четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Chicago tribute to peacemakers worth fighting for

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children ofGod.

It's not my line. Jesus said it.

He wasn't just talking about folks who avoid conflict at any cost.Peacemakers are doers. They work for peace. Often they have tostruggle for it.

For 22 years, the Chicago Peace Museum, one of the city'sperpetually hidden gems, has chronicled the work of peacemakersaround the globe.

On the way in to the modest museum on the second floor of theGarfield Park Gold Dome on North Central Park, visitors are greetedby a banner that reads, "We can create life without war."

A few feet farther into the exhibition hall, there's a small redpaper sign next to …

Police officers focus on peace role

Waterloo, Ont.

Can you be a Mennonite and a police officer? The eight police officers who met at Conrad Grebel University College on November 29 answered that question with a resounding "yes!"

In fact, these officers, all of whom attend Mennonite or Brethren in Christ churches, see their primary task as peacemaking. The six men and two women talked about their vocation and faith at a Christian Officers' Peace Seminar, hosted by Mennonite Central Committee Ontario and the Peace and Conflict Studies program at Grebel.

The "fishbowl" format had eight officers sit in a circle to discuss the issues, while 12 persons sat in an outer circle to listen in.

Five …

Jones wins WBA cruiserweight title

Guillermo Jones of Panama stopped Firat Arslan of Germany in the 10th round to win the WBA cruiserweight title Saturday.

Jones dominated the fight and hurt Arslan with a series of bruising blows to the head, causing the fight to be stopped with 27 seconds left in the 10th.

"I worked very hard for this title," Jones said.

The 36-year-old Panamanian, who was the No. 1 ranked challenger, improved to 36-2-3.

Arslan, who turned 38 during the fight as it went past midnight, dropped to 29-1-4. He won the title in November 2007 against Virgil Hill and was making his second defense.

The German was bleeding heavily from the …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Youngsters take trip to chamber

SPECIAL GUESTS: Pupils from Abergwili School have visited CountyHall as guests of the chairwoman of Carmarthenshire County …

U. of C. satellite to help track ultra-small debris

A satellite designed by the University of Chicago has detectedtiny high speed particles from a Chinese rocket that exploded inspace 500 miles above the Earth.

It was the first time ultra-small particles have been linked tothe explosion of a specific object, and it could lead to moreaccurate tracking of the space junk that constantly threatenssatellites, spacecraft and astronauts.

The space junk particles, some smaller than a grain of sand, cantravel 19 times faster than a speeding bullet, and have the potentialto damage spacecraft and spacesuits.

They are produced by the explosion of man-made objects that litterthe heavens, mostly upper stage rockets used to …

House passes $649 billion defense bill, boosts Pentagon spending by $17 billion

WASHINGTON (AP) — House passes $649 billion …

Nationals recall RHP Balester

The Washington Nationals recalled Collin Balester from Triple-A Syracuse before their game against Milwaukee on Saturday.

He replaces right-hander Luis Atilano, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list Friday with bone chips in his right elbow.

Balester has not pitched for Washington this season after going 1-4 with a 6.82 …

Developing Superior Time

In today's vast digital music marketplace, there are still plenty of opportunities to develop, record, and perform your music. The competition is still as fierce as ever, and it takes some creativity to get heard or noticed. But there is still one almost sureiire way to make an impression with your listening audience, and especially with those you work with or hope to work with...

Time feel, the ability to lock, whatever you call it, is still THE most important part of your improvising. It is the thing that makes voice-leading sound sweet and phrasing even sweeter. It clarifies your ideas, and makes the "less" in "less is more" actually happen. It is also really vital to have if …

Vietnam Catholics hold prayer vigil, call for government to return land to church

Thousands of Catholics blocked a busy street in Vietnam's capital Friday in a rare public demonstration, chanting and praying for the Communist government to return land once owned by the church.

A priest in a white robe carrying a large cross led a procession of parishioners, accompanied by a marching band, from St. Joseph's Cathedral in downtown Hanoi to the adjacent site of the former Vatican embassy, one of many church properties taken over by the Communist government after French colonialists were ousted in 1954.

The 1-hectare (2.5-acre) property is one of several sites the church is asking the government to return. Church officials say they have …

Syrian protesters call for President Assad’s head

BEIRUT — Tens of thousands of Syrian protesters shouted for President Bashar Assad's death Friday in a dramatic escalation of their rage and frustration, defying bullets and rooftop snipers after more than a week of intensified military assaults on rebellious cities, activists and witnesses said.

Security forces killed at least 14 protesters, according to human -rights groups.

The calls for Assad's execution were a stark sign of how much the protest movement has changed since it erupted in March seeking minor reforms but making no calls for regime change. The protests grew dramatically over the five months that followed, driven in part by anger over the government's bloody …

UN maintains sanctions on Iraq as Security Council split grows

HAVING RECEIVED conflicting progress reports from the two organizations monitoring Iraq's UN-imposed disarmament, the UN Security Council on April 28 voted to maintain sanctions on Baghdad for an additional six months because of its failure to fully comply with its obligations.

Authored by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the UN Special Commission (UNSCOM), the reports paint contradictory pictures of Iraq's cooperation in eliminating its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missile capabilities proscribed by the UN Security Council under the cease-fire resolution that ended the 1991 Gulf War.

Following the release of the biannual reports …

Summary Box: Union Pacific 3Q profit rises 16 pct

SUMMER GROWTH: Union Pacific Corp. said Thursday its third-quarter earnings rose 16 percent as the railroad charged higher prices to offset slower growth in shipments and higher fuel costs. Revenue rose 16 percent to $5.1 billion.

COUNTING CARLOADS: Shipping volume grew 1 percent in the …

Bangladeshis celebrate Bengali New Year with traditional functions

Tens of thousands of Bangladeshis gathered in parks and other open spaces Monday to herald in Bengali New Year with traditional concerts, fairs and foods.

Men, women and children _ most dressed in white and red _ also joined colorful parades to celebrate "Pahela Baishakh," the first day of the new Bengali year 1415.

Parts of downtown Dhaka, the national capital, were closed to traffic, while extra police were deployed at celebration venues.

Police used metal detectors to check revelers at the popular Ramna Park, where 11 people were killed in a bomb attack during celebrations in 2001. No one has been tried for that attack, but authorities have blamed it on Muslim extremists who oppose public entertainment.

On Monday, a gas cylinder used to inflate balloons exploded at a lakeside fair ground in a residential area. At least one person was hospitalized with serious injuries from the blast, police officer Alamgir Kabir said.

The Bengali calendar _ based on a harvest cycle _ was adopted in the 16th century by the region's Mogul rulers to facilitate tax collection.

The calendar is still widely used in villages and among merchants, who settle old accounts and open new ledgers on the first day of the Bengali year.

Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation, officially follows the Gregorian calendar.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Increases in trading, dues drive 9% profit rise for CBOT

The Chicago Board of Trade, the second-biggest U.S. futuresmarket, said first-quarter profit rose 9 percent, fueled by anincrease in trading and member dues.

Net income rose to $16.2 million from $14.8 million a yearearlier, President Bernard Dan wrote in a letter sent to members andfiled with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Revenue rose 24percent to $100.9 million.

Transactions rose after the exchange cut some fees in an effort toprevent traders from switching to Frankfurt, Germany-based Eurex,which opened an electronic U.S. unit in February offering futures onTreasury debt. The Board of Trade also collected $9.3 million inextra dues to fight Eurex.

