Thursday, March 15, 2012

Le Corbusier's life shown in 2,000 illustrations

NEW YORK _ This formidable picture book traces the monumental career of Charles-Edouard Jeanneret, the prophet of modern architecture and city planning known as Le Corbusier.

Weighty at 20 pounds, the bulky volume encompasses 2,000 photos of Le Corbusier's innovative structures and controversial building schemes, excerpts of his sketchbooks and treatises, examples of his art works and personal letters, with English translations from the French.

Striver, sycophant, savant, "Corbu" was an architect-colossus in the august company of German Bauhaus innovators Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe and American Frank Lloyd …

New Hoover coach wants to keep 'going forward'

Tim Meyer didn't waste any time putting his stamp on his almamater's football program.

Herbert Hoover High School's first-year head coach took advantageof the out-of-season practice period that ended Friday, using thosethree weeks to change the Huskies' offensive and defensive schemes.

The most noticeable difference is on defense, where HerbertHoover will shift from a 4-3 in 2008 to a 4-2-5 in 2009. The 5 inthe equation refers to the secondary, where the Huskies will havetwo cornerbacks and three hybrid positions (safeties/outsidelinebackers).

"We tried to suit it to our personnel a little bit better," saidMeyer, a 1992 Herbert Hoover graduate who attended …

Rwanda to Release 8,000 More Suspects

KIGALI, Rwanda - Rwanda will release more than 8,000 prisoners convicted or awaiting trial in the country's 1994 genocide, many of them elderly and sick, the justice minister said.

There have been several similar prisoner releases since 2003, when President Paul Kagame ordered them as part of an effort to decongest Rwanda's crowded prisons and promote reconciliation. Justice Minister Tharcisse Karugarama said Friday the new releases will begin in February.

Some 63,000 genocide suspects are detained in Rwanda, and justice authorities say at least 761,000 people should stand trial for their role in the 100-day slaughter, in which more than 500,000 minority Tutsis were …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Germany's Fraport says 2008 profit down 17 pct

German airport operator Fraport AG said Thursday its 2008 net profit fell 17 percent as revenue declined largely due to a divestment. It expects sales and profits to decrease further this year.

Frankfurt-based Fraport, which runs Frankfurt Airport, continental Europe's second-busiest after Paris Charles de Gaulle, said net profit in 2008 fell to euro173 million ($217.2 million) from euro209 million in 2007. Group revenues for the year fell 9 percent to euro2.1 billion from euro2.3 billion.

Fraport said revenues were lower because of the sale of its subsidiary, International Consultants on Targeted Security, or ICTS, in April 2008.

Fraport did not …

Ex-H&R Block CEO blasts company; will leave board

Former H&R Block Inc. CEO Thomas Bloch says he is leaving the tax preparer's board of directors, and sharply criticized the company's priorities, prices, and its failure to keep up with do-it-yourself online tax programs.

Bloch, who was president and CEO of the Kansas City company for 15 years, says he will not stand for re-election to the board on Sept. 30. He has been on the board …

Common bond changes delayed in two states

Common bond legislation at the state level has been virtually killed in Nebraska and is in committee delays in Missouri.

The Nebraska Banking, Commerce and Insurance Committee has indefinitely postponed LB 89 on an 8-0 vote. That bill would have expanded the common bond for state-chartered credit unions to include "persons residing within a well-defined neighborhood, community or rural district." It would also have given the Nebraska director of the department of …

(null)

The men's World Cup circuit returns to Europe this weekend after races in North America, with the season looking wide open after the defending overall champion was ruled out for months with injuries.

The absence of Aksel Lund Svindal, who was leading the overall standings again when he crashed in a downhill training in Colorado's Beaver Creek last week, leaves the race for the overall title without a clear favorite ahead of Saturday's giant slalom and Sunday's slalom.

It is the first time since a super-G in 1992 that World Cup men's events are held in this southern Austrian resort, marking a return for a revamped Franz Klammer course.

Svindal, …

News in Brief

CASH FROM REAL ESTATE TAX RISES

Chicago is facing a $51 million budget shortfall -- even after $31 million in spending cuts -- but there's a silver lining. The housing market might have turned the corner. Chief Financial Officer Gene Saffold disclosed Thursday that revenues from the city's real estate transaction tax rose to $5.3 million in March, up from $3.5 million in January and $3.3 million in February. Home sales were up 26 percent in March.

CASINO HIT BY FIRE MAY OPEN IN JUNE

The Empress Casino in Joliet is expected to reopen in June, officials said Thursday. Only the casino and buffet-style eatery are initially expected to open. The rest of the casino …

Zoar congregation, Waldheim, turns 100

Former members from Manitoba, Alberta, British Columbia and numerous locations in Saskatchewan, came to the July 2 and 3 festivities that commemorated the 100th anniversary of Zoar Mennonite Church, Waldheim, Sask.

The first formal event was a music concert on July 2. Of special note at this concert was the reunion of a male quartet that last sang together 45 years ago. A specially commissioned composition by Audrey Falk Janzen, entitled "Foundation," was also performed during the concert, which included a mass choir.

A quilted wall hanging featuring the past and present Zoar church buildings became an item of much conversation. It hangs in the foyer of the …

Australian PM calls on African nations to prevent Mugabe from 'stealing' election

Australia's prime minister said Sunday he fears Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe will "steal" the upcoming election, and called on African nations to promote democracy.

"I've seen how Robert Mugabe can manipulate elections," Rudd told reporters. "Our concern and the concern of most countries around the world is that Mr. Mugabe will steal this election."

Rudd said the African Union and South African Development Council should "speak with one voice about the importance of democracy and the will of the people prevailing in …

50 YEARS AGO TODAY

Two days after his kidnapping at the hands of J.W. Milam and RoyBryant, the white shopkeeper whose young wife Till was said to haveoffended, Emmett Till's name and photograph were circulating in thenational media.

His mother, then Mamie Bradley, had ordered …

Hawks' confidence growing after split in Chicago

ATLANTA (AP) — Larry Drew likes the look of these playoffs.

He's feeling pretty good about his own team, too.

There are upsets all around in the NBA postseason. Top-seeded San Antonio has already been eliminated. The defending champion Los Angeles Lakers are in trouble. And Drew, the rookie coach of the Atlanta Hawks, sees no reason why his own team can't go farther than anyone would've expected.

"This thing is wide open," he said Thursday.

The Hawks have already knocked out Dwight Howard and Orlando, a team that swept Atlanta from the playoffs in lopsided fashion a year ago. They're trying to follow a similar script in the Eastern Conference semifinals, having stolen a victory in Game 1 against the Chicago Bulls, a 62-win juggernaut during the regular season.

Even coming off a series-tying loss, the Hawks are exuding confidence as they return home for the next two contests. Game 3 is Friday, which shapes up as the most significant night in 14 years for a franchise that has largely been an NBA wasteland.

"We feel good about where we're at," said Jamal Crawford, the Hawks' super sub. "We feel like we took their best punch."

Chicago, of course, would prefer to follow the script. The Bulls won 18 more game than Atlanta during the regular season and are in no mood to be the fodder for another playoff upset.

After a shocking 103-95 defeat in the series opener, Chicago played with a sense of desperation Thursday night. The Bulls dominated the boards 58-39, turned the Hawks' offense into a stagnant mess (34 percent shooting), hustled for seemingly every loose ball and pulled away for an 86-73 victory.

