and convey lessons in humanity. They consider envy, greed, selfishness, selflessness and much more. In one tale, a young girl disobeys her mother and meets an unfortunate end. In a second story, a clever wanderer uses his wit to win respect and riches from a miserable royal. In yet another tale, a young woman's show of kindness helps her escape an impoverished life.

The folktales, which are hundreds of years old, are retold by African storytellers and have been collected from Kenya, Morocco, Uganda, Zimbabwe and many other countries. Sixteen artists, most who hail from South Africa, created the animated, color illustrations that accompany each tale.

Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales is a volume of heartfelt works that will be enjoyed by generations to come. It is a welcome addition to any family library.

Illustration (Illustration of a young boy with a flamingo and jaguar)

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

LOW-CAPACITY, HIGH-PERFORMANCE WASTEWATER DECANTERS

New wastewater decanters that are ideal for sludge dewatering at smallscale wastewater treatment plants and for industrial applications are now available from Alfa Laval. The ALDEC models (20 and 30) are described as compact, modular designs that provide cost-efficiency, reliability and easy operations. Efficient operation reduces sludge volume, cutting transportation and disposal costs. Contact Kevin Bailey, Alfa Laval, Inc., in Richmond, Virginia. kevin.bailey@alfalaval.com

Swiss club Neuchatel fires manager Schuermann

Swiss club Neuchatel Xamax has fired manager Pierre-Andre Schuermann after five straight defeats.

Schuermann lost his job on Wednesday, the day after a 1-0 defeat away to last-place Aarau left the club eighth in the 10-team top division.

The former Switzerland Under-21 coach became the sixth manager fired by Neuchatel chairman Silvio Bernasconi in the past five years.

The club said on its Web site that Jean-Michel Aeby _ one of the six fired coaches _ would take charge until the end of the season.

Neuchatel won the last of its two Swiss championships in 1988.

Future-Driven Mobility

Don't fear the future of mobile banking

Bill Murray made progress by taking baby steps in the movie, "What About Bob?" But if banks are going to make progress in the future, baby steps are not going to be enough.

According to Jennifer Clark, former vice president and director of ecommerce at Cambridge (Mass.) Savings Bank and now an e-consultant for retail banks (www. s implye strategy, com), "Social communication and mobile banking are shaping today's world. These are paradigm shifts in the way people communicate today and the way banking will be conducted tomorrow."

Washington Trust Bank, a $4 billion-asset bank in Spokane, Wash., recently took its giant step by implementing mFoundry's mobile banking solution. Mobile customers now have the ability to check balances, pay bills, make transfers and find branch and ATM locations. In addition, customers using a device with a mobile web browser can view the bank's enhanced mobile website.

"The new service is a nice complement to our existing suite of online delivery products," said Amber Albertini, vice president, product manager. "It helps to round out our already robust product lines and continues our commitment to customer experience by allowing them to bank with us in a way that meets their needs and allows them to take control of their finances."

Washington Trust Bank understands that even though mobile banking remains comparatively small compared to brick-and-mortar and online banking, the future portends an expansive segment of the population adopting mobile banking. A recent survey by Intuit Financial Services, for example, found 20 percent of banking customers using mobile banking solutions to manage their finances, and the percentage is increasing at a rapid pace.

"Mobile banking is evolving from simply being a source of account details, to something richer and more transaction-driven," said Carlo Cardilli, senior vice president, sales and business development, at mFoundry. "Although there is ROI from mobile banking in terms of call center deflection and increased debit card spend, there are new features like mobile deposit, peer-to-peer money movement, card loyalty, fraud protection, payments, etc., that are driving gains on both top and bottom lines for financial institutions."

Albertini identified three primary objectives in the bank's mobile banking initiative: to deploy all three mobile banking offerings: text banking, mobile web and downloadable apps; to work with a partner whose approach to innovation matched the bank's strategic plan for future development in the mobile banking channel; and to get the new mobile offering to market quickly and without a large number of project hours involving internal resources. In fact, the process of determining delivery strategy and prioritizing deliverables took just 30 days. The final decision was based on two primary objectives: to meet customer demand, and to remain competitive with the large financial institutions already delivering mobile banking solutions.

Partnering

One of the objectives - working with an innovative partner - was achieved through the selection of mFoundry's software-as-a-service (or SaaS) offering, which allowed the bank to implement the mobile banking solution without any significant changes. mFoundry is among the companies helping community banks and credit unions introduce mobile banking without significant infrastructure changes and capital expenditures.

"mFoundry's mobile banking platform has been successfully deployed for financial institutions of all sizes," said Cardilli. "Delivered as a configurable, hosted solution, the platform can be deployed quickly and then dynamically updated as new features and functions are added as the market matures." The company can integrate its mobile banking platform directly into a bank's or credit union's core system, or deliver it via connections through multiple online banking systems, ATM networks and bank-created web services.

"We have been able to incorporate the product development and strategy, as well as the technical support, into our existing internal infrastructure for customer online delivery channels," said Albertini.

Although the bank doesn't expect to generate fee income directly from mobile banking, it does expect to realize indirect income by attracting new customers, increasing its retention rates on existing customers and increasing transactions in the bank's payment channels (e.g., debit and credit cards).

Mobile Wallets

The ability to receive updated features is one of most compelling features of SaaS solutions, especially as nextgeneration smartphones become fully functional mobile wallets: portable devices capable of making purchases, sending e-payments, conducting person-to-person transactions, checking account balances, transferring money, receiving financial alerts, depositing checks remotely, and, for businesses, sending e-invoices.

mFoundry is one of the only mobile banking providers in the United States with a deployed, fullproduction mobile payment solution in market. And the solution can be deployed within its SaaS mobile banking platform. This means that when mobile payments finally hit the United States, Washington Trust Bank will be able to implement the service without a major operational or technological impact.

"Mobile banking is a channel with enormous potential and with ever-increasing demand among customers and potential customers in every market," said Albertini. "Our approach is to look at our mobile banking channel as strategically as we approach the rest of our commercial and retail banking initiatives."

If you are still taking baby steps, perhaps you need expand your step as you expand your vision of what lies ahead. SaaS mobile banking solutions are available now for banks from $100 billion to $50 million in assets. And three years is not a long time.

[Sidebar]

Washington Trust Bank recently took a giant step by implementing mobile banking.

[Author Affiliation]

Michael Scheibach * Executive Editor * mscheibach@banknews.com

With deal announced, Delta, Northwest face challenge of merging fleets, work force, cultures

Delta and Northwest executives want to smoothly complete their deal to create the world's largest airline by the end of the year. But investors reacted negatively amid word there are no plans for further domestic flight cuts as well as the challenges of integrating companies with contrasting cultures, planes and labor relations.

