четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

17 Hopefuls Eye Million XIV Field

The news Friday from Arlington International Racecourse was that17 horses were still in the lineup for Million XIV Aug. 28 and 10fillies and mares were set for the $500,000 Beverly D., to be runAug. 27.

In addition, Holy Bull and Tabasco Cat, the two leading3-year-olds, will meet in today's $750,000 Travers at Saratoga.Arlington will simulcast the 1 1/4-mile championship race that drewfour other horses.

Both the Million, at 1 1/4 miles, and the Beverly D. at 13/16 miles could be rated as championship events. Hardly a top horseis missing from the list of probable starters.

According to my sources, Hollywood Wildcat, one of the …

Japan central bank keeps interest rate near zero

TOKYO (AP) — Japan's central bank on Friday kept its key interest rate unchanged at nearly zero and extended by six months an emergency loan program for disaster-hit regions.

The Bank of Japan's nine-member policy board voted unanimously at a two-day meeting to maintain the overnight call rate target at zero to 0.1 percent.

It described the world's No. 3 economy as "picking up" and predicted an eventual return to a moderate recovery despite concerns about the health of the global economy.

Industrial production figures last week showed that output had nearly recovered to the levels recorded before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami devastated northeastern Japan. Exports …

Haeger strengthens case for Dodgers rotation spot

Knuckleballer Charlie Haeger moved closer to earning the fifth spot in the Los Angeles Dodgers' rotation, throwing 5 1-3 scoreless innings in a 3-1 victory over the Seattle Mariners on Saturday.

Haeger gave up just two hits, both singles by Ichiro Suzuki. He struck out five …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Capital Hill, cont.; Cubs lefty has picked up where he left off in '06

He is "king of the hill" now, less than a year after the groundseemed to be crumbling beneath him.

Rich Hill takes the mound for the Cubs tonight against theMilwaukee Brewers as the major leagues' hottest pitcher, his 3-0record and minuscule 0.41 ERA in stark contrast to his team'swayward start. The lefty's mastery dates back even farther, going 6-3 with a 2.91 ERA over the final two months of last season.

Before that? An 0-4 record and 9.31 ERA in a three-week stintthat ended with a May 20 start against the White Sox, in which Hilllasted only four innings and drew stinging comments from Sox managerOzzie Guillen for coming to the defense of Cubs catcher …

The Two Motor Domains of KIF3A/B Coordinate for Processive Motility and Move at Different Speeds

ABSTRACT

KIF3A/B, a kinesin involved in intraflagellar transport and Golgi trafficking, is distinctive because it contains two nonidentical motor domains. Our hypothesis is that the two heads have distinct functional properties, which are tuned to maximize the performance of the wild-type heterodimer. To test this, we investigated the motility of wild-type KIF3A/B heterodimer and chimaeric KIF3A/A and KIF3B/B homodimers made by splicing the head of one subunit to the rod and tail of the other. The first result is that KIF3A/B is processive, consistent with its transport function in cells. Secondly, the KIF3B/B homodimer moves at twice the speed of the wild-type motor but has …

Overseas Filipino workers unaffected by crisis

Most of the more than 8 million Filipinos working overseas have not been affected yet by the global financial storm, but a contingency plan has been cobbled together for possible layoffs, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said Wednesday.

The workers are regarded as the country's financial backbone, with the earnings they send home _ US$14.45 billion last year _ accounting for 10 percent of gross domestic product in the impoverished Southeast Asian nation of 90 million people.

The bulk of them are in the Middle East, Asia, Europe and the United States, mostly working as nurses, laborers, construction workers and maids.

Arroyo told a Manila …

Friends Life t20: Can Essex [...]

Friends Life t20: Can Essex qualify? John Hardy, 43, a Ford'semployee from Barking, said: "I think it's a bit of an ask butnothing's impossible. I like Ravi Bopara, I know he hasn't done itrecently but I think he could make the difference."

Paul Adams, 49, a Ford's employee from Rainham said: "They shouldgo through. When you see the players that Essex have got, on paperthey have probably got one of the best Twenty 20 …

Piazza, Wood Shine at Spring Training

Mike Piazza and Kerry Wood are trying new roles this spring, hoping to have healthy, productive seasons. One is off to a fast start in his new spot while the other may take a little longer to come around.

Piazza, who will be the designated hitter for the Oakland Athletics, homered for the second straight game, connecting for a three-run shot in the first inning against his former team in Oakland's 8-7 victory over the San Diego Padres. He also hit a sharp single to left in the fifth.

"Mike has been on everything at the plate," manager Bob Geren said in Phoenix. "He's been feeling so good after three at-bats."

Wood, moving to the Cubs' bullpen, pitched in a spring …

Defensor Sporting sets up qualification showdown

Uruguay's Defensor Sporting set up a qualification showdown with Independiente Medellin of Colombia after holding on for a scoreless draw with America de Cali on Wednesday in Group 4 of the Copa Libertadores.

Defensor had a man sent off after 79 minutes against the Colombian side, but claimed a point to move within two of Medellin, with the clubs scheduled to play each other in the group's final fixtures.

Meanwhile, Deportivo Tachira of Venezuela came from behind to beat Paraguay's Guarani 2-1 and take a big step toward qualification from Group 2. Boyaca Chico of Colombia won by the same score at home against Bolivia's Aurora to move into second place in …

Jordan `no' to Nike boycott // Calls action by PUSH `unfair'

Chicago Bulls basketball star Michael Jordan said Tuesday thathe does not support Operation PUSH's call for a boycott of Nikeproducts, saying the civil rights organization is being "unfair."

Meanwhile, using black electrical tape, Operation PUSH leaderscovered up the Nike name on a pair of high tops, demonstrating thelatest tactic in the public feud between the civil rightsorganization and the athletic wear company.

Jordan, who has endorsed Nike products in numerous televisionand print advertisements, said through a spokesman that "while all ofcorporate America needs to provide opportunities for qualified blacksto go up the corporate ladder," he would not back …

AP sources: Headley's 2 wives spoke to authorities

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two wives of a businessman convicted in the Mumbai terrorist attacks in India spoke to U.S. authorities about their husband before the violent assaults in 2008. But two government officials said Saturday that the wives of David Headley provided information that was general in nature and did not involve specifics about any particular terrorist plot.

One of the officials told The Associated Press that one of Headley's wives informed the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force that Headley had expressed to her his support for Pakistan in its bitter dispute with India over Kashmir.

The official, who is familiar with the matter, said the FBI interviews in New York City …

Shin, Creamer come out of the fog in Samsung

Ji-Yai Shin became a household name back home in South Korea and even somewhat in Japan after she won the Women's British Open in August.

Now, the 20-year-old Shin is interested in raising her profile in the United States _ with regular success on the LPGA Tour.

She shot a 5-under 67 on Thursday to take the first-day lead in the Samsung World Championship, topping Paula Creamer's 68 that featured a birdie on 17 following a bogey on the previous hole.

"Everybody knows me as the British Open champion," Shin said. "In Korea, the players say: 'Don't come back to Korea. Go play in America.'"

Lorena Ochoa and Annika Sorenstam …

Lie, survive -- why Clinton, not Edwards?

I am having trouble figuring out the savage reaction in some circles to John Edwards' admission that he had an affair and lied about it.

It couldn't be about sex, and it couldn't be about lying -- because we have had plenty of both in American politics.

According to Edwards, he had an affair in 2006 and told his wife about it, she forgave him, and then he went ahead and announced for president.

When he was later asked by reporters about rumors regarding the affair, Edwards lied and went on with his campaign.

Democratic primary voters found him wanting, and it had nothing to do with rumors of his affair.

Edwards, who had run for president in 2004 and won just one primary (his home state of South Carolina), won no primaries in 2008. In 2004, Edwards promised to carry a whole bunch of Southern states if he got on the ticket, but the John Kerry/John Edwards ticket carried none.

Now I am reading Edwards betrayed the nation and ruined a great political career through his weakness of the flesh.

But haven't we seen this movie before?

Didn't Bill Clinton have an affair with Gennifer Flowers before his 1992 presidential campaign? And didn't he lie about it to everyone? And didn't he have another affair with Monica Lewinsky while he was president, and didn't he lie to his wife, staff, friends, colleagues, members of Congress, investigators and the nation about it?

