четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Swine flu factor

Chicago is bracing for the return of swine flu to keep back-to-school from becoming back-to-sick.

Children -- the flu's prime spreaders -- are starting to return to classrooms in the area and across the nation.

But the swine flu vaccine won't be available until October.

And only this week will U.S. researchers start blood tests on test patients who received early vaccinations. The tests will answer how many doses of swine flu vaccine are needed for protection. That will determine whether people need to line up for two flu shots -- one against swine flu and one against regular flu -- or three.

The world's most dominant flu strain is especially dangerous to …

Letters

Afghanistan Assessment

* GEN David H. Petraeus, commander of the international Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and U.S. F orces- Afghanistan, issued the following letter on January 25.

To the soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines, coast guardsmen and civilians of the NATO International Security Assistance Force:

I thought it might be useful to provide my assessment of the situation in Afghanistan as we enter 2011.

Up front, I want you to know that you and our Afghan comrades did tremendous work in 2010. Indeed, ISAF and Afghan forces made impressive progress in our mission - a mission that is of enormous importance not just to each of our countries and …

Senior NYC crane inspector accused of corruption

A senior city buildings official signed off on crane inspections he didn't perform and helped crane operators cheat on licensing exams in exchange for thousands of dollars in bribes, but his actions do not appear to be connected to two recent fatal crane collapses, authorities said Friday.

James Delayo, acting chief inspector with the Department of Buildings' cranes and derricks division, was released without bail after he was arraigned Friday. He is charged with bribe receiving, tampering with public records, falsifying business records, filing a false instrument and receiving unlawful gratuities. He entered no plea and his lawyer, Lawrence Linzer, declined to …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Using the newspaper to learn geography lessons

Ten years of reform in geography education have led to widespreadacceptance of geography as a core subject in American schools. It isnow believed that for students to earn a decent wage, enjoy life tothe fullest and be responsible citizens, they must be geographicallyliterate.

Geography for Life, the national geography standard developed in1994, states: "All individuals need to have an understanding ofgeography, which means that they need to have an understanding of thespatial contexts of people, places and environments on Earth. Anisolated geographic fact does not constitute geographicunderstanding."

What constitutes geographic understanding? It requires, …

Sears Shareholders Approve Allstate Spin-off

By an overwhelming margin, shareholders of Sears, Roebuck and Co.Friday approved spinning off Allstate Corp. in what would be thelargest corporate divestiture in U.S. history.

More than 80 percent of outstanding Sears shares were cast infavor of the $10 billion spin-off at a special meeting Friday at theChicago Historical Society.

Sears hopes to hear from the Internal Revenue Service later thisspring on whether the spin-off would be considered tax-free toshareholders. As planned, each Sears shareholder this summer wouldreceive an estimated 0.93 share of Allstate common stock for eachSears share owned.

Divesting the stake in Northbrook-based Allstate is …

Court overturns conviction in killing of officer

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has overturned the conviction of a man who fatally shot a police officer in Florida in 1998.

The high court on Thursday said the lower court should reconsider the conviction of Charles Fowler, who was given life in prison for the shooting death of officer Todd Horner.

Fowler was convicted under a federal law that bans people from trying to keep U.S. …

UK Supreme Court considers prenuptial agreements

This city filled with high-flying investment bankers is also known as the divorce capital of the world, thanks to the hefty financial settlements awarded by London courts and their willingness to ignore prenuptial agreements.

That reputation was put to the test Monday as the Supreme Court began hearing a dispute between a German heiress and her ex-husband, a case that hinges on the issue of whether prenups can be enforced in England, one of the few countries in which they have no legal standing.

If Britain's highest court rules such contracts do have weight, it will mark a major change _ and make the divorces of the rich and famous much more predictable …

Army, automakers work on trucks

It may not be a silver BMW, but it's still a vehicle that wouldmake James Bond proud.

Complete with armor-plated doors, a thermal-imaging system, pepper-gas dispensers, a grenade launcher and a top-mounted laser to explodeland mines, the Ford SmarTruck could be the ultimate urban command/assault vehicle.

The sleek black pickup can lay a smoke screen, create an oil slickand drop heavy-duty tacks to slow pursuers. It has blinding lights,high-voltage door handles to deter intruders, and, of course,bulletproof glass.

But you won't see this truck on a sales lot soon. The SmarTruck isa concept vehicle developed for the Army by the National AutomotiveCenter, a …

Aquino to China: Filipinos will defend territory

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — President Benigno Aquino III warned China in a major national speech Monday that the Philippines was ready to defend its Spratly Islands claims by acquiring more weapons and would elevate the territorial feuds to a U.N. tribunal.

In his State of the Nation Address to Congress, Aquino also announced a new chief anti-graft prosecutor and said his year-old government plans to file its first major corruption case this year against corrupt officials and their accomplices. He did not name the officials but vowed punishment for the guilty.

"We do not wish to increase tensions with anyone, but we must let the world know that we are ready to protect what is …

NHL Standings

All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Philadelphia 1 0 0 2 3 2
New Jersey 0 0 1 1 3 4
N.Y. Islanders 0 0 0 0 …

AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Howard T. Orville Endowed Scholaraship in Meteorology

The Dr. Pedro Grau Undergraduate Scholarship

The Guillermo Salazar Rodriguez Undergraduate Scholarship

The AMS 75th Anniversary Endowed Scholarship

The Mark J. Schroeder Endowed Scholarship in Meteorology

The Richard and Helen Hagemeyer Scholarship

The Ethan and Allan Murphy Endowed Memorial Scholarship

The John R. Hope Endowed Scholarship in Atmospheric Sciences

The Werner A. Baum Endowed Scholarship

The Loren W. Crow Memorial Scholarship

The Om and Saraswati Bahethi Scholarship

The Carl W. Kreitzberg Endowed Scholarship

The Bob Glahn Endowed …

Nothing could be finer than eating at Cindy's Diner

A popular downtown Fort Wayne landmark provides a fitting setting for daily gatherings and special occasions. In this exceptional place, hearty food and hospitality are served every day along with family like solace and occasional political advice. Some people have enjoyed dancing here and one couple has found the establishment the perfect site for a wedding - all this in 400 square feet of space.

The place is Cindy's Diner, a cultural and architectural icon offering nostalgia, warmth and sustenance to its loyal, local patrons and worldwide fans.

Owners John and Cindy Scheele have operated Cindy's Diner since 1990 at its present location on the northwest corner of Wayne and Harrison streets. In 1954, the structure was originally purchased and brought to Fort Wayne from Kansas to be located on the northwest comer of Clinton and Jefferson, and then for a time at Clay and Berry Streets. Twelve years ago, John noticed the structure was about to be auctioned and he wanted to keep the unique retro diner in Fort Wayne. So, he called his wife with a completely unexpected question and asked "how would you like to own a diner?" With no time to consider the pros and cons of such a move and unencumbered by the bottom-line mentality of a business plan, the Scheeles purchased the structure two days later and two days after that, the diner was moved beside a warehouse on property John owned.

The Scheeles figured they would complete a fix-up of the diner and then hire someone else to operate it. At the time of the purchase, Cindy had sold the fabric shop she owned for 10 years and was caring for her parents. John was involved in running his construction company, which he started in 1967.