The two airlines have very different relationships between management and workers, which was reflected as soon as Delta's acquisition of Northwest was announced Monday. Delta pilots support it. Northwest pilots oppose it. Fifteen minutes after the announcement, the union representing many Northwest ground workers pledged to fight it.

Northwest is heavily unionized, while Delta's pilots are the only major work group at Delta to be part of a union. Delta flight attendants begin voting April 23 whether to join a union.

"Sometimes, they're a little overly optimistic," industry expert Terry Trippler said Tuesday of the airlines' executives.

Airline consultant Darryl Jenkins acknowledged that there will be challenges, but he believes the deal will go through.

"For all practical purposes, this deal is done," Jenkins said. "The things that would derail this deal are all regulatory, and I think this is one of the easier deals to sign off on that I've ever seen."

The unions cannot kill the deal, but they can put pressure on other groups that have a say _ like shareholders and regulators _ to stop it.

Investors already appeared nervous, punishing the stocks of both airlines Tuesday and shaving $400 million (252.7 million) off the value to Northwest shareholders if the agreement to be acquired by Delta were to close now. Oil prices hit yet another record Tuesday, nearing $114 a barrel, and investors were disappointed that the deal may not yield as much in cost savings or higher revenue as Wall Street expected.

The carriers said they have no current plans to cut more U.S. flights beyond what they have disclosed separately _ something analysts see as limiting the cost savings or higher fares the airlines could reap from the deal. Delta and Northwest also don't plan to close any of their hubs. They did not rule out further capacity cuts in the future if fuel prices continue to rise.

Executives said they are confident they will be able to consummate the deal and integrate the two carriers.

"Bottom line is, we think it's a really good fit," Delta Chief Executive Richard Anderson, who will head the combined airline, said Tuesday.

Delta and Northwest executives said they would like to close the deal by the end of this year, which would be before the end of the merger-friendly Bush administration. They are trying to avoid repeating what happened in 2001, when an attempted merger of United Airlines and US Airways fell apart amid antitrust concerns.

Several lawmakers have already railed against a Northwest-Delta combination, arguing that the deal will decrease competition and lead to higher fares. But Congress has little power to stop a transaction, and most experts believe the Justice Department will approve it.

As for union support, the airlines tried something novel: They attempted to get pilots to agree on a joint contract and seniority beforehand. That failed over seniority disputes.

Delta made a deal with its pilots over the weekend, leaving the Northwest pilots to work something out later. On Monday, Northwest pilots declared their opposition to the combination "as it stands," perhaps leaving room for a deal later.

The Delta pilot agreement, which still needs rank-and-file ratification, extends the current contract through 2012 and gives Delta pilots 3.5 percent of the new company.

Pilots at Northwest said the new airline won't be able to shift planes onto new routes without changing their contract _ and until they do, the combined airline can't be profitable.

Northwest CEO Doug Steenland acknowledged that it will take a combined pilot contract to make the new airline most efficient.

It's "not black-and-white, but to get to the full benefit of it, you would like to have a combined contract and a merged seniority list," he said.

Anderson has promised to protect worker seniority. Northwest's Steenland said a deal must protect worker interests but never made specific promises.

Still, the companies have been trying not to antagonize Northwest pilots. Ed Bastian, Delta's chief financial officer, said the lack of a deal was "notwithstanding everybody's best efforts," and said they'd aim for a combined pilot agreement, including resolving the seniority question, before the deal closes.

That would still be a big advancement over other airline mergers where the contract is worked out afterward, often acrimoniously.

Delta has not had a labor strike since 1947, according to the National Mediation Board, the federal agency that handles airline labor disputes. Northwest mechanics struck in 2005, however, and its pilots in 1998.

In 1982, Delta workers contributed $30 million (19 million) of their own money to buy that airline's first Boeing 767, named "The Spirit of Delta." That same year, machinists at Northwest struck for 35 days.

Combined, the airline will have more than 1,400 planes, including regional jets. It includes 12 mainline jet types _ something airlines have often seen as a disadvantage since each kind of plane requires unique maintenance and crew training. Southwest, for instance, flies only the 737.

Delta and Northwest executives said the fleet was a benefit, since it will give them a range of planes to match specifically with routes. Northwest also has some bigger planes than Delta, and can patch a hole in the midsize range.

Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace consultant at the Teal Group, doesn't buy the executives' argument on fleet diversity.

"If that's a factual statement, why is every single carrier moving in the opposite direction?" Aboulafia said.

The share-swap agreement announced Monday calls for the combined airline to be named Delta, remain based in Atlanta, and be run by Anderson. If the deal goes through, Delta shareholders will get a bigger company, while Northwest shareholders would get a 16.8 percent premium over Monday's closing stock prices.

Based on those prices, the agreement valued Northwest at more than $3.6 billion. However, shares of both companies fell Tuesday, reducing the deal's value of Northwest to $3.2 billion (2.02 billion). Northwest Airlines Corp. shares fell 94 cents, or 8.4 percent, to $10.28, while Delta Air Lines Inc. lost $1.32, or 12.6 percent, to $9.16.

[ WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT? ]

TODAY

"Maury" (9 a.m., WGN-Channel 9): WGN apparently thinks paternitytests pass for entertainment, because it's proudly airing MauryPovich dedicating a whole hour to them, as if it were some kind ofgame show ...

"Jenny Jones" (10 a.m., WGN-Channel 9): ... and the execrableJenny Jones milking a two-parter from the exact same lame, loathsomeshtick.

"The Rosie O'Donnell Show" (noon, WMAQ-Channel 5): After thisfinal rerun of O'Donnell's chatfest, we're going to find out if aRosie by any other name is Caroline Rhea, whose replacement showdebuts at 8 p.m. Monday on WCIU-Channel 26.

"Law & Order Marathon" (6 p.m., A&E): A&E braces itself for losingthe rerun rights of this long-running NBC series to TNT by running a25-hour marathon.

"Hollywood Rocks the Movies: The Seventies" (7 p.m., AmericanMovie Classics): AMC, which has abused the term classics with some ofthe mediocre stuff it has taken to running, enlists David Bowie (whomay be classic, but not American) to host this look at 1970s rockmovies, such as 1984's "This Is Spinal Tap."(Repeated at 5 p.m.Sunday.)

"Larry King Live" (8 p.m., CNN): Gearing up for the big telethon,Jerry Lewis sits down for an hour with Larry, who can be counted onfor a few of those half-laughs that sound like he's clearing histhroat. Expect a discussion of Lewis' health, the Kids, Dean and justhow great Jerry was and is. (Repeated at 11 p.m. and 2 a.m.)