In fact, Wikipedia has a separate entry titled: "I did not have sexual relations with that woman," and it contains the famous quotation by Clinton from Jan. 26, 1998: "But I want to say one thing to the American people. I want you to listen to me. I'm going to say this again: I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky. I never told anybody to lie, not a single time, never. These allegations are false, and I need to go back to work for the American people. Thank you."

Bill Clinton continued to lie, and only admitted the truth after physical evidence (the blue dress) was discovered. He was impeached by the House and then acquitted by the Senate.

And what happened to him then? He went on to become the most popular Democrat on the planet.

So why is John Edwards such a villain? After all, he ended his affair and got the forgiveness of his wife -- he says -- before he began running for president. And as for his lying to reporters, well, I also hear there is gambling in Casablanca.

After getting caught, Edwards told ABC News: "I went from being a young senator to being considered for vice president, running for president . . . becoming a national public figure, all of which fed a self-focus, an egotism, a narcissism that leads you to believe you can do whatever you want, you're invincible, and there will be no consequences. And nothing could be further from the truth."

I wish nothing could be further from the truth, but I have a feeling a lot more affairs get covered up in politics than get discovered.

Actually, we have an example of how to handle such matters. David Paterson, shortly after becoming governor of New York after Eliot Spitzer got caught going to hookers, announced he had affairs with "several" women during his marriage. He said it was a personal matter and did not violate any laws.

Paterson said he was making the announcement in order to "clear his conscience" and avoid blackmail.

And that was that.

So what are guidelines for politicians?

Have affairs, but deny them to everyone until you get caught?

Have affairs, admit them to your spouse, but keep them secret from everyone else?

Have affairs, but admit them to everybody before the truth comes out?

Or maybe just not have affairs at all.

Maybe some politicians should try that one. Just to see if it works.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

news in brief

Judge accepts plea

in school shootings

PADUCAH, Ky. - A judge today accepted pleas of guilty butmentallyill from a teen-ager accused of opening fire on a high school prayercircle group, killing three students and injuring five others.McCracken Circuit Judge Jeff Hines set a sentencing date of Dec.16 for Michael Adam Carneal of Paducah, the 15-year-old charged withthe shootings at Heath High School in West Paducah last Dec. 1.Under a plea arrangement, the judge agreed to accept the pleas oncondition that the maximum penalty - life in prison withoutpossibility of parole for 25 years - would be imposed.Grandmother begsson to return babySALT LAKE CITY - At first, Cheryl Gardner did not believe her sonand daughter-in-law were starving their 20-month-old child, whomtheyallegedly kidnapped two weeks ago from a hospital.Photographs and videotapes of her emaciated grandson changed hermind."It made me cry. It made me sick," Gardner said Sunday at an FBInews conference, where she appealed for her son, Christopher Fink,tosurrender to authorities.Christopher and Kyndra Fink allegedly took their boy, David, fromPrimary Children's Medical Center on Sept. 19, five days afterKyndraFink's family had brought in the severely malnourished child.David weighed 16 pounds, which is about the size of an average 6-month-old, and had been fed only watermelon and lettuce according toa diet his father believed would allow the boy to live forever."We want you all to be brought in safely," Gardner said. "It'stoo cold to have that baby out there. He's so hungry."

Explosion at Mojave launch site kills two

MOJAVE -- Two workers were killed and four others criticallyinjured Thursday by an explosion at a Mojave Desert airport siteused by the pioneering aerospace company that sent the first privatemanned rocket into space and is developing a new craft for spacetourism.

Wreckage of equipment and vehicles could be seen in viewsbroadcast by TV news helicopters over the Mojave Air and Space Portin the high desert north of Los Angeles near Edwards Air Force Base.

The blast occurred at a facility belonging to Scaled CompositesLLC, caused two fatalities and at least four critical injuries andleft some toxic material, said Kern County fire Capt. Doug Johnston.All the victims worked for Scaled.

The accident involved nitrous oxide but it was not known if anactual rocket motor test was under way or whether it occurred duringpreparation for a test, fire Inspector Tony Diffenbaugh told KABC-TV.

Scaled Composites is the Mojave-based builder of SpaceShipOne,the first private manned rocket to reach space.

and is developing a successor for the new space tourism businessVirgin Galactic.

Aerospace designer Burt Rutan, who heads Scaled, was away at thetime. He sounded distraught in a phone call with The AssociatedPress as he was en route to the scene.

"We've lost a couple of our employees. It's a very big deal,"Rutan said.

Scaled's flight line facilities were closed late Thursday, andauthorities did not allow any access to the accident site in aremote unpaved area about a quarter-mile beyond an airplane storagearea.

Scaled uses nitrous oxide as an oxidizer in its rockets, whichare tested at the airport. An oxidizer provides the oxygen thatrocket fuel needs to burn. Scaled's Web site notes that"temperatures and pressures must be carefully controlled" duringoxidizer transfers.

Aerospace and defense contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. owns 40percent of the company and recently agreed to acquire the rest ofit. The deal is awaiting regulatory approval and should close nextmonth.

Northrop Grumman spokesman Dan McClain said the company had nocomment on the explosion.

Mojave airport is where the Rutan-designed Voyager aircraft wasbuilt. It made history in 1986 when it achieved the first nonstopflight around the world without refueling.

In 2004, Rutan's SpaceShipOne, funded by Microsoft co-founderPaul Allen, made the first privately financed manned spaceflight byclimbing more than 62 miles high on a suborbital journey aboveMojave. SpaceShipOne went on to make two more flights to win the $10million Ansari X Prize.

Rutan has since been developing SpaceShipTwo for entrepreneurRichard Branson's Virgin Galactic, who plans to offer $200,000 ridesinto space for tourists.

Branson is investing at least $200 million for a fleet of Rutan'sspaceships. Earlier this year he told a trade show the new ship willbe ready within a year, and after a year of flight tests, its firstcommercial launch would be in 2009.

Rutan, who works secretively and stresses that safety will be thekey to success of space tourism, has not publicly released aschedule for completion of the design, testing and first launch.

An ambulance station at the airport responded immediately to thescene, said Mark Corum, a spokesman for Hall Ambulance Service.

Paramedics reported two people were killed, four were criticallyinjured and one suffered minor injuries, Corum said.

The injured were airlifted to Kern Medical Center about 45 milesfrom the airport, he said.

A call seeking comment from the airport manager was notimmediately returned.

Hazardous-materials experts and coroner's officials were workingat the scene late Thursday.

The airport is often crowded with parked airliners that are notin service. Its flight operations often involve unusual aircraftundergoing testing, and civilian test pilots undergo training there.

Xcor Aerospace, another of the high-profile civilian rocketcompanies located there, was not involved in the blast, said RichPournelle, its director of business development.

Bill Deaver, publisher of weekly Mojave Desert News, said theairport is an important part of the unincorporated community ofabout 4,000 people. The airport employs about 1,500 people, he said,and is the country's first inland spaceport certified by the FederalAviation Administration.

The airport has been a popular location of movie and televisionproduction. Part of "Speed" was filmed at the airport -- a Boeing707 was blown up in a scene that was supposed to be Los AngelesInternational Airport.

Deaver said parts of other several other movies, including "Flagsof Our Fathers" and "Waterworld" were filmed there.

3 Dead in Bombing at Philippine Congress

A Philippine congressman who had been targeted by Muslim militants was among three people killed Tuesday night when a bomb exploded at an entrance of the Philippine House of Representatives, police said.

Rep. Wahab Akbar, a former member of a Muslim rebel group that signed a peace accord with the government in 1996, died at the hospital, his chief of staff said.

Metropolitan Manila Police Chief Geary Barias said a lawmaker's driver and a congressional staff member also were killed. Seven other people were wounded, including two congresswomen.

Police and soldiers in the capital went on high alert, but Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno sought to play down the possible involvement of Muslim extremists, saying the investigation was pointing away from a terrorist attack and "more of a directed assault on certain individual."

"There were threats on life of Akbar," Puno said. "The indications are that that was the case both in terms of location of the bomb and the manner it was set off."

