Thursday, March 15, 2012

Viacom: Scrap YouTube copyright ruling

NEW YORK (AP) — A lawyer for Viacom Inc. warned an appeals court panel Tuesday that there will be greater exploitation of copyright material on the Internet if the court lets YouTube get away with a business built on "rampant copyright infringement."

The lawyer, Paul Smith, told a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan that a lower court judge was wrong to rule that Google Inc.'s popular video service was protected from copyright infringement claims.

"YouTube not only knew there was rampant copyright infringement on the site but welcomed it," Smith said. "These people made this kind of money on somebody else's property."

Google purchased …

Tuning TECH to Business

Aligning IT to business needs will continue as one of the top--and most vexing--challenges for IT managers for the next five to 10 years, according to new research by Ziff Davis Enterprise.

Alignment is nothing new. It's a perennial list topper, since ensuring IT organizations do what businesses need to get done is the entire reason IT organizations exist, and it doesn't happen without a concerted effort. The survey of 346 IT executives and managers provides some telling insights into how enterprises' IT leadership is going about achieving their alignment goals.

Building management's leadership and project execution skill sets is among the top priorities for the …

US, Australian Leaders Show Close Ties

New Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and President Bush are showing signs of a burgeoning diplomatic friendship: Rudd calls the president "George," while Bush describes Rudd to reporters as a "fine lad" and a "straightforward fella."

The two leaders, who met Friday at the White House, are playing down the signs that Rudd has distanced his government from some of the pro-U.S. policies of his immediate predecessor, John Howard.

Bush said he understood Rudd's decision to withdraw Australia's combat troops from Iraq, and he praised Rudd's commitment to the fight in Afghanistan. U.S.-Australian "friendship will strengthen and …

SARS has China, other Asian economies reeling

SINGAPORE--Asian economies might be hurt by a slowdown in Chinaafter the world's most-populous nation said it had almost a thirdmore cases of a deadly virus than previously reported.

China's growth this year might fall by half a point to 7 percentas citizens cut spending on travel and entertainment to avoid thedisease, said Pu Yonghao, a Manila-based consultant to the AsianDevelopment Bank's macroeconomic monitoring unit.

A drop in growth and consumption in China will compound the woesof a region already hurt by a slowdown in the U.S. and the spread ofthe virus, which is cutting sales at companies from SingaporeAirlines Ltd. to hotel operator Shangri-La Asia Ltd. The …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Physiology tool

Designed specifically for university laboratories by National Instruments, BioBench requires no programming. Students and researchers alike can immediately begin using this software for Windows 95/Nt PCs to gather and analyze many types of physiological data. For example, BioBench can measure the effects drugs have on blood pressure and other physiological responses, and the temperature effects of chemical reactions. Plug-in …

Review: A memoir of growing up in New York society

"A Voice From Old New York: A Memoir of My Youth" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $25), by Louis Auchincloss: A prolific chronicler of New York's high society in more than 60 novels, short story collections and nonfiction works, Louis Auchincloss concluded his career with a slim memoir.

"A Voice From Old New York" addresses his own youth among the city's richest and most connected residents with the same detached amusement and keen observations of his previous work.

His voice remains both charmingly and disarmingly familiar — but elegant and easy to read. The quick disdain that one expects from a writer steeped in and fascinated by wealth and privilege is certainly here, as when …

Officials: 2 Afghan troops killed in firing

Officials say two Afghan soldiers have been killed in fighting between NATO and Afghan troops in what may have been a friendly fire incident.

A Wardak province spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid, says NATO and Afghan soldiers began fighting early Saturday after a misunderstanding following an operation in the Sayed Abad district.

A NATO official …

Leonard Bernstein memorabilia go online

Samples from the 400,000 letters, photos, manuscripts, recordingsand other memorabilia of composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein ina collection at the Library of Congress went online last week ; onwhat would have been his 80th birthday.

Bernstein died in 1990.

The 85 items on the Internet include the first known photoshowing Bernstein conducting, …

Lawyers: Abortion doctor immune from prosecution

WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawyers for a Utah abortion doctor charged with murder for the death of a fetus in Maryland are asking a judge to throw out the charges and release her from custody.

Dr. Nicola Riley has been indicted under a Maryland law that allows murder charges to be brought in the death of a viable fetus. Riley's lawyers say she is immune from prosecution because the law …

Van Marwijk says players must respect one another

Netherlands coach Bert van Marwijk says his players don't have to like one another, but they do have to accept and respect their teammates' qualities.

It is a recipe that has brought an unusually calm and cheerful mood to the Dutch team at the World Cup and helped it advance to the round of 16 with a perfect record of three wins.

At training Sunday, a day ahead of the Netherlands' second round match with Slovakia in Durban, players laughed, joked and clapped one another at the Princess Magogo training pitch as Van Marwijk issued instructions.

That picture of unity was a far cry from some previous Dutch teams, which have been hit by dissent and …

Resumen del Béisbol: En la Recta Final

Hablando de Deportes

La temporada regular concluye para la gran mayor�a de los 30 equipos que componen las Grandes Ligas el Domingo 1 de Octubre. Nuestros equipos locales estan luchando por clasificar a la postemporada.

Los Atl�ticos de Oakland tienen solo un enmigo; los Atl�ticos de Oakland. Oakland controla su destino, como de costumbre una primera mitad floja pero una tremenda segunda mitad de la temporada donde se han solidificado en el primer lugar de la Divisi�n del Oeste en la Liga Americana. La adquisici�m del veterano lanzador Mexicano Esteban Loaiza no estaba luciendo muy buena en la primera mitad, pero ahora con solo cuatro semanas de temporada restante el …

Violence and 250,000 displaced: Kenyan unrest takes toll on once-peaceful nation

Armed with bows and arrows and automatic weapons, hundreds of attackers poured through the camp where the terrified had sought refuge Sunday. They fired into the air, sparking a brief gunbattle with police before fleeing into the hills.

Hours later, after the bodies of a woman and her baby shot dead were carted away, aid agencies arrived to hand out emergency sacks of food to the hungry masses.

It sounds like a scene from war-ravaged Congo or Sudan. But this is Kenya, a country long known for welcoming refugees from troubled neighbors _ not producing them.

A week of postelection violence has left at least 250,000 people homeless, shattering the East …

Body of Indonesian maid found in Saudi dumptser

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesia demanded an investigation Friday into reports that a domestic worker was allegedly killed by her employer in Saudi Arabia and thrown into dumpster — the second case of maid abuse to emerge this week.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was speaking to reporters after a Cabinet meeting called to discuss the need to protect hundreds of thousands of migrants who flock to the Middle East in search of work.

Too many, human rights groups say, face slavery-like conditions, torture, sexual abuse and even death.

Indonesian Minister of Labor Muhaimin Iskandar said an embassy team was dispatched to the Saudi town of Abha to look into allegations the 36-year-old maid, Kikim Komalasari, had been killed by her bosses.

Her neck was slashed and she had severe cuts to the rest of her body, he said.

"It's shocking to hear this ... it's beyond inhumane," Yudhoyono said, adding, however, he was encouraged so far by the Saudi government's quick response. "I'm hopeful the perpetrators will be punished according to law."

The report came as a team of Indonesian officials headed to the Mideast to seek justice and medical help for another maid, Sumiati binti Salan Mustapa, who has been hospitalized in the Saudi city of Medina since Nov. 8.

The 23-year-old's employers allegedly burned her, broke her middle finger and cut her lips with scissors.