"We can always step it up. You can always improve in each game," league MVP Derrick Rose said. "But we've got to continue to make hustle plays because it's just going to get harder."

Indeed, the Hawks actually took some comfort from the way they lost.

Despite the obvious deficiencies, Atlanta was still in the game with about 4 minutes left, trailing by six and poised to pull off another upset. It didn't work out, but the Hawks know they can stick with a team that put up the best record in the league.

"Whatever doubt might have been seeping into our guys' heads, that doubt was erased after Game 1," Drew said. "Even though we lost Game 2, there wasn't a knockout blow. There was all this talk about how they would come out with all this energy and everything. Well, we didn't feel that. ... They didn't put us away."

At the end, they did.

Now it's back to Atlanta to play in front of what figures to be a raucous sellout crown, an anomaly in this attendance-challenged city. This is the most important home playoff game for the Hawks since 1997, when they also were tied 1-1 in a second-round series against the Michael Jordan-led Bulls.

That one didn't work out so well for Atlanta. The Bulls won Game 3 — and the next two, as well — to knock out the Hawks on the way to Jordan's fifth of six titles.

This is a different postseason landscape. No team has come across as unbeatable, not even the Miami Heat with their Big Three. The eighth-seeded Memphis Grizzlies knocked off the mighty Spurs out West, and just about every series has been competitive.

"We have one of the best chances to win this thing, better than anybody in the league," Hawks star Joe Johnson said. "We want to take advantage of it."

The Bulls struggled in the first round to put away Indiana — a team with a losing record during the regular season. If they didn't before, they certainly realize now it's not going to be a smooth ride to their first NBA title since No. 23 ruled Chi-Town.

Carlos Boozer is coming off another rough outing: 8 points on 4-of-12 shooting. That only tells part of the story, though. He got blocked four times in the second half by Josh Smith and booed by the home crowd.

Boozer sustained a turf toe injury on his right foot in the opening round against Indiana, and that certainly isn't helping.

"Carlos is out there, he's playing hurt," forward Luol Deng said. "It's one of those injuries that sounds, when you just say a toe, it doesn't sound like much, but it's an annoying injury. I know he'll get his rhythm, but I thought last night he was diving on the floor. He was hustling. For us, he was really playing well."

Rose also needs to get it going. He's averaging 24.5 points a game but shooting just 39 percent, with 11 turnovers.

"I want to see him attack. He has to get to the line more," coach Tom Thibodeau said. "We have to create more space. We have to play with more pace. When we can get Derrick into the open floor, he has more scenes where he can get to the rim."

Atlanta guard Jeff Teague, filling in for the injured Kirk Hinrich, has done an amazing job on the MVP in the first two games, cutting off his lanes to the basket and forcing him to put up more jumpers than he'd like. Teague also contributed at the offensive end, averaging 15.5 points and turning it over just one time in 84 minutes.

Johnson and Crawford dominated in Game 1, so the Bulls threw plenty of double-teams at both. Atlanta needs to get others involved in the offense, especially All-Star Al Horford, and a more consistent performance out of the enigmatic Smith would sure help.

His inspired play in the third quarter helped the Hawks get back in the game, but Smith made just 4 of 14 shots — many of them out of his range — and looked downright sloppy turning it over four times.

Drew lectured Smith before practice Thursday.

"His shot selection was not very good. He was trying to do too much," Drew said. "He admitted that was the case. He didn't feel good about the way he played."

___

AP Sports Writer Andrew Seligman in Deerfield, Ill., contributed to this report.

Phillies 6, Braves 1

21Phillies 6, Braves 1
PHILA @ ATLANTA @
ab r h bi @ab r h bi
Rollins ss 5 0 1 0 Prado lf 4 0 0 0
Utley 2b 3 1 0 0 KJhnsn 2b 4 0 1 0
Werth rf 4 1 2 0 CJones 3b 3 0 1 0
Howard 1b 3 1 1 1 McCan c 4 0 0 0
Burrell lf 4 0 1 0 Infante ss 4 0 0 0
Brntlett lf 1 1 0 0 Ktchm 1b 4 0 2 0
Vctrino cf 4 1 3 0 Frncur rf 4 1 2 0
Feliz 3b 3 0 0 1 JAndsn cf 3 0 0 0
Ruiz c 3 0 1 2 Boyer p 0 0 0 0
Happ p 1 0 0 0 Norton ph 1 0 1 1
Jenkins ph 1 0 0 0 Jrrjens p 1 0 0 0
Durbin p 0 0 0 0 YEsbar ph 0 0 0 0
JRmro p 0 0 0 0 BJones pr 0 0 0 0
Stairs ph 1 1 1 1 VNunez p 0 0 0 0
Cndrey p 0 0 0 0 GBlnco cf 2 0 0 0
Totals @ 33 6 10 5 Totals @34 1 7 1
Philadelphia 400 000 011_6
Atlanta 000 000 001_1
E_McCann (9). DP_Atlanta 3. LOB_Philadelphia 8, Atlanta 8. 2B_Werth (15), Kotchman (4). HR_Stairs (1). SB_Rollins (43), Werth (18), Victorino (33). S_Happ.
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia @
Happ W,1-0 6 3 0 0 1 2
Durbin 1 2-3 2 0 0 1 1
JRomero 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Condrey 1 2 1 1 0 0
Atlanta @
Jurrjens L,13-10 5 5 4 4 5 2
VNunez 2 1-3 3 1 1 1 2
Boyer 1 2-3 2 1 1 1 1
Umpires_Home, Mike WintersFirst, Randy MarshSecond, Hunter WendelstedtThird, Marvin Hudson.
T_2:49. A_32,821 (49,743).

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Pakistan Presses Case for U.S. Nuclear Deal

As part of a wide-ranging, high-level dialogue between Pakistani and U.S. leaders held in Washington last month, Pakistan reportedly proposed a civilian nuclear trade arrangement similar to the one granted to India, but received a noncommittal response from senior U.S. officials.

Since India and the United States announced plans in 2005 to lift U.S. and international restrictions on nuclear trade with New Delhi, Pakistani officials have argued for such an arrangement.

Ahead of the March 24-25 talks involving Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi that were focused primarily on strategic cooperation on security and energy issues and the war in Afghanistan, Pakistani officials once again raised the possibility of civil nuclear cooperation and recognition of Pakistan's status as a state possessing nuclear weapons.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari told reporters following a March 16 meeting in Islamabad with U.S. Director of National Intelligence Dennis C. Blair that U.S. assistance with "[civilian nuclear technology will help Pakistan meet its growing energy demand."

In an interview with the Los Angeles-based newspaper Pakistan Link published on March 19, U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Anne W. Patterson was quoted as saying the United States is "beginning to have a discussion" with the Pakistani government on the country's desire to tap nuclear energy. "We are going to have working-level talks" on the issue in Washington, she said.

Patterson said in the interview that U.S. "non-proliferation concerns were quite severe," but she added, "I think we are beginning to pass those and this is a scenario that we are going to explore."

Her comments quickly prompted speculation in Pakistan and India and in Washington that the United States might be prepared to reverse existing U.S. policy and law barring civil nuclear trade with Pakistan, which is not a member of the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), has tested nuclear weapons, and does not accept comprehensive international safeguards for its extensive nuclear infrastructure.