"In spite of the fact that we lowered fees we still made money --that's a great sign," independent trader Harold Lavender said duringa break from buying and selling 10-year note futures at the CBOT.

Transactions at the Board of Trade rose 44 percent to 136.6million contracts in the first quarter. Trading in futures tied tograins, for which fees stayed at last year's levels, rose 63 percentto 14.3 million.

The exchange in January began clearing transactions through itsneighbor, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange -- a move it says has savedtraders $1.8 billion in the amount they must put up to back bets atthe two markets. The CBOT also started using a new electronic systemthat it says has boosted computer-based trading.

"The exchange and its customers have reaped tremendous benefitsfrom the successful implementation of the CME/CBOT Common ClearingLink and the migration to a premier electronic trading platform," Danand Chairman Charles Carey wrote in the letter. The new systems have"fostered significant growth."

The CBOT collected clearing fees for the first time, earning a net$4.4 million after paying the Mercantile Exchange.

Bloomberg News

Today in History - Nov. 23

Today is Sunday, Nov. 23, the 328th day of 2008. There are 38 days left in the year.

Today's Highlight in History:

On Nov. 23, 1765, Frederick County, Md., became the first colonial entity to repudiate the British Stamp Act.

On this date:

In 1804, the 14th president of the United States, Franklin Pierce, was born in Hillsboro, N.H.

In 1889, the first jukebox made its debut in San Francisco, at the Palais Royale Saloon.

In 1903, singer Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, appearing in "Rigoletto."

In 1936, Life, the photojournalism magazine created by Henry R. Luce, was first published.

In 1943, during World War II, U.S. forces seized control of Tarawa and Makin atolls from the Japanese.

In 1945, most U.S. wartime rationing of foods, including meat and butter, was set to expire by day's end.

In 1963, President Johnson proclaimed Nov. 25 a day of national mourning following the assassination of President Kennedy.

In 1971, the People's Republic of China was seated in the U.N. Security Council.

In 1980, some 2,600 people were killed by a series of earthquakes that devastated southern Italy.

In 1996, a hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 crashed into the waves off Comoros Islands, killing about two-thirds of the 175 people on board.

Ten years ago: Whitewater figure Susan McDougal was acquitted in Santa Monica, Calif., of embezzling from conductor Zubin Mehta and his wife _ a case McDougal said had been trumped up to pressure her to testify against President Clinton.

Five years ago: Five U.S. soldiers were killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan. Eduard Shevardnadze resigned as president of Georgia in the face of protests.

One year ago: Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations grudgingly agreed to attend an upcoming U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace conference, despite failing to get any guarantee of Israeli concessions. Lebanon's President Emile Lahoud left office without a successor after announcing he was handing over security powers to the army. A Canadian cruise ship, the MS Explorer, struck submerged ice off Antarctica and began taking on water, but all 154 passengers and crew took to lifeboats and were plucked to safety by a passing cruise ship.

Today's Birthdays: Broadway composer Jerry Bock is 80. Former Labor Secretary William E. Brock is 78. Actor Franco Nero is 67. Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas is 64. Actor Steve Landesberg is 63. Actor-comedy writer Bruce Vilanch is 60. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., is 58. Singer Bruce Hornsby is 54. Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., is 53. Actor Maxwell Caulfield is 49. Actor John Henton is 48. TV personality Robin Roberts ("Good Morning America") is 48. Rock singer-musician Ken Block (Sister Hazel) is 42. Rock musician Charlie Grover is 42. Actress Salli Richardson-Whitfield is 41. Actor Oded Fehr is 38. Rapper Kurupt (Tha Dogg Pound) is 36. Actor Page Kennedy is 32. Actress Kelly Brook is 29. Actor Lucas Grabeel is 24. Actress-singer Miley Cyrus (TV: "Hannah Montana") is 16. Actor Austin Majors is 13.

Thought for Today: "I'm a realist and so I think regretting is a useless occupation. You help no one with it. But you can't live without illusions even if you must fight for them, such as 'love conquers all.' It isn't true, but I would like it to be." _ Marlene Dietrich, German-born actress (1901-1992).

Council presidency eludes Saunders

Council presidency eludes Saunders

David G. Yosifon

It happened again last week. For the second straight year Roxbury's City Councilor Gareth Saunders offered himself as a last-minute candidate for City Council president. And for the second straight year, he was easily defeated by James Kelly, the incumbent council president from South Boston.

Saunders's short-lived candidacy bewildered many political observers and angered some of his colleagues on the council, several of whom told the Banner they first learned about it from newspaper reports over the weekend, and did not hear from Saunders himself until the morning of the vote.

Saunders said he had been talking casually with fellow councilors for several months about a possible run for council president, but he avoided a formal announcement in order to hold off any early effort to quash his candidacy.

The only chance of unseating Kelly, Saunders reasoned, was a last-minute surprise attack that did not leave Kelly or Mayor Thomas Menino, a Kelly supporter, a chance to twist councilors' arms.

"It was a planned and premeditated strategy," Saunders said.

The strategy seems to have backfired.

"I think it was very disrespectful," said Councilor Maureen Feeney of Dorchester, who said Saunders first asked for her support just hours before the council met to vote.

"To me it was just somewhat of a ploy to read his name in print," she said.

Saunders, though, would have none of his colleagues' criticism, and fired back at Feeney:

"Any person of color who thinks they want to vote for Maureen Feeney should come talk to me first," he told the Banner.

Other councilors, however, said Saunders' timing probably made little difference to the final outcome. Kelly had the votes and no amount of planning would have carried the day for any opponent.

"Councilor Kelly did his homework and he had his votes secured," said Councilor Charles Yancey, who supported Saunders.

Saunders had hoped to make political hay of Kelly's vocal opposition to affirmative action and domestic partner legislation over the past year. Kelly drew criticism from several councilors this summer when he orchestrated a public hearing on ending affirmative action in the city's police and fire departments. After Kelly's contentious performance at the hearing, speculation circulated through City Hall that a majority of councilors might join together to wrest the gavel from Kelly's hand in the new year.

Saunders billed his candidacy as an alternative to what he termed Kelly's "divisive" use of the council's bully pulpit.

In a letter sent to several news agencies last week announcing his candidacy, Saunders wrote:

"President Kelly today still displays myopic views very similar to those he espoused during the turbulent 1970s anti-busing campaigns. These views seem to surface most often surrounding issues of race relations, fair housing, public education, desegregations, gay/lesbian rights, equity and diversity in the workplace."

In the end, however, it seems that speculation about Kelly's weakening hold on power was merely a mirage.

"I don't think it ever really fully materialized," Yancey said.

On Monday, only Yancey and Back Bay Councilor Thomas Keane supported Saunders over Kelly. And Keane made it clear that his vote was more anti-Kelly than it was pro-Saunders.

"I don't want to comment about who would or would not make a good president," Keane said, responding to a Banner inquiry about his vote. "Gareth was the only alternative so I voted for him."

Keane, who attempted his own run at the presidency last year, before running into the Kelly juggernaut and dropping out, told the Banner that he has not yet decided whether he will seek re-election to his district seat this year.

At-large councilors Peggy Davis-Mullen, Stephen Murphy, and Albert "Dapper" O'Neil, as well as district councilors Feeney, Maura Hennigan, Brian Honan and Paul Scapicchio all supported Kelly. Councilor Daniel Conley, of Hyde Park, and atlarge Councilor Francis "Mickey" Roache were both absent from the vote due to deaths in their families.