"The Mary Tyler Moore Show Reunion" (8 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): Thisslapdash clip show was a disappointment unworthy of the great, greatsitcom it sought to exploit ...

"The Honeymooners 50th Anniversary Celebration" (9 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): ... and so was this, which was even more remarkable,given the source material.

"Tracy Morgan: One Mic" (10 p.m., Comedy Central): Jokes aboutairports? Why hasn't a comedian ever thought of doing that before?What's next? The differences between New York and Los Angeles?(Repeated at 7 p.m. Saturday.)

"Dennis Miller Live" (10:30 p.m., HBO): Vince Vaughn, the pride ofLake Forest High School, joins 400-pound gorilla Miller in his finalHBO show after nine years of rants and raves.

"Late Show With David Letterman" (10:35 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2):Today is Dave's ninth anniversary at CBS. Just thought you would wantto know.

SATURDAY

"Gimme Shelter" (12:50 a.m., American Movie Classics): Welcome tothe breakfast show.

"Dare to Dream 2002" (8 p.m., WMAQ-Channel 5): Billy Bush (nephewof George W.) and Lynda Lopez (sister of Jennifer) host this charityconcert for cancer treatment, taped last month at an Indian casino.

"The Drum Corps International Competition 2002" (9 p.m., WTTW-Channel 11): Bang a gong. Get it on.

SUNDAY

"Our Greatest Hopes, Our Worst Fears" (12:30 p.m., WLS-Channel 7):It's a look back at the Palestinian terrorists who murdered 11Israeli Olympians at the Munich Games 30 years ago.

"Law & Order Marathon" (4 p.m., TNT): TNT celebrates completelytaking over the old A&E mainstay with 28 back-to-back episodes.

"Forensic Files" (7 p.m., WMAQ-Channel 5): The 1995 murder of LosAngeles Raiders cheerleader Linda Sobek is recalled.

"Arthur: It's Only Rock 'n' Roll" (7 p.m., WTTW-Channel 11): TheBackstreet Boys come to Elwood City on their latest world tour. Noteveryone is as excited by their presence as Muffy is, leading toFrancine forming an "anti-cute, anti-commercial" rival band called UStink in this charming ***1/2 takeoff.

"Third Watch Marathon" (7 p.m., A&E): Four episodes run insuccession. (Repeated at 11 p.m.)

"Caddyshack II" (7 p.m., Comedy Central): You want to be upsetwith Jackie Mason about something? How about this dreadful sequel?

"Avril Lavigne in Concert" (7:30 p.m., Nickelodeon) The Canadianteen prodigy does her thing.

"The Biographer: The Secret Life of Princess Di" (8 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): Andrew Morton's efforts to write a Princess Di biographyare chronicled in this film starring Paul McGann, Brian Cox, HughBonneville, Faye Dunaway and the voice of Rachel Preece as Diana.

"Sex and the City" (8 p.m., HBO): Carrie's book tour takes her toSan Francisco and ... Big (Chris Noth). And it's about freaking time!

"Live From Lincoln Center" (9 p.m., WTTW-Channel 11): Well, it'snot live, it's on tape. But it is a chance to catch the finalperformance of the dance review "Contact," the Tony winner as 2000'sbest musical.

"The 37th Annual Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon for MuscularDystrophy" (10 p.m., WGN-Channel 9): The corporate behemoths line upbehind hosts Jerry, Ed McMahon, Norm Crosby, Wayne Brady, CynthiaGarrett and Jann Carl along with a slew of Vegas acts in theirefforts to raise as much money as they can in 21 hours.

Bears at Miami Dolphins (11:05 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): What's moremeaningless and less interesting than an NFL preseason practice game?How about a rerun of an NFL preseason practice game that's four daysold?

Shaw, Jackson Jr. declare victory

Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr. (D-2nd) and Cook County Comm. Robert Shaw Wednesday declared victory after a Cook County Circuit judge threw out the fraud portion of a lawsuit.

Shaw said it was a victory when Judge Allen Goldberg threw out the alleged fraud charges leveled by Jackson.

Jackson had accused both Shaw and his brother, Senator William "Bill" Shaw (D-15th), of allegedly orchestrating the circulation of Second Congressional nomination petitions on behalf of Jesse Jackson, the 68-year-old Robbins truck driver claimed. "One allegation was fraud and that was thrown out," Robert Shaw said, referring to charges that he and his brother secured nominating signatures for the Robbins candidate.

"The other charge that was not thrown out is alleged invasion of privacy as related to misrepresentation of a name. This is the allegation that the court said he would have to give a deposition to," said Shaw.

But Jackson says the Shaw brothers were "ordered" to testify in his case having not shown up for two court appearances.

Jackson said the Shaws must tell under oath their roles in circulating those nominations for the truck driver Jackson and that they will be deposed within 30-days by his lawyers.

Jackson said Goldberg denied the Shaw's request to dismiss the case entirely.

Joyce Pierce, who reportedly notarized 189 pages of the truck drivers petitions, must also be deposed within a month. Jackson said she too failed to appear in court two times.

"We are pleased with the court's ruling," said Larry Rogers Sr., Jackson's lawyer. "This is a victory for Congressman Jackson and for the publics right to know the story behind the unusual and short-lived candidacy of the other Jesse Jackson."

Feds charge 3 NYers in election bias attacks

Three New York teenagers have been charged with federal civil rights charges in connection with election night racial violence in which attackers shouted "Obama."

The three youths were charged with conspiracy to interfere with voting rights in an indictment unsealed in Brooklyn federal court on Wednesday, and scheduled to be arraigned later that day.

The indictment says the defendants _ Ralph Nicoletti, Michael Contreras and Brian Carranza _ "did knowingly and intentionally conspire to injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate African American citizens of Staten Island..." of their constitutional rights.

The names of their lawyers could not immediately be determined.

Authorities say the most serious of the Staten Island attacks was on a 17-year-old Liberian native. He was bludgeoned with a pipe and an expandable police baton, while the attackers yelled "Obama!"

A rebirth for West Side church

Gerald and Irene Andreoli were students at Our Lady of the Angels when 92 classmates and three nuns were killed in a fire at the school. Both were severely injured.

They didn't know each other until they met at the hospital, but they became friends and eventually married at the parish church on Aug. 19, 1967.

When the Archdiocese of Chicago closed the church building at 3800 W. Iowa in 1990, they were shocked, even though they hadn't lived in the neighborhood for years.

"Then we were kind of sad to see all those memories go. We thought we might never see that church again," Gerald Andreoli said.

Now, a small Franciscan mission that has occupied the old rectory for four years is poised to fulfill a dream held by many former parishioners: It's planning to reopen the church as a place for Catholic worship.

