четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Federal commodities regulators settle hedge-fund supervision case with MF Global

Futures and options broker MF Global Ltd. agreed Wednesday to pay more than $77 million (euro53.5 million) to settle federal charges that it failed to watch over a hedge fund charged with fraud more than two years ago.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission settled the charges with MF Global, formerly known as Man Financial.

The government said the company did not adequately supervise accounts used by Philadelphia Alternative Asset Management Co., a hedge fund that regulators charged with fraud in summer 2005.

The CFTC, which pursued the case with the receiver in charge of the hedge fund's assets, said it settled the charges with both MF Global …

Pena figures out Cubs’

ST. LOUIS — A few days ago, Cubs pitcher Carlos Zambrano said he wanted changes made to his struggling team, refusing to specify. A day later, teammate Aramis Ramirez said he expected personnel changes.

And Sunday — after he survived the non-waiver trade deadline still in a Cubs uniform — Carlos Pena said the bigger changes needed were ''intangibles,'' including improved ''chemistry.''

''I'm talking about our culture, our way of being, our way of thinking, our energy,'' Pena said before the Cubs snapped a five-game losing streak with a 6-3 victory against the St. Louis Cardinals. ''It takes a little bit of time, but with . . . the talent we have, there's no doubt about it. …

Commonwealth success comes in many packages

At Commonwealth Packaging Co. in Harrisburg, packaging is not just the family business: it's an intergenerational affair.

Jay Maisel started the company 38 years ago in his basement. At that time, the housewares salesman decided it was time to venture out on his own.

In the company's humble early years, Maisel made ends meet by selling brown paper bags to "mom and pop" businesses. Later, the current chairman of the board managed to hire employees and moved up to more expensive matching packaging.

"The business didn't really start to take off until the mid 1970s," he explains. And take off it did. He moved the company to its current home at 5490 Linglestown Road in …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Signs good for Celtics' Allen to play in Game 6

The Celtics expect Ray Allen to play when they try for a second time to win the NBA championship. Kendrick Perkins? Now that's a different story.

Allen rushed from Staples Center after the Los Angeles Lakers' 103-98 win Sunday night that forced a sixth game Tuesday night in Boston. The reason: "health issues" involving one of his three children.

Perkins watched Game 5 from the bench with a shoulder injury. His availability for Game 6 will be a game-time decision.

As the Celtics waited at LA International Airport on Monday afternoon for their delayed flight to leave, team spokesman Jeff Twiss said he expected Allen to take a later airplane …

Garrido victim in prior case: 'Don't let him out'

A Nevada woman who was abducted and raped in 1976 by California kidnapping suspect Phillip Garrido says he deserves the death penalty.

Katherine Callaway Hall said in a telephone interview Thursday from New York City that federal and state prison terms Garrido served for attacking her in Reno only made him a smarter criminal.

She says, "Don't let …

Colleges Learn a Lesson in Economics // Competition Forces Many to Limit Tuition Hikes

WASHINGTON For parents of high school seniors waiting for thickenvelopes with college postmarks, first the bad news: A year at youroffspring's top choice still could set you back more than $25,000.

The good news, though, is that college tuition - which surged asmuch as 17 percent a year in the 1980s - isn't accelerating quite somuch these days. In fact, the rate of increase has been slowingsteadily since the early 1990s, to 6 percent in the last two years.

That's still more than twice the pace of consumer inflation,which averaged 2.5 percent last year. Even so, the decline in thepace of price increases hints at the efforts colleges are taking tosurvive in a …

Savannah River seals up 2 nuclear weapons reactors

AIKEN, S.C. (AP) — The U.S. Department of Energy has sealed off access to two reactors at a former nuclear weapons plant near the South Carolina-Georgia border.

Energy officials say the P and R reactors at the Savannah River Site were sealed off Wednesday with about 260,000 cubic yards of concrete grout.

The reactors have been shut down for more than …

2 convicted in Serbia for Croatia war crimes

Two ex-soldiers in Serbia have been found guilty of gunning down five elderly women and a man in a Croatian village during the 1991-95 Croatian war.

The war crimes court in Belgrade sentenced Pane Bulat and Rade Vranesevic on Monday to serve prison terms of 15 years and 12 years, respectively, for the 1992 crime.

Bulat and …

Give Todd the nod Only by giving Hundley a chance to play can the Cubs determine what he can do

DENVER There are some Cubs players who would like to hold a teammeeting with manager Don Baylor and make a simple suggestion.

Play Todd Hundley. Play Todd Hundley. Play Todd Hundley.

Maybe they could sing it to the tune of "99 Bottles of Beer on theWall." Because good ol' 99 in your program, who signed a four-year,$23 million contract with the Cubs in December, is wilting on thevine.

That is the great mystery being discussed in private talks amongCubs players. Why hasn't Hundley started in the last three gamesafter hitting home runs in his last two at-bats Saturday against thePittsburgh Pirates to lift the Cubs to a 4-3 victory?

Baylor has said it's …

Tenn. to free woman whose death term was commuted

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee is freeing a woman who once sat on the state's death row for hiring a man to kill her husband.

The state Board of Probation and Parole voted Wednesday to release 58-year-old Gaile Owens, whose death sentence was commuted last year by then Gov. Phil Bredesen.

Owens was convicted in 1986 of hiring a man to kill her husband, Ron. He was beaten to …

Hamelin wins 1,000 at World Cup short track

NAGOYA, Japan (AP) — Canada's Charles Hamelin won the men's 1,000 meters Sunday in a World Cup short-track speedskating event.