And so Kelly will head the council again in 1999, and will again enjoy substantial control over the body's agenda, public presence, and committee assignments.

In an impromptu acceptance speech, Kelly said his priorities for 1999 would include finding ways to ensure quality public education and affordable housing for middle-class city residents.

As Kelly begins his unprecedented sixth term as council president, Yancey and Saunders both said the political reality is that the majority of councilors will continue to support Kelly, whether or not they agree with his conservative positions, so as not to alienate South Boston voters who turn out in large numbers for city elections.

"The message is that councilors are not going to trade 10,000 votes that come out of South Boston for 2,000 votes that come out of Roxbury," said Yancey.

Yancey said he believed Kelly would remain council president until he steps down or until new councilors were elected who do not rely on Kelly's South Boston voters for their own base of support.

"Therefore the onus is on our community," Yancey said, "To be more politically involved so our views will be represented when it comes to votes like this."

Saunders concurred.

"We have to show that the road to an at-large seat runs through Roxbury, not just South Boston."

Saunders told the Banner that he is himself considering a run this year for one of the four at-large city council seats which represent the entire city. No African American has held an at-large seat since Bruce Bolling left in 1994.

Saunders noted that if he were to run for an at-large seat, it would open the opportunity for another person of color to reach the council through his current District 7 seat, which is heavily populated by African Americans.

Saunders said he will gauge the depth of financial and political commitment among his supporters, and decide by the end of this month whether he will run at-large or for his district seat.

Photo (Gareth Saunders)

Euro rises to $1.3520 in European morning trade

The euro was slightly higher against the dollar Wednesday, even as investors continued to worry about euro-zone debt _ particularly Greece's _ and slow growth in Europe.

Investors were also looking forward to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testifying before the U.S. Congress for any hints about the state of the economic recovery.

The 16-nation euro bought $1.3520 in European morning trade, up from $1.3515 late Tuesday in New York.

The British pound was nearly unchanged at $1.5419, compared with $1.5420 late Tuesday. The dollar fell to 89.99 Japanese yen from 90.18 yen.

"Fears of a double-dip recession are now starting to permeate into the markets' thought processes and this is causing a certain amount of risk aversion," analyst Michael Hewson at CMC Markets said.

The euro closing "below $1.3485 could well be the signal for further losses and the move toward $1.3200," he added. "While the market is able to hold above this level, it could well be susceptible to bounces back toward $1.3750."

STYLE AND GRACE: AFRICAN AMERICANS AT HOME

by Michael Henry Adams

Bulfinch Press, September 2003

$35.00, ISBN 0-821-22847-1

Our Kind of Style

MICHAEL HENRY ADAMS lives in an old kitchen, but you'd never know it. The architectural historian has transformed the space with antique mirrors, a Chinese carpet, artfully stacked books, a low-hanging chandelier, imported textiles, Bayard Rustin's walking sticks and stone fragments from other old brownstones in Harlem. His eclectic collection of furniture ranges from a carved West African stool to an early 1900s Iyre-back chair that evokes the mahogany suite of Mama Willie, his stylish great-great grandmother.

Besides Mama Willie, Adams was influenced by the grandeur of Stan Hywet Hall, a 65-room house museum in Akron, Ohio, where he was a volunteer tour guide on his off days. His love of history, culture and design is reflected in his new book Style and Grace: African Americans at Home.

Through his prose, along with pictures by Mick Hales, Adams walks readers through his home and those of photographer and filmmaker Gordon Parks; Rep. Charles Rangel and his wife, Alma; model Kimora Lee and hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons; and dancer Sylvia Waters.

Readers can envision sitting for a spell on the Rangels' English camelback sofa under an Indian mirror framed in shell and ebony; playing Parks's grand piano while gazing at the East River; or soaking in Waters's dolphin-footed tub surrounded by oak, inlaid marble and mirrors with recessed lighting overhead.

Adams calls Gordon Chambers's 1860s Italianate brownstone "a modern masterpiece." Chambers hired interior designer Henry Mitchell to blend neoclassical furniture and treasures from trips around the world. His open dining room features a marble counter with gas burners, a grill and translucent glass. To reach the lily pool in his garden, visitors pass a wall displaying awards and photos from his work as a Grammy-winning composer and former music editor at Essence.

Another treat in Adams's book is the sneak peek into the shared home of design divas Cheryl Riley and Courtney Sloane. Each woman has won acclaim for interior and furniture designs, some of which have been featured in the Cooper-Hewitt. Their garden apartment in Chelsea reflects their playful personalities and talent, from the Mexican wooden crocodile and ram skull in front of the fireplace to the vibrant artwork, leather and corduroy sofa, African textile-covered chairs and custom mirrors.

Photograph (A Living Room)

Michael Douglas' son pleads guilty to drug charge

NEW YORK (AP) — Michael Douglas' imprisoned son has pleaded guilty to a new drug charge.

Cameron Douglas admitted Thursday that he managed to get drugs in prison while serving a five-year sentence for an earlier drug plea.

Douglas entered the plea to a narcotics possession charge. He's agreed to serve another year in prison.

Douglas admitted possessing drugs from May through last week. That's when authorities found what appeared to be heroin and cocaine in his cell.

Federal Judge Richard Berman questioned whether security lapses at two federal prison facilities made it possible for Douglas to obtain drugs.

The 32-year-old son of the Academy Award-winning actor had previously admitted to dealing methamphetamine and cocaine.

He recently testified for the government in a drug trial as part of a cooperation deal.

Blake rallies to advance at Shanghai Masters

James Blake rallied to defeat Ivo Karlovic of Croatia 3-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3 Monday in the first round of the Shanghai Masters.

The American was broken early in the first set but won the second when Karlovic sent a forehand wide in the tiebreaker.

"I didn't have very good momentum at the start," said Blake, who recently started working with coach Kelly Jones. "The third set, I liked the way, when I did get my racket on it, how I was playing."

Despite serving 27 aces in the match, Karlovic allowed Blake to break serve in the third and ninth games of the third set.

Karlovic, who holds the record for serving 78 aces in a match during a five-set loss to Radek Stepanek in the Davis Cup semifinals last month, double-faulted on the final point.

Spanish players Tommy Robredo and David Ferrer advanced to the second round with straight-set wins.

The 14th-seeded Robredo, who won 29 of 31 points on his first serve and never faced a break point, easily beat French qualifier Michael Llodra 6-1, 6-4. Ferrer topped Richard Gasquet 6-4, 6-3.

Tenth-seeded Fernando Gonzalez of Chile moved into the second round after Mischa Zverev of Germany retired with an injured right wrist with the score 7-5, 6-7 (0), 2-2.

Former Grand Slam champion Marat Safin, coming off of a quarterfinal showing at Beijing last week, beat Chinese wild-card Gong Maoxin 6-4, 6-4.

$5 million repairs approved by CHA

More than $5 million in emergency repairs for deterioratingpublic housing was authorized Tuesday by the Chicago HousingAuthority Board.

The money comes from $31 million awarded last year by the U.S.Department of Housing and Urban Development for renovations. Underthe agreement between the two agencies, $19 million of that must bespent on emergency repairs by the end of September.

Emergency repairs costing $3.3 million already have beenapproved, and about $7 million will go toward two big projects,systemwide mechanical and electrical repairs and replacement of trashchutes at Stateway Gardens on the South Side.