Earlier this week, New York-based group Human Rights Watch urged Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Kuwait to do more to protect domestic workers in their countries, saying a string of allegations point to a "broader pattern of abuse."

They were responding to reports that a Sri Lankan maid working in Jordan had been forced to swallow nails. Another maid employed in Kuwait claimed her employer drove nails into her body.

"The wanton brutality alleged in these cases is shocking," said Nisha Varia, senior women's rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, which called on authorities to investigate claims promptly and bring those responsible to justice.

___

Associated Press writers Niniek Karmini in Jakarta and Dale Gavlak in Amman, Jordan contributed to this report.

Mickelson 8 strokes off lead going into 3rd round

Phil Mickelson is tuning up for Bethpage Black and the U.S. Open. It might help if he can find a way to finish off the 18th hole at the TPC Southwind better than double bogey.

Playing the final three holes of his second round at the St. Jude Classic on Saturday, Mickelson started with a birdie that dropped him to 5 under, but then went bogey and double bogey on No. 18 for a second straight round.

He finished with an even-par 70 that left him 2-under 138 in his first tournament since announcing his wife has breast cancer.

He is eight strokes behind Brian Gay, whose 66 Friday gave him the clubhouse lead at 10-under 130 when play was suspended because of thunderstorms with 78 players on still on the course.

Robert Allenby finished a 64 on Saturday and was a stroke back. Bryce Molder (63) and Vaughn Taylor (65) were tied at 132.

John Daly made the cut at even par and will play the weekend in his first PGA Tour event since returning from a six-month suspension. That means a temporary restraining order keeping his estranged wife off the course remains in effect through the weekend.

Sergio Garcia (3 over) and defending champ Justin Leonard (5 over) were among those missing the cut.

After completion of the second round on Saturday morning, PGA Tour officials sent the 76 players who made the cut off both tees in threesomes trying to get back on schedule.

The storm brought heavy rains to the TPC Southwind that should help scoring on a course golfers already had found receptive.

"It's obviously going to make the golf course a little softer," said Allenby, who lost here in a playoff a year ago.

He ended Friday off a bogey but rebounded Saturday with a birdie on his 18th hole to pull closer to Gay.

Woody Austin (66) was at 133 in a group that included David Toms, the two-time champ here (66). Rich Beem (68) and Loren Roberts (67) were among those at 134.

Officials already had fans heading toward the exits when the horn blew Friday. The timing was good with lightning seen 10 minutes later, and the tornado sirens went off about 40 minutes after the stoppage. Winds blew rain sideways and tossed carts across the grounds with some siding ripped off concession stands.

Mickelson was at 4 under and standing next to his tee ball in the 16th fairway with 210 yards to the par-5 hole. He marked his spot, tossed the ball to his caddie and got a ride off the course on a cart. He walked to his car without commenting.

He started well enough Saturday with a birdie. Then he hit a tee shot into the rough and a two-putt bogey on 17 that he followed up with his second consecutive double bogey on the par-4 18th.

Hundreds of fans followed Mickelson from hole to hole yet again, many wearing pink in support of Mickelson and his wife, Amy.

"The star this week is Phil Mickelson," said John Senden, who shot a 66.

Mickelson looked more relaxed a couple days after an emotional news conference, even laughing a couple times during breaks in play Friday. He had three birdies and a bogey before just missing with his putter on the back nine. He is using this event to get back into competition mode, and that may have been why he hit iron instead of driver or a wood off the tee a couple times.

He birdied three of six holes to get to 5 under, and his last birdie came when he mashed his drive 348 yards on the par-4 ninth. He stuck his approach within 5 feet and rolled in another putt for birdie.

His putter failed him as he left a birdie attempt short on No. 11 and had to tap in for par. His second shot into the par-4 No. 12 dropped 12 feet from the cup. His birdie attempt rolled just right of the hole and a couple feet past.

Then Mickelson pushed his drive into the rough, coming up a couple feet short of knee-high weeds. He bogeyed the hole but not because of that drive. He missed a 25-footer for birdie, then lipped out a 3-footer for par when the ball hit the back of the cup.

He laid up again on the par-4 15th and had a short birdie putt he pushed a couple feet past with his frustration starting to show. He had a chance to rebound after a strong drive on the 16th, a good scoring hole. Then came the horn.

For Gay, he is trying to do what he did in Hilton Head in April, when he ran away with a victory by 10 strokes. A win here will get him a ticket to Bethpage Black next week, and he birdied five of his first eight holes and get to 12 under at No. 15 before bogeying his final two holes.

"I did pretty good being ahead last time, so I was telling myself on the back nine out there to, I was really trying to push and try to make as many birdies as I could but ... probably pulled the wrong club on a couple holes coming in," Gay said.

Divots: The second-round stoppage marked the seventh PGA Tour event interrupted by weather this year. ... Gay's 130 total for 36 holes is his personal best on tour. He shot 131 twice, most recently at the 2003 Zurich Classic in New Orleans. ... Guy Boros, tied for fourth after a 66, needed only nine putts over his final nine holes.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

6 killed in Chechnya clashes amid upsurge of violence in Russian region

Two separate militant attacks in Russia's Chechnya region killed three police officers and three civilians, a law enforcement official said Sunday.

A fourth officer was seriously wounded in one of the attacks, the latest in a moderate upsurge in the violence clouding the predominantly Muslim province's recovery from two devastating wars, the official said.

Two police and two civilians were killed Saturday in a clash that erupted when they came under fire in the southern Shatoi district during an operation aimed at persuading militants to surrender, the Chechen Interior Ministry official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give his name for attribution.

The civilians were relatives of militants in the area, he said.

Early Sunday, gunmen opened fire on a district police headquarters in the village of Elistanzhi, killing a deputy commander of an elite Interior Ministry unit operating in southern Chechnya and seriously wounding another officer in the unit, the official said. A resident was also killed in the attack, the official said.

Major fighting died down years ago in Chechnya, the site of two wars since 1994 pitting separatist rebels against government forces.

The province is being rebuilt under Kremlin-backed strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, the regional president whose methods of establishing order and neutralizing opposition have prompted allegations of human rights violations. An unknown number of rebels are still active, many of them based in the mountainous south, and the region remains plagued by violence.

Palestinian Lawmakers Back New Coalition

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - The new Hamas-Fatah coalition won overwhelming parliamentary approval Saturday, clearing a final formal hurdle before taking on the challenge of persuading a skeptical world to end a crippling yearlong boycott of the Palestinian government.

After the 83-3 vote was announced, lawmakers jumped up for a standing ovation. In all, parliament has 132 members, but 41 are in Israeli detention.

Presenting the government's program ahead of the vote, Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas said the coalition wants to set up a Palestinian state in the lands Israel occupied in the 1967 Mideast War. He said the Palestinians affirm the right to resist occupation, but will also seek to expand a truce with Israel.

The platform fell short of international conditions for acceptance, including explicit recognition of Israel and renunciation of violence.

Israel reiterated Saturday that it will not deal with the new government, while a senior U.N. official signaled flexibility. "This is a significant step in the right direction," said Alvaro de Soto, special U.N. coordinator for the Middle East, who attended the session. "We will be watching with interest to see how this program is implemented."

Moments after the new government was approved, Norway - a key player in Mideast peacemaking and a steadfast contributor to the Palestinian Authority - said it would normalize relations with the Hamas-Fatah coalition.

Parliament met simultaneously in Gaza City and in Ramallah, with a video link. Palestinian lawmakers cannot meet in one place because of Israeli travel bans.