"It'll be a part of the mission here," the Rev. Bob Lombardo, who runs the Franciscan community, said of the 71-year-old structure. "So we'd be able to host groups, have masses for large groups of people, prayer times for the neighborhood . . . special events."

The church won't be taking on the role of a regular parish, Lombardo emphasized.

There won't be a daily mass schedule, set times for confessions or Sunday school programs.

Instead, the church building will help accommodate the volunteers and services at the mission, which helps oversee a community center at the former parish hall and holds food and clothing give-aways, health fairs and spiritual retreats.

Lombardo said the extra space also should expand outreach to the West Side neighborhood that once revolved around the parish, but in recent decades has been mired in poverty and crime.

Lombardo isn't certain when the church might reopen, because money must be raised to cover repairs.

For Andreoli, 64, of Bloomingdale, the church was "a fixture from our childhood . . . a fixture to our lives."

"We'd like to see that altar where we got married," he said. ". . . It's a special place."

Photo: Brian Jackson, Sun-Times / The Rev. Bob Lombardo at Our Lady of the Angels Church.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Cold snap call for fire crew

CARMARTHEN firefighters were called to Rhydargaeau last Fridayfollowing a crash involving a people carrier which had left the roadduring the wintry conditions.

The crew made the scene safe.

Authorities Charge 4 in NYC Terror Plot

NEW YORK - Federal authorities announced Saturday they had broken up a suspected Muslim terrorist cell planning a "chilling" attack to destroy John F. Kennedy International Airport, kill thousands of people and trigger an economic catastrophe by blowing up a jet fuel artery that runs through populous residential neighborhoods.

Three men, one of them a former member of Guyana's parliament, were arrested and one was being sought in Trinidad as part of a plot that authorities said they had been tracked for more than a year and was foiled in the planning stages.

"The devastation that would be caused had this plot succeeded is just unthinkable," U.S. Attorney Roslynn R. Mauskopf said at a news conference, calling it "one of the most chilling plots imaginable."

In an indictment charging the four men, one of them is quoted as saying the foiled plot would "cause greater destruction than in the Sept. 11 attacks," destroying the airport, killing several thousand people and destroying parts of New York's borough of Queens, where the line runs underground.

One of the suspects, Russell Defreitas, a U.S. citizen native to Guyana and former JFK air cargo employee, said the airport named for the slain president was targeted because it is a symbol that would put "the whole country in mourning."

"It's like you can kill the man twice," said Defreitas, 63, who first hatched his plan more than a decade ago when he worked as a cargo handler for a service company, according to the indictment.

Authorities said the men were motivated by hatred toward the U.S., Israel and the West. Defreitas was recorded saying he "wanted to do something to get those bastards" and he boasted that he had been taught to make bombs in Guyana.

Despite their efforts, the men never obtained any explosives, authorities said.

"Pulling off any bombing of this magnitude would not be easy in today's environment," former U.S. State Department counterterrorism expert Fred Burton said, but added it was difficult to determine without knowing all the facts of the case.

Richard Kuprewicz, a pipeline expert and president of Accufacts Inc., an energy consulting firm that focuses on pipelines and tank farms, said the force of explosion would depend on the amount of fuel under pressure, but it would not travel up and down the line.

"That doesn't mean wackos out there can't do damage and cause a fire, but those explosions and fires are going to be fairly restricted," he said.

Since Defreitas retired from his job at the airport, security has significantly tightened and his knowledge of the operation was severely outdated.

He was arraigned Saturday afternoon in federal court, but did not enter a plea. He was to be held pending a bail hearing scheduled for Wednesday, prosecutors said. A phone number for his lawyer could not be located.

Two other men, Abdul Kadir of Guyana and Kareem Ibrahim of Trinidad, were in custody in Trinidad. A fourth man, Abdel Nur of Guyana, was still being sought in Trinidad.

Authorities said Kadir and Nur were longtime associates of a Trinidadian radical Muslim group, Jamaat al Muslimeen, which launched an unsuccessful rebellion in 1990 that left 24 dead.

Kadir, a former member of Parliament in Guyana, was arrested in Trinidad for attempting to secure money for "terrorist operations," according to a Guyanese police commander who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Kadir left his position in Parliament last year. Muslims make up about 9 percent of the former Dutch and British colony's 770,000 population, mostly from the Sunni sect.

Isha Kadir, the Guyanese suspect's wife, said her husband flew from Guyana to Trinidad on Thursday. She said he was arrested Friday as he was boarding a flight from Trinidad to Venezuela, where he planned to pick up a travel visa to attend an Islamic religious conference in Iran.

"We have no interest in blowing up anything in the U.S.," she said Saturday from the couple's home in Guyana. "We have relatives in the U.S."

The U.S. Joint Terrorism Task Force recorded and surveilled the men, learning that Defreitas drove around and videotaped JFK on four occasions this past January.

When Defreitas returned from Guyana in February, U.S. customs officials searched his belongings and found Kadir's name and telephone number in Defreitas' address book.

The government moved to foil the plot as Defreitas told an informant he was suspicious authorities knew about the plan.

The pipeline, owned by Buckeye Pipeline Co., takes fuel from a facility in Linden, N.J., to the airport. Other lines service LaGuardia Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport.

Buckeye spokesman Roy Haase said the company, which moves petroleum through pipelines in a number of states, had been informed of the threat from the beginning but he declined to detail the company's security measures.

"Given the nature of Buckeye business and the importance of this transportation network, we have an intense and ongoing communications relationship with the Port Authority, the New York City fire and police departments, the federal Department of Homeland Security and the FBI," he said. Buckeye is a subsidiary of Buckeye Partners, L.P. based in Macungie, Pa.

JFK and the area's other airports remained at a heightened state of alert Saturday, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said.

Jeanie Mamo, a spokeswoman for the White House, said President Bush had been briefed and updated regularly as the investigation into the plot progressed.

"This case is a good example of international counterterrorism cooperation," Mamo said.

The arrests mark the latest in a series of alleged homegrown terrorism plots targeting high-profile American landmarks.

A year ago, seven men were arrested in what officials called the early stages of a plot to blow up the Sears Tower in Chicago and destroy FBI offices and other buildings.

A month later, authorities broke up a plot to bomb underwater New York City train tunnels to flood lower Manhattan.

And six people were arrested a month ago in an alleged plot to unleash a bloody rampage on Fort Dix in New Jersey.

---

Associated Press Writer Tom Hays and Pat Milton contributed to this report.

Our taxes at work

It's a beautiful sunny afternoon in August. You're stretched out on a lawn chair in the yard. You reach out to take a sip of your cool, thirst-quenching beer. Damn! An ant has crawled into your glass. No big deal, really, but yuck. In the same way, seeing our taxes at work sure can spoil a good thing.