Most of the $5.3 million approved Tuesday will go for thereplacement of roofs at nine developments, including $1 million forHenry Horner Homes, $750,000 for Wentworth and $779,000 for LathropHomes.

Other projects include masonry and concrete restoration work atthree developments, updating electrical systems at threedevelopments, tuckpointing at Harrison Courts, security gates atRobert Taylor Homes and Darrow Homes, and asbestos work at the ABLAheating plant.

The action came after last week's announcement that HUD hadinvited the CHA to apply for some $48 million in modernization fundsfor next year. That money will be used for similar, though lessurgent, improvements.

The board also gave the staff the green light to apply for a$100,000 grant from the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, based inNashville, Tenn., to draft a plan to counter drug abuse. Once a planis developed, the CHA will apply for another grant to implement it,said Carol Adams, director of resident services.

CHA Chairman Vincent Lane said after the meeting that he hashired a former HUD employee, Chris Oliver, to act as director of anew department of housing development. The department will seek tobuild more housing units for the agency, he said.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Air Carter to the Rescue for Nets

CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Jason Kidd launched the jumper and knew the game - and New Jersey's playoff hopes - were in big trouble. Enter Vince Carter, who might have saved the Nets' season.

Carter caught Kidd's air ball and dunked it at the buzzer to force overtime, then took over in the extra period in a 40-point outing that led New Jersey to a 113-107 win over the undermanned Charlotte Bobcats on Saturday night.

"I knew it was short," Kidd said. "But it was straight and I saw two blue jerseys. Then when (No.) 15 rolls up above everybody else, it was up to him to finish. He did a great job.

"We got lucky."

Indeed. Carter bailed out the Nets, who snapped a two-game losing streak and moved into a three-way tie for seventh place in the Eastern Conference with idle Orlando and Indiana.

Carter, who caught the ball in front of the rim and in one motion dunked it behind his head, roared on the court as the buzzer sounded, but was low-key after the game.

"I was just in the right place at the right time," Carter said. "It looked short, so I just tried to get there."

Carter's three-point play 11 seconds into the extra period put the Nets ahead to stay. His 3-pointer just over a minute later gave the Nets a four-point lead and his two free throws with 22 seconds left put the game away.

"It was Tar Heel intervention," Nets coach Lawrence Frank said of Carter, who was back in the state where he starred in college. "Once again we were fortunate."

Josh Boone added a career-high 21 points on 10-of-10 shooting and Richard Jefferson scored 16 for the Nets, who avoided an embarrassing loss to the severely short-handed Bobcats.

Matt Carroll matched his career high with 27 points and Walter Herrmann added a career-high 20 for Charlotte, which stayed in it without its leading scorer, rebounder, point guard and two other part-time starters.

Leading scorer Gerald Wallace, who suffered severe dehydration after Friday's loss to Philadelphia, did not play. Neither did point guard Raymond Felton, who bruised his thigh against the 76ers.

Top rebounder Emeka Okafor missed his 15th straight game with a strained left calf, while Derek Anderson (knee) and Sean May (knee) remained sidelined.

The Bobcats had a far-from-imposing starting lineup of Carroll, Herrmann, Jake Voskuhl, Adam Morrison and Brevin Knight, forcing Charlotte to play mostly zone defense.

"We had guys sick, guys hurting, but we continued to battle," Knight said. "We knew we didn't have enough bodies to try to run around with their guys. Their athleticism was probably a little too much for us in one-on-one situations."

Boone, whose previous career high was 11 points, was the only Net who took advantage of the Bobcats' depleted frontcourt. Playing ahead of Clifford Robinson, who never got off the bench, Boone also grabbed six rebounds.

"When you get down the stretch, it's whoever has it going that night, is going to play," Frank said.

Charlotte stayed in it behind Herrmann, who had reached double figures twice in his first 28 games - and had failed to get off the bench in 34 games - and Carroll, who shot 11-for-19.

"That's your chance and I think Walter has learned that, too," said Carroll, who two years ago was in the developmental league. "He's got some great minutes in the past few games and has taken advantage of it. That's how this league works."

Carroll's 3-pointer with 3:36 left gave Charlotte an 89-88 lead. His driving layup with 1:41 left put the Bobcats ahead 92-90.

Jefferson's four free throws sandwiched around Herrmann's jumper tied the game with 29 seconds left. Knight's jumper with 8.2 seconds left put Charlotte ahead before Carter's heroics.

Charlotte, which lost its second straight, ran out of steam in its second overtime game in five days as the Bobcats remain without a go-to player like Carter.

But with Carter eligible to become a free-agent this summer, there is speculation part-owner Michael Jordan may try to recruit him.

"We'll have to see. It's a long ways away," Carter said. "As of right now, I'm a Net. I'll always be a Net, so we'll just go from there when it's time."

Notes:@ Nets F Antoine Wright air-balled a free throw in the fourth quarter. ... Voskuhl was called for a flagrant foul in the third quarter when he took down Jefferson. ... Bobcats coach Bernie Bickerstaff picked up his 10th technical foul in the third. ... Bickerstaff was a few minutes late for his pregame media availability so he could watch the end of the first half of the Ohio State-Memphis NCAA tournament game. Buckeyes big man Greg Oden could be the No. 1 overall pick - a pick the Bobcats could have.

CHA residents need update on rebuilding progress

The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) delivered its 2002 annual report last week, and it says that both the Plan for Transformation of public housing and the plan's future look good.

No homeless Chicagoans formed mobs blocking traffic anywhere last winter. Shelters took care of the 15,000 or so every night who needed beds, and total homelessness this year probably won't go beyond the predicted 160,000 people.

The rebuilding job is on schedule, CHA says, as it continues to tear down uninhabitable projects and move residents to scattered site, mixed income developments and the best senior facilities in the United States.

Still, there is dissent, and it comes from the usual suspects who claim the demolition process is moving faster than replacement housing can accommodate uprooted residents.

They say rebuilding isn't adequate, the tracking system through which CHA follows residents isn't working, city hall wants gentrified neighborhoods so middle and upper-income residents are lured to town and that we're in a crisis.

The Coalition to Protect Public Housing, a nettlesome critic of the CHA's 10-year, $1.6 billion rebuilding plan, says "Destruction of public housing is outpacing construction by rate of 10 to one."

CHA says that three years into the plan, 30 percent of units scheduled for redevelopment or rehab have been completed, 1,000 of them scattered site and 3,400 of them senior dwellings.

The public housing agency planned to complete 6193 units last year, but said that "multiple challenges" prevented it from meeting the goal. As a result, CHA fell short of its goal by 1,588 dwellings, completing only 4,605 units.

Its goal of rehabbing 1,063 scattered site units was reached, and some 2,200 "non-viable" units were demolished last year. More than 275 families moved to permanent housing, and 16 families were helped to buy their own homes.

Some 9,400 senior units are scheduled for rehab, and in what it said is a truly significant achievement, CHA reached 78 percent of its goal last year.

The annual report said CHA's Housing Choice Voucher Program helped 32,000 families rent private market housing apartments as the agency made supplementary payments to landlords that enabled low-income families to afford market-rate units.

Last month CHA's Executive Director Terry Peterson complained that Chicago Defender reports about the rebuilding plan "have been full of blatant misinformation." Mr. Peterson cited only one report, which was based on information developed by the Community Renewal Society.