The same is true of India, but the United States created an exception for New Delhi through a process that involved congressional approval for an exemption from the requirements of the U.S. Atomic Energy Act, the negotiation of a bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement subject to congressional review and approval, and the consensus approval of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). A nuclear deal with Pakistan would have to go through a similar process.

Clinton Cautious

In an interview with Pakistan's Express TV March 22, Clinton was more circumspect than Patterson about the prospects for nuclear trade. "I'm sure that that's going to be raised, and we're going to be considering it, but I can't prejudge or pre-empt what the outcome of our discussions will be," Clinton said, adding that the civil nuclear cooperation deal with India "was the result of many, many years of strategic dialogue."

In September 2008, the NSG, which has more than 40 members, made an India-specific exemption to long-standing guidelines barring civil nuclear trade with states that do not have a comprehensive nuclear safeguards agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). (See ACT, October 2008.) The NSG is a voluntary group that coordinates its nuclear export policies in order to prevent the spread of materials and technologies that could aid nuclear weapons programs. In 1992 the group adopted a rule significantly restricting nuclear trade with any non-nuclear-weapon state that does not open all its nuclear facilities and activities to the IAEA. India, Israel, North Korea, and Pakistan are classified as non-nuclear-weapon states under the NPT.

Since the U.S.-Indian nuclear cooperation initiative was first announced in July 2005, the United States and other key NSG states have rejected repeated suggestions from Pakistan and an overture to the NSG from Israel that they too should be eligible for civil nuclear trade. In March 2007, Israel circulated a "non-paper" to NSG members outlining a criteria-based approach for nuclear supply eligibility that would allow nuclear trade with Israel.

According to a report published in The Wall Street Journal March 22, Pakistan sent a 56-page document to U.S. officials ahead of the strategic talks in Washington. The document reportedly focused on proposals for expanded military and economic aid, but according to the Journal, it also reiterated its request for U.S. support for Pakistan's civilian nuclear program.

"We want the U.S. to recognize Pakistan's nuclear status and give us assurances not to undermine the (weapons) program," a senior Pakistani military officer who serves as an aide to the head of Pakistan's army, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, told the Journal. "Energy security is crucial, and we need U.S. help," he said.

On March 23, Department of State spokesman PJ. Crowley told reporters in Washington that "we have not been talking to Pakistan about a civilian nuclear deal. If Pakistan brings it up during the course of the meetings the next two days, we'll be happy to listen."

A "Complicated" Issue

In response to a question about the U.S. response to the Pakistani request for civil nuclear cooperation at a joint news conference ahead of the formal talks March 24, Clinton demurred, calling the matter "complicated."

Qureshi responded by saying that "the most important thing is recognizing that there is a need to fulfill the energy gap, that our indigenous resources that can be exploited, and we also have the option of civilian nuclear technology."

Following the conclusion of his formal talks with Clinton, Qureshi told Reuters March 25, "I am quite satisfied with the discussions we had" about the nuclear cooperation issue, but declined to elaborate.

The ioint communiqu� issued March 25 does not reference nuclear energy cooperation specifically, but rather says that "[t]he United States recognized the importance of assisting Pakistan to overcome its energy deficit and committed to further intensify and expand comprehensive cooperation in the energy sector."

Two senior U.S. lawmakers who met with the Pakistani delegation to Washington called the idea of civil nuclear trade with Pakistan "premature." In a March 25 interview with The Cable, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-Mass.) said, "I don't think it's on the table right now considering all the other issues we have to confront."

"There are countless things that they would have to do in order to achieve it. If they're willing to do all those things, we'll see," Kerry said. "There are a lot of things that come first before that. It's really premature," he added. "It's appropriate as something for them to aspire to and have as a goal out there, but I don't think it's realistic in the near term."

In the same article, The Cable also quoted Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), the committee's ranking member, as saying talks on civil nuclear trade with Pakistan would be "premature."

Khan Concerns

One likely reason for the lawmakers' reluctance to consider the issue is the unresolved questions surrounding Pakistan's disgraced former nuclear weapons program chief, Abdul Qadeer Khan. Just days ahead of the high-level U.S.-Pakistani talks in Washington, Pakistani government lawyers sought court permission to investigate new reports concerning Khan's illicit transfers of nuclear weapons-related technology to Iran and other states.

The petition was filed in the Lahore High Court on March 22 after The Washington Post published an article about alleged notes written by Khan in which he claims that he provided assistance with the knowledge of the Pakistani government to Iran and Iraq to develop nuclear weapons. Since then, Khan has disputed the media account. The Pakistani government has asserted since 2004 that Khan acted without official government knowledge.

In a March 29 decision, the court turned down the government's request. Reuters quoted Soofi Amar BiIaI, a government lawyer, as saying the judge had ruled that "it's up [to] the government" to decide whether to pursue the investigation.

Khan has been under house arrest since he publicly apologized for his role in a black market nuclear trade network that was finally disrupted but not fully dismantled in 2004. Khan has been barred from meeting with foreigners or traveling abroad. He has been appealing to the public and Pakistan's courts for relief from the restrictions. In another March 29 decision, the court left the restrictions largely intact, Reuters reported.

A U.S. military and development aid package for Pakistan approved by Congress last September requires that some of the aid shall be withheld until President Barack Obama certifies that Islamabad has provided "relevant information from or direct access to Pakistani nationals" involved in past nuclear commerce. The Pakistani government has so far refused to allow U.S. officials to interview Khan about his role in the nuclear trade network ana insists that the matter is "closed." - DARYL G. KIMBALL

[Sidebar]

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi speaks March 24 during the opening session of a two-day meeting in Washington. The next day, he said he was "quite satisfied" with his discussions with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on U. S. -Pakistani civil nuclear cooperation.

[Sidebar]

Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan shakes hands with supporters during a January 9 ceremony in Rawalpindi.

DomRep: X-rays find petrified fetus in woman

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Dominican health officials say they have removed the mummified remains of a fetus from the abdomen of a 59-year-old woman, who had no clue what was causing the sharp pain in her stomach for decades.

Miladys Roman is the chief gynecologist at Luis Eduardo Aybar Hospital in Santo Domingo. She says the woman had carried the petrified fetus for at least 30 years.

The Haitian woman told physicians she had long experienced pain but she never received adequate medical attention until she recently entered the public hospital with digestive complaints.

Roman told reporters late Monday that the remains of the fetus weighed 3 pounds and 12 ounces (1.73 kilograms).

Trade-offs in dealing with Myanmar's junta: UN chief walked tightrope to win aid concessions

No mention of Myanmar's detained pro-democracy leader. No talk of holding a controversial vote despite a catastrophic cyclone. Not a word about the military regime's history of human rights abuses.

Those were the issues U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon avoided in talks with Myanmar's junta leader. It appeared to pay off with dozens of visas issued for U.N. relief workers _ but at the high cost, say critics, of ignoring Myanmar's latest crackdown on dissent.

"What everyone recognized was that the scale of this disaster was so enormous that all efforts had to be focused on the emergency relief effort," Richard Horsey, a spokesman for the U.N. humanitarian effort, said Thursday.

With so many lives at stake, he said there was simply no room for politics to be discussed at this time.

Ban's main mission was to ease access for hundreds of foreign aid workers who had been restricted from entering cyclone-affected areas. He also oversaw a conference that raised up to US$150 million (euro96 million) in emergency relief funds.