The coalition replaces a government led by the Islamic militant Hamas, which carried out dozens of suicide bombings against Israel and swept parliamentary elections last year. Hamas' ascent to power drew down bruising international sanctions meant to pressure it to recognize Israel and accept past peace accords.

The incoming Palestinian finance minister, Salam Fayyad, said the new government will not be able to function for long unless the aid boycott ends.

Fayyad told The Associated Press he hopes he can meet with foreign officials to explain the Palestinians' financial situation. "We do face a very serious and crippling financial crisis," he said. "Without the help of the international community, it is not going to be possible for us to sustain our operations."

The new government "respects" previous international agreements reached by the PLO and calls for peace talks to be conducted by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a moderate who leads the Fatah party. Any future deal could be submitted to a national referendum, suggesting that Hamas would not have veto power.

Haniyeh said the government wants to expand a cease-fire with Israel, yet also "affirms that resistance in all its means" is a Palestinian right.

In his speech to parliament, Abbas said Saturday that the Palestinian people "reject violence in all its forms" and seek a comprehensive, negotiated peace.

Abbas said the Palestinians extend their hand to Israel "to achieve the peace of freedom and equality," and urge it to make a "mutual commitment ... to stop all violence."

The two speeches underscored that even though the ideological gaps between Hamas and Fatah are narrowing, fundamental differences remain.

Later Saturday, Abbas is to swear in the coalition, formed after months of stop-and-go negotiations interrupted by periods of deadly factional fighting that claimed more than 140 lives.

Brushing aside international misgivings about Fatah joining forces with Hamas, Abbas has said it is the only way to avert a civil war in the West Bank and Gaza.

Haniyeh also addressed these misgivings in his speech.

"The challenges are many, and so are the difficulties," he said. "Those who wait for mistakes are many. ... All are waiting to see what the national unity government will offer, will it be up to the challenge."

Israeli government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said Israel will deal with Abbas, but not with the new government unless it recognizes the Jewish state. "Israel has openly stated in its government program a two-state solution, (two states) alongside each other," Eisin said.

International reaction toward the Palestinian government has been generally cautious.

Russia has been the most positive, saying the new Palestinian government has taken international demands "into account."

The British Foreign Office called the formation of a national unity government "a step in the right direction." But a spokesman stopped short of endorsing the new government's platform.

The U.S. was more subdued. White House spokesman Tony Snow indicated Thursday that there would be no change in the Bush administration's refusal to deal with the Palestinian government unless its platform changed.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit on Saturday urged an end to the international boycott, saying the new government was a "precious opportunity to resume the peace process."

Bartlett has 10th inning RBI single in Rays' win

Jason Bartlett hit a game-ending single over a drawn-in outfield in the 10th inning, giving the Tampa Bay Rays a 6-5 win over the Cleveland Indians on Sunday.

Ben Zobrist opened the 10th with a single off Kerry Wood (1-4) and later was forced out at second on Carl Crawford's grounder. After Crawford stole second, Evan Longoria was intentionally walked. Bartlett then won it with a long single to right center on 1-2 pitch.

Crawford homered for the Rays, who are 9-2 in July after going 11-14 during June. Andy Sonnanstine (2-0) pitched a perfect 10th.

Cleveland got two RBIs from Austin Kearns. The Indians lost three of four in the series and are 17-32 on the road this season.

No. 21 Wake Forest routs NC Central 94-48

Freshman Al-Farouq Aminu had 21 points and 10 rebounds and No. 21 Wake Forest opened its season of high expectations by routing North Carolina Central 94-48 on Friday night.

James Johnson had 18 points and 10 rebounds and Jeff Teague added 14 points for the Demon Deacons. They led by 31 points before the Eagles made their second field goal.

Freshman Tony Woods and fellow big man Chas McFarland each scored 12 for Wake Forest, which took the second-year Division I program out of the game early. A 16-3 run pushed the lead into double figures for good by the first media timeout, and the lead was 20 by the 8-minute mark.

The Demon Deacons shot nearly 61 percent, a marked improvement after they were a 43.3 percent shooting team last year _ the worst in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Two of the rookies _ the 6-foot-9 Aminu and 6-11 Woods _ teamed with the 7-foot McFarland and 6-11 David Weaver to provide an overpowering post presence against an N.C. Central team that didn't dress anyone taller than 6-9.

It was the kind of dominating performance for second-year coach Dino Gaudio's team that Wake Forest had been missing since Chris Paul left for the NBA after the 2004-05 season.

Ranked in the preseason for the first time since '05, the Demon Deacons were picked to finish third in the ACC behind rivals North Carolina and Duke largely because they added one of the nation's best recruiting classes to a team that returned 99 percent of its scoring and went 17-13 last season.

Aminu didn't disappoint in his college debut, scoring 11 points in the first 15 minutes while coming away with highlight-reel baskets on three straight trips down the court.

He dunked home Teague's alley-oop pass, slammed home the follow-up of Teague's miss and slashed through two defenders for a layup to make it 39-8 with 5 minutes before the break.

By that point, N.C. Central was just 1-for-23 from the field with 11 turnovers. The Eagles finished shooting 27 percent and turned it over 22 times.

Jamar Briscoe, who ended that drought with a 3-pointer with 4:50 left, had 18 points and J'Mell Walters added 11 to lead the outmanned Eagles (0-1).

N.C. Central, which went 4-26 in its first season at this level, had just eight players make the 85-mile trip from Durham and constantly kept an eye on the foul situation. Ultimately, nobody fouled out, though as Wake Forest's Gary Clark went coast to coast for a layup late in the half, Central coach Henry Dickerson screamed at guard Michael Glasker, "Don't foul!"

Wake Forest won its 45th straight home game against instate, non-ACC opponents, and improved to 38-0 against them at the 19-year-old Joel Coliseum.

(This version CORRECTS No. 21 Wake Forest 94, North Carolina Central 48. SUBS 10th graf to correct NC Central's shooting percentage.)

U.S. drone destroys rocket launcher in Libya

TRIPOLI, Libya — Heavy fighting raged anew in rebel-held Misrata killing 24 people Saturday as Moammar Gadhafi's forces gave up more ground in Libya's third-largest city. The U.S. said its first Predator drone attack in the country destroyed a government rocket launcher that had menaced civilians there.

Libya's deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, said troops had halted operations in Misrata to enable tribal elders to negotiate with the rebels. If the rebels don't surrender in the next two days, armed tribesmen will fight them in place of the army, he said.

Hundreds of people have been killed in Misrata in a two-month government siege backed by tanks, mortars and snipers.

The opposition was skeptical of claims that the army would step aside.

Jalal el-Gallal, a spokesman for the rebels' leadership council in their stronghold of Benghazi, said he doubted the regime will fully withdraw from Misrata. He claimed the rebels firmly control the city, the only major rebel stronghold in western Libya.

Residents reported heavy fighting, shelling and explosions in the east and south of Misrata, and doctors said Saturday was one of the bloodiest days in weeks. At least 24 people were killed and 75 were wounded, many of them critically, said a doctor at a Misrata hospital who asked to be identified only by his first name.

NATO said a U.S. Predator drone destroyed a multiple rocket launcher Saturday in the Misrata area that was being used against civilians. The Pentagon said it was the first attack carried out in Libya by one of the drones, which began flying missions in the country on Thursday.

President Barack Obama approved the use of armed Predator drones to improve the precision of strikes on Libyan government forces. Predators had previously been used in Libya only for surveillance. The low-flying Predators have been used in Pakistan to kill militants and are suited for urban combat.