After six months of careful restoration and securing the ideal location at the corner of Harrison and Wayne, the Scheeles hired a manager and were poised to see their new venture progress as they continued their other daily pursuits. The couple would occasionally help out at the diner, but it didn't take long for them to become more and more involved in the daily operations, soon taking on management, cooking and serving duties themselves.

In the years since the Scheeles assumed ownership, Cindy's Diner has acquired a special identity and unique flavor beyond its evocative nature. Cindy's feels like a home away from home as a result of the attention showered on customers by the owners. "We know 85 percent of our customers by their first names," Cindy says. "We consider them our extended family."

This devotion is returned by a steady following of regulars and frequent out-of-towners that regard Cindy's with fondness.

Joan Flinspach, president and CEO of the Lincoln Museum in Fort Wayne, likes Cindy's for several reasons. "First, the food is really good," she says. "It's a fun place, too. You can talk to the owners right across the counter, and I like the way you can feel perfectly comfortable conversing with total strangers sitting at the counter with you."

Cindy's is a favorite of airline pilots and flight attendants on stopovers, downtown hotel guests and cast members of Embassy productions. The traveling cast of Les Miserables was so impressed with Cindy's atmosphere that they took videos of the tiny restaurant.

Many people returning to Fort Wayne include Cindy's as a must-stop while they are visiting. When San Francisco resident Steve Herkins comes back to the city, he usually stops at Cindy's Diner for a meal.

"Cindy's has the best coconut cream pie I've ever tasted, no doubt about it," Herkins says. Addresses from all over the world can be found in the guest book, which John and Cindy ask people from out of town to sign.

The cordial atmosphere is augmented by the charm of the physical surroundings. Cindy's has a seating capacity of 15, all counter space. Red stools and counter, black and white tile floors, official Cindy's Diner red-shirts on the cook and server (John and Cindy) set the theme. Several small, countertop jukeboxes featuring oldies, country and a few traditional standards can be played if the police radio and the conversation don't provide the right entertainment.

Banners exhibiting various homespun sentiments and Cindy's corporate slogan, "We serve the whole world, 15 at a time," are posted on the walls. Complaint forms (with instructions in Chinese) and a fisheye lens picture of Cindy's are part of the decor. Coffee mugs bear the names of local companies. Plaques honoring the diner are on display, including one from the fire department for John's successful effort to save a customer who had fallen into a utility vault on her way to the diner early one morning.

The main entertainment is watching John orchestrate the cooking of various dishes on the grill and stove in front of him, and Cindy's smooth-stepping around him in a sliver of space to accommodate the needs of the customers. It's a dance of agility perfected by the two after years of learning each other's cooking and serving patterns.

Cindy's is an authentic diner made by the Valentine Manufacturing Co. of Wichita, Kansas, which is no longer in business. As such, its historic value is significant. The portability afforded by the diner's construction makes it ideal for a business ready to take advantage of prime available real estate. "When we moved it to this site, we didn't even have to pack the cups," John says. "We left them on the shelves with no problem."

The cuisine featured at Cindy's is classic diner food. John does all the cooking, his skill acquired on the job. The important traits for this type of cooking are flexibility, creativity and speed. The flexibility is useful for the preparation of various customer requests not on the menu. John's creativity is tested when he's challenged by his customers to make unusual pies, among which have been orange meringue and even grapefruit. Speed is mandatory because of the customer turnover and the demand for carryout food. "John can make anything he makes up his mind to do," Cindy says.

Breakfast is available all day and makes up 65-70 percent of meals served. "It's not uncommon for me to be working on three cheeseburgers and French toast at the same time," John says. The diner's biggest seller is "garbage," a breakfast combination of eggs, potatoes, cheese, onions and bits of ham. John is particularly proud of the oatmeal, which he makes from scratch and says, "it's the best in town."

Ever faithful to their theme of nostalgia, John and Cindy brought Murphy's donut making machine to the diner in 1997. Long time residents will remember watching this equipment go through a series of steps to perfect their confectionary product, and it still functions today at Cindy's.

A visit to Cindy's Diner will confirm the unique nature of the place to anyone not familiar with its special atmosphere.

"We enjoy the camaraderie very much, or we couldn't spend the hours here that we do," Cindy says. Although the staff includes one other full-time server and two part-time workers, the Scheeles are there seven days a week most of the time, taking an annual vacation around Labor Day. Having 19 grandchildren keeps their event calendar full, and they occasionally leave their business to attend family milestone events.

When asked about long term plans for the special place they tend, John and Cindy Scheele will only say with certainty, "the diner belongs in Fort Wayne." Devoted customers could not agree more.

World's tallest tower closed a month after opening

The world's tallest skyscraper has unexpectedly closed to the public a month after its lavish opening, disappointing tourists headed for the observation deck and casting doubt over plans to welcome its first permanent occupants in the coming weeks.

Electrical problems are at least partly to blame for the closure of the Burj Khalifa's viewing platform _ the only part of the half-mile high tower open yet. But a lack of information from the spire's owner left it unclear whether the rest of the largely empty building _ including dozens of elevators meant to whisk visitors to the tower's more than 160 floors _ was affected by the shutdown.

The indefinite closure, which began Sunday, comes as Dubai struggles to revive its international image as a cutting-edge Arab metropolis amid nagging questions about its financial health.

The Persian Gulf city-state had hoped the 2,717-foot (828-meter) Burj Khalifa would be a major tourist draw. Dubai has promoted itself by wowing visitors with over-the-top attractions such as the Burj, which juts like a silvery needle out of the desert and can be seen from miles around.

In recent weeks, thousands of tourists have lined up for the chance to buy tickets for viewing times often days in advance that cost more than $27 apiece. Now many of those would-be visitors, such as Wayne Boyes, a tourist from near Manchester, England, must get back in line for refunds.

"It's just very disappointing," said Boyes, 40, who showed up at the Burj's entrance Monday with a ticket for an afternoon time slot only to be told the viewing platform was closed. "The tower was one of my main reasons for coming here," he said.

The precise cause of the $1.5 billion Dubai skyscraper's temporary shutdown remained unclear.

In a brief statement responding to questions, building owner Emaar Properties blamed the closure on "unexpected high traffic," but then suggested that electrical problems were also at fault.

"Technical issues with the power supply are being worked on by the main and subcontractors and the public will be informed upon completion," the company said, adding that it is "committed to the highest quality standards at Burj Khalifa."

Despite repeated requests, a spokeswoman for Emaar was unable to provide further details or rule out the possibility of foul play. Greg Sang, Emaar's director of projects and the man charged with coordinating the tower's construction, could not be reached. Construction workers at the base of the tower said they were unaware of any problems.

Power was reaching some parts of the building. Strobe lights warning aircraft flashed and a handful of floors were illuminated after nightfall.

Emaar did not say when the observation deck would reopen. Ticket sales agents were accepting bookings starting on Valentine's Day this Sunday, though one reached by The Associated Press could not confirm the building would reopen then.

Tourists affected by the closure are being offered the chance to rebook or receive refunds.

The shutdown comes at a sensitive time for Dubai. The city-state is facing a slump in tourism _ which accounts for nearly a fifth of the local economy _ while fending off negative publicity caused by more than $80 billion in debt it is struggling to repay.

Ervin Hladnik-Milharcic, 55, a Slovenian writer planning to visit the city for the first time this month, said he hoped the Burj would reopen soon.

"It was the one thing I really wanted to see," he said. "The tower was projected as a metaphor for Dubai. So the metaphor should work. There are no excuses."