Critics call the rare sit-down last week with Myanmar's reclusive leader, Senior Gen. Than Shwe, a missed opportunity because it avoided pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's continued house arrest and a referendum vote on a constitution some say will only perpetuate the military's grip on power.

"I think it's fair to say there was a conspiracy of silence about Suu Kyi, the referendum and political reform," said Brad Adams, Asia director for U.S.-based Human Rights Watch.

Ban took a calculated risk by avoiding talk about politics but said he felt that was the only way to get results on the more pressing issue of helping the more than 2 million people left homeless by the May 2-3 cyclone.

"That is why I believe I was able to get agreement from Myanmar authorities," Ban told reporters Sunday. "Different circumstances, different situations, require different skills or approaches. In the case of talking with a certain ... country or people who have been isolated a long time, then you need special care and sensitivity."

But Ban was also careful. He toured Myanmar for two days, then left before the second phase of voting on the constitutional referendum to avoid appearing to give it his implicit endorsement, U.N. officials said. After the polls closed, Ban flew back to Yangon for the donors conference.

The regime has been widely criticized for going forward with the referendum while hundreds of thousands suffered from the cyclone, which left more than 134,000 people dead or missing.

But Ban also played along with the junta to a certain extent, when Myanmar authorities tried to save face by showing him a tidy aid distribution center and a postcard-perfect refugee camp. He asked to be flown farther south to tour areas harder hit by Cyclone Nargis, but let it drop after authorities demurred.

The only time Ban even indirectly referred to Suu Kyi or the referendum was during a private meeting with Myanmar's prime minister. He told the leader that the country's rebuilding should also extend to democratic initiatives, according to U.N. officials.

On a rare diplomatic trip to Than Shwe's military compound in Naypyitaw, the nation's newly built capital, Ban negotiated greater access to the delta, including flying in more helicopters from outside Myanmar. Again, he didn't bring up Suu Kyi.

Ban waited until after his return to New York, when Than Shwe extended her house arrest for a sixth-straight year Tuesday, to comment on Suu Kyi.

Myanmar's rulers consider Suu Kyi, who is widely popular, their biggest threat. Her party won elections in 1990, but the military refused to accept the results. A year later, she won the Nobel Peace Prize for her nonviolent attempts at promoting democracy.

Ban expressed some regret at having his hands tied during the trip, saying he felt "very much concerned and troubled by not being able to address completely" Suu Kyi's house arrest while meeting with Myanmar's leaders.

Even so, he has continued to walk a tightrope with the regime. He took care Tuesday while criticizing Suu Kyi's continued arrest to praise the "new spirit of cooperation" between the junta and the international community.

Upset from stomach acid can be helped several ways

Q. I have a hiatal hernia. Can that cause heartburn? Stomachacid keeps bouncing back at me, causing belching, etc. I sleep withmy head elevated and still have backflow of juice. What can be done?My doctor does not recommend surgery.

A. Heartburn, as you say, results from reflux of stomach acid,and you don't have to have a hiatal hernia to have that. The hernia(at the diaphragm level of the esophagus) might not be influencingthings one bit. Your doctor doesn't think so, and he's examined you.

In any event, your job is to rein in this acid, to keep it whereit belongs, in the stomach. First off, you have to know which foods,if any, worsen the situation. Chocolate, citrus juices, mints andcaffeine are most frequently mentioned.

You are elevating your head at night. I hope that means youhave six- or eight-inch blocks propping up the head of the bedstead.It is hard to accomplish this with pillows, etc.

Also, I want you to eliminate any constricting undergarmentsaround the abdomen. Don't lie down too soon after eating. And tryantacids on a regular basis - one and three hours following meals andagain before retiring.

Q. Is surgery for varicose veins painful? Can they do both legsat once? How long is hospitalization?

A. What pain there is is always controllable, and it is possibleto do both legs at the same time. Sometimes surgery is done on anoutpatient basis. An overnight or an extra day of hospitalizationmay be required.

There are alternatives to surgery, such as sclerotherapy, inwhich the veins are injected with a drying solution. It's not forall varicose veins but is an option.

For more information, see the varicose vein report. Order bywriting Dr. Donohue/No.34, Box 830, Gibbstown, NJ 08027-9909,enclosing a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope and $2.

Q. I'm always afraid to give my children aspirin when they haveflu symptoms because of Reye's syndrome. Please explain what it isand if it can be fatal.

Q. Reye's syndrome occurs in a child (rarely in an adult) whoseems to have recovered from chicken pox, flu or some otherrespiratory tract infection. You then notice changes, perhapsirritability or drowsiness, or unexplained vomiting.

Any of these signs is enough evidence to prompt a call to thedoctor. If unattended, Reye's can lead to a coma and even death.

Aspirin used in these illnesses seems to play a role in Reye's,although the part played is not quite clear. Statistics tell us tocaution parents not to use aspirin in those who have flu, chicken poxor similar illnesses.

Exercise caution in using any medicine in a child. If afever-lowering drug is needed and your doctor is not available, youare safer using acetaminophen (Tylenol) according to packageinstructions.

Q. My daughter went to a dermatologist and he told her she had arare skin disease. It's called granuloma faciale. Could you tell usin words we can understand just what this is?

A. Granuloma faciale means that white blood cells have gotteninto the facial skin. This produces flat patches, brown to violet incolor. We don't know why it happens. The patches are not painfuland they don't itch. Dapsone is used in treating this condition, andsometimes the argon laser has been used to remove the patches.

BC-US--Silver, US

New York (AP) — Silver futures trading on the NY Merc Thursday:

(5,000 troy oz.; cents per troy oz.)

Open High Low Settle Change
Jan 3335.0 3370.2 3335.0 3370.2 Up 61.0
Feb 3320.5 3371.4 3305.0 3371.4 Up 61.6
Mar 3325.0 3379.0 3297.5 3374.3 Up 62.2
May 3316.0 3383.0 3307.0 3379.8 Up 62.3
Jul 3329.0 3384.0 3328.5 3384.0 Up 62.6
Sep 3320.0 3386.6 3319.0 3386.6 Up 62.7
Dec 3326.0 3390.2 3320.0 3390.2 Up 62.7
Jan 3390.0 Up 62.7
Mar 3389.6 Up 62.6
May 3388.3 Up 62.6
Jul 3386.7 Up 62.6
Sep 3383.2 Up 62.6
Dec 3377.3 Up 62.5
Jul 3362.9 Up 62.3
Dec 3353.3 Up 61.5
Jul 3338.9 Up 61.5
Dec 3329.3 Up 61.1
Jul 3314.9 Up 60.0
Dec 3304.9 Up 60.0

Muslims to stress voting Meeting to emphasize political potential

An international gathering of 30,000 Muslims over Labor Dayweekend here could help forge the community into a potent votingbloc.

Organizers said that more than ever before, the 37th annualconvention of the Islamic Society of North America will offersessions designed to capture the emerging strength of the 6 millionMuslims in the United States. About 400,000 Muslims live in theChicago area.

"For the first time, Muslims may be able to vote as a bloc," saidSayyid Syeed,; secretary-general of ISNA, a Plainfield, Ind.-basedadvocacy group co-sponsoring the gathering at the Rosemont ConventionCenter from Friday through Monday. "While we cannot get involved intelling people how they should be voting, our job as a religiousgroup is to tell our members that they have to use their votes."