AP

Truckmaker MAN makes 4Q net loss of (EURO)472 million

German bus and truckmaker MAN SE lost (EURO)472 million ($642 million) in the fourth quarter of 2009 amid a steep drop in demand due to the economic downturn, the company said Monday.

Munich-based MAN said the loss compared with net income of (EURO)177 million in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Revenue for the October-December period fell 18 percent to (EURO)3.3 billion from nearly (EURO)4 billion in the fourth quarter of 2008.

MAN said revenue for the quarter and the full year fell "due to the massive decline in demand in the transportation sector in particular."

Despite the decline, fourth-quarter order intake increased 35 percent to (EURO)2.6 billion from almost (EURO)2 billion in the fourth quarter of 2008. Orders for the full year were 30 percent lower at nearly (EURO)10 billion from (EURO)14 billion in 2008.

The company said it expects its bus and truck business to remain at the current lower level in 2010.

The power engineering business, which will soon merge MAN Diesel and MAN Turbo together, should see a moderate decline in revenue, the company said. MAN Diesel makes large motors for ships and power plants, while MAN Turbo makes compressors, gas and steam turbines.

The merger of the two divisions should contribute about (EURO)60 million in cost savings.

For the full year, MAN lost (EURO)258 million compared with net income of (EURO)1.2 billion in 2008, the company said. Revenue for 2009 was 20 percent lower at (EURO)12 billion, compared with nearly (EURO)15 billion in 2008.

MAN is Germany's second largest truck builder after Daimler AG. MAN is about 30 percent held by Europe's largest automotive group, Volkswagen AG.

Shares of MAN were 1 percent lower at (EURO)49.50 in Frankfurt morning trading.

___

On the Net:

http://www.man.eu

Farrakhan changes name of Million Family March

Farrakhan changes name of Million Family March

The Oct. 16th Million Family March has been renamed to Million Family Mobilization aimed at uniting...., Nation of Islam Leader Minister Louis Farrakhan said on Cliff Kelley's V-103 "Sunday Morning Live" talk show.

It isn't a march anyway, Farrakhan said referring to the upcoming event being held in Washington, D.C. where on Oct. 16, 1995, he drew nearly 2 million mostly Black men to that park area for reconciliation, atonement and forgiveness.

There, Farrakhan will unveil his national agenda, which has been presented to the presidential candidates, that includes affordable housing. "There is a reason why we should mobilize and leverage the power of our mobilization so that the gentrification that is going on in all the major cities that is displacing poor, Black and brown people....

"This should be addressed by us in a force that can bring some change.... If we don't mobilize...don't force government to address us properly, then the homelessness will continue. Right now, there are 5 million people in America homeless. This is a crime in a country that is the richest nation on earth," he said.

"This is a crime when you see $550 billion coming through our hands. That's why we should mobilize on that day." Farrakhan said on Oct. 16th, he is establishing a 1 million family mobilization economic development fund.

"We're going to press government that some of our tax dollars should be rerouted into a fund that will allow us to rebuild our own communities," Farrakhan said.

Turning a page in his own history when on Oct. 16, 1995 he held his first Million Man March, Farrakhan said: "We got Black men together for a specific purpose and the good of that purpose is still going on.

Referring to the Oct. 16th event, Farrakhan said: "It's more than a march. It is the beginning of a process of mobilizing our people nationally so that we can leverage that kind of mobilization and make it a force to change public and foreign policy," he explained.

Saying for the last 45-years of his life that he has concentrated his energy totally on the Black community, Farrakhan said: "The way we impact other nationalities or races have an affect on us.

"The enemy of the unity of us always like to pit the poor against each other. This is how the rich stay in power over the poor; so, the Black and the brown here in Chicago sometimes are at odds with each other and the brown family is in conflict with itself because of the gang problems in the Black community....

"You have problems with Arabs, Asians...with whites...." Farrakhan said if they're called in the same room and addressed the concerns Blacks have "in a way that maybe we (can) break down some of the barriers and form strategic alliances and leverage that power to bring something out of government that we deserve out of corporate America that we deserve...."

Referring to the Oct. 16th event, Farrakhan said it will be seen on satellite and website worldwide and that every word will be translated into French, Spanish and Arabic "so that we have a chance on one day with speech...culture, music with unity to affect a world that is now looking to the Black masses of America as a hope for themselves."

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Report: Orioles' Gibbons Received HGH

NEW YORK - Baltimore Orioles outfielder Jay Gibbons received performance-enhancing steroids and human growth hormone after both substances were banned by baseball, SI.com reported Sunday.

Gibbons is the latest athlete to be linked to the Florida pharmacy under investigation for illegally distributing prescription medications.

Major League Baseball asked Friday to meet with St. Louis' Rick Ankiel and Toronto's Troy Glaus after two reports said they received performance-enhancing drugs from Signature Pharmacy several years ago.

Between October 2003 and July 2005, Gibbons got six shipments of Genotropin (a brand name for synthetic human growth hormone), two shipments of testosterone and two shipments of human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), SI.com said, citing a source in Florida with knowledge of a Signature Pharmacy client list.

SI.com said its information dealt only with receipt of the drugs, not use.

Gibbons didn't immediately return a message left on his cell phone by The Associated Press. Messages left with his agent, Sam Levinson, also weren't immediately returned. Orioles spokesman Bill Stetka declined to comment.

Major League Baseball banned testosterone in 2003, the same year the sport began testing for steroids. HGH was barred in January 2005, but Gibbons allegedly received a shipment that July. HCG is not on the list of banned substances, SI.com reported.

Prescriptions that were written in Gibbons' name were sent to a Gilbert, Ariz., address that traces to the Baltimore outfielder, SI.com said.

The substances were obtained through South Beach Rejuvenation Center/Modern Therapy, a Miami Beach clinic, and sent through Signature, SI.com said.

The 30-year-old Gibbons underwent season-ending shoulder surgery last month to repair a torn labrum. The procedure ended his worst year in the majors - he batted .230 with only six homers and 28 RBIs in 84 games.

He broke into the majors in 2001 with the Orioles after being selected from the Toronto Blue Jays in the winter meeting draft. His best season was in 2003, when he batted .277 with 23 homers and 100 RBIs in 160 games.

But Gibbons has been plagued by injuries ever since. He played in 97 games in 2004, 139 in 2005 and last year he had two stints on the disabled list and played in only 90 games.

The Los Angeles Times reported last October that Gibbons was one of the players a federal agent said was implicated in drug use by former major league pitcher Jason Grimsley.

AEP to meet new Ohio standards to lessen outages

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — American Electric Power has reached an agreement with Ohio regulators to meet new standards aimed at achieving shorter and fewer outages.

AEP and other utilities in Ohio struggled with outages that lasted for days — sometimes a week or longer — after remnants of Hurricane Ike battered the state in September 2008. The winds knocked out electrical service to more than 2 million Ohio utility customers.

The standards adopted Wednesday by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio are aimed at reducing the average duration of a power failure by about a half-hour or more and the frequency of AEP's outages.

Ohio regulators have similar deals with Duke Energy and Dayton Power & Light.

Ohio's Deputy Consumers' Counsel Bruce Weston said in a statement Wednesday that the utilities' agreements should mean fewer electricity outages for shorter periods.

Utilities failing to meet their standards must submit action plans and could be fined for subsequent violations, PUCO spokeswoman Shan Eiselstein said. She said Thursday that the goal is to make sure consumers have access to reliable service.