A number of cars were damaged outside the southern entrance to the building, where the blast hit after 8 p.m. as the House ended its session and lawmakers and their staff were being picked up by their drivers.

Investigators suspect the bomb may have been placed on one of two parked motorcycles then remotely detonated as Akbar approached his car, fatally wounding him and ripping the motorcycles apart, Barias said.

"It looks like Congressman Akbar was the target," Barias said.

Akbar, a former governor of southern Basilan province, had been targeted by the Abu Sayyaf Muslim extremist group in the past for launching offensives against them.

But he also had political opponents, including those that ran against one of his wives who succeeded him as governor of Basilan. Political rivalries in the southern Philippines are often solved with readily available weapons, and assassinations of politicians are common.

"I felt the blast although I was on the other side of the building. The ceiling of the canopy near the south wing entrance came down," Rep. Teodoro Casino told The Associated Press.

National police chief Avelino Razon said a destroyed motorcycle was found and experts were conducting chemical tests to find out if it was used to carry the bomb.

Police cordoned off the massive House complex in suburban Quezon City shortly after the blast.

"If this is terrorist action or work of an anarchist I'm sure it was deliberately done to cow us," House Speaker Jose de Venecia told reporters at the site.

Puno said authorities were treating the blast as "as a violent crime intended on a particular individual rather than any institution."

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said while police investigate and bolster security, "we're making a call against rumors, accusations that create confusion, fear and conflict."

Political tensions are high in the country. Arroyo is facing a third impeachment complaint in as many years.

Last month, an explosion damaged a shopping mall in the financial district, killing 11 people and injuring more than 100. A preliminary police report said it was an accident, although the owners of the mall disputed the finding.

Muslim militants also have bombed targets in the capital in the past.

Akbar was once a member of the Moro National Liberation Front, a Muslim rebel group that dropped its secessionist goal and signed a peace accord with the government in September 1996.

Some security officials have suspected that Akbar knew the leaders of Abu Sayyaf, which has its roots on Basilan island. But they said he later had a falling out with Abu Sayyaf commanders and started fighting them.

___

Associated Press Writer Jim Gomez contributed to this report.

Florida State and Miami Knotted at 10-10

MIAMI - Drew Weatherford had third-down passes of 28 and 34 yards to breathe life into a stagnant Florida State offense late in the third quarter, setting up Joe Surratt's 1-yard plunge that pulled the Seminoles into a 10-10 tie with Miami early in the fourth quarter of the teams' season opener Monday night.

The Seminoles had only 66 yards in the first 2 1/2 quarters, before Weatherford moved his team on an eight-play, 67-yard drive. Surratt burst through the right side of the line on the first play of the final period.

A close game shouldn't have surprised anyone at the Orange Bowl - six of the previous seven meetings between the schools were decided by eight points or less.

Charlie Jones had a 4-yard touchdown run early in the second quarter, helping stake Miami to a 10-3 halftime lead. Jones' run capped a seven-play, 51-yard drive for Miami, which struggled early before finding a groove in the second quarter.

Miami's Kyle Wright completed 16 of 21 passes for 122 yards through three quarters for the Hurricanes, who were looking to beat the Seminoles for the seventh time in eight meetings.

The Seminoles - who haven't won in the Orange Bowl since 1998 - were being outgained 122-66 before their touchdown drive, and simply had no success running the ball. Florida State had 4 yards on 17 rushes before that drive.

But Weatherford got rolling in the final minutes of the third quarter, completing a 28-yard toss to De'Cody Fagg, then finding Lorenzo Booker for a 34-yard catch-and-run on another third down that brought the Seminoles to Miami's 5 and setting up Surratt's score.

Weatherford was 12-of-23 for 129 yards entering the fourth.

Florida State's Gary Cismesia hit a 37-yard field goal 6:04 into the game, opening the scoring. The Seminoles held Miami to 15 yards in the opening quarter, but the Hurricanes' fortunes changed in the second.

Miami's first scoring drive was highlighted by a 27-yard catch by Darnell Jenkins, who adjusted and spun to grab a slightly underthrown ball shortly before Jones' touchdown run with 13:02 left in the half.

The drive was aided by two penalties, one of which went against Miami.

Wright was sacked for a 16-yard loss on the first play after Jenkins' grab, yet Miami caught a break when the play was whistled dead by a false-start penalty. And Jones was stuffed for a 3-yard loss by Florida State linebacker Buster Davis on the next play, but Seminoles defensive tackle Paul Griffin jumped helmet-first into Jones after the tackle, resulting in a personal-foul flag and a new set of downs.

Jon Peattie added a 20-yard field goal later in the half, pushing the margin to 10-3.

This was the third straight Florida State-Miami opener; the Hurricanes won 16-10 in overtime at home in 2004, then lost 10-7 last Labor Day in Tallahassee.

Miami and Florida State agreed to the first-game series because it offered a prime television slot - but the game will be played later in 2007, probably the first Saturday in October.

WWII US airman seeks justice for late Serb general

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — An American whose U.S. Air Force bomber was shot down over the Balkans during World War II is on a new mission in the region: Correct a historic injustice against a former Serb guerrilla leader.

In the summer of 1944, Lt. Col. Milton Friend's B-24 Liberator was downed by German fighter planes over central Serbia. He said Gen. Draza Mihailovic saved his life — and those of 500 of his fellow airmen — in the largest air rescue of Americans behind enemy lines during a war.

The former Air Force navigator, now 88 and living in Boynton Beach, Florida, is to testify at a Belgrade court Friday at a hearing to exonerate the Serb general, whom Yugoslav communists sentenced as a Nazi collaborator and executed in 1946.

Mihailovic was not "a villain, but a hero," Friend said Thursday in an interview with The Associated Press.

"He saved 500 people and helped them rejoin their families. He did not save only 500 lives, but thousands of their future generations now living in the United States," Friend said.

About 500 U.S. pilots and other airmen were downed over Serbia between 1942 and 1944 while on bombing runs targeting Adolf Hitler's oil fields in neighboring Romania, according to U.S. government field station files, stored in the National Archives.

Along with the Americans, some 100 British, French and Canadian airmen also were saved in the rescue operation, dubbed "Halyard," a word meaning a rope used to raise or lower a flag.

Friend said the airmen were hidden in villages by Serbian guerrilla fighters, known as Chetniks, who were led by Mihailovic. The prewar military officer launched the first Balkan resistance against the Nazis in 1941, before also turning against the communists led by Marshal Josip Broz Tito.

"Mihailovic told us that an American escape committee has been formed and that an airstrip will be built to help our rescue," said Friend, adding that he spent two months sheltered by the Serbs.

"They fed us as gave us rakija" a strong Serbian plum brandy, Friend said. "Of course, at first we thought it was water, but we soon found out we were wrong. I still have the taste of that brandy in my mouth."

Three American intelligence agents strapped with radio transmitters were airdropped on Aug. 2, 1944, near Mihailovic's headquarters in central Serbia to set up the rescue operation, Friend said.

One of the three OSS agents was Capt. George Musulin who played football at the University of Pittsburgh and also was on the Pittsburgh's Steeler team, in 1938 called Pirates, Friend said.

"He landed with his parachute on a chicken coop and killed some chickens because of his size," Friend said. "He immediately offered 10 dollars to the villagers, but they, of course, refused."

Dozens of U.S. military cargo planes flew in over the months to pick up the airmen. Serbian villagers had helped them build an airstrip by the village of Pranjani, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of the capital, Belgrade.

According to historians, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt then decided to follow British Prime Minister Winston Churchill's lead and abandon support for Mihailovic in favor of Tito's partizans, the strongest grass-roots guerrilla force fighting the invading Nazis and Italian fascists.

"This was a purely political decision," Friend said. "In the first two years of the war, there were no partizans fighting the Nazis in Yugoslavia."

Increasingly isolated, Mihailovic was alleged to have later collaborated with the Germans. After the war, when communist Yugoslavia was established, he was sentenced to death in what many claimed was a rigged trial.

He was put to death in 1946, and his remains were buried at a secret location because the communists feared the grave could one day become the shrine for his loyalists.

U.S. President Harry Truman posthumously awarded Mihailovic the Legion of Merit for the rescue. However, historians say the honor was classified secret by the U.S. State Department for decades to avoid disrupting the friendly U.S. policy toward Tito.