Still, Wallace Deen Mohammed; , leader of the Muslim AmericanSociety and about 2 million Muslims, said that while there are manybonds in the Muslim community, "I don't believe we are going to see asignificant bloc of Muslims."

Mohammed, who will address the ISNA convention Friday, also willspeak Sunday at the UIC Pavilion as part of his group's simultaneousconvention. His topic, "We are Muslims and we are Americans," willunderscore his support for "the value of American citizenship."

Yet he said he reserved the right to "have our own (political)agenda. There are strong similarities with other Muslims when itcomes to family and spiritual values. But I also share those withother Christians."

Still, ISNA leaders note that Muslim issues, ranging from thebitter local dispute over locating a mosque in Palos Heights tonational efforts to defend the rights of workers to wear Muslim garb,have been at the forefront recently.

"Our community has reached the threshold of recognition," saidKareem Irfan; , spokesman for the Council of Islamic Organizations ofGreater Chicago. "Past conventions have not necessarily focused onpulling Muslims together towards a common stance in a politicalrealm. But since the last convention, we have been working towardscoalescing different Muslim groups."

With the political stakes high in battleground states such asIllinois, Michigan and Pennsylvania, Muslims are aware of theiremerging role, according to Neveen; Salem, a representative of theAmerican Muslim Council, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.

"We can be the swing vote," Salem said.

Political observers are watching closely, and representatives fromboth the Republican and Democratic parties will be participating.

"From my experience, all the ethnic groups are much morepolitically active than longtime Americans. Muslims are near the topin terms of political savvy," said Gary Mack, a political consultantand onetime spokesman for former Gov. Jim Edgar.

Pete Giangreco, a top Illinois adviser for the Gore-Liebermancampaign, cited Sunday's visit with Arab Americans in Detroit by Sen.Joseph Lieberman as an example of Democratic awareness of Muslimstrength.

"Democrats have a long tradition of welcoming immigrant groups,"Giangreco said, noting that during Mayor Daley's 1989 mayoral bid,"he was a pioneer in reaching out to the Pakistani community.

"He was one of the first to go to the Muslim Community Center (inChicago) to pray. He has built a long-standing relationship with thecommunity," Giangreco said. "Mayor Daley, Sen. Lieberman, Al Gore-it's part of a continuum."

A spokesman for the Bush-Cheney campaign was unavailable.

Stoudemire, Suns Win 15 in a Row - Again

NEW YORK - Amare Stoudemire scored 26 of his 30 points in Phoenix's big second half, and the Suns beat the New York Knicks 112-107 Wednesday night for their second 15-game winning streak of the season.

Barely a month after establishing the longest winning streak in franchise history, the Suns equaled it by turning things around after a sluggish first half in the second night of a back-to-back.

Steve Nash finished with 22 points and 14 assists as the Suns scored 63 points in the second half after an un-Sunslike 49 in the first two periods. Shawn Marion added 20 points, Leandro Barbosa had 15, and Stoudemire grabbed 11 rebounds.

Phoenix became the first team to have two separate 15-game winning streaks in the same season since the Los Angeles Lakers had streaks of 19 and 16 in a row during the 1999-00 season. The Suns will go for a franchise-record 16th straight win Friday night at Milwaukee in the third game of a five-game trip.

Jamal Crawford scored 29 points, 23 in the fourth quarter in an attempt to keep New York close. Eddy Curry added 25 points for the Knicks, but only four in the final 33-plus minutes. He also left with an injury in the final quarter of New York's second straight loss.

The Knicks were already without starting point guard Stephon Marbury, who missed his first game of the season because of left knee tendinitis.

One night after scoring 76 points in the first half at Washington, the Suns didn't reach that total until the final 2 minutes of the third quarter - right as they were taking control of the game.

Even with Stoudemire scoring 16 points in the third, New York was down just four after Nate Robinson's 3-pointer with 3:08 remaining in the period. But James Jones answered with a 3 and Barbosa converted a three-point play after a steal to give Phoenix a 74-64 lead with 2:31 to go. Stoudemire added a basket and Barbosa had five more points before period's end, making it 81-68 headed to the fourth.

Jones nailed a pair of 3-pointers early in the fourth, extending the lead to 17 with under 10 1/2 minutes remaining. Adding injury to insult, Curry hobbled off the court and into the locker room with a strained left calf after his basket early in the period and did not return.

The Suns committed four turnovers in the first three minutes of the game. Even when they did get going, they couldn't contain Curry, who scored 16 points on 6-of-7 shooting in the first quarter to give New York a 25-24 lead.

Curry scored five consecutive points early in the second quarter, part of a 9-0 burst that extended the Knicks' lead to 36-26 on Renaldo Balkman's dunk with 8:53 left in the period. The Suns finally slowed Curry with double- and even triple-teams, and got their running game going late in the half, using a 14-2 spurt that gave them a four-point advantage on Boris Diaw's jumper. Marion's layup on the fast break with 0.8 seconds remaining made it 49-46 at halftime.

Notes:@ The other teams with two 15-game winning streaks are the 1996-97 Utah Jazz (both 15); the 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks (20, 16); and the 1946-47 Washington Capitals (17, 15). ... Phoenix improved to 10-0 on the road and 19-1 overall against East teams. The last team to start 10-0 on the road in interconference games was Utah, which opened 11-0 in 1994-95. ... Phoenix has won six of the last seven meetings. New York's only victory in that span was a 140-133 triple-overtime win on Jan. 2, 2006.

Pakistan wants to host India for test series

The Pakistan Cricket Board wants to host India in January to give a strong message to terrorists after at least 119 people died in coordinated attacks across Mumbai.

"Wherever they (terrorist) are, it will send them a clear message that cricket goes on," PCB chairman Ejaz Butt said Friday.

International cricket was virtually halted in India on Thursday after the deadly attacks in Mumbai. The England cricket team returned home, the Champions League Twenty20 tournament was postponed and unofficial Indian Cricket League matches were halted.

India is scheduled to play three test matches, five one-day internationals and a Twenty20 international during its Jan. 4 to Feb.19 tour of Pakistan.

Butt was scheduled to travel to India on Dec. 2 for meetings with the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

"My tour has been canceled because of this new situation but I hope to meet the BCCI officials during Asian Cricket Council meeting in Colombo (on Dec. 5)," Butt said.

However, Butt believes the Indian and Pakistan governments will ultimately decide whether the India tour of Pakistan goes ahead.

"The issue of security is not in our (PCB) hands and the final decision on the tour could now only be taken at government level," Butt said.

Butt had twice met with the Indian high commissioner in Islamabad during the last 10 days, but after terrorist attacks in Mumbai, he said the scenario has changed.

"We had high hopes (of the tour), but after Mumbai's incident we don't know, we have to wait and see," Butt said.

Butt did not rule out the possibility of hosting the series at a neutral venue in case India refuses to tour Pakistan due to its security concerns.

"We have to look that we do not suffer huge financial losses in case we play at a neutral venue because in the past we had a bad experience," Butt said, referring to Pakistan's series at a neutral venues against the West Indies and Australia in 2002.

"We have to make sure that we avoid huge losses and then play offshore. Our team has not played a single test match this year and we need to organize some international cricket for our players."

Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi are possible neutral venues to host a Pakistan-India series.

Pakistan will end this year without playing a test match as Australia postponed its March tour due to security concerns.

The Champions Trophy in September was also postponed after five out of eight participating countries had reservations about sending teams to Pakistan.

Monday, March 12, 2012

On the Pulse

$6.6 billion was spent at family clothing stores in August 2005 onback-to-school items; book sales were $2.2 billion.

EU approves Belgian bailout scheme

The European Union has approved a euro1.5 billion ($1.9 billion) Belgian bailout scheme to inject fresh money into the insurance and banking group Ethias.

The European Commission says the measures are limited to "the minimum required to enable the Ethias group to continue operations" during the crisis.

EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said Thursday she hoped the aid would allow Ethias "to weather the financial crisis."

The Belgian government shored up the struggling insurer with a $2 billion capital increase in October.

Hospital visitation program restored

Winnipeg, Man.

Mennonite Church Manitoba is pleased that its Spiritual Care Volunteers Program, a hospital visitation ministry, is alive and well. Peter J. Dyck, a member of the Bethel Mennonite Church here, has accepted the role of coordinating this program on a voluntary basis.

"After a time of loss and uncertainty, we are delighted to be able to share a new level of commitment and excitement for this ministry," said John Klassen, director of Leadership Ministries for MC Manitoba.

The conference cut the visitation program from its budget in October 2002.

"Cutting a care-giving ministry with such a loyal volunteer base was difficult. However, we were forced to choose between many excellent ministries," said Klassen.

While initial plans were to invite congregations to pick up this program, it quickly became apparent that this was not the best alternative.

"Numerous appeals from directors of spiritual care in the hospitals we served and from our volunteers encouraged us to seek to find a new way of maintaining a denominational focus," said Klassen. Unfortunately, it was still necessary to cut a part-time chaplaincy position.

Dyck, who will coordinate the hospital volunteers, is a retired teacher whose idea of retirement was to finish a master of divinity degree, including clinical pastoral education. All the spiritual care volunteers--Kay Klassen, Greti Peters, Ben Sawatzky, Linda Wiebe, Orletta Wiebe and David Winter--have agreed to continue their visitations.

"Without a salaried chaplain and coordinator we will undoubtedly require more volunteers to offer similar ministry, but we feel confident that people will step forward to receive the necessary training to serve in this role," said Klassen.

In late May, Klassen and Dyck met with the spiritual care volunteers to review the vision, to renew their commitment and to set priorities for the future of the program.--From MC Manitoba release

24 Dead in Angolan Building Collapse

The death toll from the collapse of a police headquarters building in Angola's capital over the weekend has risen to 24, officials said Monday.

Rescue crews pulled nine bodies from the debris of the six-story building that served as headquarters for police detectives, emergency coordinator Eugenio Laborinho said.

About 180 people, among them civilians in cells, are believed to have been in the building when it crumbled before dawn Saturday. Officials said the dead included 13 men, 10 women and a baby. Fifteen bodies were retrieved Sunday.

"It's very difficult to get into the debris. It's shifting all the time," Laborinho told state radio.

Crews using a crane, bulldozers and sniffer dogs have rescued 145 people. Most of those inside were being held by police investigating criminal activities. The baby was believed to have been with its mother, who was under arrest.

The government says it has opened an official inquiry to find out why the building collapsed.

"We are discounting any external cause" for the collapse, Interior Minister Leal Monteiro Ngongo said. "It's more likely a structural problem."

The building was about 30 years old, officials said. Many buildings in the Angolan capital are in a poor state of repair due to the Southwest African country's two-decade civil war, which ended in 2002.

Probe Finds E. Coli in Spinach Package

WASHINGTON - The E. coli outbreak spread to two more states Wednesday, and investigators reported finding contaminated spinach in the refrigerator of one victim.

The outbreak has sickened at least 146 people in 23 states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One person has died and 76 others have been hospitalized, some with kidney failure.

In a break that could help isolate the source of the outbreak, New Mexico's public health laboratory isolated E. coli from an opened package of spinach, the CDC said. Spinach had only been the suspected source of the bacteria, based on interviews with victims.

The package of Dole brand baby spinach came from the refrigerator of a patient who ate some of the leafy greens before becoming ill, New Mexico department of health officials said. The New Mexico laboratory completed "DNA fingerprinting" tests late Tuesday, and state and federal officials then matched it to the strain of the bacteria - E. coli O157:H7 - implicated in the outbreak.

That find could help investigators narrow their hunt for the source of the contamination to a specific producer or processor.

Dole is one of the brands of spinach recalled Friday by Natural Selection Foods LLC, of San Juan Bautista, Calif.

Meanwhile, FDA inspectors began visiting California farms this week, seeking signs of past flooding or cases in which contaminated surface areas had come into contact with crops. They also were looking for potential sources of bacteria inside packing plants.

California produces 74 percent of the nation's fresh spinach crop. The Salinas Valley accounts for roughly three-quarters of the state's share, and it has been the focus of the investigation. The area has links to both Natural Selection Foods and a second company that's also recalled fresh spinach products, River Ranch Fresh Foods of Salinas.

Also Wednesday, Arizona and Colorado joined the list of states reporting E. coli cases.

The other states are California, Connecticut, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Wisconsin has reported the most cases, as well as the lone death.

Among those sickened, 71 percent were women. Among those victims who could provide a date, they reported falling sick between Aug. 19 and Sept. 5, according to the CDC.

Officials continued to recommend consumers not eat fresh spinach.

Russia welcomes Ahmadinejad

Russia welcomed Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Tuesday on his first trip abroad since his bitterly disputed re-election, a show of support for a leader facing massive protests at home and questions from the West about the legitimacy of the vote count

Ahmadinejad arrived in the Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg and sat down for talks at a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which includes Russia, China and four Central Asian nations. Iran has observer status in the grouping, widely seen as a counterbalance to U.S. interest in the region.

A senior Russian diplomat hailed Ahmadinejad's visit as evidence of strong ties between Russia and Iran.

"It's quite symbolic that the Iranian president arrived in Russia on his first foreign visit since re-election," Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said at a briefing. "We see that as a sign that the Russian-Iranian relations will advance further."

Ahmadinejad had been expected to arrive Monday and meet with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on the sidelines of the summit. He postponed the trip for one day amid persistent street protests in Iran following his re-election Friday in a vote his main opponents claim were rigged. Iran's state radio says at least seven people died in clashes in Tehran.

Ryabkov said the election was Iran's internal affair, but he endorsed Ahmadinejad as the victor.

"We welcome the fact that the elections have taken place, and we welcome the newly re-elected Iranian president on the Russian soil," he said. "We see this visit as a reflection of partner-like, neighborly and traditionally friendly relations between Moscow and Tehran."

President Barack Obama said Monday he does not know who rightfully won the Iranian election, and the European Union Monday said an Iranian probe into alleged election fraud must answer all complaints made by opposition protesters.

It was unclear whether Medvedev would meet with Ahmadinejad on Tuesday.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Giants close gap vs. Dodgers

Barry Bonds hit a two-run homer and Kirk Rueter pitched sevenstrong innings as the host San Francisco Giants defeated Los Angeles2-1 Wednesday night to pull one game behind the NL West-leadingDodgers.