CHA is attempting "something bold, ambitious and historic, and it is simply baffling that the Defender keeps missing this important national story," he said.

Peterson repeatedly says that CHA residents are Chicagoans first and that CHA's goal is greater than merely building public housing: It's to improve quality of life for residents. CHA's progress is to be saluted.

Its plan is indeed a bold one. The city and private developers are working together, creating exciting new neighborhoods, Peterson said. Many of those developers are profiting handsomely.

Yet, many advocates say residents, Chicagoans first, are entitled to reassurance to calm fears amid this massive construction job.

The next annual report would do well to address itself to them -- the needy, the fearful, the bewildered -- the very reason for the ambitious plan.

Article copyright REAL TIMES Inc.

NL makes big return to Milwaukee

Brewers 6 Expos 4 MILWAUKEE On the day National League baseballreturned to Milwaukee for the first time in 33 years, the Brewers wonwith some American League-style ball.

Jeromy Burnitz and Jose Valentin homered off losing pitcherDustin Hermanson (0-1) in the fifth inning, and the Brewers won theirsixth consecutive game Tuesday by defeating the winless MontrealExpos 6-4 before a crowd of 51,408 at County Stadium.

The Brewers already have hit 11 home runs, including four eachby Burnitz and Valentin. Their average of 1.57 home runs per game istwice what it was last season."When the pitchers have made a mistake, we've punished theball," Brewers manager Phil Garner said. "They've got the ball upthree or four times on Valentin, and he hammered it. And the samething with Jeromy."The Expos fell to 0-7, extending the worst start in theirhistory.Home-run king Hank Aaron threw out the first ball, a one-hopperto the plate. It was the first National League game in Milwaukeesince Sept. 22, 1965, when the Braves lost to the Los Angeles Dodgersin 11 innings. They moved to Atlanta the next season.The Brewers, who moved from Seattle to Milwaukee before the 1970season, started the season with a 5-1 road trip. The crowd Tuesdaywas the biggest for a County Stadium opener in four seasons.Expos manager Felipe Alou, who played with Aaron in Milwaukee,said he was excited to see the packed house."We left in '66 because no one came," Alou said. "So it wasencouraging to see so many people."Winning pitcher Scott Karl (1-0) gave up two earned runs andseven hits in 6 1/3 innings. He left with a 5-2 lead in the seventhafter hearing two unusual pops in his throwing shoulder. The Brewerswill examine him today.After the Expos pulled to 5-4, Chad Fox, Bob Wickman and DougJones shut them down the rest of the way, with Jones pitching theninth for his third save.

Engineers lease penthouse

National engineering firm Peter Brett Associates has opened anoffice in Bristol.

Up to 18 staff will work out of new penthouse offices at 10 QueenSquare.

The company previously handled Bristol business from itsheadquarters in Reading but has now taken a 10-year lease on the1,600 sq ft fifth floor of the building - its 13th office.

The offices are expected to be up and running by June 14.

Matt Whiston, senior associate at Peter Brett Associates, said:"PBA is delighted to be occupying these premier offices in the heartof Bristol.

"This reflects the PBA corporate image and supports our continuedexpansion of transport, environmental and engineering services in theSouth West region."

DTZ advised Peter Brett on the acquisition.

Joint marketing agents Osmond Tricks and CBRE are now seekingoccupiers for the remaining space inside the building, which can beoffered on a floor by floor basis, or as a whole, at a quoting rentof GBP20 per sq ft.

U.S. Senator Pete Fitzgerald fights for prescription bill

U.S. Senator Peter Fitzgerald fights for prescription bill

There is bipartisan support for a prescription drug benefit package for senior citizens as part of the Medicare program, but the battle remains in how to structure the legislation, U.S. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald (R-Ill.) said Wednesday.

"The president's proposal was to provide the first dollars for a prescription drug benefit but not the last catastrophic dollars for the benefit," he said on WBBM's Bob Crawford's "At Issues" radio talk show scheduled to air 9:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. Sunday (Nov. 28).

His remarks come on the heels of Cook County Commissioners Roberto Maldonado and Bobbie Steele this week accusing Republicans of slapping seniors in the face by adjourning and not passing legislation that would help the elderly pay for their prescription drugs.

"I don't think we want to pay the very first dollars," he said, explaining there should be a little co-pay.

Fitzgerald said President Clinton's plan allegedly failed to provide protection for seniors who have huge pharmaceutical costs. He called that "problematic" but he provides the first dollars without a co-pay.

"While we want to recognize the need that our seniors have for the prescription drug benefit, we still have to be fiscally responsible at the same time. We don't want to craft a program that has incentives for wasteful spending on pharmaceuticals," the senator stated.

Asked if Congress should be looking at the soaring cost of prescriptions, Fitzgerald said there have been obstacles to using generic brand drugs in the past. "I think we need to look at what there is in the law that keeps our drug prices so high."

Fitzgerald wants to know why drugs are higher than other countries like Canada.

"We have to make sure that drug companies have incentives to develop new drugs and they will be awarded if they hit upon a successful drug but at the same time not keep that monopoly power over that brand name drugs for an inordinate number of years."

The senator said there must be a right balance and that congress needs to look to see if there are obstacles in existing law that prevents competition among drug companies regarding brand name vs. generic alternatives.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (U.S. Senator Peter Fitzgerald)

Tree-sitters in Berkeley determined to save oaks; university officials mull options

University of California officials have won the legal right to oust a band of tree-sitters who have taken up residence in a oak grove standing in the way of a planned sports center.

But how do you uproot a tree-sitter in Berkeley, one of America's most politically correct cities?

"Extremely difficult," acknowledges campus spokesman Dan Mogulof.

As the protest nears its one-year anniversary, plenty of people have suggestions: Fire hoses, skunk spray and tranquilizer darts are among the thorny ideas Internet posters have planted.

So far, the university has moved cautiously.

The university wants to remove dozens of the picturesque trees, called evergreen coast live oaks, to build a $125 million (euro84.3 million) training facility for its athletic teams.

There have been scuffles between police and tree-sitters; and campus officials have put up chain-link fences around the grove. University lawyers have told a judge they are considering pruning lower branches _ to make it harder to ferry supplies up to the protesters.

Both sides say they do not want a treetop confrontation.

"It's not an easy thing to do, to climb up into a tree, first of all," said Doug Buckwald, member of a group that supports tree-sitters but doesn't join them. "If you're climbing up into a tree to try to wrestle with somebody and drag them down, you are taking on a high level of risk."

A judge ruled last month that school officials would be within their rights to oust the protesters. Mogulof declined to comment on what tactics campus police might use but said they are "not currently contemplating a forcible removal."

"Any decisions we make are going to be guided by an overriding desire to minimize the chance of harm coming to our officers or the people in the trees," Mogulof said.

The protest began last Dec. 2. It is unclear exactly how many tree-sitters there are, or whether they are students or outsiders. Many rotate in and out at night and wear masks, and they usually give false names.

Although some just spend a few hours in a tree to show solidarity, others seem to hang out for days or weeks, helped by supporters who hoist food, water and reading materials to them in buckets and haul out trash, excrement and other waste.

Notable milestones have included an appearance by conservationist Sylvia McLaughlin, 91, who briefly sat on a tree platform in January. There have been two nude photo shoots, and two sitters have fallen, breaking bones.