Hamelin won in 1 minute, 28.270, .095 seconds ahead of South Korea's Kwak Yoon-gy who was second followed by Canadian Michael Gilday.

In the women's competition, Li Jianrou led a Chinese sweep …

Letters sent to stop dog mess

Residents are sending out the message they are unhappy withmessy dog owners.

Two members of Hammersley Hayes Action Group in Cheadle, IanWhitehouse and Fred Statham, started yesterday to deliver 250letters and postcards to houses in their neighbourhood in a bid tocombat dog fouling.

The letters and postcards, which have been printed byStaffordshire Moorlands District Council (SMDC), are aimed atramming home the health dangers posed by dog mess, citing the tragiccase of two-year-old Aimee Langdon, in Manchester, who lost most ofthe sight in her left eye after coming into contact with caninefaeces in a gated play area near her home.

The literature also warns SMDC is to step up patrols ofenforcement officers on the estate

They have also unveiled an anti-dog fouling banner.

Pictured unveiling the banner on the Hammersley Hayes estateare, from left, local partnership officer Ruth Reeves, CouncillorGill Burton, district council portfolio holder for communities, MrStatham and Mr Whitehouse.

Picture by Shaun Smith

Cursed is the ground

Do we discourse of West Nile Virus Mad Cow Disease AIDS, the Ebola Virus Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Cancer As our predecessors talked of Bubonic Plague Smallpox, Malaria Tuberculosis and Polio As the Egyptians whispered of the seven plagues the death of firstborns and unnatural drownings As Noah's descendants of the flood and Adam's race of weeds and childbirth As Saint John of the great tribulation plagues of fire, smoke and sulphur the seven angels with the seven last plagues As God in his heaven of keeping us challenged lest we think ourselves as gods?

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Trial resumes for evangelist accused of sex crimes

Attorneys for an Arkansas evangelist accused of taking five young girls across state lines for sex are expected to begin presenting their defense this week.

The trial in federal court for 74-year-old Tony Alamo (uh-LAH'-moh) resumes Monday morning. It's not clear how many more witnesses prosecutors plan to present, but all the women Alamo is accused of raping or sexually assaulting have testified.

The evangelist has pleaded not guilty. His lawyers claim the government has targeted him because of his religious beliefs. If convicted, he could spend the rest of his life in prison.

A series of women have testified that Alamo "married" them while they were underage.

Northwestern pushing for more Black journalism students

Northwestern pushing for more Black journalism students

The dean of Northwestern University's journalism school just got back to Evanston from his fourth professional convention since he was appointed to the job in June.

"I think I'm the only dean in the country to attend every minority journalism convention this summer," said Loren Ghiglione, 60, a former newspaper editor and publisher, who said he is on a quest to increase minority enrollment at the Medill School of Journalism, one of the nation's top two or three training schools for aspiring reporters and editors.

"At the National Association of Black Journalists meeting in Orlando, I talked with people about possible openings here as potential faculty members and potential students," he said.

Ghiglione said it's his goal to increase minority enrollment on Northwestern's picture postcard lakeside campus, where nearly every graduate journalism student receives financial aid.

"High school students should know that we are trying to encourage more students of color to come to Northwestern," said the former head of the diversity center of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.

Northwestern's undergraduates are admitted on the basis of traditional standards and criteria, such as test scores and high school grade point averages, but in his effort to recruit African American students, Ghiglione said he wants to start emphasizing writing ability and reporting skills to evaluate candidates.

This fall, 24 percent of Medill's 163 undergrads are minority students, 11 of whom are Black. Last year, 23 percent were minority, including eight Blacks. In 1999, 29 percent were minority, with 14 Black students, and in 1998, it was 25 percent minority, 12 Black.

Journalism educators want to see more Blacks reporting on life and issues in minority communities, but the experience of newspapers and broadcast stations shows it's been a serious problem keeping them on the job.

"Many Black journalists are hired, but at some point in their careers, they opt for public relations jobs where they can earn more income because as you get older in journalism not everyone can be a boss," Ghiglione said.

That's not such big news, but there is an ominous factor behind many departures by Blacks from journalism.

"I don't know whether they feel opportunities are as available to them as they are to white reporters, whether it's conscious discrimination or not," he said.

"Certainly, people feel more comfortable with folks who look like them. Everywhere in society, including in newsrooms, discrimination is not necessarily conscious," he said, although its existence can be found almost everywhere.

He described the possibility of unconscious discrimination as "a question of separation or social segregation," but, he said, journalists are less culpable than most people.

"I think journalism is better than many fields in this respect. It has to explain (segregation) as well as serve a larger community," he said.

"If you talk to the Chicago Defender as well as to the Chicago Tribune, African American reporters, they will tell you there are issues (of segregation) in every institution in our society, newsrooms not excluded," he said.

In no way suggesting that minority students should look elsewhere to remedy the discrimination problem, he said human beings are fallible and at best, they can try to be "reflective" about the issue.

"Journalists, as much as I love them, are not members of a priesthood. Priests have been known to have problems, too," he said.

Ghiglione headed a company that owned a chain of New England newspapers and said the problem of profitability of a news organizations is a complex issue. He cited high earnings of news executives such as the Tribune Co.'s chairman's $6 million paycheck last year as fair in a business where shareholder value is as important as share values in any business.