Dubai opened the skyscraper on Jan. 4 in a blaze of fireworks televised around the world. The building had been known as the Burj Dubai during more than half a decade of construction, but the name was suddenly changed on opening night to honor the ruler of neighboring Abu Dhabi.

Dubai and Abu Dhabi are two of seven small sheikdoms that comprise the United Arab Emirates. Abu Dhabi hosts the federation's capital and holds most of the country's vast oil reserves. It has provided Dubai with $20 billion in emergency cash to help cover its debts.

Questions were raised about the building's readiness in the months leading up to the January opening.

The opening date had originally been expected in September, but was then pushed back until sometime before the end of 2009. The eventual opening date just after New Year's was meant to coincide with the anniversary of the Dubai ruler's ascent to power.

There were signs even that target was ambitious. The final metal and glass panels cladding the building's exterior were installed only in late September. Early visitors to the observation deck had to peer through floor-to-ceiling windows caked with dust _ a sign that cleaning crews had not yet had a chance to scrub them clean.

Work is still ongoing on many of the building's other floors, including those that will house the first hotel designed by Giorgio Armani that is due to open in March. The building's base remains largely a construction zone, with entrance restricted to the viewing platform lobby in an adjacent shopping mall.

The first of some 12,000 residential tenants and office workers are supposed to move in to the building this month.

The Burj Khalifa boasts more than 160 stories. The exact number is not known.

The observation deck, which is mostly enclosed but includes an outdoor terrace bordered by guard rails, is located about two-thirds of the way up on the 124th floor. Adult tickets bought in advance cost 100 dirhams, or about $27. Visitors wanting to enter immediately can jump to the front of the line by paying 400 dirhams _ about $110 apiece.

___

On the Net: http://www.burjdubai.com

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Dollar Falls Versus Euro, Yen

NEW YORK - The dollar weakened to a new 20-month low against the euro Monday, as traders bet the gap between European and U.S. interest rates will keep narrowing.

European economic data has recently been surprisingly robust while U.S. data has been tame, leading market participants to believe the European Central Bank will continue hiking rates and the U.S. Federal Reserve may eventually start cutting back. If this happens, dollar-denominated investments will become less attractive.

The possibility of China reducing its dollar holdings also caused the U.S. currency to drop.

The euro bought $1.3128 in late trading in New York, up from $1.3079 late Friday. Earlier Monday, the euro reached $1.3172, its highest point since March 2005.

The euro crossed the key $1.30 mark late last week, when many traders were off for the Thanksgiving holiday. Light volumes often cause market volatility. Still, even as U.S. traders re-entered the currency markets on Monday, the dollar held at low levels.

"The naysayers are suggesting the move occurred only because of low liquidity. But we're still here. The move is real, it has some strength to it," said David Durrant, chief strategist at Julius Baer Investment Management. "The dollar bears are going, 'I told you so,' and the dollar bulls are standing there in disbelief."

The euro got a boost from a report Thursday from the Ifo Institute in Germany, the biggest economy in Europe. The Ifo report showed that German business confidence rose for a second month in a row to a 15-year high.

"What's undermining the dollar is that U.S. economic data has been soft, and European data has been stronger than expected," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at Bank of New York. "The pendulum is swinging back towards a Fed rate cut."

So far this month, most U.S. data has indicated that the economy is cooling off. Whether the dollar extends its drop, recovers, or consolidates at current levels through the rest of the year will depend largely on upcoming economic data.

Reports this week include durable goods orders on Tuesday; gross domestic product and the Federal Reserve's survey of regional economic conditions on Wednesday; retail sales and jobless claims on Thursday; and manufacturing activity and construction spending on Friday.

Traders will also be paying attention to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's speech on Tuesday, as well as manufacturing data out of Japan and Europe.

The Fed in August ended its two-year-long tightening campaign, and has left rates steady for the past three months. Most analysts believe the Fed will hold interest rates again at 5.25 percent at its meeting on Dec. 12, even in light of the dollar's recent plunge.

Monday morning, December federal funds futures were pricing in a 13.3 percent chance of a rate cut to 5 percent at the Fed's next meeting.

Most analysts are looking for the ECB - which has raised rates five times since last year to 3.25 percent - to hike rates again in December.

The euro rose to a new record against the yen on Monday, and has risen more than 2 percent against the dollar over the past week. The 12-nation currency is up 10 percent this year against the U.S. currency.

Also putting downward pressure on the dollar Monday was speculation that China may shift part of it's $1 trillion foreign-currency reserves - the biggest in the world - away from the dollar and into the euro and other major currencies, said Satoshi Okagawa, head of foreign exchange spot trading group at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

"The trend is: Sell dollars," Okagawa said.

According to market watchers, China isn't the only country looking to reduce dollar holdings.

"We've heard out of China, Russia, Sweden, and other central banks the desire to hold smaller proportion of reserves in U.S. dollars," Woolfolk said.

On Monday, the People's Bank of China set its currency's rate at 7.8402 yuan per dollar - the strongest level since the current exchange system was set up in July 2005.

Against the Japanese currency, the dollar fell as low as 115.40 yen on Monday - its lowest point since August. It then recovered to 116.08 yen by late trading, up from 115.78 yen late Friday in New York.

The dollar fell to 1.2067 Swiss francs from 1.2105, and to 1.1324 Canadian dollars from 1.1331. The British pound rose to $1.9371 from $1.9317.

Unrivaled Belle wins BC Ladies' Classic

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The Breeders' Cup began with fists flying in the winner's circle.

The mayhem was just starting.

Jockeys brawled and long shots dominated on a wild opening day, capped by Unrivaled Belle's victory in the $2 million Ladies' Classic under the lights Friday at Churchill Downs.

Unrivaled Belle ran 1 1-8 miles in 1:50.04, winning by 1¾ lengths over 3-2 favorite Blind Luck in front of 41,614.

Jockeys Calvin Borel and Javier Castellano traded punches after the first Breeders' Cup race, with an enraged Borel needing to be restrained. He was furious about a move in tight quarters by Castellano.

Shared Account scored the second-biggest upset in the event's 27-year history, winning the $2 million Filly & Mare Turf at 46-1 odds on a gray and chilly day.

Celebrity chef Bobby Flay earned his first Breeders' Cup victory as owner of More Than Real in the $1 million Juvenile Fillies Turf.

American horses won all of the six races. No jockey or trainer won more than one race on a day where horses and riders got around safely.

Off the track, though, was a stunningly different story.

The genteel atmosphere of the Breeders' Cup — well-dressed fans, wealthy owners and gorgeous horses worth millions — was jolted when Borel and the lesser known Castellano tangled in the winner's circle after the opening race.

Borel charged Castellano shortly after the $500,000 Marathon, angry over a mid-race move in traffic that endangered Borel and fellow rider Martin Garcia.

Borel, the usually smiling three-time winner of the Kentucky Derby, turned livid during the fight that went on for several minutes in front of startled onlookers. His eyes bulged and the veins in his forehead stood out as he resisted being held back.

Eventually, his wife and brother each took one of his arms and marched Borel back to the jockeys' room, where further scuffling broke out between the two riders. He later apologized and rode in two other races, but didn't win.

The races went off without Zenyatta, who was back in her barn waiting to defend her title Saturday in the $5 million Classic against the boys. She will put her 19-0 winning streak on the line in the 1¼-mile race, the richest in North America.