A few months ago, Revenue Canada finally replaced its old customs declaration forms for air travellers, which had been obsolete since the changes in 1997 to basic exemptions. Public servants in Ottawa slaved away for two years to come up with a new customs declaration card, providing a unique opportunity for 30 million Canadians to see their taxes at work.

Unlike countries in Europe, Canada is pretty picky about the information it requests from incoming citizens travelling by plane. To the average citizen, most questions are irrelevant. Furthermore, the form isn't particularly welcoming to non-Canadians.

Revenue Canada could have used this opportunity to simplify Declaration E311 (99) and greet travellers in a friendlier, less bureaucratic manner. But it wasn't to be. Our taxes were at work, and Revenue Canada wasn't going to throw in the towel.

The new card contains a number of innovations. For example, despite the fact that it's pocket-sized, the form is now divided into four parts: A, B, C and D. "They" now require everyone who has completed Part A "to be included" in Part B and answer Parts C and D, in the same order as in Part A. Great work, if it wasn't so confusing! Another major change is that the card no longer discriminates against large families (a sign that David Foot hasn't yet made it big at Revenue Canada). Five family members at the same address can now all use one card. But Persons #3, #4 and #5, who represent about 0.5% of respondents, take up a third of the form. Indeed, Person #5 makes up only 0.001%, yet occupies 5% of the form. Why doesn't Revenue Canada stop at two per family or, if paper is cheap, at three? Going to five is bureaucratese at its worst.

What's more, Revenue Canada hasn't dropped the question about bringing eggs. (Yes, eggs!) It also shows its environmental awareness by asking you to declare all "articles made or derived from endangered species." (There are two pages of explanation, in case you need it. Four, really; they are in both official languages.)

Nor have the form's great "classics" been jettisoned. You are still asked whether you will visit a farm within the next 14 days. I have always wondered if there are more true positive responses to this question (a farm visitor who checks "yes") than false negatives (a farm visitor who checks "no") and false positives (someone who has no intention of visiting a farm but checks "yes"). Great minds in our nation's capital must think travellers will tell the truth. (My own advice: never check "yes.")

It is not only the information requested that is a national embarrassment; it's also the form's general appearance. Most of us are friendly to visitors to this country. Unfortunately, Revenue Canada greets them first, at least those who arrive by plane. Canada thus welcomes them not only with bureaucratic gibberish and concerns about eggs, but with questions about funny diseases and such. Nice work, public servants!

Let's put aside what Ottawa does or intends to do with this information. After all, there's only one month of summer left. Let's ask ourselves why they do this with our taxes.

Far be it from me to allege that public servants aren't good. Ottawa employs hardworking, qualified people. I know that for a fact. Ten years ago, as assistant to the prime minister, I was probably one of the 100 most important people in government. The problem isn't with the individuals. It's with them getting together to work on something; it is the system that stinks.

Take the questionnaire for travellers. It likely required dozens of long meetings, memos to the minister and deputy minister, focus groups and so on to design it. And after "they" read my column, more memos might follow. I am sure they will justify every line, period and comma on that form. "These questions, Mr. Minister, are required by law," they'll say. "Revenue Canada is only responding to the requirements of other departments.""This information is very important and useful." "Cote is wrong; this form is attractive, well-intentioned and welcoming.""Other countries use similar forms." Etc., etc. You see, this is Ottawa. It is always right. Didn't you know?

The most unfortunate side to this story is that Ottawa has probably printed enough of these forms for the next 10 years. Don't ask why; this was the right thing to do, some good public servant will say.

Our taxes at work? Just like ants in summer, they sure can spoil a good beer.

[Author Affiliation]

Marcel Cote is a senior associate at SECOR Inc. in Montreal.

Stats illustrate Detroit's challenges

Some statistics conveying the breadth of challenges facing the city of Detroit:

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916,952: Detroit's latest official population, down from peak of about 1.8 million in 1950s. In a city of 139 square miles, that gives Detroit a population density about half of Chicago's.

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201,000: Residential taxpayers in Wayne County, which is dominated by Detroit, who were tax delinquent in October, out of a total of 857,000.

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19,708: Violent crimes recorded by FBI for Detroit in 2007, giving it highest violent crime rate of any major U.S. city. San Diego and San Antonio, each with 50 percent more people than Detroit, had less than half as many violent crimes.

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$18,513: Average sale price of a Detroit home so far in 2008, down from $40,011 in 2007, according to Detroit Board of Realtors. Average sale price in neighboring Oakland County is $153,695.

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47.8: Percent of Detroit children in 2007 who lived below poverty line of $21,000 for a family of four. For children nationally, the rate was 18 percent. Detroit's overall poverty rate of 33.8 percent was highest of any major city.

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21.6: Detroit's unemployment rate, according to latest Census Bureau figures for 2005-07. Of all U.S. cities with more than 20,000 residents, only Muskegon, Mich., had a higher rate, at 22.1 percent.

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15: Candidates competing in a special mayoral election called after Kwame Kilpatrick was jailed for trying to cover up a text-messaging sex scandal.

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14: Losses so far for Detroit Lions en route to what could be National Football League's first 0-16 season.

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3: Days each week that Detroit's two newspapers will offer home delivery, as part of new cost-cutting plan.

Bulls Learn Lesson // No Second-Half Fade Vs. Hurting Pistons

BULLS 117 PISTONS 96

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. This time, the Bulls got it right.

They jumped out to a big halftime lead against an opponentplaying without a pair of starters and followed up with a solidsecond half.

The result was an easy 117-96 victory Friday night over theonce-hated Detroit Pistons, who were without Grant Hill and JoeDumars (both home because of illness). But facing a short-handedopponent wasn't a guarantee of success earlier in the week as theBulls blew a 19-point lead Monday against New Jersey.

"Unfortunately for us, we had to learn a valuable lesson thehard way," said B.J. Armstrong, who had a season-high 22 points on8-for-12 shooting in his hometown.

"We really wanted to come out with a strong effort after thatNew Jersey game. We were very concerned coming in because usuallywhen a team is playing without two players, they usually have a lotof energy."

But it was the Bulls who had all the energy Friday. They jumpedon top immediately and never trailed.

"We're happy to get a win, whatever the circumstances," coachPhil Jackson said.

Besides Armstrong and Scottie Pippen (19 points), the Bulls(9-8) also got strong bench play as Bill Wennington (season-high 16points), Toni Kukoc (13) and Steve Kerr (12) scored in doublefigures.

"We wanted to go for the kill early," Pippen said. "We playedhard throughout the game. We come in here very competitive, knowinghow tough it was with the Pistons of old."