___

Associated Press writer Verena Dobnik contributed to this report from New York.

Nicklaus rues a "different day" in golf, but love to be part of it.

Four players were having lunch in the grill room at Muirfield Village when they straightened in their chairs at the sight of Jack Nicklaus, who sat down to join them in conversation.

Lucas Glover played for him and Geoff Ogilvy played against him in the last Presidents Cup. Another player at the table was Daniel Chopra, fluent in three languages (Swedish, Hindi and English) yet struggling to comprehend the language spoken by Boo Weekley, who walked by muttering something about having to wear a different hat.

Nicklaus was only kidding when he said he saw 20 guys in the grill room and didn't know 10 of them.

"I love seeing the young guys come along," he said. "Young people come along in the game every year, and I think that's great."

What he has trouble recognizing at times is the game they play and how they play it.

"It's a different day," Nicklaus said, a phrase he uttered 21 times in a press conference that lasted just over an hour and covered such topics as the Ryder Cup, mental coaches, player gratitude and yes, technology.

So much has changed, not all for the good.

Muirfield Village is where Europe won the Ryder Cup for the first time on American soil, with Nicklaus as the U.S. captain. That was the first sign Europe was gaining equal footing, and lately, it has stomped all over the American team.

"I don't understand it, frankly," Nicklaus said.

It's a curious trend, especially considering that the United States has not lost in the Presidents Cup in 10 years. It made Nicklaus wonder if Ryder Cup captains are taking their jobs too seriously. He mentioned the number of assistant captains brought to the matches, and alluded to Tom Lehman taking his team to Ireland a month before the Ryder Cup to practice.

"To take a whole team over to go play a practice round a month before an event?" he said. "You give me Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson and Jim Furyk, who are basically Nos. 1-2-3 in the world on our team. And they just finished playing all the major championships in the world, and they all are working their tail off. And you say, 'OK, guys, now we're going to do something important.' Give me a break.

"Get out of the way and let them go play," he said. "That's sort of my feeling."

If there's too much baby-sitting going on, it's not restricted to the Ryder Cup.

Nicklaus often recalls his practice sessions with teacher Jack Grout at the start of the season, to knock off the rust and make sure his fundamentals were in order. He might have seen Grout a few more times during the year, but not much more. As for sports psychologists? Nicklaus saw them as often as a seven-figure paycheck.

"I've never known one during the time when we played," he said.

Nicklaus learned from his father how to run his own life. Grout taught him to play golf and understand his swing so he could correct his mistakes and learn how to prepare on his own.

"And the one thing is that Jack Grout, never one time in all the years that he worked with me, did he ever step on a practice tee at a tournament. Not once," Nicklaus said. "When you're a young guy and you come out and you see all the guys out there all have coaches, and you say, 'Well, I've got to get that, too.' As I say, it's a different day."

Perhaps the most troubling for Nicklaus is communication skills.

Nicklaus was asked if Tiger Woods ever called him personally when he decided not to play the Memorial because of soreness in his left knee from surgery in April.

"It's a different day and age today, guys," he said. "It's all through agents."

He did appreciate Mark Steinberg at IMG calling him twice over the last few months to report on Woods' progress, and twice more leading up to the decision on Friday.

But that got Nicklaus thinking about the way it used to be. Arnold Palmer was a rival, but he also was a mentor to Nicklaus, and the King once told the Bear that he almost always wrote sponsors a note of thanks for putting on the tournament.

"So every tournament I ever played in, I always dropped the sponsor a note," Nicklaus said.

Then he paused, reflecting on his role as the tournament host at the Memorial.

"We get one or two," Nicklaus said. "I'm not saying that of everybody. We do get one or two. But not very many."

Rarer still are notes of regrets, and there are plenty of opportunities this year. Adam Scott changed his mind about playing, a surprise to tournament officials last Friday. Steve Stricker and Anthony Kim were among five players who withdrew on Tuesday. Woods isn't here for the second time in three years. Vijay Singh pulled out with an injury.

"Guys just don't communicate anymore," Nicklaus said. "Every once in a while, I might get something. But I don't think I ever had a note from anybody when they're going to leave the Memorial Tournament or not going to play or something they wrote and said, 'Jack, I'm sorry. I had a problem, I can't be here."

Someone suggested that most players use text messages.

"I think that's a cop-out," Nicklaus said.

Does he worry about manners?

"It's a different day," he said.

Nicklaus finds it irrelevant trying to compare this generation of titanium and solid-core balls against his generation of wooden drivers and balatas, against previous generations of hickory shafts and gutta percha.

It's a different day, but one thing hasn't changed. And this brings some energy to his voice.

"If I would have grown up in this age, I would have loved this age just as much as the age I grew up in," he said. "I think the guys today love playing the game. I think they love playing."

That's not all bad.

A cover-up campaign

"Make Him Ache for You. Our 6 Frisky Phrases Will Have Him BurningUp by Bedtime."

The headline is one of seven rather saucy teasers on the cover ofthis month's Cosmopolitan, which also shows model Laetitia Casta in askintight, sequined dress.

It's typical stuff from the Hearst Corp. magazine, which boastsmore than 35 million readers worldwide, and exactly what has promptedthe American Decency Association to launch its latest campaign.

On Monday, the Michigan-based conservative group ran a $100,000,full-page ad in the metro section of The New York Times denouncingthe willingness of grocery stores to display such "morals-destroyingfilth."

"This is NOT a demand for censorship. We are simply asking forRESPONSIBILITY by supermarket chains (and local store managers),"read the ad, which included a petition to be filled out bysupporters. "It can be stopped . . . All it takes is for enough of usto ACT."

By Wednesday, the group had received one petition back in themail.

"I don't think it takes a moral giant to determine what is andwhat isn't appropriate," said Bill Johnson, the group's executivedirector, who keeps a stack of magazines on his desk for quickreference. "We know that there are many people who share our concern.Whether we get one piece of mail back or five pieces of mail, we'llcontinue to do what we have to do."

In the next few weeks, the group (formerly the American FamilyAssociation of Michigan) plans to fire off a series of letters tomajor advertisers in such magazines as Cosmo, Glamour and Redbook,encouraging them to consider advertising elsewhere.

The controversy of selling sex to sell magazines seems to havepicked up momentum in the past year, mostly because of the New Yorkgroup Morality in Media.

In December, the Cincinnati-based Kroger supermarket chainannounced it would place Cosmopolitan behind blinder racks in all itsstores. Earlier this year, Food Lion, based in North Carolina, alsoannounced it would use blinder racks on "certain magazines."

Responding to the American Decency Association in a statementissued Tuesday, the Magazine Publishers of America said: "It isunfortunate that a highly vocal minority is trying to deprivemillions of Americans-from all walks of life and in all parts of thecountry-of their right to purchase their favorite magazines."

As for the magazines, the association's ad doesn't seem to becreating much buzz. "We have not heard from any readers about this,"said Paul Luthringer, a Hearst spokesman.

"We're standing by the MPA's statement."

Spector Jury Locked in 7-5 Impasse

LOS ANGELES - The judge in Phil Spector's murder trial said he is considering giving jurors the option of finding the record producer guilty of a lesser charge than second degree murder after the panelists reported a 7-5 impasse following seven days of deliberations.

Spector's defense team was expected Wednesday to vigorously oppose Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler's expected proposal to help jurors break their deadlock, while legal scholars said a conviction on lesser charges could be vulnerable to appeal.

Fidler had previously rejected the option of letting jurors find Spector guilty of involuntary manslaughter rather than the second degree murder charge that has dominated the trial.

Spector, 67, a music legend, is charged with murdering actress Lana Clarkson in his Alhambra mansion on Feb. 3, 2003, a few hours after she met him at her job as a nightclub hostess and went home with him.

The defense maintains Clarkson, 40, was depressed and shot herself in the mouth either on purpose or by accident.

The jury foreman, a 32-year-old civil engineer, told the judge that he saw little hope of resolving the impasse and indicated jurors were in disagreement about facts in the case, not about the law.

"I believe it comes down to the individual jurors' conclusions that are drawn from the facts," said the foreman. "At this time I don't believe that anything else will change the positions of the jurors, based on the facts that are in evidence."