"I'm not prepared to editorialize about amounts paid" to news company executives such as Gannett Co.'s chairman's $9 million in pay last year, he said.

"There has always been a need for news organizations to make a profit. Those that don't don't survive," he said, adding that young people who aspire to become reporters can make a good living, although without spectacular earnings.

"I think reporters at metropolitan newspapers are able to lead good lives and send their children to college. These things are all relative," he said.

Charges that standards are declining as TV and newspaper journalism becomes more entertaining don't bother Ghiglione.

"There has always been a lot of the low culture element in journalism. I used to refuse to print an astrology column because it's like professional wrestling," he said.

"But I know it's in the Tribune and it's there to lure people to read entertaining things as well as the serious stuff," he said.

While the very nature of journalism is changing as a result of broadcast media and changes in retailing, people will always have a need "to connect" through news vehicles serving their communities, he said.

"The metropolitan dailies used to not report anything about people of color except crimes, entertainment and sports," he said, but that's changed.

"I always like to see more voices because that's valuable to ethnic and racial groups," he said.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Strauss: England batsmen still bad vs. spinners

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Captain Andrew Strauss admits England has yet to overcome its weakness of batting in subcontinent-like conditions after Pakistan spinners rolled his side for just 72 in the second test on Saturday.

The incredible 72-run victory inside four days won Pakistan the series with a test to spare. Pakistan won the first test by 10 wickets with two days to spare at Dubai last week.

Both teams travel back to Dubai for the last match, starting on Friday.

England has flopped on the spinner-friendly pitches in the Gulf, and hasn't won a test series in either India, Pakistan or Sri Lanka in a decade.

"I said at the start of this tour this is the final frontier in a lot of ways — the subcontinent," Strauss said.

"But, I think the fact we got rolled over twice in Dubai meant that there was some baggage there going into this final innings."

Pakistan spinners have exposed the top-ranked team's ability to bat on turning pitches: Kevin Pietersen, Eoin Morgan and Ian Bell have put up four below-par batting performances in the two tests.

"Test cricket is hard and it exposes vulnerabilities or weaknesses that you have," Strauss said. "The good thing is you can overcome those ... but we weren't able to do it in this game."

England bowlers gave hope to Strauss' batting unit when left-arm spinner Monty Panesar claimed six wickets and bowled out Pakistan for 214 after lunch.

That meant England required 145 to win with more than four sessions left.

But England's run-chase folded half an hour before stumps on the fourth day in only 36.1 overs with only Strauss (32) and Matt Prior (18) reaching double figures.

Instead of showing some aggression against spinners, England was caught by surprise when offspinner Mohammad Hafeez bowled with the new ball.

"I suppose it's easy to get caught between two schools, whether to be patient and wait for scoring opportunities to appear or to take the bull by the horns," Strauss said.

"We just didn't play well enough, individually and collectively. Individually we haven't been clear enough with our game plans against the spin.

"We've allowed pressure to build, and each time a wicket falls it makes it harder for the guy coming in.

"As a batting unit we have to hold our hands up and say 'we haven't been good enough.' It's been pretty apparent, it's clear, no excuses, we need to be better than that.

"There will be regrets because these are the games that hurt the most."

Strauss applauded Pakistan, which ranks 5th in test cricket, and has a chance to record its first clean sweep against England.

"Pakistan thoroughly deserved their victory ... we've been below where we want to be and we need to come back and bounce back strongly from this.

"I thought in both games they've played really well, they've been a good, close-knit unit and they've got some very good spin bowlers and ultimately they played better cricket than we did."

¿Tiene Razón Bush?

Independientemente de lo que piensen los cr�ticos en el pa�s y en el extranjero, el "incremento" que el presidente Bush est� planeando para Iraq es m�s que un aumento de las tropas en una nueva estrategia regional de alto riesgo. Es cierto que el plan de Bush resultar� insuficiente y llegar� demasiado tarde para estabilizar Iraq. Pero le ofrece a Estados Unidos algunos beneficios de largo plazo en la batalla regional con Ir�n pof obtener influencia.

En el centro de la nueva estrategia de Bush est� la decisi�n de conducir la lucha directamente hacia la milicia m�s poderosa de Iraq, el ej�rcito Mahdi. Bajo el control nominal del cl�rigo militante Moqtada al-Sadr, el grupo se ha convertido en la fuerza de combate m�s grande y mejor armada de Iraq y tiene su propia agenda pol�tica y de seguridad.

El ej�rcito Mahdi ya ha intercambiado fuego con las tropas estadounidenses, particularmente durante las duras batallas por el control de las ciudades meridionales de Iraq de Najaf y Karbala en 2004. Esas confrontaciones terminaron con una especie de tregua -aunque han continuado las escaramuzas-porque las fuerzas estadounidenses se muestran reacias a luchar contra los insurgentes sunitas y los milicianos chi�tas al mismo tiempo.

El Primer Ministro iraqu�, Nouri al-Maliki, tambi�n ha estado renuente a atacar al ej�rcito Mahdi, principalmente porque el apoyo de los parlamentarios leales a Sadr es crucial para su supervivencia pol�tica. Ahora, en lugar de esperar a que Maliki act�e, las fuerzas estadounidenses parecen estar listas a hacer el trabajo por s� mismas.