The two-day world championships were back at Churchill Downs for a record seventh time, and the first in three years to be run on dirt. The event was on the synthetic track at Santa Anita the last two years.

The lights dotting the home of the Kentucky Derby were turned on before daylight faded. The dirt oval was brightly lit for the Ladies' Classic that went off at 7:35 p.m.

"I don't think the horses know its nighttime out there," winning jockey Kent Desormeaux said. "It is so bright. Everyone can see where they're going. It's safe."

Under Desormeaux, Unrivaled Belle was fifth much of the way before making a four-wide move on the final turn and taking charge at the top of the stretch. She paid $17, $5.80 and $4.20. The gray filly is owned by Gary Seidler and Peter Vegso, publishers of the "Chicken Soup for the Soul" series of motivational books.

"She left them for dead leaving the three-eighths pole. I mean, it was over," Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott said.

Blind Luck ran next-to-last until rallying with three-eighths of a mile to go under Joel Rosario. She returned $3.20 and $2.40. Havre de Grace paid $4 to show.

After the fight and inquiries into the results of the first two races, things settled down until ending on a controversial note in the Ladies' Classic.

Life At Ten, the 7-2 second choice, finished last, and jockey John Velazquez later said the filly wasn't warming up well before the race. She broke sluggishly, quickly dropped back and lost contact with the rest of the field after a half-mile.

"She seemed OK," Velazquez said. "She never put in any effort whatsoever. I tried to warm her up and wake her up, and she just never felt like running."

Trainer Todd Pletcher said Life At Ten was "abnormally quiet, almost sedated-like" while being saddled. He speculated the 5-year-old mare might have had an allergic reaction to Lasix, an anti-bleeding medication legal in Kentucky.

"It's a tough situation for Johnny to be in," Pletcher said. "He asked the vets to look at her and she was moving soundly but clearly she probably should not have run. Of all the horses we've run over here today, none were doing better than her."

Pletcher's other entry Malibu Prayer finished 10th.

Life At Ten is owned by Candy DeBartolo, the wife of former San Francisco 49ers owner Ed DeBartolo Jr.

In the other races:

—Eldaafer won the 1¾-mile Marathon by 1¾ lengths for Velazquez and trainer Diane Alvarado. He paid $23.20 to win.

—Flay's horse More Than Real won the $1 million Juvenile Fillies Turf by two lengths under Garrett Gomez and paid $29.20. It was Pletcher's lone win on the day.

—Dubai Majestry won the $1 million Filly & Mare Sprint by 2¼ lengths, giving jockey Jamie Theriot his first BC title. She paid $19.20.

—Awesome Feather won the $2 million Juvenile Fillies by 2¼ lengths, making jockey Jeffrey Sanchez and trainer Stanley Gold winners in their BC debuts. She paid $10.40.

—Shared Account and jockey Edgar Prado won the $2 million Filly & Mare Turf by a neck in the day's closest race. She paid $94.

'Be on the alert'

The co-ordinator of a neighbourhood watch group in Keynsham haswarned residents not to be complacent.

Bob Eastaugh, who helped set up the Charlton Road NeighbourhoodWatch, told residents at the latest meeting to remain vigilantdespite the recent lack of criminal activity.

He said: "People have to do everything they can to make sure theydon't become the victims of burglars or thieves."

The next meeting is on Monday, January 24, from 7pm at QueensRoad Methodist Church in Keynsham.

Is Essex set to buck the trend? ; The housing market pendulum continually swings, but it remains positive for Essex, with an interesting twist that could buck the trend, reports Zoe Napier at Zoe Napier Country & Equestrian

During 2010, we have seen a market like no other continual lowinterest rates (for the 20th consecutive month so far) have enabledproperty owners to balance their books in a somewhat difficultclimate. This has created a property shortage throughout much of theyear due to it often being more economically viable to stay put asopposed to moving. This alone has sustained house prices in ourregion.

It takes a brave person to buy in the months that report houseprices falling by 3.7%, as reported by the Halifax in October. Thesestatistics have not been so evident in the country property andequestrian market, subject to the property greeting the market atthe right price. Some of the price adjustments have been more acorrective measure than prices falling, which fail to be reported assuch.

Statistics are useful but are based on national figures and notniche markets like the higher end market. This is where good,experienced local knowledge from a property expert can be invaluablewhen buying or selling.

However, the general uncertainty of the sales market has createda huge upturn in the rental market. In real terms this means that wehave a significant 'bank' of people waiting to buy. Should thesefuture prospective buyers be waiting to hear word of an upturn thiscould well mean that they have missed the boat for the best buys,which happen to be sitting out there now to be negotiated upon andbought. Buyers are also naturally cautious about making offers onproperties that have been available for a considerable length oftime. This is where the scenario of waiting for buses appears, whenthe buses (buyers) all arrive at once. One person makes an offer andthis gives the next buyer the confidence to also make an offer andbefore you know it (and on several occasions this year alone) pricesin excess of the guide price have been achieved. The market is allabout confidence, being media lead.

Equally, due to national property reports, many potential sellersare waiting until the Spring to proceed with marketing, butstatistics over more recent years show that the first quarter of theyear for Essex in particular, is proving to be more lucrative thanthe second quarter of the year.

There are many reasons for this, not least of which is that Essexhas the most business owners in the country, probably some of thebest entrepreneurs, and many city workers who are already in theknowledge of their likely city bonus monies to be received (mostly)in January. It is hardly a surprise therefore, in this age of theinternet, that the Christmas period can be a prime time forbrowsers. Those thinking of selling should really considerpreparations for marketing prior to the festive season, in order toreach these potential browsers and the relevant media publicationsfor a January launch.

After 26 years in the Essex property industry, Zoe launched herown business in October 2010, based in Maldon, to cover the entirecounty of Essex and south Suffolk, specialising in property in thecountryside. She now promotes her company with the aptly namedwebsite www.inthecountryside.com

Jude Law backs teen effort to finance film

Their movie is not even made yet, but three teenage filmmakers already have video promotions from Jude Law and Stephen Fry.

"Now more than ever it's incredibly difficult to get a film funded even if you've been doing it for years and have a good track record," Law says in the video he shot for Adrian Bliss, Ben Robbins and Toby Stubbs, who discovered "Clovis Dardentor," an 1896 novel by Jules Verne, and decided to make a movie of the comic story about two friends who try to get adopted by a wealthy man.

"No matter how passionate you are, or how good your film could be, it's still a monumental struggle to get the money together. What could make it harder is if you're a teenager like Adrian, Toby and Ben who found a forgotten Jules Verne novel in the British library and they knew instantly they wanted to make it into a film," says Law, speaking alone on camera with a "Sherlock Holmes" sign behind him.

Determined to become filmmakers, the trio hatched their plan during their final year in a London secondary school. Stubbs, 18, says they knew they had to find a creative way get funding.

"We knew we couldn't just go around to these studios and ask for money because of our age, because we were even younger back then, a year ago," he says.

"Well, we did try, didn't we? We called up. It was, 'No, no. Sorry.' And then they hung up," Bliss, 19, adds.

So, they used the Internet, social networking and a bit of bluster to get their production off the ground. Many people have turned to micro-financing to launch record albums or films, employing the Internet as a fundraising tool. But Stubbs, Bliss and Robbins found a way to involve celebrities.

"We thought about it and thought what could we sell to people that there are lots of in a film and that's when credits came up," Stubbs says. "Everyone wants to see their names on the end credits of a film."