AEP Ohio spokeswoman Terri Flora says the utility already is meeting stricter standards and expects a more aggressive tree-trimming program and more sophisticated meters that alert the company automatically when a customer loses power to help in meeting those standards.

Special court helps veterans in Tulsa, Okla.

When Matt Stiner joined the Marine Corps in 2000, he intended to follow family tradition and make military service his career.

Instead, he is making a career out of helping veterans.

Stiner, in charge of veterans affairs for Tulsa Mayor Kathy Taylor, has helped create one of the first courts in the nation specifically for veterans.

The Tulsa County Veterans Treatment Court is intended to help people whose problems seem tied to military service. In October alone, 158 veterans were arrested in Tulsa County on drug and alcohol offenses.

The idea is modeled on special drug courts, which have long been effective in handling cases of substance abusers, giving them a chance to participate in programs to end the addictions causing their legal problems.

In early 2008, the city of Buffalo, N.Y., started holding sessions in what is recognized as the nation's first Veterans Treatment Court.

The veterans court in Oklahoma, which began in December, is a specialized docket within the Tulsa County Drug Court. Treatment, counseling and other veterans-related services are coordinated by a network of organizations.

Special Judge Sarah Smith calls it her favorite court and not just because the defendants still know how to stand at attention when she enters the courtroom.

"I feel very strongly about the men and women who are willing to give their lives for us," she said. "When they find themselves in circumstances where they are here in the criminal justice system, it gives me a chance to give them their dignity back and help them get some treatment and back on their feet instead of sending them to prison."

District Attorney Tim Harris' office determines who is eligible for the court. According to state law, only those with a nonviolent felony arrest can participate.

One of the first orders of business at a recent hearing was to recognize a program participant, Army veteran Henry Ward, who had just secured a job as a telemarketer. Ward, who will soon turn 60, became addicted to hashish combined with other drugs in the early 1970s.

He ended up hooked on crack, and even hocked his prized saxophone to pay for his drug addiction.

"Oh, man, you wouldn't believe the resources here," said Ward, who was unemployed when he signed up for the Tulsa veterans court.

The Veterans Administration in Muskogee has assigned volunteer service officers _ veterans themselves who understand what is going on in the minds of returning soldiers.

Ward's service officer helped him pay his rent and utilities until he found a job, and the service officer helped him retrieve his saxophone.

Ward recently played the instrument for a drug court graduation.

Clients in veterans court undergo substance abuse tests as often as three times a week. They get counseling, treatment and weekly help from veterans service officers.

One out of six veterans will likely have a substance abuse disorder, according to a 2008 National Survey of Drug Use and Health. Rose Ewing, the Tulsa judge's assistant, said Oklahoma is getting a head start because soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan will need these services.

"If you come back and see us in 18 months, I think the age will have trended down," she said. "Some of these Afghanistan and Iraq soldiers are just getting back; some are still serving."

___

On the Net:

Tulsa County Veterans Treatment Court:

http://www.cityoftulsa.org/ENews/2008/12-16/Court.asp

MCC helps train trauma counsellors on Indian islands

Andaman Islands, India

With $13,000 in Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) funding, the West Bengal Volunteer Health Association has been doing health assessments and training trauma counsellors on the Andaman and Nicobar islands off the coast of India, hard hit by the Dec. 26 tsunami that killed more than a quarter-million people in south Asia.

Carolyn Holderread Heggen, a psychotherapist from Oregon, is helping train the counsellors there for two months.

While the islands have been described as "heavenly," Heggen said her first view of the Andaman capital, Port Blair, from the air, made it seem anything but to her. "The sight of reddish brown rice paddies, temples, shrines, bridges and buildings askew and crumbled, boats smashed and deposited far from the water's edge, quickly jolted me back to reality," she said.

While she found the 18 camps set up around Port Blair-each housing from 300 to more than 1,000 survivors each in makeshift plastic tents, Heggen said that the immediate provision of MCC funds to ship medical supplies from the Indian mainland helped the camp clinic and a volunteer local doctor (secured by the West Bengal Volunteer Health Association) provide for the basic medical needs at the camps.

"Because of the pools of trapped and brackish water and the destruction of many latrines at Port Blair, there is an infestation of mosquitoes and large flies," Heggen reported. "At camps people begged us for nets because they were unable to sleep at night or protect their young babies, the old and the sick during the day. We were able to place a call to [Calcutta] and thousands of brightly colored nets were put on the next ship. As we distributed the nets, people graciously thanked us," she said.

While some semblance of normalcy now pervades the camps-though they remain "quite challenged" to meet basic physical needs-the psychological needs are immense, according to Heggen.

"Most camp residents have a personal story of profound loss and nightmarish images trapped in their minds" she said. "Many children fight sleep and don't want to close their eyes because when they do they see haunting 'pictures.'" Distraught wives, who have lost their husbands in this very patriarchal society, wonder what will become of them and their children.

Heggen has been focusing her training efforts in the Andaman Islands on those who will help the child survivors. "I did separate training workshops with teachers at the elementary, middle school and secondary levels," she said. "We focused particularly on ways of using art, stories, play and drama to help students externalize and resolve the internal terror they have experienced."

She also met with nurses and the medical staff at the government hospital to conduct a workshop on healing responses to emotionally devastated patients.

"Sitting on the front row of the large lecture hall was a young nurse who frequently wiped tears from her eyes as I spoke," Heggen said. "She later shared with me her personal story of tsunami terror and shared how hard it is to help her patients and be compassionate with them when her own heart is so full of sadness."

Relief workers, emergency response teams and community workers have been working 14- to 16-hour days for over a month now in hot, muggy, mosquito-infested tense situations. While capable and committed, they are exhausted, Heggen said.

"I was happy to have a chance to hold workshops with them on compassion fatigue and self-care," she said. "They responded enthusiastically and emotionally to the invitation to set limits for themselves and to suggestions for ways they can help each other monitor and manage their workload and stress."

These people are key for the rebuilding of tsunami-affected communities, according to Heggen. Support for them will be vital in the months ahead.

"My heart is full already of images of destruction and stories of despair," she concluded. "But in the Andaman Islands I also saw enough expressions of human compassion, courage and generosity to renew my belief in the resilience of the human spirit and energize me for the work ahead."

-Ross W. Muir

Henson, Howard: Hollywood needs more minorities

NEW YORK (AP) — Taraji P. Henson agrees that minorities were not represented enough at the Emmys — and there are too few working in Hollywood.

Henson says "there were several times when I didn't even want to watch the Emmys because I mean, who am I looking at?"

Henson made the comments when asked on her thoughts about fellow actress Regina King's Sept. 3 blog post for the Huffington Post website.

In it, the black actress criticizes the Emmys for under-representing minorities in its main categories. King also writes that she was offended after a member of the media confused her with actress Rutina Wesley of HBO's vampire saga "True Blood." And she says she was hurt that late actress Alaine Reed Hall, best known for her role on "Sesame Street," was not among those recognized in the tribute to recently deceased TV personalities at this year's Emmys. Hall and King starred together on the 1980s TV comedy show "227" about the lives of black women in an apartment building.

"I mean, she has a point," Henson said of King's blog post.

In the same interview, actor Terrence Howard says that Hollywood is changing, for the better.

"The truth is, the country still has a lot more growth it needs to make and in due time, I'm sure none of those questions will even be relevant anymore," Howard said, adding: "The whole country seems to have started toward a trend of equality and brotherhood."

Henson interjected: "Hollywood hasn't."

"Hollywood just has to catch up," he responded. "Give them some time."