He said the panel had taken four votes before reporting the deadlock.

However, three jurors suggested that rereading jury instructions on the question of reasonable doubt might help. One juror asked for an explanation of "the difference between reasonable doubt and doubt."

The judge, clearly troubled by the prospect of a hung jury after five months of trial, told jurors he might give them some new instructions, or even have attorneys reargue part of the case.

Legal experts said Fidler would be risking appellate disapproval if a conviction was obtained after adding involuntary manslaughter as an option.

"He's certainly taking a gamble that the defense won't be able to make a plausible argument on appeal," said Jody Armour, a law professor at the University of Southern California.

The judge's apparent willingness to let jurors consider the lesser charge marks a departure from his comments before final arguments on Aug. 26, when he told attorneys he had researched the law and felt there was no legal reason to instruct jurors on so-called "lesser included offenses" of involuntary or voluntary manslaughter.

He told lawyers not to mention such an option in closing arguments.

"I would never allow that," Fidler said at the time. "The only verdict form they will get is second-degree murder."

On Tuesday, he said he had been researching the law while jurors were deliberating and had come upon a case that contradicted that view.

But Loyola University Law School professor Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor, said the case cited by Fidler as precedent did not involve a situation where jurors had already deliberated and reported an impasse.

If a conviction was obtained after they were instructed to consider a lesser charge, "this would be the biggest issue on appeal," she said. "If the judge gives the instruction now, it looks like he's pressing the jurors for a compromise verdict."

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Watson takes street marketing to the next level

Watson takes street marketing to the next level

It was an ordinary day for Robert Buzz Watson.

As soon as he pulled his Coca Cola van onto the curb of 62nd and Cottage Grove a little boy in an oversized purple shirt pressed his face into the passenger window and screamed. The Coca Cola man is here! Watson flicked a half dozen buttons on his audio mixer, and the four 15 inch subwolfers plus the four exterior roof speakers he had custom designed were blasting-within minutes children and their parents were flocking the truck.

Somethimes Watson's the Coca Cola man, other times he's the Sprite guy, the Power 92 man, the hot party promoter, but for those in the entertainment and marketing industry, he's one of the top street promoters in the Midwest.

Street promotions is the art of grass roots marketing. To reach the hip hop consumer, African American market, and any other specially targeted group, it is crucial that companies have an effective street marketing campaign. Author Nelson George once said that the tacticks people used to register voters in the 60s, are now being tapped to sell products. It,s a skill that 27-year old Watson has mastered. His work with Coca Cola alone helped the companies growth rate in Chicago double that of the national average in two years. As a result, his company, 2020 Vision, landed major contracts with several companies including the Black McDonald,s operators, a parternership with MazJac Company and other entertainment event promoters with contracts totalling six figures annually.

They know that Watson and his ten member team will get the job done.

Watson began working in street promotions, four years ago, while he was a student at Chicago State University. I knew a lot of people, so I started promoting parites, he said. With steady work, he soon began to rise in the promotions circle.

His passion for the communities he worked made him stand out.

Street marketing is more than just rolling around in a van and tossing out product indiscrimanately it's knowing the city's hot spots, knowing key people. But most importantly, it's building a relationship rooted in trust with the consumer.

It's a way to make them feel appreciated.

When the dozens of children and adults flocked around the truck, the smiles and excitement in their eyes showed they wanted more than a pop to drink. They were being appreciated by a familiar face who picked them to dole out goodies from time to time. Watson and tour manager Jamil Willis didn't just shove product in their face. They talked to the kids, teasing them, asking that they play the I love you game. Some days they'll play basketball with the children, handing out T-shirts to the winners. Other days they'll share job opportunities with the adults.

Anyway I can alleviate exploitation, I will, Watson said of his work with corporations, some he notes, that could care less about the market. Whereas some street promoters opt for the trendy spots, a park downtown, a ritzy club - Watson makes sure he also targets what he calls the ignored area - the projects and rough parks. They deserve access to product just like anyone else, said Watson. If someone says they want to promote with me at a club, but not the Ickes, I drop them. It's degrading and I take that very personally.

The trust factor allows 2020 Vision to establish programs to aid communities in need. In addition to their street promotions arm, Watson has organized several community outreach programs including PAE- Perseverance, Ambition and Experience.

A model program in partnership with the Mayor's Office of Workforce Development, Boys and Girls Club and Skills for Life, based in the Robert Taylor Boys and Girls Club. Speakers and facilitators teach job readiness skills. He also mentors other young street promoters.

It's this love for community that drives Watson, who,ll hit multiple spots from 10 a.m. to 3 a.m. His keys to sucess he,ll eagerly share with anyone Loyalty, great communication skills and follow through, said Watson

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Well-heeled serenade Obama on his 47th birthday

It may take a few months for Barack Obama's birthday wish to come true.

The expected Democratic presidential nominee turned 47 on Monday and shared his special day with hundreds of friends and other admirers, who paid up to $28,500 for the honor.

Introducing Obama, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry said: "I asked Barack Obama what he wanted for his birthday. He said, `Indiana, Colorado and Virginia,'" said Kerry, referring to three potential swing states Obama hopes to win in the Nov. 4 election. The election is won on a state-by-state basis.

In a ballroom on the 33rd floor of a downtown skyscraper overlooking Boston Harbor, Obama was serenaded first by singer Harry Connick Jr. and Connick's 10-year-old daughter, Kate, and then by the entire room in an animated rendition of "Happy Birthday."

About 850 people attended the birthday fundraiser, which cost between $1,000 and $4,600 per ticket. Among those, 250 also ate dinner with Obama _ for $15,000 per ticket or $28,500 for a couple.

The Illinois senator received two gifts. The first was a Hawaiian shirt emblazoned with symbols of Boston's Red Sox baseball team to wear on a vacation that begins later this week in Hawaii, where he was born. "As a White Sox fan, this hurts a little bit," Obama said, referring to a team based in Chicago.

But all was well when he opened the second present; it was a near-identical shirt with Chicago White Sox symbols on it.

Obama later served birthday cake on his campaign plane and told reporters that he also "got a new tie from the girls," his two daughters, for his birthday. He said he wasn't sure whether it represented a gift or that "they didn't like my previous ties."

Thomas Lifts Sox

WHITE SOX 5 ATHLETICS 4

Frank Thomas got a lift in the offseason when he went back tohis college days of weightlifting and now he's a professor ofslugging.

Determined to have a powerful season, Thomas hit his 29th homerun Monday night to break a seventh-inning tie and lead the White Soxto a 5-4 victory over the Oakland A's.

"I was looking to have a big home run year and I'm right onpace, but I don't go up trying to hit one," said Thomas, whose3-for-3 performance against Bobby Witt (8-11) carried his average to.321.

"I didn't think I crushed this one, but the way it jumped Ithought it might go out."

The ball went 429 feet to left-center field to make a winner ofAlex Fernandez (13-6), but not before a scare in the eighth inningwhen the A's loaded the bases off Donn Pall and Scott Radinsky.

Roberto Hernandez, though, got pinch-hitter Lance Blankenship ona popup and breezed through the ninth inning for his 24th save in 28opportunites.

"He's got good stuff; we all know that," manager Gene Lamontsaid. "Tonight, he went right at them. He's a hardballer."

Fernandez considers himself a grinder.

"This was one of those grind games," he said of four A's runs(one unearned) in seven innings on 10 hits.

"I made the pitches when I had to, and that's all that counts."

The triumph didn't increase the Sox' lead on second-place KansasCity, which rallied to top Seattle and remain 3 1/2 games back.

But it did put a charge back into the White Sox, who had lostfive of their previous seven games.

"It seemed Frank took it upon himself after what happened in theeighth inning yesterday," Lamont ventured of Sunday's contest whenThomas popped up on a Mike Butcher curve with two runners on base ina 2-1 defeat to the Angels.

"No, that wasn't it," Thomas corrected. "That was a good3-and-2 slow-breaking pitch. He got me, that's all."

Thomas said he was "surprised" to see Witt still pitching afterhaving given up four runs on nine hits the first six innings,including two RBI singles by Robin Ventura, a double by Ozzie Guillenand RBI-grounder by Tim Raines.