Si logran reducir significativamente la fuerza de la milicia, o al menos limitar su influencia a los barrios bajos de Bagdad, el gobierno iraqu� tendr� una oportunidad algo mejor de desarrollar una fuerza de seguridad cre�ble y Bush podr� proclamar cierto �xito. Como m�nimo, la nueva estrategia reconoce que el desaf�o m�s grave para la estabilidad a corto plazo proviene de las milicias en general y del ej�rcito Mahdi en particular.

Por otra parte, est� tambi�n el conflicto m�s amplio y creciente con Ir�n. La ret�rica oficial reciente de los Estados Unidos y sus acciones en el terreno incluyendo el arresto de cinco iran�es en Irbil a principios de enero y la autorizaci�n dada por Bush para utilizar fuerza letal contra los iran�es que amenacen la seguridad de Iraq o a las tropas estadounidenses-refleja un enfoque mucho m�s proyocador hacia la influencia de Ir�n al interior de Iraq. Pero tambi�n indica el reconocimiento de que los esfuerzos de Ir�n por ampliar su influeneia regional plantean el mayor desaf�o a la estabilidad de largo plazo del Medio Oriente.

Ciertamente, es muy poco probable que la nueva estrategia de Bush ayude a evitar, que los iraqu�es caigan en una guerra civil sectaria. Un incremento temporal de 16% de las tropas sencillamente no es suficiente para lograr ese objetivo. Bush insiste que pronto habr� suficientes tropas en el centro de Iraq para "conservar" las zonas arrebatadas a las milicias y los insurgentes. Pero, �por cu�nto tiempo? �Un meses? ^Cuatro meses? �Tres a�s? Las tropas estadounidenses saldr�n en alg�n momento, y todas las partes relevantes -el gobierno de Maliki, las milicias chi�tas, los insurgentes sunitas. Ir�n y los vecinos sunitas de Iraq-lo saben. S�dr sencillamente puede retroceder y esperar a que los estadounidenses se vayan.

Adem�s, cualquier soluci�n viable en Iraq requiere de un acuerdo pol�tico entre los iraqu�es, que a su vez depender� de la voluntad que tengan para negociar. Se deben redactar leyes que garanticen un reparto justo de los ingresos petroleros de Iraq, y todas las facciones deben confiar en que lo que se acuerde se aplicar�,. Es necesario convencer a los sunitas de que ni su condici�n minoritaria ni su antigua participaci�n en el partido Ba'ath de Saddam Hussein los excluir�n de la vida pol�tica y econ�mica.

Pero ahora los sunitas y los chi�tas se est�n matando entre s� en cantidades cada vez mayores y la nueva agresividad de las fuerzas estadounidenses har� que los acuerdos sean casi imposables. No es realista esperar que los pol�ticos iraqu�es hagan sacrificios sustanciales mientras sus electores luchan contra los estadounidenses y entre s�.

Por �ltimo, la estrategia de Bush ya encara retos en casa. Pocos estadounidenses -y por lo tanto pocos legisladores estadounidenses-tienen mueha confianza en el liderazgo de Bush en cuanto a Iraq. Si la nueva estrategia no produce resultados positivos y tangibles en unos cuantqs meses, el continuo redoblar de los tambores que piden el retiro de las tropas ser� ensordecedor. Un aumento brusco de las bajas estadounidenses reforzar�a la presi�n para salir.

Con todo, la nueva estrategia tiene algunos beneficios. En primer lugar hace a un lado a Maliki, lo que significa que �ste saldr� menos da�ado pol�ticamente que si se le identificara directamente con los ataques estadounidenses contra los chi�tas iraqu�es. Las acciones estadounidenses provocar�n criticas en el sentido de que Maliki es impotente o un t�tere de los Estado Unidos, pero esas acusaciones ya se han hecho. Nada podr�a ser peor para Maliki que autorizar expl�citamente los ataques contra las milicias chi�tas, y la supervivencia a corto plazo de su gobierno es fundamental para que se logren avances en los desaf�os pol�ticos a que se enfrentan todas las facciones iraqu�es.

En segundo lugar, la nueva estrategia mantendr� en retirada al ej�rcito Mahdi.

La milicia de Sadr amenaza con convertirse r�pidamente en el equivalente de Jezbol� en Iraq: un ej�rcito privado bien armado, con v�nculos pol�ticos y una pol�tica exterior propia. Mientras m�s puedan desgastar las fuerzas estadounidenses la posici�n del ej�rcito Mahdi y obligar a Sadr a dar pasos pol�ticos para mantener su prestigio, m�s d�bil ser� la milicia en relaci�n con otras fuerzas en Iraq despu�s de que las tropas de los Estados Unidos regresen a casa.

Por �ltimo, dar la pelea directamente contra la milicia chi�ta m�s poderosa de Iraq y los iran�es que est�n en el pa�s alinear� mucho m�s a los Estados Unidos con sus aliados �rabes sunitas tradicionales -Arabia Saudita, Egipto, Jordania y los Estados del Golfo. Los gobiernos �rabes han estado particularmente irritados por el caos que impera en Iraq, temen que los Estados Unidos abandonen a la minor�a sunita a la merced no tan generosa de los chi�tas vengativos y expresan una preocupaci�n creciente de, que la guerra ha permitido que Ir�n extienda la influencia chi�ta por todo el Medio Oriente.