The next big development in the case could be a ruling, expected soon, on lawsuits filed by the City of Berkeley and others challenging the building plans. They argue the athletic center would be environmentally and seismically unsound, which campus officials deny.

The judge hearing those lawsuits previously issued an injunction banning construction while the case is pending.

Campus officials say a new gym will allow the school to move athletes out of cramped and dilapidated quarters in the university's 84-year-old Memorial Stadium. They promise to plant three new trees for every one felled.

Berkeley has changed since its '60s heyday as an epicenter of student protest, and the tree-sit does not appear to have generated huge interest on campus. "Unfortunately, a lot of the people are detached," said Jerlina Love, a graduate student who supports the sitters.

But sitters have vowed not to descend as long as the oaks are in peril. The sound of laughter and guitar music wafted from the trees as sitters enjoyed mild temperatures on a golden afternoon this week.

The group was feeling "awesome," said a sitter who would give only her nickname of "Dumpster Muffin." Still, she said, they are concerned for their safety. "It's definitely coming to a head of some sort."

___

On the Net:

U.C. athletics: http://calbears.cstv.com/

Tree supporters: http://www.saveoaks.com/SaveOaks/Main.html

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

ORGANIC WASTE COMPOSTING PROJECT PROTOCOL ADOPTED

The Climate Action Reserve (CAR), an offset registry for the North American carbon market, adopted a new standard that encourages reduction of greenhouse gases (GHG) from a significant methane source in the U.S. - food waste. The Organic Waste Composting (OWC) Project Protocol provides guidelines for developing carbon offset projects and generating offset credits, which can be traded in the carbon market, by diverting food waste from landfills to composting operations.

The performance standard for this protocol defines compost feedstocks that the Reserve has determined are likely to be deposited in landfills under common practice or "business-asusual" management practices. Only …

Iran test-fires short-range missiles

Iran said it successfully test-fired short-range missiles during military drills Sunday by the elite Revolutionary Guard, a show of force days after the U.S. warned Tehran over a newly revealed underground nuclear facility it was secretly constructing.

Gen. Hossein Salami, head of the Revolutionary Guard Air Force, said Iran also tested a multiple missile launcher for the first time. The official English-language Press TV showed pictures of at least two missiles being fired simultaneously and said they were from Sunday's drill in a central Iran desert. In the clip, men could be heard shouting "Allahu Akbar" as the missiles were launched.

"We are going to respond to any military action in a crushing manner and it doesn't make any difference which country or regime has launched the aggression," state media quoted Salami as saying. He said the missiles successfully hit their targets.

The powerful Revolutionary Guard defends Iran's clerical rulers. It has its own ground, naval and air units and its air force controls the country's missile program.

The tests came two days after the U.S. and its allies disclosed that Iran had been secretly developing a previously unknown underground uranium enrichment facility and warned the country it must open the nuclear site to international inspection or face harsher international sanctions. The drill was planned before that disclosure.

The newly revealed nuclear site in the arid mountains near the holy city of Qom is believed to be inside a heavily guarded, underground facility belonging to the Revolutionary Guard, according to a document sent by President Barack Obama's administration to lawmakers.

After the strong condemnations from the U.S. and its allies, Iran said Saturday it will allow U.N. nuclear inspectors to examine the site.

Nuclear experts said the details that have emerged about the site and the fact it was being developed secretly are strong indications that Iran's nuclear program is not only for peaceful purposes, as the country has long maintained.

By U.S. estimates, Iran is one to five years away from having a nuclear weapons capability, although U.S. intelligence also believes that Iranian leaders have not yet made the decision to build a weapon.

Iran also is developing a longer-range ballistic missile that could carry a nuclear warhead, but the administration said last week that it believes that effort has been slowed. That assessment paved the way for Obama's decision to shelve the Bush administration's plan for a missile shield in Europe, which was aimed at defending against Iranian ballistic missiles.

Salami said Iran would test medium-range Shahab-1 and Shahab-2 missiles on Sunday night and a longer-range Shahab-3 missiles on Monday, during drills set to last several days.

Salami said Fateh, Tondar and Zelzal missiles were test fired on Sunday, but did not give specifics on range or other details. All are short-range, surface-to-surface missiles.

He told reporters Iran had reduced the missiles and their ranges and enhanced their speed and precision so they could be used in quick, short-range engagements. He also said they are now able to be launched from positions that are not as easy to hit.

He said the Revolutionary Guards' current missile tests and military drills are indications of Iran's resolve to defend its national values and part of a strategy of deterrence and containment of missile threats.

Salami claimed Iran has started "running into difficulties storing so many missiles" with its recent progress on its missile program.

Iran has had the solid-fuel Fateh missile, with a range of 120 miles (193 kilometers), for several years. Fateh means conqueror in Farsi and Arabic. It also has the solid-fueled, Chinese-made CSS 8, also called the Tondar 69, according to the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control, a private group that seeks to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction. The Tondar, which means thunder, has a range of about 93 miles (150 kilometers.)

State media said the Revolutionary Guard tested a multiple launcher for the first time, designed for the Zelzal missile. Tehran has previously tested the Zelzal _ versions of which have ranges of 130-185 miles (210-300 kilometers) _ but only single launch.

In July 2006, Israeli military officials said their jets had destroyed a missile in Lebanon named Zelzal, which they said Hezbollah had received from Iran and could reach Tel Aviv. Zelzal means earthquake.

Iran's last known missile tests were in May when it fired its longest-range solid-fuel missile, Sajjil-2. Tehran said the two-stage surface-to-surface missile has a range of about 1,200 miles (1,900 kilometers) _ capable of striking Israel, U.S. Mideast bases and southeastern Europe.

The revelation of Iran's secret site has given greater urgency to a key meeting on Thursday in Geneva between Iran and six major powers trying to stop its suspected nuclear weapons program.

The U.S. and its partners plan to tell Tehran at the meeting that it must provide "unfettered access" for the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, within weeks.

The facility is Iran's second uranium-enrichment site working to produce the fuel to power a nuclear reactor, or potentially the material for a weapon.

A close aide to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Saturday the site will be operational soon and would pose a threat to those who oppose Iran.

"This new facility, God willing, will become operational soon and will blind the eyes of the enemies," Mohammad Mohammadi Golpayegani told the semiofficial Fars news agency.

Evidence of the clandestine facility was presented Friday by Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy at the G-20 economic summit in Pittsburgh. On Saturday, Obama offered Iran "a serious, meaningful dialogue" over its disputed nuclear program, while warning Tehran of grave consequences from a united global front.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Saturday the revelation was firm proof Iran was seeking nuclear weapons.

Israel considers Iran a strategic threat with its nuclear program, missile development and repeated calls by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for Israel's destruction. It has not ruled out a pre-emptive strike on Iran's nuclear sites.

In 1981, Israeli warplanes bombed Iraq's Osirak nuclear reaction and in 2007, Israel bombed a site in Syria that the U.S. said was a nearly finished nuclear reactor built with North Korean help that was configured to produce plutonium _ one of the substances used in nuclear warheads.

Israel's Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment on the missile tests.

Iranian Vice President Ali Akbar Salehi, who heads the country's nuclear program, said Saturday that U.N. nuclear inspectors could visit the nuclear site. On Sunday, he told Press TV Iran and the IAEA would work out the timing of the inspection.

The small-scale site is meant to house no more than 3,000 centrifuges _ much less than the 8,000 machines at Natanz, Iran's known industrial-scale enrichment facility, but they could still potentially help create bomb-making material.