"He had walked me the last time, so I knew he'd try to start meout with a strike," Thomas said.

He got it.

Witt threw a fastball that Thomas identified at the knees.

"I have a home run swing this season, mostly from memory," hesaid of work in the batting cage.

The home run helped the paid crowd of 36,643 at Comiskey Parkget its mind off Thomas' first-base throwing error the previousinning that allowed the A's to stage a comeback.

The White Sox scored in the first inning on Ventura's single,but the A's went ahead in the third on a fielder's-choice RBI by TroyNeel and a double by Mike Aldrete.

The White Sox shot ahead 4-2 in the fifth on Raines' grounderand singles by Joey Cora and Ventura.

But the A's inched back on an unearned run in the sixth andAldrete's single in the seventh.

Enter Thomas.

Exit the A's. BOX SCORE, PAGE 78

Bernanke warns of possible recession

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said a recession is possible and policymakers are "fighting against the wind" in trying to steady a shaky U.S. economy. He would not say if further interest rate cuts are planned.

Bernanke's testimony Wednesday to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress was a more pessimistic assessment of the economy's immediate prospects than a report he delivered earlier this year. His appearance on Capitol Hill came amid a trio of economic slumps in the housing, credit and financial areas.

"It now appears likely that gross domestic product (GDP) will not grow much, if at all, over the first half of 2008 and could even contract slightly," Bernanke told lawmakers. GDP measures the value of all goods and services produced within the United States and is the best barometer of the United States' economic health. Under one rule, six straight months of declining GDP, would constitute a recession.

Bernanke said "a recession is possible" but he also said he expects more economic growth in the second half of this year and into 2009, helped by the government's $168 billion (euro107.47 billion) stimulus package of tax rebates for people and tax breaks for businesses as well as the Fed's aggressive reductions to a key interest rate.

"Much necessary economic and financial adjustment has already taken place, and monetary and fiscal policies are in train that should support a return to growth in the second half of this year and next year," Bernanke said.

To try to limit the damage, the Federal Reserve has aggressively cut a key interest rate, now at 2.25 percent, to spur buying and investing by individuals and businesses. At the Fed's last meeting in March, however, two members dissented from the Fed's decision to sharply cut rates, showing a rare division in the often unified front the Fed shows the public. The dissenting officials, who had reputations for being extra concerned about inflation, favored a smaller reduction. Although Bernanke said he hopes inflation will moderate in coming quarters, he acknowledged that high energy prices have clouded the inflation outlook.

Many economists had predicted the Fed might drop it key that rate again when it next meets April 29-30, although Bernanke's remarks cast some doubt on that scenario.

"We are fighting against the wind," Bernanke said. The Fed's interest rate cuts and other actions are working their way through the economy and are having the effect of "at least offsetting significantly the headwinds coming from these financial factors," he said.

Housing, credit and financial woes are threatening to push the country into a deep recession. The situation has emerged as a top concern for presidential contenders and a hot-button issue for Congress. It has thrust the White House and the Fed in crisis-management mode.

Faced with mounting home foreclosures and job losses, Bernanke has been under immense political and public pressure to provide relief and help turn around a faltering economy.

Committee Chairman Sen. Charles Schumer peppered Bernanke with questions about the Fed's moves to aid once mighty Wall Street firm Bears Stearns and then juxtaposed that with _ what he believed was a lack of help _ to millions of people at risk of losing their homes.

"I hope that you will use your position to jawbone this administration to get behind the housing relief effort before Congress." Schumer said. "Addressing the housing crisis head-on will do as much to instill confidence in the markets as lowering interest rates or bolstering regulatory oversight of wayward mortgage lenders and financial institutions. We need to do all of it."

Many private analysts believe the U.S. economy contracted in the first three months of this year, signaling the start of a recession. The government releases first-quarter results later this month. The economy lost jobs in January and February, with many economists bracing for more losses when the report for March is released on Friday. Bernanke said he expected unemployment to move "somewhat higher in coming months."

"Clearly, the U.S. economy is going through a very difficult period," he told lawmakers, adding that all the problems have weighed heavily on consumers whose spending is indispensable to economic vitality.

The Fed also has taken a series of extraordinary steps in recent weeks and months to prop up the nation's financial system, which has been in state of high jeopardy.

In a controversial move, the Fed backed a $29 billion (euro18.55 billion) lifeline as part of JP Morgan's deal to take over the troubled Bear Stearns, the nation's fifth largest investment house, which was on the brink of bankruptcy. Bear Stearns had invested heavily in risky mortgage-backed securities that eventually soured with the collapse of the housing market.

Bernanke defended the move. "With financial conditions fragile, the sudden failure of Bear Stearns likely would have led to a chaotic unwinding of positions in those markets and could have severely shaken confidence," he said. "The damage caused by a default by Bear Stearns could have been severe and extremely difficult to contain."

Although the taxpayers are on the hook for the $29 billion (euro18.55 billion), Bernanke said he was "reasonably confident we'll be able to recover the full amount." He also said that Bear Stearns' investments that the Fed took control of "are entirely investment grade."

In addition, the Fed _ in the broadest use of its credit authority since the 1930s _ agreed to temporarily let big investment firms obtain emergency financing from the Fed, a privilege that previously had been granted only to commercial banks.

Those actions have prompted criticism from Democrats and others who contend that the Fed is bailing out Wall Street and putting billions of taxpayers' dollars at potential risk. Bernanke and the Bush administration argued that the actions were warranted to avert a potential meltdown in the entire financial system, something that would have devastating consequences for the overall economy.

Asked about the Bush administration's plan to revamp the creaking financial system, Bernanke said it was vital for the Fed to have sufficient enforcement powers. Under the plan, the Fed would become a top cop in charge of financial market stability but would lose its day-to-day supervision of U.S. banks.

___

On the Net:

Joint Economic Committee: http://www.jec.senate.gov

APNewsBreak: Farmers avoiding fed loan program

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Drought has withered grain across the Great Plains. Flooding drowned corn from Nebraska to Louisiana. And a tropical storm submerged Carolina tobacco fields and New Jersey blueberry bushes.

One agriculture official describes this as a "monster" year for natural disasters — yet few farmers are taking advantage of a federal loan program aimed at helping them recover.

An Associated Press review found that the Farm Service Agency made fewer than 300 emergency loans, totaling just $32.6 million, for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30.

Some farmers say they aren't taking out the disaster loans because recent high crop prices gave them enough money to bounce back. Others say there are better aid programs available — and interest rates on emergency loans are higher than for regular farm loans.

Baghdad muralists resist push for sectarian themes

It's art ornamenting life: murals of soothing landscapes and historical heroes covering the blast walls that are now as much a part of Baghdad's cityscape as date palms and desert dust.

The idea took off last year when Iraqi aid groups sought to provide work for young artists _ and offer a bit of hope and a splash of color to a city whose signature hue is oatmeal brown.

But fully rising above Iraq's sectarian suspicions has proved a challenge.

Many members in the founding group of artists are putting down their brushes to protest requests from neighborhood councils to depict politically charged sectarian themes such as Sunni shrines in Sunni districts or Shiite saints in Shiite areas.

"We'd rather refuse the work than do that," said Ali Saleem Badran, one of the original crew of muralists in the Jamaat al-Jidaar, or the Wall Group. "That is not what this work is supposed to say."

But that is what Baghdad has become: a quilt of Sunni and Shiite enclaves after years of sectarian killings and threats. While some displaced families are crossing the lines and returning to their old neighborhoods as violence ebbs, the capital may never fully regain its place as a true mixing ground for Iraq's religious and ethnic groups.

The mural project began in early 2007 when Iraqi civic groups approached aspiring and student artists, including Badran who was then in his last year of art school.

Hundreds of concrete slabs _ each about 12-by-6-feet and designed to shield against car bombs and other threats _ were gradually turned into an open air art gallery meant to boost spirits and kindle optimism.

It's a bit like the Baghdad version of other acts of art in the face of adversity, such as the New Deal-funded murals during the Depression or the tangle of messages and figures on the western face of the Berlin Wall.

But rumbles started a few months ago, Badran said, when the program was transferred from loose government oversight to neighborhood councils that began suggesting sectarian images.