Cuando Iraq se venga abajo, como parece inevitable ahora, los Estados Unidos necesitar�n a todos los amigos que puedan conseguir en la regi�n, sobre todo a medida que se intensifiquen la batalla con Ir�n por la influencia regional y el conflicto por su programa nuclear. A falta de otra cosa, tener un enemigo com�n ayudar� a los Estados Unidos y sus aliados �rabes a restablecer los nexos da�ados.

[Author Affiliation]

Jan Bremmer es Presidente del Eurasia Group, una consultar�a de an�lisis de riesgos pol�ticos, y autor de The J Curve: A New Way to Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall.

Crede's Sac Fly Leads ChiSox Past Rays

CHICAGO - Joe Crede's sacrifice fly with the bases loaded in the ninth inning lifted Chicago to a 5-4 win over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays on Friday night, the White Sox fourth win in five games.

Tampa Bay's Chad Orvella (0-2) pitched a scoreless eighth but left after walking Tadahito Iguchi and Jim Thome to start the ninth. Brian Stokes came in and struck out Jermaine Dye, but A.J. Pierzynski singled to right to load the bases.

Crede then drove in Iguchi with a fly to left on the first pitch, giving the White Sox their eighth win in their final at-bat this season.

It also made a winner of Bobby Jenks (2-1), who pitched a perfect ninth, and sent Tampa Bay to its sixth loss in seven games.

Luis Terrero gave Chicago a 3-1 lead in the fourth with a long homer to left, and Tadahito Iguchi added an RBI single in the sixth. But it crumbled in the seventh, when Tampa Bay's Elijah Dukes hit a three-run homer off Mark Buehrle.

Jorge Cantu led off with a single and Buehrle hit Brendan Harris with two out. That drew a warning from plate umpire Jim Reynolds and a visit from manager Ozzie Guillen. It also set the stage for Dukes, who missed two games amid allegations by his estranged wife that he threatened to kill her and their two young children.

Dukes tied it at 4 when he sent a 1-0 pitch out to left for his ninth homer.

Buehrle retired the next batter, B.J. Upton, on a grounder, but got a no-decision in his fifth attempt at his 100th victory. He allowed four runs and eight hits while walking one and striking out four in his first start since he criticized Pierzynski for showing disrespect to backup catcher Toby Hall.

That stemmed from Pierzynski telling a radio host he was disappointed he wasn't in the lineup for the series opener last Friday against the crosstown rival Cubs, which spurred a profane on-air tirade by manager Ozzie Guillen.

Buehrle was in line for the win after Terrero sent a shot that fell just a few rows shy of the left-field concourse, an estimated 442 feet away, for his second homer.

Terrero scored from second after being hit by a pitch in the seventh, when Iguchi broke an 0-for-21 skid with a single to center off Devil Rays starter James Shields.

Shields allowed 10 hits, walked three and struck out two while hitting two batters and throwing two wild pitches.

The Devil Rays wasted an opportunity in the eighth, when Carl Crawford committed his second baserunning blunder of the game.

He led off with a single - his third hit - off pitcher Mike MacDougal's glove. But after MacDougal intentionally walked Delmon Young with one out, Matt Thornton came in and caught Crawford trying to steal third before striking out pinch hitter Greg Norton. Crawford was caught in an inning-ending rundown trying to score in the fourth.

Dukes made a mistake in the third, when he stayed in the box rather than run out a dribbler in front of the plate, but he made up for it later.

Manager Joe Maddon said he lost sleep over the decision but put Dukes back into the lineup because "I felt it was time to move things along."

Dye and Darin Erstad had two hits apiece for Chicago and extended their streaks to 12 and 11 games, respectively. Pierzynski and Crede also had two hits.

Notes:@ Erstad started at first base for Paul Konerko, who had a death in the family. Guillen expects Konerko to play Saturday. ... Crede started after missing three games with a sore back. ... The Devil Rays hope to activate 3B Akinori Iwamura (right oblique strain) from the 15-day disabled list in time for Monday's game against Detroit.

Dutch Football Results

Results from the 16th round of the Eredivisie, the Dutch first-division football league (home teams listed first):

Friday's Game

AZ Alkmaar 2, FC Utrecht 0

Saturday, Dec. 20

Roda JC 2, FC Groningen 5

NAC Breda 2, Vitesse Arnhem 0

Sparta Rotterdam 4, SC Heerenveen 1

Sunday, Dec. 22

NEC Nijmegen 0, ADO The Hague 0

De Graafschap 0, Ajax 6

PSV Eindhoven 1, Feyenoord 0

FC Volendam 3, Heracles Almelo 1

FC Twente 2, Willem II 0

Friday, Dec. 26

Feyenoord vs. NAC Breda

Saturday, Dec. 27

Vitesse Arnhem vs. FC Volendam

Willem II vs. Sparta Rotterdam

Heracles Almelo vs. De Graafschap

PSV Eindhoven vs. FC Twente

Sunday, Dec. 28

FC Utrecht vs. Roda JC

AZ Alkmaar vs. NEC Nijmegen

Ajax vs. ADO The Hague

FC Groningen vs. SC Heerenveen

Multifest schedule

TODAY

* 6 p.m.

Opening Ceremony

Multi-denominational Prayer

130th Air Wing WV Air

National Color Guard

National Anthem performed

by Angie Richardson

* 6:30 p.m.

The Voodoo Cats

* 8 p.m.

SHOWCASE

Pendulum, Ty-G, Kawanna,

The Shizzles, Washington Fly

Girls, Charleston's Finest

Girls, Flava, Little Page Crew,

Little Page Posse, Jo'Nes

* 9:30 p.m.