Bonds' 34th homer, his sixth against the Dodgers this year, went426 feet into the upper deck in right field. Bonds did a 360-degreespin as he watched the ball disappear into the stands, then pumpedhis right fist.

After crossing home plate, Bonds blew kisses to the 50,921 fans,who spent much of the night chanting "Beat L.A." It was the Giants'second home sellout of the season.Rueter (13-6), who did not allow a hit until Raul Mondesi hithis 27th homer with one out in the fifth, gave up one run on fourhits.Braves 10, Mets 2: Atlanta became the first major-league team toclinch six straight postseason appearances and also set a record withtheir 12th grand slam of the year, using a nine-run first to cruisepast visiting New York.Ryan Klesko hit the slam, Jeff Blauser added a three-run homerand Greg Maddux picked up his 19th victory for the Braves, who havebeen in the playoffs every completed season since 1991 and areassured at least a wild-card berth.The Braves reduced their magic number to six for winning a sixthstraight division title. Atlanta holds a six-game lead in the NLEast over the Florida Marlins, who split a doubleheader with thePhiladelphia Phillies.The Braves announced 20-game winner Denny Neagle will miss hisscheduled start today because of an ailing right (non-pitching)shoulder. Reliever Paul Byrd will start instead.Phillies 5-2, Marlins 2-5: Rookie Tony Saunders earned his firstvictory since July 31 to help host Florida salvage a split of itsdoubleheader with Philadelphia.Saunders (4-6), winless in his last seven starts, allowed fourhits and one run in six innings. He entered the game 3-0 against theBraves but 0-6 against the rest of the league.Rookie Garrett Stephenson and closer Ricky Bottalico combined ona six-hitter for the Phillies in the opener.Astros 8, Pirates 4: Visiting Houston took a big step towardwinning its first division title since 1986, backing Shane Reynolds'eight-hit pitching with three homers.The Astros have won their last two games by a combined score of23-7 to open a 4 1/2-game lead in the NL Central over the upstartPirates, who had edged back into the race by winning two in a row.Houston's magic number is seven.Expos 4, Reds 1: Rondell White's three-run homer in the eighthsnapped visiting Montreal's four-game losing streak. The Expos havelost seven of their last 11 games.Padres 5, Rockies 4: Wally Joyner's two-run homer in the sixthgave host San Diego the victory. Larry Walker had two homers andfour RBI for Colorado.

Giants close gap vs. Dodgers

Barry Bonds hit a two-run homer and Kirk Rueter pitched sevenstrong innings as the host San Francisco Giants defeated Los Angeles2-1 Wednesday night to pull one game behind the NL West-leadingDodgers.

Bonds' 34th homer, his sixth against the Dodgers this year, went426 feet into the upper deck in right field. Bonds did a 360-degreespin as he watched the ball disappear into the stands, then pumpedhis right fist.

After crossing home plate, Bonds blew kisses to the 50,921 fans,who spent much of the night chanting "Beat L.A." It was the Giants'second home sellout of the season.Rueter (13-6), who did not allow a hit until Raul Mondesi hithis 27th homer with one out in the fifth, gave up one run on fourhits.Braves 10, Mets 2: Atlanta became the first major-league team toclinch six straight postseason appearances and also set a record withtheir 12th grand slam of the year, using a nine-run first to cruisepast visiting New York.Ryan Klesko hit the slam, Jeff Blauser added a three-run homerand Greg Maddux picked up his 19th victory for the Braves, who havebeen in the playoffs every completed season since 1991 and areassured at least a wild-card berth.The Braves reduced their magic number to six for winning a sixthstraight division title. Atlanta holds a six-game lead in the NLEast over the Florida Marlins, who split a doubleheader with thePhiladelphia Phillies.The Braves announced 20-game winner Denny Neagle will miss hisscheduled start today because of an ailing right (non-pitching)shoulder. Reliever Paul Byrd will start instead.Phillies 5-2, Marlins 2-5: Rookie Tony Saunders earned his firstvictory since July 31 to help host Florida salvage a split of itsdoubleheader with Philadelphia.Saunders (4-6), winless in his last seven starts, allowed fourhits and one run in six innings. He entered the game 3-0 against theBraves but 0-6 against the rest of the league.Rookie Garrett Stephenson and closer Ricky Bottalico combined ona six-hitter for the Phillies in the opener.Astros 8, Pirates 4: Visiting Houston took a big step towardwinning its first division title since 1986, backing Shane Reynolds'eight-hit pitching with three homers.The Astros have won their last two games by a combined score of23-7 to open a 4 1/2-game lead in the NL Central over the upstartPirates, who had edged back into the race by winning two in a row.Houston's magic number is seven.Expos 4, Reds 1: Rondell White's three-run homer in the eighthsnapped visiting Montreal's four-game losing streak. The Expos havelost seven of their last 11 games.Padres 5, Rockies 4: Wally Joyner's two-run homer in the sixthgave host San Diego the victory. Larry Walker had two homers andfour RBI for Colorado.

Leaderboard packed with anything but celebrities

The celebrity watch at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am took place everywhere but the top of the leaderboard Thursday.

Kent Jones birdied the two most famous par 3s at Pebble Beach and kept bogeys off his card for a 6-under 66 and a one-shot lead, an encouraging start for someone who has played 270 tournaments over the last decade on the U.S. PGA Tour without finishing in the top five.

Developmental U.S. tour graduate Roland Thatcher was a shot back along with qualifying school graduate Brad Adamonis and John Mallinger, third at Pebble Beach last year as a rookie.

Defending champion Phil Mickelson was on the verge of shooting himself out …

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

CHAIRMAN CAMP STATEMENT ON AGREEMENT TO EXTEND THE PAYROLL TAX HOLIDAY, REFORM UNEMPLOYMENT AND PREVENT CUTS TO MEDICARE DOCTORS.

WASHINGTON -- The following information was released by the Committee on Ways and Means:

Today, Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI), who chaired the House-Senate payroll conference committee, issued the following statement after the House passed the conference report for H.R. 3630, The Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act by a vote of 293-132:

"The idea of a conference committee dates back to our Founding Fathers. In their wisdom, they recognized Congress would often be divided. They also knew that our responsibility to govern and find a path forward was equally important, and that is what has been accomplished through this legislation - a path …

CHAIRMAN CAMP STATEMENT ON AGREEMENT TO EXTEND THE PAYROLL TAX HOLIDAY, REFORM UNEMPLOYMENT AND PREVENT CUTS TO MEDICARE DOCTORS.

WASHINGTON -- The following information was released by the Committee on Ways and Means:

Today, Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI), who chaired the House-Senate payroll conference committee, issued the following statement after the House passed the conference report for H.R. 3630, The Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act by a vote of 293-132:

"The idea of a conference committee dates back to our Founding Fathers. In their wisdom, they recognized Congress would often be divided. They also knew that our responsibility to govern and find a path forward was equally important, and that is what has been accomplished through this legislation - a path …

Monday, March 5, 2012

Anti-dumping duties imposed on CPL

Starting from June 6, 2003, China will impose anti-dumping duties on imports of caprolactam (CPL) from Belgium, Germany, Japan, Russia and the Netherlands.

The duties range from 5% to 28%, said a notice issued on June 5th by the Ministry of Commerce (MOC). The anti-dumping measure will be effective for the next five years.