These were the Pistons of old, all right - from last season,when they won just 20 games. For them, the new went from bad toworse after the game. Lindsay Hunter suffered a bad ankle sprainlate in the game and Oliver Miller was placed on the injured listwith a broken hand, an injury he apparently suffered last month.

The Pistons (8-9) suffered through a poor shooting night, going34-for-87 (39.1 percent) overall and 3-for-23 (13 percent) fromthree-point range.

"They say when it rains, it pours - and it's pouring on us rightnow," Detroit coach Don Chaney said. "We just have to hopefully hangin there and get through this. We are short-handed, and we're goingto have to have guys step up and play hard."

The absence of Hill, a brilliant rookie, and the veteran Dumarsdidn't help matters, but this game was a vivid reminder just how farthe Bulls-Pistons rivalry has slipped.

A sellout crowd of 21,454 jammed the Palace, but there waslittle reason for them to get excited. The Pistons struggledvirtually the entire way, and the Bulls went about closing out thegame in workmanlike fashion. The crowd began filing out with aboutseven minutes remaining.

About the only thing resembling past Bulls-Pistons games was aflagrant foul by Terry Mills on Wennington in the fourth quarter.But it apparently was more a foul of frustration then intimidation.

Wennington made both free throws for a 103-83 Bulls lead with6:54 remaining.

"I'm not sure it was meant to be," Jackson said of the foul andbumping. "Maybe guys were just clumsy."

"I asked (Bill) Laimbeer if he would have done the same thing,"Armstrong said. "He said, `Sure.' "

The Pistons' start shooting the ball Friday wasn't as bad as NewJersey's in the Bulls' previous game, but it must have caused a fewflashbacks.

"We just wanted to get off to a good start in the second half,"Jackson said. "The intensity level was up there. We moved the ballwell and had some shooters out there."

The Bulls were 37-for-75 (49.3 percent) from the field for thegame despite making just eight of 21 shots during agarbage-time-dominated fourth quarter.

They also posted a 56-52 rebounding advantage and had 10 blockedshots, with Pippen and Will Perdue getting three apiece. BOX SCORE, PAGE 96

Afghan Leaders: Free Female Hostages

KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghanistan's top political and religious leaders invoked Afghan and Islamic traditions of chivalry and hospitality Sunday in attempts to shame the Taliban into releasing 18 female South Korean captives.

A purported Taliban spokesman shrugged off the demands and instead set a new deadline for the hostages' lives, saying the hardline militants could kill one or all of the 22 captives if the government didn't release 23 militant prisoners by 3:30 a.m. EDT Monday. Several other deadlines have passed without killings.

Afghan officials, meanwhile, reported no progress in talks with tribal elders to secure hostages' freedom.

In his first comments since 23 Koreans were abducted on July 19, Karzai criticized the Taliban's kidnapping of "foreign guests," especially women, as contrary to the tenets of Islam and national traditions.

"The perpetration of this heinous act on our soil is in total contempt of our Islamic and Afghan values," Karzai told a South Korean envoy during a meeting at the presidential palace, according to a statement from his office.

Echoing Karzai's words, Afghanistan's national council of clerics said the Prophet Muhammad, the founder of Islam, taught that no one has the right to kill women.

"Even in the history of Afghanistan, in all its combat and fighting, Afghans respected women, children and elders," the council said. "The killing of women is against Islam, against the Afghan culture, and they shouldn't do it."

And a former Taliban commander and current lawmaker who has joined the negotiations, Abdul Salaam Rocketi, said the government policy was that the "women should be released first."

But the Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, instead invoked the religious tenet of "an eye for an eye," alleging that Western militaries are holding Afghan females at bases in Bagram and Kandahar, and saying that the Taliban can do the same. He said the Taliban could detain and kill "women, men or children."

"It might be a man or a woman. ... We may kill one, we may kill two, we may kill one of each (gender), two of each, four of each," Ahmadi told The Associated Press by satellite phone from an unknown location. "Or we may kill all of them at once."

Ahmadi said the militant group had given a list of 23 insurgent prisoners it wants released to government officials, and that if they weren't freed by midday Monday hostages would be killed.

The Taliban has set several deadlines that passed without consequence and it wasn't clear how seriously the militants would treat their latest ultimatum. A leader of the South Korean group was shot and killed Wednesday but it was unclear why.

Two days of meetings between elders of Qarabagh district in Ghazni province, where the South Korean hostages were kidnapped on the Kabul-Kandahar highway, and a delegation of senior officials from Kabul yielded no results so far, said Shirin Mangal, spokesman for the Ghazni provincial governor.

The meeting is being held behind closed doors, and Mangal did not divulge any details.

In his meeting with Karzai, Korean presidential envoy Baek Jong-chun thanked the president for the Afghan government's help with the hostage situation and said South Korea will respect the Afghan government's way of ending the crisis, according to Karzai's office.

Pope Benedict XVI also called for the hostages' release, saying the perpetrators "desist from the evil they have carried out and give back their victims unharmed."

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Kuwaiti female parliamentary candidates hope for better result second time around

Kuwaiti women participating in parliamentary elections Saturday for only the second time in the history of this conservative Muslim country hope to improve on their performance in 2006 when they failed to win any seats.

Women in the small Gulf nation first gained the right to vote and run for public office in 2005, but they say the odds are still stacked against them.

Only one of the 27 women competing in the current elections _ the same number that ran in 2006 _ is supported by a political group. There are no officially recognized political parties in Kuwait, but informal groups provide critical campaign support.

"Male culture still dominates our society," said activist Aisha al-Rsheid. "(Male) candidates address women issues only to get their votes" and then forget about them.

Women make up about 55 percent of the more than 360,000 people eligible to vote in Kuwait, but many experts say the success of female candidates is limited because their male relatives control how they vote, especially in remote Bedouin areas.

"Women failed in the first elections. They proved they were followers," said political analyst Ayed al-Manna. "They are not any closer to realizing their dream."

But female candidates running in the current elections say they are not deterred. One is a science fiction writer who preaches separation of religion and politics and another wears a full face veil and is worried about the effect of Western culture on Kuwaiti children.

Female candidates hope that they will be better prepared this time around since the 2006 election occurred only a year after they first were able to run for office. In both cases, Kuwait's emir, Sheik Sabah Al Ahmed Al Sabah, called the elections after disbanding the parliament because of tension with the Cabinet.

Khawla al-Ateeqi, a veteran women's rights activist and an Islamist, recently told hundreds of people at a political rally that women should use one of the four votes they get in a district for a female candidate.

"Let's give one to a relative, one to a friend, one to a party or a tribe and one to a woman," said al-Ateeqi.

Under Kuwait's new election law, the country is divided into five districts that each send 10 people to the 50-seat parliament. Each person is allowed to vote for four people in a district.