The result is http://www.buyacredit.com, which sells end credits for $10 a name. Stubbs, Bliss and Robbins, 19, are also selling advertising space on the site. The teens, who need $2 million, say they already have raised about $150,000.

"Essentially, you can be a movie producer and see your name on the end credits of a film knowing that you've helped to make it happen," Law says in the video, which was made available to The Associated Press. "The aim of the project is to provide a window into the world of movies and to show ... a real-time 'making of' through the Web site, blogs, YouTube and Twitter."

Larger donors are offered set visits and even cameo roles.

Fry already has appeared in a 10-minute film the three produced called "Jam" and will have the lead role of the wealthy Mr. Eustache in "Clovis Dardentor." Fry says he "admired in an amused manner the chutzpah, determination and the charm of these three young fellows in their determination to get into the movie business this way."

The teens landed Fry after sending dozens of tweets to his Twitter page.

"I clicked on their site and I thought, 'Oh, that's very sweet and very clever. So, I retweeted it and drew other people's attention to it and Adrian, who's sort of the leader of the gang, he got in touch with me to thank me and his way of thanking me was asking for more favors."

Fry also appears in a video on the teens' Web site and asked friends such as Sir Ian McKellen and Rowan Atkinson to offer their backing as well.

Law got involved after Bliss talked him up outside a London theater.

"When we found out that he was in London doing 'Hamlet,' ... we thought, 'Well, there's a chance to try and contact him,'" Bliss says. "So I ... waited outside the stage door for him to come in and I met him there and I told him about the project ... and he was really interested and that's how we sort of got his support from the start."

The teens say Law was soon giving advice. He looked over their script, offered to make the video and hired his own camera crew to shoot while doing publicity for the film "Sherlock Holmes," in which he played Watson to Robert Downey Jr.'s Holmes.

They hope Law's pitch will resonate with wannabe producers so the young filmmakers can reach their $2 million goal.

___

On the Net:

http://www.buyacredit.com

Jesse, Bishop: 'Bush using Iraq as hit list'

Accusing President Bush of using Iraq for "target practice," the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. and Bishop C. Joseph Sprague, said war is not the answer to the Middle East crisis that has turned into a nightmare for the families of the slain and kidnapped soldiers.

Calling the attack on Iraq a "tragedy on television," Jackson, who held a press conference with Sprague, from the United Methodist Church, at Dr. King's Workshop over the weekend, called the military strike an act of "savagery.

"Our nation's heart is heavy with emotion as bombs burst over Baghdad," said Jackson calling the war "unnecessary."

Jackson, who said he is ready to go to jail in protesting this war, said these preemptive strikes against Iraq amount to war crimes and that "those who engage in war crimes must pay the price for it."

Both men offered prayers for those soldiers who were killed, others kidnapped, and for the journalists who were caught in the crossfire of the Iraqi conflict.

Sprague, and Jackson, prayed for those PUSH members who came to the altar petitioning for the safety of family members fighting in Iraq.

Sprague said most U.S. soldiers fighting in the Iraqi War are African American.

"I thought that was a compelling statement, for those who are fighting this war are Black, brown and poor whites," he said.

"We see those who have suffered the most finding themselves in harm's way," Sprague said: "The death of an Iraqi is as much an abomination in the eyes of God as the death of a precious U.S. citizen...."

"Why does the Islamic world have such disdain for those in the West generally and in the U.S. in particular"? Sprague asked "They hate us because of the four 'M's": McDonald's, Michelob, MTV and militarism," he said.

Sprague called Bush's plans to rebuild Iraq by giving lucrative contracts to firms once tied to Vice President Dick Cheney "problematic."

He said the next battle with the U.N. is France's refusal to approve Bush's plans to rebuild Iraq because it would give credence to the attack which France refused to sanction.

Referring to Cheney's old company Halliburton reportedly set to receive a $900 million "clean-up" contract after the war, Jackson said: "This is not just regime change. It's region control."

Jackson said the clean-up of Iraq will be paid by U.S. taxpayers and said "those countries that did not participate in tearing Iraq up, cannot wreck their budgets in trying to resurrect Iraq; so, they're going to make us pay the price for Bush's unilateral foreign policy."

Sprague said this "inconsistent" policy keeps the U.S. and world citizens "off-balance" in terms of the Bush policy. "We need a multilateral peacekeeping force and a multilateral response to our needs."

However, Sprague said in Afghanistan the United States has not rebuilt one house in a nation America helped to bomb searching for the Taliban.

Given America's mounting $301 billion deficit and a $400 billion defense budget, Sprague asked "where will the money come from, given the plight of our schools, homelessness and rising AIDS cases?"

"The White House intends to shock and awe the Iraqi people into submission," said Jackson. "We believe American leaders should submit to the awesome power of God," said Jackson.

Rev. Clay Evans, founder of the Fellowship Baptist Church, said the war is "nonsense, foolishness, and a lot of our men are going to get killed. I don't think it is for the same purpose they say it is in trying to liberate them (the Iraqi's). I think it is oil."

Jackson concurred saying: "So far, the weapons of destruction have come from the U.S. and Britain. Today, we see we were given to a fear that has not been founded. It was really exaggeration to justify what is happening today."

However, on NBC's "Meet the Press," Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said in time the world will see that Saddam Hussein had been hoarding weapons of mass destruction.

"We pray for our troops, that they come home and pray that the hostilities cease," said Jackson.

He childed the media he says "have been almost totally controlled by the government" and criticized Bush for asking questions from "pre-screened media with pre-screened questions."

In addition, Jackson criticized the television airing of the war, likening it to "a July 4th celebration; a Nintendo game."

"They are pouring out Coca-Cola, burning up McDonald's; American brand names are under attack as American tourists will be under attack," said Jackson, referring to the growing anti-U.S. sentiment around the world.

But, he warned "while the obsession is with Iraq" and its 22 million people, "next door is Iran, a nation of 70 million, with some suggesting Iran as the site of the next conflict."

Article copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Many women packing on pounds during pregnancy

Eating for two? New guidelines are setting how much weight women should gain during pregnancy _ not too much if women already are overweight or obese when they conceive.

The Institute of Medicine issued guidelines Thursday that aren't too different from what obstetricians already recommend, but more than half of pregnant women don't follow them. Adding to that concern, women who become pregnant today tend to be heavier, older and have more conditions such as diabetes than just a decade ago _ issues that make extra pounds riskier.

The recommendations: A normal-weight woman, as measured by the BMI or body mass index, should gain between 25 and 35 pounds. An overweight woman should gain 15 to 25. And for the first time there's a recommendation for obese women: 11 to 20 pounds.

Reflections on a short-term mission

Regina

Murray and Dolores Logon and their family travelled to Thailand and Macau earlier this year to visit Mennonite missionaries working in these two countries. Upon their return, Murray Logan reflected on what he had learned from their trip:

* In Thailand, as well as in Macau, I learned that Christianity is seen as a western religion. Because of the particularly North American emphasis on materialism, money and individualism, as well as the militaristic and violent spin which they see in our movies, advertisements and products, they may be interested in the good news of Christ but they don't want the North American baggage that comes with it. They want victory over sin, guilt, fear, the law, death, and evil and meaningless existence without attachments to the "cultural other."

* Many fears accompany daily living. Many are filled by the need to appease spirits that plague them, working hard at a dead-end job to support families or buying unnecessary goods, in order to feel good and add meaning to life.