Many of the original artists have refused to take part. Local dabblers have often taken up the slack with less refined _ but still potent _ references to either Sunni or Shiite roots.

"They want to take an idea that was supposed to unite the city and express the things that divide us," said Badran, now a professor at the Fine Arts College in northern Baghdad.

City officials have tried to clamp down on overt sectarian symbols, but watching over the miles of blast walls borders on impossible. The best they can do is appeal for reconciliation.

"This is the year of reconstruction. This is the year of building," said Tahseen al-Sheikhly, civilian spokesman for Baghdad security operations.

For now, most of the paintings on blast walls are apolitical, portraying themes on the region's past as Mesopotamia, the Sumarian and Assyrian cultures, Baghdad's place as an intellectual heart of the medieval Islamic world.

Others show the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, and ziggurats, the terraced temple towers that once dotted the Mesopotamian valley.

Still others depict stylized scenes from Arab myths and literature _ Scheherazad's tales is a favorite subject _ or wild nature like galloping Arabian horses or boats on the Tigris River.

Remarkably, none of the murals appears to have suffered any significant vandalism or the type of graffiti seen on naked blast walls, such as the scrawled slogans and advertisements for businesses hidden behind the concrete barriers.

One barber tried to lure customers with a ditty that rhymes in Arabic: "Jump and you will find me."

The hands-off aura around the murals could be fear of the Iraqi security patrols or America's aerial surveillance. Badran likes to think it's respect.

"People know these murals represent a kind of hope," he said. "So why would they ruin them? That's like saying they don't want things to improve."

Qasim Sabti, who runs one of Baghdad's best-known art galleries, said he encouraged about 20 young artists to join the mural effort in the early stages, and he denounces the attempt to push sectarian images.

"It is absolutely rejected by any respectful artist," Sabti said. "We, as a community of artists, refuse this."

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT: Let's not forget the CCPA's real heroes: our individual members

When the CCPA recently celebrated its 25th anniversary, many of the people who helped establish and sustain the Centre over its first quarter century were appropriately recognized and honoured. They included some of the founders, past and present board and staff members, researchers and authors.

Unavoidably missing at the anniversary celebrations, however, were nearly all the people who have made it possible for the CCPA to do its work: YOU and our other 10,000 loyal members across Canada. It has been your support, particularly over the past decade, that has given us the resources needed for our research and publications. (We get substantial union contributions, too, for which …

Baylor delivers stunning blow to No. 5 OU, 45-38

WACO, Texas (AP) — Robert Griffin and Baylor created even more chaos in the national championship race with a stunning blow against fifth-ranked Oklahoma.

Griffin threw for 479 yards and four touchdowns, including a 34-yarder to Terrance Williams with 8 seconds left and 25th-ranked Baylor beat the Sooners for the first time, 45-38 on Saturday night.

The Sooners (8-2, 5-2 Big 12) had overcome a …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Vopak board member steps down. (Business & Finance News: Europe/Mideast).(Brief Article)

Vopak board member Niels von Hombracht stepped down on July 1, "to pursue his career outside the company," Vopak says. Board member Paul Govaart has …

Pavilion short-listed for architecture award.

THE De La Warr Pavilion is one of eight buildings in the South East short-listed for this year's Royal Institute of British Architects Awards.

The architects for the [pounds sterling]9m refurbishment of the pavilion were John McAslan and Partners, of London.

Some 23 projects were entered for the awards in the region - which includes not only Sussex, Kent and Surrey but Guernsey and Jersey.

The other short-listed buildings in the region are:

*Folkestone Academy, Folkestone, Kent; Foster & Partners, London

*A public toilet in Parrock Street Car Park, Gravesend;Plastik Architects, London

*The Viking Day Unit, Margate ; …

PHILIP F. HARRIS, 57.(CAPITAL REGION)

COLONIE Philip F. Harris, 57, of Oakwood Drive died Saturday at St. Peter's Hospital in Albany.

Mr. Harris was born in Albany, and was a lifelong resident of the Albany area.

He graduated from St. Joseph's Academy and Russell Sage College, and was a Navy veteran.

Mr. Harris worked as a computer analyst at Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. for 28 years before retiring in 1994.

Survivors include his wife, Suzanne M. Fahey Harris of Colonie; one daughter, …

Ethiopian scientist wins World Food Prize

An Ethiopian scientist who has helped to feed hundreds of millions of people in sub-Saharan Africa has won this year's World Food Prize.

Dr. Gebisa Ejeta was honored at the U.S. State Department Thursday for his breakthroughs in developing drought and disease-resistant forms of sorghum, which is an African diet staple. According to the U.S.-based World Food Prize Foundation, which awards the prize annually to individuals who have helped increase the global food supply, Ejeta's efforts have exponentially increased production and availability of the crop around the continent.

Ejeta grew up in a one-room thatched hut in Ethiopia and eventually became a …

Taking a hands-on approach

Dr. David Chalfant, or "Dr. Dave" as he is referred to by his patients, truly cares about the health and well being of his patients. Having practiced chiropractic care for the past twentyfive years, he says Chalfant Chiropractic Center's mission statement, which is to locate and analyze the problem, correct it and prevent the problem from returning, truly defines his practice.

Chalfant has embraced this mission statement for as long as he can remember having been raised in a family of ten chiropractors, including his father. Watching his father treat patients is one of the things that ultimately influenced him to pursue chiropractics as a career.

"I watched patients come …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates.(Review)

Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates Tom Robbins Read by Keith Szarabajka Bantam Doubleday Dell Audio ten cassettes, sixteen hours and fifteen minutes, unabridged

Of the hundreds of audiobooks I have listened to this year, I am delighted to report that the best of the bunch is an off-kilter comedy about a smart-aleck CIA agent, a parrot and a computer-hacking grandmother. There is simply never a dull moment, or a dull character. Agent Switters (no more than a glorified gofer) is an unabashed eccentric who reads both Tricycle, a Buddhist magazine, …

Research from Dokuz Eylul University, Medical Department yields new data on neutropenia.

"This prospective study analysed 83 patients (age 45 +/- 17 years) with haematological neoplasms, implanted with 93 tunnelled catheters, who were neutropenic or developed neutropenia during treatment. Catheters were implanted in the right (n = 82) or left (n = 11) jugular vein by the same surgical team using the some technique," scientists writing in the Journal of International Medical Research report (see also Neutropenia).

"They remained in place for 124 +/- 88 days: 29% were removed due to infection; 18% due to treatment termination and 2% due to mechanical problems. Seventeen patients died with catheters in place. At 30, 60, 90, 120 and 200 days mean catheter …

WRITERS COULD SHARE CONSTRUCTIVE IDEAS.(PERSPECTIVE)

Byline: DAN KITTAY Niskayuna

Daniel Button wonders where all the letters to the editor are about the presidential election (letter, Aug. 9). Remember the saying, ``Be careful what you wish for.'' Most days the letters page is filled with one-sided, everyone-else-is-wrong screeds on issues that generally are resolved far from the Capital Region. On the Israeli-Palestinian issue, it's ``they did/no, they didn't.'' On abortion, it's ``it …

BOY ALLEGES ABUSE IN DIVORCE FROM FAMILY.(Main)

Byline: Ike Flores Associated Press

Squirming and chewing a gumdrop, a 12-year- old boy went to court Thursday seeking a "divorce" from his parents in a case that could help give children more protection against parental abuse.

Gregory Kingsley, brown-haired and pale, sat in the back of the courtroom with members of the foster family he hopes to live with permanently.

His mother, Rachel Kingsley, cried as she denied allegations that she abused, neglected and abandoned him for most of his life. In the past eight years, Gregory has lived with her only seven months.

Rachel Kingsley also denied that her fiance, Steve Hack, had recently beaten …

Monday's Sports Scoreboard

All Times Eastern
American League
Detroit 12, Baltimore 9 F
Chicago White Sox 6, L.A. Angels 1 -7
Boston 5, Tampa Bay 2 -5
Cleveland 4, Texas 0 -3
N.Y. Yankees vs Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Kansas City vs Seattle, 10:10 p.m.

China's Chery launches new Qoros brand

SHANGHAI (AP) — Chinese automaker Chery Automobile Co. and partner Israel Corp. are launching a new brand, seeking fresh appeal both overseas and in the slowing local market.