Ali al-Nutaifi said he opposed the idea that women should vote for female candidates simply based on their gender.

"If a woman deserves my vote, I will give it to her," said al-Nutaifi. But he acknowledged that many Kuwaitis were still reluctant to vote for a woman.

Some citizens are calling on parliament to impose a quota that would guarantee women a certain number of seats in the legislature. But the proposals have not gained much momentum and are opposed by many women who say they do not want any handouts.

The government has appointed two women as Cabinet members since 2005. One resigned as health minister in 2007 following a hospital fire and a second managed to survive a vote of no confidence earlier this year as the education minister.

At a recent seminar on women and elections, longtime activist Kawthar al-Joaan called on less accomplished female candidates to withdraw from the upcoming elections, so that people could concentrate their votes on those who have the best chance to win.

Khalida al-Khader, who is running for the second time, believes both men and women now have more confidence in female candidates.

"This time women and men will vote for women," said the physician, who wears an Islamic head scarf.

Al-Khader came in eighth place in 2006, getting only 381 votes compared with the 3,691 that the man who won first place in the district received. She said she had to sell land to finance her last campaign but will spare no expense until she wins a seat in parliament.

"This time, I sold shares (of stock)," said al-Khader. "I still have a beach house and a house to sell."

As New Hampshire goes, etc.(Commentary)(Editorials)

The Manchester Union Leader thinks that Sen. Bob Smith has what it takes to be president: "The man is a principled conservative, a patriot and a man of uncompromising integrity." Wow! But wait a minute. For all these warm, cuddly kudos, the newspaper doesn't want Mr. Smith to be president. At least the Union Leader doesn't want him to run.

The paper is worried, you see, that Mr. Smith, being New Hampshire's favorite son, will make the first-in-the-nation primary a moot point. "A Smith candidacy would pretty much drive a stake through the heart of the GOP primary in the Granite State." Other candidates would write New Hampshire off, letting the air out of the state's quadrennial balloon economy. The state would lose influence - not to mention the Union Leader losing influence. "A Smith candidacy would damage, perhaps fatally, the New Hampshire primary," according to the paper's editorial. "And so, in view of all this, we would urge Sen. Smith to think long and hard about the potential consequences of his candidacy and do what is best for New Hampshire."

And no doubt what's best for the Union Leader. But really, isn't the logical conclusion of the Union Leader's editorial that the paper doesn't think anyone from New Hampshire should ever be president?

* SYMPATHY IN LEESBURG: Courtney Mulherin, who is three years old, has a potentially life-threatening problem: She is severely allergic to dairy products. Should she ingest even a trace amount, she is at risk of death.

Her parents have clearly agonized over the problem, especially the matter of Courtney's interaction with other kids. As anyone who has ever seen two or more 3-year-olds in action knows, one kid's snack is apt to become another kid's snack before an adult can say "boo."

The folks at the Ida Lee Recreational Center, which is run by the city of Leesburg, Va., came up with a pretty good solution to cope with Courtney's problems and allow her to attend pre-school there. They distributed detailed instructions to all the parents of kids in Courtney's class on what kinds of snacks the kids could bring from home. Rule No. 1: No dairy products. Rule No. 2: Take care to wipe off surfaces that may have come into contact with dairy products before preparing your child's lunch.

For some reason, though, these precautions all seem like too darn much bother to some of the parents at the center. A couple parents have withheld part of their payment in protest. Here, as reported by the Associated Press, are the charming views of Kate Davine, whose son goes to the center: "I'm trying to find it in my heart to feel sorry for the little girl. But I don't think Ida Lee has been up front with us. And I do think some of it is unreasonable."

Here's hoping Ms. Davine's life is and remains perfect, since her hard-hearted views don't exactly invite sympathy, either.

As New Hampshire goes, etc.(Commentary)(Editorials)

The Manchester Union Leader thinks that Sen. Bob Smith has what it takes to be president: "The man is a principled conservative, a patriot and a man of uncompromising integrity." Wow! But wait a minute. For all these warm, cuddly kudos, the newspaper doesn't want Mr. Smith to be president. At least the Union Leader doesn't want him to run.

The paper is worried, you see, that Mr. Smith, being New Hampshire's favorite son, will make the first-in-the-nation primary a moot point. "A Smith candidacy would pretty much drive a stake through the heart of the GOP primary in the Granite State." Other candidates would write New Hampshire off, letting the air out of the state's quadrennial balloon economy. The state would lose influence - not to mention the Union Leader losing influence. "A Smith candidacy would damage, perhaps fatally, the New Hampshire primary," according to the paper's editorial. "And so, in view of all this, we would urge Sen. Smith to think long and hard about the potential consequences of his candidacy and do what is best for New Hampshire."

And no doubt what's best for the Union Leader. But really, isn't the logical conclusion of the Union Leader's editorial that the paper doesn't think anyone from New Hampshire should ever be president?

* SYMPATHY IN LEESBURG: Courtney Mulherin, who is three years old, has a potentially life-threatening problem: She is severely allergic to dairy products. Should she ingest even a trace amount, she is at risk of death.

Her parents have clearly agonized over the problem, especially the matter of Courtney's interaction with other kids. As anyone who has ever seen two or more 3-year-olds in action knows, one kid's snack is apt to become another kid's snack before an adult can say "boo."

The folks at the Ida Lee Recreational Center, which is run by the city of Leesburg, Va., came up with a pretty good solution to cope with Courtney's problems and allow her to attend pre-school there. They distributed detailed instructions to all the parents of kids in Courtney's class on what kinds of snacks the kids could bring from home. Rule No. 1: No dairy products. Rule No. 2: Take care to wipe off surfaces that may have come into contact with dairy products before preparing your child's lunch.

For some reason, though, these precautions all seem like too darn much bother to some of the parents at the center. A couple parents have withheld part of their payment in protest. Here, as reported by the Associated Press, are the charming views of Kate Davine, whose son goes to the center: "I'm trying to find it in my heart to feel sorry for the little girl. But I don't think Ida Lee has been up front with us. And I do think some of it is unreasonable."

Here's hoping Ms. Davine's life is and remains perfect, since her hard-hearted views don't exactly invite sympathy, either.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Service gave Vonnegut his start -- and lots of good material: Paltry pay 'worth it' for famed novelist, then a grad student

The City News wire service is often referred to as a boot camp forjournalists.

On Thursday, one of its most decorated foot soldiers sounded offon its impending demise.

"That's sad," novelist Kurt Vonnegut Jr. said when told of theChicago Tribune's plan to shut City News down at year's end. "It wassomething to be proud of -- like being in the infantry."

". . . I learned how to be a tough guy [there]," Vonnegut, 83,said. "You know, it's something to boast about. And it won't meananything anymore, I guess, except to a few old-timers."