The BEAT 98.7, Charter Communications, Black EntertainmentTelevision (BET) presents national

recording artists:

Prophet Jones, Coo Coo Cal, IMx, Cappadonna

SATURDAY

Verizon presents an afternoon of cultural entertainment:

* 1 p.m.

Percussion demonstration

by Mark Davis

* 1:30 p.m.

Montaneros-Venezuelan Ilanero

from Elkins, WV

* 2:30 p.m.

Central Standard Time - Latin jazz from Charleston, WV

* 3:30 p.m.

Orquesta Son - Latin salsa

from Bloomington, IN

* 5 p.m.

Baaqi - reggae from Detroit, MI

* 5:45 p.m.

Jeannie's Genies -

Cabaret-style belly dance

troupe from Charleston

The Sulukule Travelers -

Eastern Indian Dancers

Bear Tails Native American show

* 8 p.m.

Presentation of Multifest Board of Directors and the

Franca T. Martin Award

* 9 p.m.

Columbia Gas Transmission and American Electric Power presentsnational recording artist:

Midnight Star

* 10:30 p.m.

Multifest presents national recording artist:

Montell Jordan

DANIELSON: BEST OF GLOUCESTER COUNTY

DANIELSON: BEST OF GLOUCESTER COUNTY

Daniel Smith, devout Christian and art school ist, has made records with a rotating lineup of his family and friends since 1995 under the monikers Danielson Famlle, Brother Danielson and Danielson, among others. Best of Gloucester County, Smith's first album In five years, is also the first that he has released on his own label, Sounds Familyre Records. His current lineup retains his wife, EIIn, his sisters Megan and Rachel, and longtime collaborator Sufjan Stevens, and ushers In a few newcomers as well. Danielson's lyrics speak of faith and devotion but these are woven in subtly and metaphorically, so that a listener may hear several songs without catching on to it.

The music bends conventions and obeys Smith's idiosyncratic whims, although the experimental departures feel more restrained here than on previous records. Likewise, you'll hear Daniel Smith's voice slide into childlike squeals but to a lesser extent than before. But as is the norm for Danielson, a joyful, celebratory tone strings the songs together.

"This Day is a Loaf" features punctuating chords, a glockenspiel underlying the chorus and a bread metaphor: "This day is a loaf / Of fresh baking bread / Start with the crust / You got big things/ Right, right on ahead."

"But I Don't Wanna Sing About Guitars" follows a loud-quietloud dynamic with emphatic bursts of cymbal crashes spaced out by a sharp rhythm over a background of meandering electric guitar effects.

"Hovering Above That Hill" is a meditative mess of jingling, rattling and incomprehensible wailing melted together.

The safer, more controlled approach makes for less groundbreaking unpredictability than previous releases such as Tell Another Joke at the 01' Choppin' Block, but existing fans of Danielson will feel right at home, and newcomers may want to choose this album as a mild place to test the water.

- Eric Austin

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

VMI stuns Kentucky, 111-103

It was Gardner-Webb all over again for Kentucky, only this one may even have been worse.

Virginia Military Institute handed the Wildcats an early-season stunner for the second straight year with a 111-103 victory Friday night at Rupp Arena.

The upset came just over a year after Gardner-Webb's 84-68 victory over the Wildcats in Billy Gillispie's second game as coach. The sequel came in Kentucky's season opener in year two.

The Kewdets hadn't beaten a program from a major conference since knocking off Virginia Tech 72-66 on Dec. 4, 2004.

It looked like a blowout early, as VMI led by as many as 26 points. But Kentucky used a furious comeback to take the lead with five minutes left before giving it back up.

Satellite radio beaming down soon to a car near you

Five dedicated satellites are floating in space and ready foraction, as Sirius and XM, two rival satellite radio providers,prepare for their nationwide roll-outs.

Sirius, which began broadcasting in four test markets in February,plans to be broadcasting from coast to coast by August. XM expectsits national roll-out to be completed by November.

XM has been broadcasting in several Southwestern markets since thefall, offering 100 channels of music, talk, sports and news, many ofwhich are commercial-free. Stations that are not commercial free willbe limited to about 6 minutes of advertising per hour, as opposed to16 to 20 minutes on commercial FM stations.

All of Sirius' 100 channels are commercial-free, but the monthlysubscription cost is slightly higher: $12.95, as compared with $9.95for XM. Both services require a special receiver in the car plus atrunk-mounted antenna. Cost of the equipment ranges from about $200-$300 for a basic set-up to $2,000 for systems that also include DVDplayers. Installation costs are extra. XM and Sirius receivers arenot interchangeable, so audiophiles who are planning to retrofitshould do some homework ahead of time.

GM rolled out factory-installed Delphi-Delco XM radios in CadillacDeVille and Seville models last November and plans to expand to 21additional GM models this year. Saab, Honda, Isuzu and Acura alsohave signed deals with XM, while BMW, Chrysler, Mercedes-Benz, Jeep,Mazda, Dodge, Ford, Lincoln, Volvo, Jaguar and Porsche are offeringSirius option packages.