Henson and Howard starred together in 2005's "Hustle & Flow," which earned Howard an Oscar nomination for best actor. Henson was nominated for best supporting actress last year for her role in "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button."

The pair will return this year as hosts of the Soul Train Music Awards on Nov. 28. ___

Online:

Regina King's blog post: http://tinyurl.com/22ohymz

Soul Train: http://www.soultrain.com

Friday's NHL Sums

Phoenix 2 0 0_2
Carolina 1 2 2_5
First Period_1, Phoenix, Porter 4 (Yandle, Jovanovski), 8:56 (pp). 2, Carolina, Staal 6 (Samsonov, Ruutu), 15:16. 3, Phoenix, Doan 11, 17:03.
Second Period_4, Carolina, Staal 7 (Pitkanen, Wallin), 8:00. 5, Carolina, Staal 8 (Walker, Pitkanen), 19:14.
Third Period_6, Carolina, Whitney 6 (Brind'Amour), 17:39. 7, Carolina, Whitney 7 (Walker, Pitkanen), 19:28 (en).
Shots on Goal_Phoenix 15-7-6_28. Carolina 12-13-8_33.
Goalies_Phoenix, Bryzgalov. Carolina, Ward. A_14,848 (18,680). T_2:22.
___
At Boston
Florida 1 0 1_2
Boston 2 2 0_4
First Period_1, Boston, Kessel 10 (Savard, Wideman), 2:46. 2, Florida, Booth 9 (Horton, McCabe), 8:01. 3, Boston, Bergeron 4 (Hunwick, Ryder), 10:02.
Second Period_4, Boston, Krejci 5 (Kobasew), 7:43. 5, Boston, Savard 8 (Bergeron, Axelsson), 9:26 (pp).
Third Period_6, Florida, Peltonen 1 (Bouwmeester, McCabe), 16:54.
Shots on Goal_Florida 9-13-10_32. Boston 14-21-4_39.
Goalies_Florida, Vokoun. Boston, Thomas. A_16,878 (17,565). T_2:27.
___
At Newark, N.J.
N.Y. Islanders 0 2 0_2
New Jersey 2 2 1_5
First Period_1, New Jersey, Clarkson 5 (Oduya, Gionta), 18:41 (pp). 2, New Jersey, Zajac 3 (Langenbrunner, Parise), 18:51.
Second Period_3, N.Y. Islanders, Hilbert 4 (Witt), 3:29. 4, New Jersey, Salvador 1 (Langenbrunner, Parise), 3:52. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Bergenheim 4 (Sutton, Weight), 13:04. 6, New Jersey, Gionta 5 (Elias, Parise), 19:44 (sh).
Third Period_7, New Jersey, Martin 2 (Langenbrunner, Elias), 12:32 (pp).
Shots on Goal_N.Y. Islanders 9-14-4_27. New Jersey 12-9-12_33.
Goalies_N.Y. Islanders, J.MacDonald. New Jersey, Weekes. A_17,138 (17,625). T_2:19.
___
At Buffalo, N.Y.
Philadelphia 1 0 2_3
Buffalo 0 0 0_0
First Period_1, Philadelphia, Hartnell 5 (S.Gagne, Alberts), 19:02.
Second Period_None.
Third Period_2, Philadelphia, Carter 12, 8:19. 3, Philadelphia, Carter 13 (Nodl, Timonen), 19:00 (en).
Shots on Goal_Philadelphia 6-11-8_25. Buffalo 12-13-15_40.
Goalies_Philadelphia, Biron. Buffalo, Miller. A_18,256 (18,690). T_2:23.
___
At Tampa, Fla.
Nashville 1 0 0_1
Tampa Bay 3 1 0_4
First Period_1, Tampa Bay, Lecavalier 8 (Malone, Stamkos), 4:57 (pp). 2, Tampa Bay, Lecavalier 9 (St. Louis), 7:05. 3, Nashville, Tootoo 3 (Zanon), 10:40. 4, Tampa Bay, Recchi 4 (Malik, Malone), 12:17.
Second Period_5, Tampa Bay, Prospal 4 (Malone, Stamkos), 6:32.
Third Period_None.
Shots on Goal_Nashville 11-15-9_35. Tampa Bay 10-7-7_24.
Goalies_Nashville, Ellis. Tampa Bay, M.Smith. A_16,444 (19,758). T_2:18.
___
At St. Louis
Anaheim 0 0 2 0_2
St. Louis 1 0 1 1_3
First Period_1, St. Louis, Backes 3 (Winchester, Polak), 7:14 (pp).
Second Period_None.
Third Period_2, Anaheim, Kunitz 3 (Ryan, Huskins), 7:13. 3, St. Louis, Regier 3 (Backes, Woywitka), 10:15 (pp). 4, Anaheim, S.Niedermayer 3 (Getzlaf, Pahlsson), 19:59 (pp).
Overtime_5, St. Louis, Stempniak 3, 2:39.
Shots on Goal_Anaheim 9-7-11-1_28. St. Louis 10-6-9-3_28.
Goalies_Anaheim, Giguere. St. Louis, Legace. A_19,150 (19,150). T_2:37.

Gorbachev battles spirited foe: vodka

MOSCOW (UPI) When a man in a crowd complained recently aboutthree-hour-long lines to buy vodka, Soviet leader Mikhail S.Gorbachev shrugged it off by asking if liquor was a necessity.

For the Communist Party chief, the answer is clearly, "No."

He drove that point home less than a week after his televisedconfrontation with the man by again increasing vodka's price. A pintof Stolichnaya vodka now costs slightly more than 5 percent of anaverage monthly salary.

More than a year after he started his anti-alcohol campaign,Gorbachev shows no sign of easing his drive to reverse centuries ofhard-drinking tradition.

"This process must not be stopped," Gorbachev told residents inthe distant far east of the country. "Maybe someone is displeased.They write letters even to me saying, `You forced us to stand inlines for vodka.' "

But, he continued, "even those who criticize the leadership andgovernment because we have cut back on vodka and are leaningresolutely on drunkards, I think they, too, will understand that itis for their good as well."

According to Gorbachev, the campaign has cut fatal industrialaccidents by 20 percent. Police report crime from drunkenness hasdropped 21 percent, traffic accidents by 27 percent.

The better economic performance so far this year also is seen asa response to tighter discipline at work. There are no liquor storesoperating on the east side of Moscow, where much of the capital'sheavy industry is situated.

"Hard drinking struck a great blow against the entire society,"Gorbachev said. "On the family first of all. And if there was anormal situation in the family, it struck then at production."

The campaign must have been prompted by some alarmingstatistics, although most probably are known only inside the Kremlin.

The Soviet Union is believed to be unique in the industrializedworld in that its citizens have decreasing average life expectancies.

Gorbachev's reference to industrial accidents indicates anothershocking figure. Construction sites showed a steady decline in thenumber of functioning workers as the day progressed.

But in taking on vodka, Gorbachev is attempting to change a wayof life much older than the Soviet Union. Vodka arrived in medievalMoscow about the year 1400, and ever since visitors have commented onthe national predilection for heavy drinking.

Gorbachev has attacked alcohol sales with two weapons.

Supply has been tightened sharply, with sales down an additional35 percent this year from the already slashed production in the lasthalf of 1985.

At the same time, prices have jumped - up 76 percent in one yearfor the lowest-quality vodka, rivalling the new price of 10.20 rubles($14.80) a pint for brands such as Stolichnaya.