Experts have estimated that Iran's current number of centrifuges could enrich enough uranium for a bomb in as little as a year. Washington has been pushing for heavier sanctions if Iran does not agree to end enrichment.

Iran test-fires short-range missiles

Iran said it successfully test-fired short-range missiles during military drills Sunday by the elite Revolutionary Guard, a show of force days after the U.S. warned Tehran over a newly revealed underground nuclear facility it was secretly constructing.

Gen. Hossein Salami, head of the Revolutionary Guard Air Force, said Iran also tested a multiple missile launcher for the first time. The official English-language Press TV showed pictures of at least two missiles being fired simultaneously and said they were from Sunday's drill in a central Iran desert. In the clip, men could be heard shouting "Allahu Akbar" as the missiles were launched.

"We are going to respond to any military action in a crushing manner and it doesn't make any difference which country or regime has launched the aggression," state media quoted Salami as saying. He said the missiles successfully hit their targets.

The powerful Revolutionary Guard defends Iran's clerical rulers. It has its own ground, naval and air units and its air force controls the country's missile program.

The tests came two days after the U.S. and its allies disclosed that Iran had been secretly developing a previously unknown underground uranium enrichment facility and warned the country it must open the nuclear site to international inspection or face harsher international sanctions. The drill was planned before that disclosure.

The newly revealed nuclear site in the arid mountains near the holy city of Qom is believed to be inside a heavily guarded, underground facility belonging to the Revolutionary Guard, according to a document sent by President Barack Obama's administration to lawmakers.

After the strong condemnations from the U.S. and its allies, Iran said Saturday it will allow U.N. nuclear inspectors to examine the site.

Nuclear experts said the details that have emerged about the site and the fact it was being developed secretly are strong indications that Iran's nuclear program is not only for peaceful purposes, as the country has long maintained.

By U.S. estimates, Iran is one to five years away from having a nuclear weapons capability, although U.S. intelligence also believes that Iranian leaders have not yet made the decision to build a weapon.

Iran also is developing a longer-range ballistic missile that could carry a nuclear warhead, but the administration said last week that it believes that effort has been slowed. That assessment paved the way for Obama's decision to shelve the Bush administration's plan for a missile shield in Europe, which was aimed at defending against Iranian ballistic missiles.

Salami said Iran would test medium-range Shahab-1 and Shahab-2 missiles on Sunday night and a longer-range Shahab-3 missiles on Monday, during drills set to last several days.

Salami said Fateh, Tondar and Zelzal missiles were test fired on Sunday, but did not give specifics on range or other details. All are short-range, surface-to-surface missiles.

He told reporters Iran had reduced the missiles and their ranges and enhanced their speed and precision so they could be used in quick, short-range engagements. He also said they are now able to be launched from positions that are not as easy to hit.

He said the Revolutionary Guards' current missile tests and military drills are indications of Iran's resolve to defend its national values and part of a strategy of deterrence and containment of missile threats.

Salami claimed Iran has started "running into difficulties storing so many missiles" with its recent progress on its missile program.

Iran has had the solid-fuel Fateh missile, with a range of 120 miles (193 kilometers), for several years. Fateh means conqueror in Farsi and Arabic. It also has the solid-fueled, Chinese-made CSS 8, also called the Tondar 69, according to the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control, a private group that seeks to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction. The Tondar, which means thunder, has a range of about 93 miles (150 kilometers.)

State media said the Revolutionary Guard tested a multiple launcher for the first time, designed for the Zelzal missile. Tehran has previously tested the Zelzal _ versions of which have ranges of 130-185 miles (210-300 kilometers) _ but only single launch.

In July 2006, Israeli military officials said their jets had destroyed a missile in Lebanon named Zelzal, which they said Hezbollah had received from Iran and could reach Tel Aviv. Zelzal means earthquake.

Iran's last known missile tests were in May when it fired its longest-range solid-fuel missile, Sajjil-2. Tehran said the two-stage surface-to-surface missile has a range of about 1,200 miles (1,900 kilometers) _ capable of striking Israel, U.S. Mideast bases and southeastern Europe.

The revelation of Iran's secret site has given greater urgency to a key meeting on Thursday in Geneva between Iran and six major powers trying to stop its suspected nuclear weapons program.

The U.S. and its partners plan to tell Tehran at the meeting that it must provide "unfettered access" for the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, within weeks.

The facility is Iran's second uranium-enrichment site working to produce the fuel to power a nuclear reactor, or potentially the material for a weapon.

A close aide to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Saturday the site will be operational soon and would pose a threat to those who oppose Iran.

"This new facility, God willing, will become operational soon and will blind the eyes of the enemies," Mohammad Mohammadi Golpayegani told the semiofficial Fars news agency.

Evidence of the clandestine facility was presented Friday by Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy at the G-20 economic summit in Pittsburgh. On Saturday, Obama offered Iran "a serious, meaningful dialogue" over its disputed nuclear program, while warning Tehran of grave consequences from a united global front.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Saturday the revelation was firm proof Iran was seeking nuclear weapons.

Israel considers Iran a strategic threat with its nuclear program, missile development and repeated calls by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for Israel's destruction. It has not ruled out a pre-emptive strike on Iran's nuclear sites.

In 1981, Israeli warplanes bombed Iraq's Osirak nuclear reaction and in 2007, Israel bombed a site in Syria that the U.S. said was a nearly finished nuclear reactor built with North Korean help that was configured to produce plutonium _ one of the substances used in nuclear warheads.

Israel's Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment on the missile tests.

Iranian Vice President Ali Akbar Salehi, who heads the country's nuclear program, said Saturday that U.N. nuclear inspectors could visit the nuclear site. On Sunday, he told Press TV Iran and the IAEA would work out the timing of the inspection.

The small-scale site is meant to house no more than 3,000 centrifuges _ much less than the 8,000 machines at Natanz, Iran's known industrial-scale enrichment facility, but they could still potentially help create bomb-making material.

Experts have estimated that Iran's current number of centrifuges could enrich enough uranium for a bomb in as little as a year. Washington has been pushing for heavier sanctions if Iran does not agree to end enrichment.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Cops Attacked by Fleas in Vacant House

SOUTH BEND, Ind. - It wasn't a fleeing suspect who attacked four police officers sent to investigate a burglary report at a garbage-filled vacant house - it was a swarm of fleas.

The bug barrage was so overwhelming that the patrolmen had to be decontaminated.

"They were all over the place - in our socks and even in our shorts. It was disgusting," said Cpl. Ken Stuart.

A van took the officers back to their station, where they …

Robust column.(Brief Article)

SGE has developed a capillary column with the strength of stainless steel and the benefits of traditional silica columns.

The SolGel-1 column features a non-polar polydimethyl siloxane phase encapsulated within a synthetic glass called SolGel. The phase is …

Catnaps reduce heart attack risksSusan Brink.(News)

Los Angeles: The next time the boss finds you leaning back in your chair, feet up, eyes shut, tell her that you're napping for medical purposes.

Science won't definitively back you up yet but the evidence is mounting that a short afternoon nap, for an otherwise well-rested, healthy person, is good for the heart.

"I love to nap," says Dr Robert Downey III, chief of sleep medicine at Loma Linda University Medical Centre in Southern California. "I recommend napping."