* In North America we seem to have taken the benefits of Jesus Christ so much for granted that the true meaning of Jesus Christ has become lost or buried in some sort of secular or apostate culture. We have found ourselves going the other way and embracing the very things they in Asia have sought to shed once they discover freedom from spiritual poverty and bondage.

* The Buddhist religious system suffers from the same attacks of apostate drift and indifference by the youth as Christianity does in North America.

* The social gospel-made manifest under the banner of the buzzword "peace," which pays only lip service to evangelism and the resurrection of Jesus Christ in the face of real evil and poverty under our noses-will not have much success in bringing the gospel of Jesus Christ through his divinity to anyone hurting in this world, because it pays only minimal attention to the glory of God.

-Murray Logan

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

UN head expected to meet Myanmar junta leader

The U.N. Secretary-General will meet the head of Myanmar's ruling junta during a visit this week to discuss assistance for cyclone victims.

U.N. humanitarian chief John Holmes says Ban Ki-moon is supposed to visit Myanmar on Thursday for talks and an inspection of the devastated area.

On Sunday, he is supposed to attend a meeting of aid donors in Yangon.

Holmes was in Myanmar on Tuesday to persuade its government to allow more international assistance into the Southeast Asian country for victims of the May 2-3 cyclone.

At least 1.7 million survivors of the storm are in desperate need of aid, including food, clean water and shelter.

Justice for David Boim

Chicago lawyers win a battle in the war against terror

A LANDMARK COURT CASE HAS ENDED IN Chicago, with a verdict that has the potential of dealing a major blow to the financing of terrorism. The Jewish community can be proud that, thanks to a local law firm working essentially probono, individuals and organizations that raise money in this country for groups that engage in terrorism will be held legally accountable for the actions of the groups their funds support.

"It was something we could do as lawyers to fight terror," Stephen Landes who, with Richard Hoffman prosecuted the case, told the Jewish Star.

"It was personally very satisfying to use my law skills for a very important purpose -- the war on terror," Mr. Landes added.

ON DECEMBER 8, THREE ISLAMIC charitable organizations and one individual were found guilty of funding the Hamas terrorist organization, and therefore legally liable in the murder of American-born, 17-year-old David Boim.

In 1996, David Boim was shot in the head by Hamas terrorists as he waited at a bus stop in the West Bank.

Four years after his murder, David's parents, Joyce and Stanley Boim, Americans who have lived in Israel since 1985, filed suit under a federal law passed in 1990 that permits terrorism victims to sue for civil damages.

The verdict was the first successful one under this law, and the first one brought by Americans against terrorism outside this country, according to Mr. Landes.

The amount of the award was $156 million. As Mr. Landes summed up the matter, the "organizations that support terrorism, overtly or covertly, are subject to liability. It is outrageous that money was being raised here to commit terror against Americans."

He thinks that donors will now ask where their money is going before they contribute.

"I hope this will put a dent in the terror organizations," Mr. Landes added. "This is what we set out to do."

MR. LANDES' AND MR. HOFFMAN'S LAW firm, Wildman Harrold, was approached by Washington, D.C. attorney Nathan Lewin, who had filed the original lawsuit on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Boim in 2000, to take over the case in Chicago.

They agreed to do so.

A major result of their commitment to the case is a precedent-setting verdict that will have widespread implications for American victims of terror, here and abroad.

Pending lawsuits by 9/11 victims and their families, for example, now have a legal basis for arguing that supporters of terror are complicit in terrorists acts, even if they did not directly participate.

And there is a heavy financial price to pay for that complicity -- the way has been shown for U.S. courts to bankrupt Islamic organizations in this country that operate in the guise of charities while actually supporting terrorism.

NO JUDGMENT OR VERDICT, OF COURSE, can compensate for the loss of David Boim's life, or that of any other terrorist victim.

But the Boim case has made the first dent in cutting off the funding of terror; eventually, as other cases make more and more dents, terror organizations will be hindered in obtaining, or retaining, funds they need to finance their murderous acts.

It took one successful case to strike the first blow. We are grateful for the determination and steadfastness of those who made it happen.

Article copyright Star Media Group, Inc.

CAP FOR: Lowri Harries a [...] [Edition 2]

CAP FOR: Lowri Harries a Linsey Harries o Goleg Prifysgol yDrindod Dewi Sant sydd yn gydlynwyr prosiect Mentora a Datblygu yngnghwmni Sian Phillips, Paul Thomas, Nerys Burton a Deris WilliamsRheolwr Gyfarwyddwr Menter Cwm Gwendraeth. "Mae'r Menter CwmGwendraeth wedi ymrwymo i gydweithio gyda'r brifysgol er mwyn rhoicyfle i'w staff ddatblygu sgiliau rheoli ac ennill cymhwysterauperthnasol. Edrychwn ymlaen i gydweithio gyda'r Brifysgol sydd morflaengar ac yn medru cynnig y gwasanaeth trwy gyfrwng y Gymraeg,"ategodd Deris Williams rheolwr gyfarwyddwr Menter Cwm Gwendraeth.

TD bank to buy South Financial

Canada's TD Bank Financial Group Inc. said Monday it will buy South Financial Group for $191.6 million, adding 176 locations to the Canadian bank's holdings in the U.S. Southeast.

South Financial, which was the subject of Federal Reserve enforcement action on May 4, has incurred more than $1.3 billion in losses since 1998 because of loan charges related to real estate. The enforcement action prohibits the troubled bank from declaring or paying any dividends without approval from the Fed.

Canada's second largest bank said it will pay $61 million in cash or stock to shareholders, less than half the value of its shares before the announcement was made.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury will also sell to TD its $347-million worth of stock, warrants, and accrued but unpaid dividends for total cash consideration of about $130.6 million.

"In addition to the evaluation we came up with to pay shareholders, when we looked at the evaluation of the company with the metrics that we follow, it meant that we had to have this particular kind of deal with the U.S. Treasury," said Bharat Masrani, group head of U.S. Personal and Commercial Banking at the Canadian bank. He added this is the first time TD will pay the U.S. Treasury for an acquisition.

The Treasury's stake comes from its Capital Purchase Program, part of its troubled asset relief program for the 2008 U.S. financial system bailouts.

The Toronto-based bank said the transaction would give it a foothold in North and South Carolina _ two markets TD said were key for its U.S. expansion plans.

TD has been expanding into the U.S. over the past few years. In 2004 when it bought control of New England's Banknorth.

In 2007, it acquired New Jersey-based Commerce Bancorp for $8.5 billion, adding roughly 460 branches on the East Coast just before the global economic crisis hit.

Less than a month ago, TD agreed to buy the risky assets of three insolvent Florida banks worth $3.8 billion.

Riverside National Bank of Florida, First Federal Bank of North Florida and AmericanFirst Bank were all purchased with the help of U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

TD Bank also has a stake in the broker TD Ameritrade, based in Omaha.

TD president and chief executive Ed Clark said the bank did not want to wait for the FDIC to take over the assets of South Financial because executives believed it could destroy asset some value.

TD Bank also plans to issue $250 million of common shares before the agreement closes for "prudent capital management."

TD Bank shares were down $1.25 to $72.14 in trading Monday on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

76ers Rout Lakers for 6th Straight Win

PHILADELPHIA - Andre Iguodala scored 31 points and the Philadelphia 76ers spoiled the return of Kobe Bryant with their sixth straight victory, 108-92 over the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday night.