Most of the satellite radio receivers are confined to use withinautomobiles. However, Sony has developed a "plug and play" receiverfor XM that also can be used in the house. The receiver plugs intothe car's cigarette lighter and has a cassette adapter for divertingsound through the car's speakers. An AC adapter will allow listenersto plug the device into a wall outlet. A magnetic antenna is easy tomove and install. Jensen has announced plans to introduce a Sirius-enabled "boom box" radio later this year. The boom box (pricing notyet announced) will incorporate the Sirius chip set, an antenna, AM-FM tuner and CD section that will also play MP3 files, CD-Rs andconventional discs.

While both companies broadcast digital signals from remotesatellites, the satellites work differently. XM utilizes two Boeingsatellites, "Rock" and "Roll" in geostationary orbit over the Eastand West coasts, while Sirius has three satellites that orbit thenation in a figure eight pattern. Sirius claims the orbitalsatellites maintain better signal elevation angles for maximum lineof sight from the satellites to the receivers. Because satelliteradio operates off digital signals, there's no static, and listenerscan expect uninterrupted service with enhanced sound quality fromcoast to coast. Closely packed tall buildings in urban areas canblock the signal, so both companies have installed "repeaters"(antennas that can be used to rebroadcast the signal) to eliminatethe possibility of reception problems.

Is satellite radio worth the investment? That depends on how muchtime a person spends in his or her car, and, to some extent, wherethe person drives. People who travel a lot for business will enjoysatellite radio's uninterrupted broadcast clarity, especially inremote areas. In addition to offering commercial-free programming,satellite providers can also provide a depth of content not found innetwork radio.

"We have the advantage of economy of numbers," said Siriusspokesman Matthew Meyer. "The audience for certain types of music,say jazz fusion, is relatively narrow, even in a large urban area.Since satellite radio draws listeners from the entire country, we canattract enough listeners to offer this type of specializedprogramming."

Sirius has seven commercial-free jazz and standards stations,including classic jazz, swing, Latin, standards and contemporary.XM's offering includes NASCAR radio, XMU (college radio), Rhyme(classic hip hop), and X Country (alternative country).

For additional information on satellite radio, includingprogramming and availability, log onto www.xmradio.com orwww.siriusradio.com.

Nina Padgett-Russin is a certified mechanic and Phoenix-based autowriter. If you have a service question for Nina, write to her c/oChicago Sun-Times, Fourth Floor, 401 N. Wabash, Chicago 60611. Pleaseenclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

Groundhog doesn't see shadow, so spring may be early

DAILY MAIL STAFF

West Virginia's own furry little weatherman, French Creek Freddie,did not see his shadow this morning, meaning an early spring.

State Division of Natural Resources biologist Rob Silvester helpednudge Freddie out of his Upshur County burrow about 10 a.m. today.

No shadow was apparent, likely because of an overcast sky.

Silvester said groundhogs are usually in hibernation this time ofyear, but the groundhogs at the Wildlife Center at French Creekfailed to take their prolonged nap this winter.

Silvester attributed their lack of sleep to weather that was moremild than normal and the amount of food they are supplied with year-round.

Freddie, along with the rest of the groundhogs, would normally bewaking up sometime within the next few weeks.

The Wildlife Center officials have been carrying on this traditionwith Freddie since 1978.

Silvester said Freddie almost always agrees with the more famousPunxsutawney Phil from Pennsylvania, but officials at French Creekallow more time for the sun to come out if it is going to do so.

"Ours is more realistic," Silvester said, adding that Phil issometimes pulled from his burrow before the sun is even up.

One local weather forecaster with more formal experience disagreedwith Freddie's prediction for an early spring.

Eric Seymour, a meteorologist at Charleston's Weather Service,said the outlook for the eight to 14-day forecast is showing below-normal temperatures. Past mid-February, Seymour said, it would behard for meteorologists to give an accurate prediction.

Contact writer Samantha L. Thomas at samantha@dailymail. com or348-4819.

Summer Solstice Celebrated at Stonehenge

STONEHENGE, England - Thousands of modern-day druids, pagans and partygoers converged on Stonehenge early Thursday to cheer the dawn of the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere - the summer solstice.

Clad in antlers, black cloaks and oak leaves, a group gathered at the Heel stone - a twisted, pockmarked pillar at the edge of the prehistoric monument - to welcome the rising sun as revelers danced and yelled.

Jeanette Montesano, a 23-year-old recently graduated religion student from New York and a self-described pagan, said she had been saving for a year to make it to Stonehenge, comparing the importance of the trip to the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca.

"It's not the hajj, but it is 19,000 people in a little circle. I wanted to experience something like that."

An estimated 20,000 people gathered at the stone circle in Wiltshire, in southwestern England. Dancers writhed to the sound of drums and whistles as floodlights colored the ancient pillars shades of pink and purple, and couples snuggled under plastic sheets.

Solstice celebrations were a highlight of the pre-Christian calendar. People in many countries still celebrate with bonfires, maypole dances and courtship rituals.

In more recent years, New Age groups and others have turned to Stonehenge to celebrate the solstice, and the World Heritage Site has become a magnet for those seeking a spiritual experience - or just wanting to have a good time.

But the celebrations also can attract their share of troublemakers. Police closed the site in 1984 after repeated clashes with revelers. English Heritage, the monument's caretaker, began allowing full access to the site again in 2000.

Police were deployed early Thursday to keep the hedonists from getting out of hand, and to prevent revelers from climbing the stones.

Solstice celebrations also take place in other countries, although most are deferred until the last weekend in June. Swedes will gather to sip spiced schnapps, Danes will light bonfires, and Balts and Finns will flock to the countryside to dance, sing and make merry under the midnight sun.