Among his fellow researchers, it's still controversial whether napping has cardiovascular benefits. Early studies of possible heart benefits of siestas in Mediterranean and Latin American …

COURT RULING BENEFITS EMPLOYERS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: JOHN CAHER - Staff writer

New York's top court on Friday threw out its own 13-year precedent and ruled that employers can force their workers to arbitrate disputes over racial and sexual discrimination.

The Court of Appeals, which had previously ruled that disputes as important as those should be resolved by a judge, now says the claims can be handled through compelled arbitration. Friday's decision is a victory, legally and economically, for employers.

"These claims of discrimination, which are often very costly and very difficult to defend against, can now be handled in a much more expeditious manner," said Vincent M. Bonventre, an …

Shearer 'not ready' to become a Newcastle coach

Former Newcastle striker Alan Shearer has rejected a chance to join Joe Kinnear's coaching staff at the Premier League club.

"I said he'd be welcome to come in any time to give the place a lift and work with our strikers," Kinnear said. "He said it was a very kind offer but he wasn't ready for it yet, and I said, 'That's fine.'

"There's a possibility I might bring someone else in on the …

NATO troops start deployment in Macedonia 30-day mission aims to disarm ethnic Albanian rebels

BRUSSELS, Belgium--NATO authorized deployment of 3,500 troops toMacedonia on Wednesday and could begin collecting weapons from ethnicAlbanian rebels early next week in its latest foray trying to bringstability in the Balkans.

Troops started moving almost immediately, with the first Frenchsoldiers of the main force arriving Wednesday afternoon in thecapital Skopje, joining the 400 communications and headquarterspersonnel already on the ground.

NATO officials said complete deployment probably would take 10days to two weeks, but the job of collecting rebel arms andtransporting them to a central location for destruction could beginwell before all the troops had …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Hold that line.(Brief Article)

With a reported 16 station groups now signed on to Sinclair's petition asking the FCC to throw another DTV transmission standard into the mix (and a handful said to be supporting it unofficially), the conversion to digital TV is at a critical junction, in danger of being derailed or at least seriously impeded. From our point of view, only three votes stand between the future of DTV and chaos.

Since digital TV will not be in anything like a critical mass of homes for at least another five years, the key question is: Can the perceived multipath interference issues be fixed within the current standard? If so, then the complaints by Sinclair and others is so much wasted …

beast injury.(Monday Sports Supplement)

BYLINE: ASHFAK MOHAMED

DURBAN: Injuries, fatigue and a possible suspension could result in several changes to a battered and bruised Springbok side for Saturday's final Tri-Nations clash against the Wallabies in Johannesburg.

Tighthead prop CJ van der Linde has been cited for an alleged headbutt on Wallaby scrumhalf Sam Cordingley, while loosehead Beast Mtawarira limped off the field with a knee injury that had been troubling him all week. Van der Linde's disciplinary hearing takes place this morning.

Springbok coach Peter de Villiers hinted after Saturday's crushing 27-15 defeat to the Wallabies that others such as flyhalf Butch James, centre Jean de Villiers and flank Juan Smith might also be rested because of the amount of rugby they have played this year.

"We do try to manage the players …

KNOW IT ALL.(MAIN)

Q: In the movie ``The Caine Mutiny,'' what was Captain Queeg's first name? Was he a captain?

A: Philip Queeg, portrayed by Humphrey Bogart, was the ship's captain, but he held the rank of lieutenant commander.

Q: Where is the estate used in the opening shots of the TV show ``Dark Shadows''?

A: I asked Patrick McCann, host of one of several ``Dark Shadow'' Web sites. Here's his response: ``There were several different slides used during the opening of the show, but the main Collinwood shot is from the rear view of Seaview Terrace/Carey Mansion on Ruggles Avenue in Newport, R.I. It's now owned by Salve Regina University and is used as a male …

CIA'S SECRET BOTTOM LINE SENATE PANEL DROPS PLAN FOR DISCLOSURE.(Main)

Byline: Tim Weiner Knight-Ridder

Under pressure from President Bush, Congress has canceled a proposal to unveil the secret "black budget" that pays for U.S. intelligence.

The Senate intelligence committee had voted to disclose the secret sum, the bottom line of the intelligence budget. CIA chief Robert M. Gates endorsed the idea during his confirmation hearings in September. He said the disclosure would show that "the mentality of the Cold War has changed" at the CIA and the White House.

Apparently it hasn't. Bush told the congressional intelligence committees he would veto the 1992 spending bill for the CIA and 11 other U.S. intelligence agencies …

Reliever Nelson still going after 4 surgeries

Joe Nelson won the last game ever played at Shea Stadium. He received a World Series ring for pitching just three games with the Boston Red Sox.

The reliever's other career milestones are less joyous _ four serious surgeries, seven major league organizations and too many grueling days of rehabilitation for him to count.

Now Nelson faces another challenge. He's one of about a half dozen pitchers competing for the lone vacancy in Boston's bullpen, a hurdle his history of dealing with adversity may help him overcome.

"I thrive in situations like that," the right-hander said Sunday. "I love the game. I'm 35 and I still get to play a game …

Jet Crash in Thailand's Phuket Kills 74

BANGKOK, Thailand - A passenger plane filled with foreign tourists crashed Sunday as it tried to land in heavy rain on the island of Phuket, splitting in two and bursting into flames, officials said. At least 74 people were killed.

The budget One-Two-Go Airlines domestic flight OG269 was carrying 123 passengers and seven crew members to Phuket - one of Thailand's leading tourist destinations - from the capital, Bangkok.

Survivors described their escape from the airplane's windows as fires and smoke consumed the plane.

"I saw passengers engulfed in fire as I stepped over them on way out of the plane," Parinwit Chusaeng, a survivor who suffered minor burns, told …

Changing Hands.(television, radio station sales)(Brief Article)

TVs

KNTV-TV San Jose, Calif.

Price: $230 million (see story in Business)

Buyer: NBC (Jay Ireland, president, NBC Stations)

Seller: Granite Broadcasting (Stuart J. Beck, president)

Facilities: Ch.ll; 182 kW, ant. 2,769 ft.

Affiliation: WB (NBC effective Jan. 1, 2002)

Financial advisers: Merrill Lynch (for NBC) and Goldman Sachs (for Granite)

Combos

WANB-AM-FM Waynesburg, Pa.

Price: $850,000

Buyer: Broadcast Communications Inc. (Robert M. Stevens, president); also owns WKHB(AM) and WKTW(AM) both Pittsburgh

Seller: WANB Radio (Joseph F. Hennessey, president)

Repair work closes hall for a month.

BRIGHOUSE Civic Hall will remain closed for urgent repair work throughout January.

A timber specialist along with staff from Calderdale Council inspected the building yesterday to assess essential work that needs carrying out to the roof.

The building in Bradford Road closed just before Christmas when an earlier inspection of the roof by structural engineers revealed movement in one of the wooden roof trusses.

The decision was taken to close the building until engineers were satisfied there was no danger to the building or people using it.

But following yesterday's check experts realised the extent of the problem is not as bad as was …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

KATHLEEN M. ESTES.(CAPITAL REGION)

EAST GREENBUSH -- Kathleen M. Estes, 73, of Eastern Ave., died after a short illness at her home in East Greenbush. Born in Ireland she was a resident of the capital region most of her life. She was a homemaker in her own home. She was the wife of the late Richard C. Estes; mother of Miss Carol Estes of East Greenbush, aunt of …