Andre Miller scored 23 points, Kyle Korver had 18 and the Sixers scored 16 straight points in a 20-3 run to cap a perfect homestand (6-0) and win their seventh straight at home in front of their first sellout crowd of the season. The Sixers are making a late playoff push, one reason team president Billy King said before the game that coach Maurice Cheeks would return next season.

Bryant cooled in the second half after scoring 21 points in the first. He finished with 30 points after serving a one-game suspension for striking a player in the face, his second penalty for that action in a little more than a month.

Suicide haunts friend's dreams

Dear Zazz: I'm a 16-year-old girl, and my friend "Kevin" recentlycommitted suicide. Now I dream about him every night. In the dream,he's trying to tell me something, but I can't figure out what he'ssaying.

I'm scared by this. I'm also feeling guilty because Kevin onceasked me out and I turned him down. I don't know why I did thatbecause, actually, I really liked him. And since he died, I feellike I'm in love with him.

How do I stop crying and move on?

MISSING HIM

Dear M.H.: First of all, know this: Kevin didn't kill himselfbecause you turned him down for a date. People who are suicidal aredeeply troubled, often suffering from major depression, a mentalillness. Kevin needed medical care, not a date.

Like most people who've lost loved ones and friends to suicide,you yearn to go back to the past and change things. Your dreamsabout Kevin are likely a reaction to that. And your feelings of"love" are also understandable.

Losing him in such an awful and permanent way has heightened youremotional ties to him.

You need to reassure yourself that turning Kevin down for thatdate was the right decision for you at that moment, and maybe it wasthe right decision for him, too. Your friendship survived hisoverture. Maybe it wouldn't have survived had you begun dating - andbroken up.

You can best serve Kevin's memory by making good use of your lifein the years to come. As painful as his death is for you, it willlikely make you a stronger, more understanding person. Let that behis legacy to you.

Dear Zazz: A boy asked you how kids can earn money by startingtheir own summer businesses. One of your suggestions was a car washon the boy's driveway.

That's a bad, bad idea.

Think of all the residue and grease that cars have underneath.All that will collect in the sewers and eventually go into thegroundwater. It'll also leave residue on the driveway and lawn, andmay upset neighbors.

Cars should be washed in a professional car wash that has specialareas for waste and waste water.

DIDN'T LIKE YOUR IDEA

Dear Didn't: OK, there are ecological considerations to an on-the-driveway car wash. Now, some kids reading your letter will surelyturn off their hoses and open up lemonade stands instead.

I wonder if I'll then hear from readers who believe lemonadeshould be sold only in officially sanctioned stores or restaurants.They'll write about the risks of children stirring up too-sourpitchers of the stuff, leaving whole neighborhoods stricken withunsightly, scrunched-up faces.

Being a young entrepreneur isn't as easy as it used to be.

Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah: So your kids are away at camp thissummer, or they're visiting grandparents, or they've flown out tospend quality time with your ex-spouse. What are they saying intheir letters and e-mails home? I'd like to print some of thefunniest, most loving, or most touching correspondences.

Send me a copy of your kids' letters, and I'll select the 10 Ilike best. Those kids will receive special back-to-school prizes,including Rugrats memorabilia.

Send your entries to LETTERS HOME, c/o Zazz, Box 3455, Chicago60654. Or fax us (312-321-2812) or e-mail (zazz@suntimes.com).

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

SURFACE ENERGY COMPONENTS AND LAND CHARACTERISTICS OF A RICE PADDY

In South and Southeast Asia, rice is one of the major staple food crops. A steady diet of rice accounts for as much as 70% of the daily calorie intake for more than 2 billion people. Rice, however, is uniquely different from other crops. Cultivated under water its entire life, the fact that the crop is flooded substantially affects the land characteristics of the rice paddy field. Many meteorological, climatological, and air-quality models require land characteristics as input. Our research confirms that describing land as having characteristics derived from the cereal crop fields common to Western nations, as is currently being done in many "state-of-the-art" models, yields an inaccurate …

Vegas casinos try bargains to lure back visitors

It's back to the buffet, bargains and customer bonuses for Las Vegas casinos.

Fast food is up, fine dining tabs are down and hotel rooms are available for under $50 in a city that has been calling on recession-weary tourists to come back and play the quarter slot machines.

Value is the hippest thing on Las Vegas Boulevard this year.

At O'Sheas Casino, the president of five Harrah's Entertainment Inc. hotel-casinos on the Las Vegas Strip is poking fun at the economic downturn and the excesses that built Sin City's anything-goes reputation.

Don Marrandino points at a sign pushing $45 bottles of Jack Daniels whiskey or Smirnoff vodka, and …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Rice Urges Patience Until Fall Report

WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice exhorted congressional critics of Iraq war policy Friday to give the Bush administration and the fledgling government in Baghdad until September to "make a coherent judgment of where we are."

On the morning after the House voted 223-201 for a Democratic proposal to force a U.S. troop withdrawal by next spring, Rice acknowledged in a round of television interviews that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government hasn't achieved "as much progress as we would like."

"But we shouldn't just dismiss as inconsequential the progress that they have made," the secretary argued.

Maj. Gen. Benjamin R. Mixon, a top U.S. …

CCES ACQUIRES E-COMMERCE CO.

CCS Information Technology, a regional subsidiary of Neal & Massy, has acquired the Barbados e-commerce solutions provider, Uniserv, for an undisclosed sum, company officials said, reports CANA (January 15, 2001). CCS General Manager Michael Armstrong said the company was getting into offering business-to-business solutions for government …

Past work experiences prove to be valuable business lessons.(Benefit Manager of the Year)(Linda M. Kuklinski manager at Stokely USA Inc.)

Byline: JERRY GEISEL

WAUKESHA, Wis.-One of the most valuable business lessons Linda M. Kuklinski says she ever learned happened a decade ago when she was the treasurer at Stokely USA Inc., a canned and frozen food processor in Oconomowoc, Wis.

In 1997, food giant Chiquita Brands International Inc. reached an agreement with Stokely to acquire the company. Ms. Kuklinski recalls the stress that Stokely employees felt between the time the buyout was announced and the deal was completed.

"It was a difficult time for employees. Lots of executives left,'' said Ms. Kuklinski, now employee benefits and risk manager at Generac Power Systems Inc.

QUESTIONS RAISED ON IRRADIATED FOOD.(CAPITAL REGION)

Not enough is known about the effects of irradiated food to declare it safe, the former chairwoman of a federal investigative team said Wednesday.

In written testimony to a joint hearing of the state Assembly and Senate consumer affairs committees, Marcia van Gemert said 441 studies that the U.S. government used as a basis for the approval of food irradiation were flawed.

But a Cornell University …

Aetna to offer records in Microsoft HealthVault

Health insurer Aetna Inc. is becoming the first health insurer to team with Microsoft Corp. to give its customers an Internet-based vault for storing medical records they can access even if they change jobs or leave their health plan.

Starting next month, Hartford, Conn.-based Aetna will allow some customers to transfer electronic personal health records to Microsoft's HealthVault, a platform that lets care providers look at the information, if they have patient permission.

The vault will give the insurer's customers "continuous access" to their claims information and anything the patient wants to add, like clinical data or past medical records, …

Chicagoans missing out on tax break

Low-income residents are forfeiting $100 million a year in Chicago- and $300 million statewide - by failing to claim federal earnedincome tax credits, officials said Tuesday.