Vonnegut was fresh out of the U.S. Army, having been freed from aGerman POW camp, when he took a job at the original …

Recent studies by L. Ouerdane and co-authors add new data to agricultural and food chemistry findings.

According to a study from Ottawa, Canada, "This paper reports, for the first time, a quantitative replacement of methionine (Met) by selenomethionine (SeMet) at >98% substitution, with up to 4940 mu g of SeMet/g of yeast obtained for the entire protein pool of a wild-type yeast grown on a SeMet-containing medium. The incorporation of selenium in yeast proteins, in the form of selenomethionine, and the influence of various organic and inorganic Se and S sources present in the media were monitored during the growth of a wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which allowed the optimization of the composition of a fully defined synthetic growth medium that ensured maximum SeMet …

JUDGE MAY APPOINT A MONITOR.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

BOSTON -- Using a tactic traditionally reserved for desegregating schools and cleaning up corrupt unions, Massachusetts is asking for a court-appointed monitor to oversee a country club that discriminated against women.

Nine female golfers won a $1.97 million verdict against the Haverhill Golf and Country Club this fall when a jury unanimously decided the women were unfairly denied the sought-after ``primary memberships'' that come with choice starting times and greater access to the club.

In a motion scheduled to be heard next week in Suffolk Superior Court, the state attorney general asked Judge John Cratsley for, among …

Bar manager: Mosque bomb plot suspect vowed blast

DETROIT (AP) — Hours before his arrest outside a popular Detroit-area mosque, a 63-year-old California man held court at a nearby sports bar, telling an employee that he was a Vietnam veteran-turned Muslim holy warrior, that he planned to set off a "big explosion," and that he was "going to be part of making history," the employees said Monday.

Joe Nahhas, an operations manager at the J.S. Fields bar in Detroit, told The Associated Press that a man identified after his arrest as Roger Stockham ordered a double-Scotch on the rocks on Jan. 24 and told him he planned to cause an explosion that would be "here, there, the mosque." Stockham — who is bipolar and suffers from other …

Revisiting the resume

First, get comfortable with the basics

Our focus in this BioPharm column is usually on career strategy, not on the minutia of the job hunt. That's a conscious decision on my part. As a headhunter, I look at 200 resumes a week, and I'm generally not interested in spending nights and weekends writing about them as well. In fact, most people share my dislike of resumes but realize that writing those documents must be revisited regularly. After all, if you don't keep your resume current and looking good, you'll never know what opportunities might pass you by.

Resume Real Estate

The most common question among junior level job seekers is, How long should my resume be? …

Private Giving to UC Santa Barbara Reaches Record $51.3 Million in 2001-02.

Byline: University of California, Santa Barbara

SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Sept. 10 (AScribe Newswire) -- In a climate of economic uncertainty, alumni and friends of the University of California, Santa Barbara demonstrated their strong support for the campus by contributing a record $51.3 million in philanthropic gifts and pledges during 2001-02.

In terms of philanthropic support, the fiscal year that ended June 30 was the campus's most successful ever, surpassing the banner fund-raising achievement of the previous year by more than $3 million.

Over the past three years, annual private support for the campus from individuals, corporations, and …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

TRYING TO KEEP IT GOING.(Sports)

SCHENECTADY -- Two decades of football doldrums at Schenectady High were eclipsed by an unforgettable 2008 season when the Patriots captured their first Liberty Division title, registered a school-record eight victories and advanced to their first Class AA Super Bowl.

The architect of that climb from obscurity, coach Carm DePoalo, is gone. Many of the team's top stars graduated.

But the 2009 Patriots have no intentions of becoming an afterthought. They realize the hunter has now become the hunted.

"I think it is outstanding because the bull's-eye is on us now," said Schenectady first-year coach Jim Kramer, who was the offensive coordinator in 2007 …

Shockers home for two today.(Sports)

Byline: Staff reports

The New York Shockers will face the Mass Aztecs today at 2 p.m. as part of a Premier Arena Soccer League doubleheader at the Center City Complex in Schenectady. The Aztecs are 7-2 this season. At 5, the Shockers will take on the Connecticut Pythons, who are 4-5.

The Shockers (7-1) will play at home in the first round of the playoffs on Feb. 11.

For more information, call the Shockers office at 438-3131.

-6

Schenectady Curling Club: Will host open houses Feb. 18-19 to coincide with the Winter Olympics. The first will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Feb. 18, with the second scheduled from 1-4 p.m. the next day. …

PAULA BARBIERI: MOVIN' ON OUT PAULA BARBIERI,.(MAIN)

who announced last week on ABC's ``PrimeTime Live'' that her three-year relationship with O.J. Simpson is over, has sold her one-bedroom West Los Angeles condo for close to its $220,000 asking price, including furnishings, sources say.

Barbieri, a 26-year-old model/actress, put the …

Results of phase III PRIMO-CABG trial presented.

2003 DEC 8 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., (ALXN) announced that Edward D. Verrier, MD, William K. Edmark professor and chief of cardiothoracic surgery at the University of Washington, presented the phase III trial results of the investigational drug pexelizumab in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass - "Pexelizumab for Reduction in Infarction and Mortality in Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery," or PRIMO-CABG.

The results were presented at the Late Breaking Clinical Trials Session of the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Orlando, Florida. Alexion conducted the PRIMO-CABG trial together with Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals, and initially described top-line observations of the trial on August 4, 2003.

The total Intent-to-Treat population (n=3,099) consisted of patients undergoing CABG-alone …

Texas deputy gunned down at traffic light

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Authorities in south-central Texas say a veteran sheriff's deputy was shot and killed while waiting at a traffic light in his patrol vehicle.

Bexar County Sgt. Kenneth Vann was waiting at an intersection early Saturday when someone in another vehicle pulled up next to his marked cruiser and opened fire through Vann's front passenger side window.

Chief …

MYTURN: ; Religious truths are universal; Maxims of varied faiths emphasize love and peace

AT a recent interfaith prayer service, I hugged a Muslim friend.

The pain in her eyes mirrored my feelings over recent tragediesin our nation.

Over the last two years, I have written a series of articles onvarious faiths throughout our community. I have not become anexpert, but I have learned a little about several differentreligions. The most amazing thing I have learned is how much we allhave in common.

Some examples:

Speak the truth. Avoid violence. Respect the opinion of others. -Jainism

Lives are to be filled with humility, charity, forgiveness andkind words. - Sikhism

Devote time and finances to make the world a better place for …

ANA Objectives.

ANA Objectives

1. CE participants will be able to identify methods of limiting their risk of being named defendants in a lawsuit.

2. CE participants will be able to list data necessary to develop prevention programs in managed workersE comp …