The 50-50 joint venture Qoros Automotive Co., introduced Monday at Shanghai's former Expo zone, intends to be one of the first Chinese car makers to meet stringent 2013 Euro auto safety standards, the companies said.

Chery and Israel Corp., an industrial holding company, originally launched their joint venture as Chery Quantum Auto Co., in 2007. Since then, the company has kept a relatively low profile.

Originally, the plan was for Chery, one of China's biggest independent automakers, to contribute …

Clinical trial update.

 Clinical Trial Update: November 2002  Company *                 Product (Country; Symbol)  AUTOIMMUNE  Biogen Inc.               Amevive (BGEN)      Serono SA                 Rebif (NYSE:SRA) and            (FDA-approved) Pfizer Inc.     Teva                      Copaxone Pharmaceutical            (FDA-approved) Industries Ltd. (Israel; TEVA)  CANCER  AltaRex Corp.             OvaRex MAb (Canada; TSE:AXO)      Aton Pharma               SAHA Inc. *          Biomira Inc.              BLP25 (Canada; BIOM; TSE:BRA)       Celgene Corp.             Revimid (CELG)     Cell                      Trisenox Therapeutics              (FDA-approved) Inc. (CTIC)  Cell                      Xyotax Therapeutics Inc. (CTIC)      Cell                      Xyotax Therapeutics Inc. (CTIC)   Cell                      Xyotax Therapeutics Inc. (CTIC)     EntreMed Inc.             ENMD 0995 (ENMD)   Essential                 ETRX 101 Therapeutics Inc. (ETRX)   Eximias                   Thymitaq Pharmaceutical Corp. *   FeRx Inc. *               --        Genta Inc. (GNTA)         Genasense and Aventis SA (Germany)   Genta Inc.                Genasense (GNTA)     GenVec Inc.               TNFerade (GNVC)     GenVec Inc.               TNFerade (GNVC)     Genzyme                   -- Molecular Oncology (GZMO)  Immuno-Designed           Uvidem Molecules SA * (France)    ImmunoGen Inc.            huN901-DM1 (IMGN) and British Biotech plc (UK; BBIOY; LSE:BBG)  Kosan Biosciences         KOS-862 Inc. (KOSN) and F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. (Switzerland)  Maxim                     Ceplene Pharmaceuticals Inc. (MAXM)       Millennium                MLN2704 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (MLNM) and BZL Biologics LLC *       NeoPharm Inc.             IL13-PE38 (NEOL)     NeoPharm Inc.             LE-SN38 (NEOL)   NewBiotics Inc. *         Thymectacin    Onyx Pharmaceuticals      BAY 43-9006 Inc. (ONXX) and Bayer Corp.       Pharmagenesis Inc. *      PG490-88Na    Progen Industries         PI-88 (Australia; PGLAF)     Telik Inc.                TLK286 (TELK)      Telik Inc.                TLK286 (TELK)     Telik Inc.                TLK286 (TELK)      Transgene SA              MVA-Mucl- (France: TRGNY)           interleukin-2                           vaccine     CARDIOVASCULAR  Alexion                   Pexelizumab Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ALXN)    Alteon Inc.               ALT-711 (AMEX:ALT)   CollaGenex                Periostat Pharmaceuticals           (FDA-approved) Inc. (CGPI)    Carvas International      rNAPc2 Inc. (CVAS)   CV Therapeutics Inc.      CVT-3146 (CVTX)    CV Therapeutics Inc.      Tecadenoson (CVTX)   GenVec Inc.               Biobypass (GNVC)     Genzyme Biosurgery        -- (division of Genzyme Corp.: GENZ) Millennium                Integrillin Pharmaceuticals           (FDA-approved) Inc. (MLNM)      The Medicines             Angiomax Company Inc. (MDCO)       (FDA-approved)         United Therapeutics       Remodulin Corp. (UTHR)              (FDA-approved)    Vasogen Inc.              -- (Canada; AMEX:VSV; TSE:VAS)  CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM  Aderis                    Rotigotine CDS Pharmaceuticals Inc. *    Avanir                    Neurodex Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AMEX:AVN)   CeNeS                     M6G Pharmaceuticals plc (UK; LSE:CEN)     DOV                       Ocinaplon Pharmaceutical Inc. (DOVP)  Guilford                  GPI 1485 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (GLFD)  Neurocrine                Indiplon-IR Biosciences Inc. (NBIX)     Neurogen Corp. (NRGN)     NGD 97-1       NeuroSearch A/S *         NS2330 (Denmark) and Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH (Germany)  Oxford                    OGT 923 GlycoSciences plc (UK; OGSI; LSE:OGS)  Repligen                  RG1068 Corp. (RGEN)     DIABETES  Theratechnologies Inc.    ThGRF (Canada; TSE:TH)    INFECTION  Acambis plc               ChimeriVax-DEN2 (UK; LSE:ACM)   AuRx Inc. *               --        BioMarin                  Aldurazyme Pharmaceutical Inc. (BMRN) and Genzyme General (GENZ)  Gilead Sciences           Hepsera Inc. (GILD)               (FDA-approved)        Hollis-Eden               HE2000 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (HEPH)     Human Genome              Albuferon-alpha Sciences Inc. (HGSI)    Idenix                    Telbivudine Pharmaceuticals Inc. *     Immtech                   DB289 International Inc. (IMMT)  Inspire                   INS365 Pharmaceuticals           Respiratory Inc. (ISPH) Inspire                   INS37217 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISPH)     Inspire                   INS37217 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISPH     Intercell AG *            -- (Austria)  Isis                      ISIS14803 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISIS)      Ribapharm Inc.            Viramidine (NYSE:RNA)   Romark                    Nitazoxanide Laboratories *      SciClone                  Zadaxin Pharmaceuticals Inc. (SCLN)      Trimeris Inc. (TRMS)      Fuzeon          Vertex                    GW433908 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (VRTX)     MISCELLANEOUS  Adolor Corp.              Alvimopan (ADLR)       Alexion                   Eculizumab Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ALXN)       Amgen Inc.                Aranesp (AMGN)                    (FDA-approved)    AnorMED Inc.              Fosrenol (Canada; TSE: AOM)   AVI BioPharma             AVI-4126 Inc. (AVII)  Exhale                    ETX-100 Therapeutics Inc. *  Galileo                   GLI-8545 Laboratories Inc. *   GenVec Inc. (GNVC)        AdPEDF    Hemosol Inc.              Hemolink (Canada; HMSL TSE: HML)  Inflazyme                 IPL512,602 Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (Canada; TSE:IZP) and Aventis Pharma AG (Germany)  Isis                      ISIS 2302 Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISIS)  Novactyl Inc. *           PCL-016    SR Pharma plc             SRP299 (UK; LSE:SPA) and Genesis Research and Development Corp. (New Zealand; ASX:GEN)  Sucampo                   RU-0211 Pharmaceuticals Inc. *  Transkaryotic             Replagal Therapies Inc. (TKTX)    Vivus Inc. (VVUS)         TA-1790     Vivus Inc. (VVUS)         VI-0162   Company *                 Description (Country; Symbol)  AUTOIMMUNE  Biogen Inc.               Alefacept; novel (BGEN)                    immuno-modulatory                           agent that                           selectively targets                           the CD45RO+ subset                           of T cells  Serono SA                 Interferon beta-la (NYSE:SRA) and Pfizer Inc.     Teva                      Oral formulation of Pharmaceutical            glatiramer acetate Industries Ltd. (Israel; TEVA)  CANCER  AltaRex Corp.             Immunotherapeutic; (Canada; TSE:AXO)         oregovomab; a fully                           foreign monoclonal                           anti-body that                           targets CA125   Aton Pharma               An inhibitor of Inc. *                    histone deacetylase          Biomira Inc.              Synthetic MUCI (Canada; BIOM;            therapeutic vaccine TSE:BRA)                  consisting of the                           25-amino-acid                           sequence of the MUCI                           cancer mucin,                           encapsulated in                           liposomes  Celgene Corp.             Orally available (CELG)                    agent;                           immunomodulatory                           drug   Cell                      Arsenic trioxide Therapeutics Inc. (CTIC)  Cell                      Links paclitaxel, the active Therapeutics …