The case began on December 7, 2001, by the Ministry's …

New scandal: bishops as porn producers.(GERMANY)

For about l0 years, some German laity had been quietly and with some insistence telling the German bishops to get out of the porn business. In 2008 each bishop was sent a 70-page dossier with details. None replied. It turns out that the bishops have been involved in several companies that are financially lucrative. They are the sole owners of Weltbild, one of the most profitable book companies in Germany, with a $1.7 billion annual turnover and 2500 porn titles, with sexually explicit covers. They own another company that produces pornographic novels and books on Satanism, the occult and atheism. Oh yes, they also produce some religious books.

Now the news has hit the …

COUNTY URGED TO SHUT CLAVERACK LANDFILL *BOARD WANTS TO CONTINUE DISPOSAL.(Local)

Byline: Gary Sheffer Staff writer

More than 100 people jammed the County Board of Supervisors chambers Wednesday night, most to demand that the Claverack landfill be closed.

The county is considering beginning eminent domain proceedings to seize the landfill on Snydertown Road so that it can continue dumping at the site.

The landfill was scheduled to close Saturday under a state consent order, but the county last week won a temporary extension from the state Department of Environmental Conservation to Sept. 17.

The board voted to address 10 conditions imposed by EnCon that will help the state decide whether to grant a longer extension. …

PARENTIAL CONSENT AT ISSUE HEALTH THREAT QUESTIONED.(Local)

Byline: Deborah Gesensway Capitol bureau

Teenage pregnancy isn't ended by laws that deny abortions to minors who don't tell their parents, but these laws can threaten girls' mental and physical health, according to lawyers and sociologists from two states with mandatory parental consent laws.

Two anti-abortion legislators are about to introduce such parental consent bills in New York's Legislature.

In Massachusetts, a 1981 consent law hasn't stopped teenage girls from getting abortions, said Virginia Cartoof, a Boston-based sociologist who studies teenage pregnancy and parenthood issues. The girls, she found, merely traveled to neighboring New England states that don't …

Venezuela condemns pro-ETA vandalism at Spanish Embassy in Caracas

Venezuelan authorities promised to catch the people who hurled a tear gas canister into the Spanish Embassy and spray-painted slogans in favor of a Basque separatist group on its walls.

Unidentified vandals pulled up to the embassy Friday on motorcycles and spray-painted the insignia the group ETA and slogans including "stop the repression" and "resistance of the Basque people."

They also threw a tear gas canister inside the embassy compound, prompting security guards to flee, the Venezuelan newspaper El Universal reported.

The Venezuelan government issued a statement Friday night condemning it as a …

Weary Dow rises 5 after 3 hectic days

NEW YORK Thursday's stock trading was downright boring comparedto the three previous days of tumultuous activity. The Dow Jonesindustrial average gained 5.59 points to 3,007.38 in active trading.

Advancing issues outnumbered declines by a narrow margin ofabout 9-to-7 on the New York Stock Exchange, with 894 up, 688 downand 512 unchanged.

Volume on the floor of the Big Board came to 173 million sharesas of 4 p.m., down from 231.73 million in the previous session.

With the Soviet crisis quiet for the moment, investors tookprofits by selling high-value growth stocks that rose sharply duringWednesday's rally. The Dow gained 88.10 points Wednesday after …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Chocolate company goes green.

Staff at Somercotes chocolate-maker's Thorntons were given lessons in how to reduce waste at home and make the best use of the recycling facilities available.

Derbyshire County Councillor John Allsop, cabinet member for technology and recycling, said: "County council staff spoke to about 160 Thorntons workers about how to make the most of the food they buy, saving them money by better planning and portion control."

The average UK household throws away up to [pounds sterling]50 worth of food that could be eaten, food which ends up in …

Memorial for former editor unveiled at gardens.

A PERMANENT tribute to a former Belper News editor has been unveiled at Beaurepair Gardens in Belper.

Peter Hampson, hailed as the saviour of the Belper News, died in November following a battle with cancer.

On Saturday friends and family attended the unveiling of a memorial in his name at the gardens at Bridgefoot.

The memorial was the idea of close friend Peter Davies, who Mr Hampson had nominated for an MBE.

Daughter Rebecca Hampson said: "The day was lovely. Peter had gone to a lot of trouble and the attention to detail is great. If you look around there are tributes to other people - it's nice for families to go there and see them as …

A HOME FOR THE ARTS.(PERSPECTIVE)

This is the week when a part of Troy's past becomes prelude to a new era in the arts. It is the opening week of the newly and ambitiously named Arts Center for the Capital Region.

The timing could not be more appropriate. It comes on the dawn of a new century, yet it is linked to the lustre of an earlier era. For years, the center was known as the Rensselaer County Council for the Arts, and its home was a handsome brownstone facing the city's bucolic Washington Park. But the old house, though charming, was too confining for an arts center that continued to attract and serve thousands throughout the Capital Region and beyond. The center's new home is in five River …

R&H Plans Modifiers Plant in Turkey.

Rohm and Haas (R&H) says it has signed a letter of intent to build a plastics additives acrylic impact modifiers and processing aids plant at Gebze, Turkey. The facility will have capacity of 40,000 m.t./year, and will supply the plastics industry in Turkey …

China Southern Airlines 1Q profit down 71 percent

China Southern Airlines Ltd., one of China's three major state-owned carriers, said Tuesday its profit fell 71 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier amid a slump in traffic.

Profit for the three months ending March 31 was 222 million yuan ($32.4 million) or 0.03 yuan per share, the carrier said.

The result added to a string of bleak news for China's state-owned airlines, which have suffered large full-year losses for 2008 due to …

The blues scale [Guitar technique]

Believe it or not, those great blues licks you hear, whether it be Robert Johnson, Jimi Hendrix, Robert King, Johnny Lang or whoever else turns your blues crank, are derived from the standard blues scale. I was playing blues for quite a while before I found out that there is a method to figuring out the notes you're going for. Most of my guitar education was gathered from lifting solos from records and from performing live. Not to mention the countless lonely days and nights in my parent's basement as I played the licks I knew over and over until I could play them in any situation (physical or mental!). Here's your standard blues scale in the key of A, starting from the low E string (the …

LAYOFFS PRECEDE TELECOM PRIVATIZATION.

State-owned Bahamas Telecommunications Corp. is severing almost 700 workers under a pre-divestment plan, the company said, reports CANA (June 1, 1999). The staff cut will complete BaTelCo's downsizing exercise, with a total of 867 workers leaving. The Government is seeking an international strategic partner to buy into 49% …

Tour of 'green' homes scheduled for Oct. 6.(Business)

ALBANY - The Northeast Sustainable Energy Association will host its annual green buildings open house tour Oct. 6 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Homes in Albany, Berne, Delmar, Glenmont and Slingerlands will be …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

OFFICIALS MAY EXCUSE MENTAL HEALTH CHIEF'S SALARY BOBBLE.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: MICHAEL MCKEON Staff writer

ALBANY Two county lawmakers are still not pleased with Department of Mental Health Executive Director John Fahey's handling of a politically charged personnel matter, but are willing to let it drop.

Democrat Legislator William McNulty said the Health Committee last week met privately with Fahey to hash out an incident in which some believed Fahey lied to the committee during an appearance in late February.

``He said he was not trying to mislead the committee,'' McNulty said. ``He said he was just caught off guard at the meeting.''

Fahey tried to get the committee to approve the creation of a …