As some wine and liquor stores converted to juice andmineral-water outlets, lines grew longer outside the remainingalcohol shops.

Liquor that is available tends to be expensive Soviet champagneand cognac instead of vodka and fortified wines, simultaneouslycutting into consumption and keeping the state income from erodingtoo drastically.

Despite those prices and long lines, people do get liquor. Itis far from clear how much the problem is just hiding rather thandisappearing.

"Today, drinking has changed from public places to apartmentsand hostels and is becoming domestic," G. Negoda, an official withthe Soviet public prosecutor's office, said in a newspaper interview.

His evidence was a "noticeable increase" in the number ofdrunken crimes committed at home, a rise that has paralleled the dropin public offenses.

As with so much of the Soviet economy, constraints on supplyhave produced larger payoffs for sellers in the black market.Penalties are harsher than ever - a man selling watered-down vodkawas sentenced to eight years - but so are the profits.

A young man said a birthday party where everyone arrived withouta bottle turned out to be a great success. "We went out later andbought vodka from taxi drivers," he said.

More ominously, the government newspaper Izvestia complainedthat factory foremen are routinely serving up industrial alcohol toworkers they want to encourage. Not surprisingly, there are manypublished reports of poisoning.

Production of moonshine is unlikely to have declined either,despite official reports of thousands of people surrendering theirequipment for making samogon.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

THE PGA CHAMPIONSHIP TIGER NOT AT HIS BEST; BUT HE'S STILL GOOD ENOUGH TO LEAD BY 1

LOUISVILLE, Ky. As if one were needed, here's another depressingthought for the rest of the field in the 82nd PGA Championship: TigerWoods hasn't been at the top of his game yet this week.

"You're not going to have it every day," said Woods, who's halfwayto defending his PGA title after a 5-under-par 67 on Friday atValhalla Golf Club. "I didn't really have it yesterday or today. Youjust have to play your shots and leave yourself opportunities to makepar or birdie."

If Woods didn't have it the first two rounds, those chasing himreally have had it. As it is, only Scott Dunlap-winless on the PGATour-is breathing down Woods' neck, one stroke back.

At least Woods isn't lapping the field this time as he tries towin his third consecutive major championship, fourth in 12 months andfifth of his professional career.

But he certainly is in good position to accept the baton from hisplaying partner of the last two days-and the man whose record 18 promajors Woods is chasing-Jack Nicklaus.

"It has been handed over long before this," said Nicklaus, whonearly holed out a wedge shot on the 18th hole that would haveallowed him to make the cut.

"I kept saying, `I can't understand why no one else is playingthat well.' I'm more understanding now why they aren't. He is thatmuch better."

Woods actually is slipping in comparison with his last two majorvictories. He led the U.S. Open by six shots at the midway point andwent on to win by 15, and he led the British Open by three beforewinning by eight.

"I'm getting old," he said, "going downhill."

Woods proved last year at Medinah, in a thrilling final-round duelwith Sergio Garcia, that he can stand toe-to-toe as well as hedelivers the early knockout punch. But he would prefer the latterroute.

"Any time you have a chance to have a great lead, you are going totake it," he said. "But I like my chances."

So does everyone else, including Dunlap, who said Woods "has wonmore majors than I have made cuts."

Actually, Dunlap leads 5-4 in that contest, but his point is justas valid. Besides Woods, the only player on the leaderboard with amajor title on his resume is Davis Love III, the 1997 PGA winner whowas two behind before bogeying the last two holes as darkness wasfalling.

"I am not happy with the way I scored," said Love, who's tied forthird with Fred Funk and J.P. Hayes at 7 under par. "I hit bad driveson 17 and 18, and it cost me."

Woods may not be totally happy with his play, either, but he's notsurprised he's in front.

"If you are 11 under par after two days of a major, you should beleading," he said. "If not, hats off to that person."

If Woods was shaky, it didn't show for the first 16 holes. He madefour birdies on the front side to get to 10 under, and moments afterDunlap tied him with a birdie on 18, Woods hit an 8-iron to two feeton 15 and tapped in to retake the lead.

After 29 consecutive holes without a bogey, going back to No. 5 inthe first round, Woods had his first hiccup of the day on 17. Hereached the green on the par-4 in two and putted from 30 feet tothree but missed the short par putt.

"I didn't say encouraging words to myself walking off the green,"he said. "I guess the word would be `perturbed,' to the 10th power."

It looked like luck had left Woods' side when he tried to reachthe par-5 18th with his second shot and his ball plugged in the frontbunker.

"Going to 18, I wasn't too happy," he said. "And then to see myball buried like that, after the best 3-wood I have hit in two days,I said, `This is great.' "

But as Nicklaus noted Thursday, Woods doesn't stay mad for long.He aimed for the pin and hit to 15 feet. He pumped his fist-more of abody shot, as opposed to his trademark uppercut-as the birdie puttfell.

"When you are playing a major championship, you really have tokeep control of your emotions."

Widger says pitchers will cut it loose

Almost everyone has offered an opinion on the inconsistencydisplayed by White Sox starting pitchers Freddy Garcia and JonGarland through the early part of this season.

No one has a better inside look, however, than reserve catcherChris Widger.

With the starting staff putting in an extra month of work withlast year's World Series run, Widger was expecting to see at leastone starter dragging this year. He just didn't know who it would be.

"[Garland's] last couple starts and his last one in springtraining, he has said he wasn't feeling good," Widger said before thegame Tuesday. "He said he wasn't hurt, but he said he was tight, hewas having trouble getting …

What next for Obama haters?

What will the nutcases gripe about now that the president has released the long form of his birth certificate.?

I guess their next claim will be he was abducted by aliens at an early age, reprogrammed and then returned to Earth to do their bidding so they could dominate the world.

Will the Republicans now be forced to turn in their tinfoil hats and recognize Obama is really is the president?

Mike Smith, Oak Lawn

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

MARS EXPLORED; EARTHLINGS ON THE LOOKOUT FROM LIVING ROOM COMMAND CENTERS.(CNY)

Byline: William LaRue Staff writer; Page design by Keith Thompson / staff artist

Mars is a cold and distant planet, but interest in the fourth rock from the Sun has become red hot again on Earth.

The successful Jan. 3 landing of rover Spirit and its transmission of pictures and data have inspired a new wave of interest in Mars. But the Red Planet has long been a gold mine for our collective imaginations. It helped to inspire the H.G. Wells' novel "War of the Worlds," video games, toys, movies, TV series and, most recently, entire Internet sites.

Here are some of the many ways we can dig Mars right now:

Fun and games

- Lego Mars Exploration Rover ($89.99). An 857-piece building-block model of robotic geologists Spirit and Opportunity.

- Mars 2020 board game ($24.99). Manufactured by Aristoplay, the goal is to be the first player …

MARS EXPLORED; EARTHLINGS ON THE LOOKOUT FROM LIVING ROOM COMMAND CENTERS.(CNY)

Byline: William LaRue Staff writer; Page design by Keith Thompson / staff artist

Mars is a cold and distant planet, but interest in the fourth rock from the Sun has become red hot again on Earth.

The successful Jan. 3 landing of rover Spirit and its transmission of pictures and data have inspired a new wave of interest in Mars. But the Red Planet has long been a gold mine for our collective imaginations. It helped to inspire the H.G. Wells' novel "War of the Worlds," video games, toys, movies, TV series and, most recently, entire Internet sites.

Here are some of the many ways we can dig Mars right now:

Fun and games

- Lego Mars Exploration Rover ($89.99). An 857-piece building-block model of robotic geologists Spirit and Opportunity.