Mayor Daley is joining with the business community on an outreachcampaign aimed at alerting Chicagoans who need it most to a tax breakthat could be worth as much as $3,800-a-year to a struggling family,retroactive to 1997.

Dominick's has agreed to put the alert on its grocery bags atChicago stores. The city has also asked Commonwealth Edison to put anotice in customer bills.

"It sounds like a no-brainer to me," said Pam Strobel, ComEd'sexecutive vice president and general counsel. "This is …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

In Brief: Bomb Near Argentine BankBoston Branch.(Brief Article)

BUENOS AIRES -

A small bomb exploded outside a BankBoston Corp. branch here Friday, in what authorities said may have been a protest against U.S. participation in the Kosovo conflict.

The homemade device was detonated …

Future bright at Buxton Museum.

The visitor boom at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery is continuing with 27,898 people visiting during the last year - a rise of 4,174.

Rising visitor numbers have also led to an increase in donations made to the museum to more than [pounds sterling]1,000 for the year. Sales in the museum shop are also up by more than [pounds sterling]1,000 on last year's figure.

Since 2000/01 the annual total has increased by almost 11,000.

Derbyshire County Council member for community services, Councillor Bob Janes said: "We have had some excellent work running at the Buxton museum and this is reflected in the number of people now visiting."

Additions have …

NEW SURVEY FINDS PARENTS ARE NO MATCH FOR WEB-SAVVY GIRLS.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: KAREN THOMAS USA Today

Most teenage girls consider themselves to be the savviest computer user in their home better than their brothers and, naturally, way better than their parents.

Indeed, more than half the girls questioned in a new survey said they can chat, flirt and even read parents' e-mail without them catching on. Almost 20 percent say they could hack into a school computer.

The recent survey from the Girl Scouts of the United States delves into the psyche of girls online and shows that teens are hiding a whole lot from their parents: 30 percent say they've been sexually harassed online (ranging from being asked their bra size to …

HEALING BEGINS AT FENWAY.(Sports)

Byline: Joe Layden

The pitch was thrown at 1:23 p.m., EDT, under a New England sky so perfectly clear and blue it seemed to have been painted.

For the record, it was a strike, stared at by Tony Phillips of the Detroit Tigers and cheered heartily by a Fenway Park crowd of 35,199. This particular fastball, which came wrapped in a blanket of anticipation, landed with a smack in the glove of catcher Tony Pena, just an instant after it had left the hand of Roger Clemens.

As it whistled across the plate, you could almost feel the seed of redemption being planted. It was the first pitch of the first game of the new year - one week overdue but no less sweet for the wait.

"Opening day is big. It's great," said Dwight Evans, who started his 18th season in Boston by driving in three runs to help lead the Red Sox to a 5-2 victory. "I still get butterflies, absolutely. …

Top Senate Democrat lays out deficit curbs

The top Senate Democrat is proposing tough anti-deficit rules to make it harder to run up the deficit with new tax cuts or expansions of federal benefit programs.

If approved, the plan by Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada would have an almost immediate impact on Congress' free-spending ways by requiring spending cuts or revenue increases to pay for new spending.

In the near term, Reid's "pay-as-you-go" plan would make it difficult to pass an extension next month of emergency unemployment benefits and health insurance subsidies for laid-off workers. It would also make it tougher to give states help with Medicaid budgets.

Under the …

Tenn. Wife Sentenced in Preacher's Death

SELMER, Tenn. - A woman who killed her preacher husband with a shotgun blast to the back as he lay in bed was sentenced Friday to three years in prison, but with time served could be released on probation in a little more than two months.

Mary Winkler must serve at least 210 days of her sentence but gets credit for the 143 days she has already spent in jail, Judge Weber McCraw said.

That leaves 67 days, and McCraw said up to 60 days of the sentence could be served in a facility where she could receive mental health treatment. That means Winkler might spend only another week in jail.

Prosecutors had pursued a murder charge against Winkler, 33, but jurors convicted …

Fontanka 16: The Tsars' Secret Police.

Fontanka 16: The Tsars' Secret Police, by Charles A. Ruud and Sergei A. Stepanov. Montreal, Quebec, McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999. ix. 394 pp: $39.95 Cdn (cloth).

In late nineteenth-century St. Petersburg, the address "Fontanka 16" became a shorthand for "secret police." From the 1830s until 1917, the tsarist secret political police, the Okhranka, was headquartered there. In co-operation with the military police -- the Corps of Gendarmes -- the Okhranka worked to detect and counteract subversion against the Russian state. By the time of the collapse of the Russian autocracy in February 1917, Okhranka informants kept watch virtually everywhere.

This wide-ranging study, a revised version of the authors' 1994 Russian-language work, focuses on the activities of the Okhranka and the Gendarmes from the 1880s to 1917. Charles A. Ruud and …

Student faces charges after backpack search.(Capital Region)

FORT EDWARD - Police who searched an Argyle student for drugs found weapons instead at a Board of Cooperative Educational Services facility Tuesday.

Michael R. Rabine, 19, of 392 West Road, was charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree and unlawful possession of a weapon on school property.

Fred Valastro, principal of Argyle Central School, said Rabine was searched because students reported he had drug …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

CAPITAL REGION ALMANAC.(CAPITAL REGION)

This almanac of community news provides coverage of local governments, local courts and police calls from selected communities in our region. Government listings focus on communities in Albany County, and police calls are taken from the actual police blotters from larger communities throughout the area. This feature usually appears on this page Mondays through Saturdays. ALBANY FRIDAY 10:10 a.m. CONTEMPT. A man, 42, from the 400 block of Washington Avenue, allegedly made ten collect calls from a correctional facility to a complainant's workplace, which violated an order of protection.

1 p.m. ASSAULT. A male, 16, from the 500 block of North Pearl Street, allegedly struck someone in the face with his fist. Officer: Michael Cuerdon.

5:03 p.m. STOLEN PROPERTY. A man, 31, from the 200 block of Second Avenue, allegedly had a flashlight and a wrench that had been reported stolen. He also was charged with petit larceny.

5:16 p.m. WEAPON POSSESSION. A man from Second Avenue, allegedly had a hammer and used it against someone else on Osborne Street. Officer: Dennis Leonard.

5:17 p.m. DRUG CHARGES. A man, 22, from the 1000 block of University Place, Schenectady, was charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, criminal possession of a narcotic drug with intent to sell and second-degree criminal use of drug paraphernalia. Officer: Dennis Guiry.

5:17 p.m. DRUG CHARGES. Two 19-year-old men from the 600 block of Park Avenue, and a man, 43, from the 200 block of Livingston Avenue, were arrested after police served a search warrant. The first two men were charged with third- and fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, and one of them was additionally charged with third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance and criminal use of drug paraphernalia. The third man was charged with first-degree loitering.

5:29 p.m. DRUG CHARGES. A man, 50, from the 100 block of Lancaster Street, allegedly had a piece of crack …

Vivus weight loss drug faces safety questions

Vivus' potential weight loss drug Qnexa will likely draw scrutiny over nervous system and psychiatric side effects from a panel of Food and Drug Administration experts this week.

The FDA acknowledges the potential blockbuster drug's effectiveness in cutting weight. But, in briefing documents the agency raises concerns about a range of side effects. …