- Mars 2020 board game ($24.99). Manufactured by Aristoplay, the goal is to be the first player …

Monday, March 5, 2012

State AIDS drug program grows

Illinois has expanded its AIDS Drug Assistance Program to coverthe costs of new, powerful drugs for lower-income patients.

Sixty-one drugs became available Tuesday, including threepowerful protease inhibitors that have shown great success.

Previously, the state offered 28 AIDS medicines and only oneprotease inhibitor."The use of a protease inhibitor, in combination with otherdrugs, has been found to be highly effective in suppressing theproduction of HIV, …

Elderly targeted in drainage scam.

The 74-year-old woman, of Pebsham Lane, was informed she would have to pay for essential drain work to be carried out in her street.

She was told to hand over cash or a banker's draft a but she realised it was a scam and did not pay up.

Now she wants other householders to be aware of the threat from con-artists pretending to be from Dyno-Rrod and making demands for cash.

She said: "My doorbell went last Monday and there was this young man saying there was trouble with the drain up the road and that Dyno-Rrod had been called.

"He said there was a broken drain and that they would have to put a camera down to see, and that there was a problem …

WHALEY `PROUD' OF HER EFFORT.(SPORTS)

Byline: JIMMY GOLEN Associated Press -

CROMWELL, Conn. -- Fears that Suzy Whaley would have the worst score in the opening round of the Greater Hartford Open were unfounded.

That distinction belonged to slumping PGA star David Duval.

Making her much-heralded appearance on the men's tour, Whaley shot a respectable but ultimately out of contention 5-over 75 on Thursday. That was good enough to win over the hometown galleries but not the 137 men ahead of her on the leaderboard.

``I am extremely proud of the way I played. I'm proud of the way I hung in there,'' said Whaley, the first woman to qualify for a PGA event since Babe Didrikson Zaharias …

Photo-rewritable polumer films.(Brief Article)

A practicable photo-rewritable imaging medium has been developed, based on a strongly fluorescent poly(methylmethacrylate film (Mw [approximately equal to] 120 000) containing the organic nanopartide (2; 20wt%) (S Lira, B An, S Jung, M Chung & S Park, Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2004, 43, 6346). This optically clear film can be …

Swiss voters approve foreigner deportation plan

GENEVA (AP) — Swiss voters on Sunday approved a plan to automatically deport foreigners who commit serious crimes or benefit fraud, in a significant victory for the nationalist party that pushed the proposal against the will of the government.

Some 52.9 percent of voters backed the proposal put forward by the nationalist Swiss People's Party, or SVP, according to Swiss national broadcaster SF1. The plan was opposed by 47.1 percent of voters.

A government-backed counterproposal failed. It would have required case-by-case review by a judge before an individual is deported.

"I'm totally for it," said Emma Link after casting her vote in Geneva. The 86-year-old blamed …

[ REAL CHICAGO ]

BIG BROTHER 6

RECAP: This was the week that America had its say in who wascoming back to the house. One of the three housemates voted off wasgoing to be allowed back in. The competition was down to Cappy andKaysar. Kaysar, thankfully, won and now has revenge on his mind. Hemay want to start with Jennifer, who swore that she would put Jamesup for elimination (every week for this poor guy) if she won HOH. Shewon HOH but left James safe -- for now. On the block this week areRachel and Janelle.

OUR GIRL SARAH: Gone. Poor Sarah got the boot from the house whenthe housemates voted 6-1 against her and opted to keep Ivette. It wassad to see Sarah go, and we threw up a little …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Committee of Civil Control urges Roza Otunbaeva to ask for assistance of military doctors from Russian and U.S. military bases.

The Committee of Civil Control appealed to Transitional President Roza Otunbaeva to ask for the assistance of military doctors from the military bases of Russia and the U.S. "We appeal to urgently apply to the Embassies of Russia and the U.S. for using the military doctors from the bases stationed on the territory of Kyrgyzstan …

Kodak tackles shots in dark; New camera filter promises crisper pictures in low light.(Business)

Byline: Associated Press

ROCHESTER - A year from now, capturing a crisp, clear image of a candlelit birthday party could be a piece of cake - even with a camera phone.

Eastman Kodak Co. said Thursday it has developed a color-filter technology that at least doubles the sensitivity to light of the image sensor in every digital camera, enabling shutterbugs to take better pictures in poor light.

"Low light can mean trying to get a good image indoors of your kid blowing out the birthday candles. It can mean you want to take a photograph on a street corner in Paris at midnight," said Chris McNiffe, general manager of the photography company's image sensor …

RECORD REVIEWS.(PREVIEW)

POP ``Jubilee.'' Grant Lee Buffalo. (Slash/Warner Bros.) ``Jubilee'' opens with an unusual declaration: ``I put an APB on you tonight, searchlights citywide.'' An extravagant length to go to retrieve a vanished love, perhaps, but Grant Lee Phillips doesn't sing like a panicked man. He delivers that line, and subsequent ones, as a kind of confession, an acknowledgement of deep obsession he's hardly proud of.

The metaphysical search that starts with ``APB'' continues, in one way or another, through the 14 songs on this vital collection, the most consistently rewarding of four GLB titles and the first without bassist Paul Kimball. Phillips' voice, which evokes the bitterness of early Elton John and the languor of late John Lennon, gives his lyrics an urgency: He's plagued by regret, haunted by doubts that hang around the corners of his songs. His characters are in pursuit of an unknowable destiny -- or at least a quiet …

Air pollution alters chromosomes.(Focus Briefs)(Brief Article)

The exposure of expectant mothers to airborne pollution has the potential to cause chromosomal abnormalities in the developing foetus, according to a New York study.

The study of 60 newborns found air pollutants from motor vehicles, heating and power generation can cross the placenta and cause chromosomal abnormalities and …

California dreaming _ can McCain win?

John McCain is starting a California campaign that might already be over.

The Republican presidential candidate opens a handful of political offices this week in the nation's most populous state, the historical turf of Reagan and Nixon that in recent years has become a Democratic fortress in presidential contests.

The Arizona senator boasts that he can win California's 55 electoral votes, the biggest prize on Nov. 4, but he's running as the Republican successor to GOP President George Bush, whose approval rating is at an all-time low in the state. Three of four voters say the nation is on the wrong track, and McCain's opposition to abortion rights and his …

Hawaiians march against 1898 annexation

WASHINGTON Native Hawaiians are in Washington this weekend toprotest the U.S. invasion of the islands and the overthrow of theHawaiian monarchy in 1893.

That action, said Butch Kekahu, founder of the Aloha March,caused the downfall of a culture. "We're still hurting after 105years," he said.

The Hawaiians, with their march from the Capitol to the WhiteHouse and 24-hour prayer vigil, marked the 100th anniversary of theannexation of the Hawaiian Islands by the United States. Hawaiibecame a U.S. territory in 1900.

For the marchers, it also was a turning point in the Hawaiiansovereignty movement as they seek to make their campaign an issue ofnational …

Looking for a better way to do business.(Brief article)

Byline: Rodd Zolkos

Regardless of their size or the segment of the market they're serving, successful agents and brokers always are looking for better ways of doing business.

At Business Insurance, we've long reported on the business of agents and brokers and their interactions with clients. In this "The Business of Better Broking" supplement, we're taking a look at several ways that successful agents and brokers are serving those clients or positioning themselves to find new business opportunities.

Whether it's recognizing the characteristics that set middle-market clients apart from larger accounts, venturing into …