Stonehenge, on the Salisbury Plain 80 miles southwest of London, was built between 3,000 B.C. and 1,600 B.C., although its purpose remains a mystery. Some experts say its builders aligned the stones with the sun as part of their sun-worshipping culture.

It is one of 20 monuments competing to be named one of the new seven wonders of the world in a massive online poll.

---

Associated Press writers Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, Louise Nordstrom in Stockholm, Sweden, Gary Peach in Riga, Latvia, and Matti Huuhtanen in Helsinki, Finland contributed to this report.

---

On the Net:

Stonehenge: http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/server/show/nav.876

Harrah's setting off on 'Star Trek' slot voyage

The announcement earlier this month that Harrah's Entertainment and WMS Gaming had entered into an agreement to bring the new "Star Trek" video gaming experience to the casino giant's properties nationwide comes as exciting news for Chicago area slot enthusiasts.

It means guests at both Horseshoe Casino Hammond and Harrah's Joliet Casino & Hotel will have the opportunity in the near future to boldly go where no slot players have gone before.

WMS is using the iconic themes from "Star Trek" as the launch pad for Adaptive Gaming, an exclusive technology that allows players to save their progress and pick up where they left off on their next casino visit.

The power of customizing "Star Trek" with Total Rewards, the system-wide Harrah's players-club program, will enhance the appeal of the game, according to Tim Stanley, chief information officer and senior vice president of innovation, gaming and technology for Harrah's Entertainment.

"By using Total Rewards to enable their personalized Star Trek account and 'avatar,' they can transport their previous play status from non-Harrah's-based 'Star Trek' games, earn 'bonus' achievement medals for their Harrah's play, and get access to new games, unique communications and special promotions and offers as part of our innovative introduction of this new capability," Stanley said.

"Star Trek" slots are scheduled to be introduced at Harrah's-owned casinos in Las Vegas this month, followed by market-by-market implementation across the country.

Elevating slot play to an experience that creates a story line to which players can return is revolutionary. In essence, the dynamic combines gambling with the entertainment of conventional in-home video gaming.

Through the server-enabled, networked gaming platform capabilities of Adaptive Gaming, players can resume play on another machine at another casino, even in another state, by entering a PIN. A ticket with a code is printed, which then can be inserted in another unit's currency acceptor for the next playing session.

The episodic story line of "Star Trek" is the perfect theme for the technology. Players earn medals during the different bonus rounds they encounter. The medals enable players, once they reach certain thresholds, to unlock future episodes.

The games feature WMS Gaming's patented Sensory Immersion experience, a blend of real-time 3D graphics and the Bose 3Space audio system. WMS rolled out "Star Trek" with three fully developed episodes of the show incorporated into the play components.

John Brokopp is a local free-lance writer.

CASINO NEWS & NOTES

Potawatomi Bingo Casino in Milwaukee is hosting its 15th annual Miracle on Canal Street awards ceremony at 7 tonight in the Nest of Life Bingo Hall. Since its inception in 1994, Miracle on Canal Street has raised more than $7 million for children's charities in the Milwaukee area. Money for the program is raised through special Miracle bingo games as well as a number of unique events and promotions. In 2007, more than $1 million was raised through the program, with upwards of $50,000 going to each of the participating charities.

The P.M. in a smokescreen

Prime Minister Jim Hacker was a non-smoker, so he tended to agree with his Minister of State for Health, Dr. Peter Thorn, that the U.K. government should take drastic legislative steps against the tobacco industry. His proposals included a ban on cigarette advertising, a ban on smoking in public places, and a massive advertising campaign to publicize the harmful effects of smoking. Tobacco consumption, however, brought in over �4 billion annually in tax revenue to the Treasury, so government officials-including Cabinet Secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby - were not in favour of such a crackdown, as the following extract from Hacker's diary makes clear.

MAY 11 - After Dr. Thorn informed me last week that 300 British citizens die every day - 100,000 a year-from the effects of smoking, I encouraged him to go public with his attacks on the tobacco industry and his anti-smoking recommendations.

Humphrey came in to see me this morning. He seemed very tense. He had heard Dr. Thorn on the BBC saying that he thought the government should take strong action to curb and eventually eliminate smoking.

"And how does he expect us to achieve this?" he asked derisively. "A campaign of mass hypnosis, perhaps?"

I leaned back in my chair and smiled confidently at him.

"No. By raising taxes on tobacco sky high and prohibiting all cigarette advertising. Don't you think that his position is admirably moral?"

He was as superior as only Humphrey could be. "Moral, perhaps, but extremely silly. No one in their right mind could seriously contemplate such a proposal."

"I'm contemplating it," I said.

"Yes, of course," he replied without a moment's hesitation, the patronizing smile wiped instantly from his face. "Don't misunderstand me, Prime Minister; of course it's right to contemplate all proposals that come from your government, but no sane person could ever support it."

"I'm supporting it," I said.

"And quite right, too, Prime Minister, if I may say so." His footwork is so fast that one might be forgiven for not noticing that he totally reversed his opinion with each sentence he uttered.

I gave him the chance to come over to my side. "So you'll support it, too?" I asked.

"Support it?" he was emphatic. "I support it wholeheartedly! A splendid, novel, romantic, wellmeaning, imaginative, do-gooding notion."

As I thought. He is totally against it!

-From The Complete Yes Prime Minister, BBC, edited by Jonathan Lynn and Antony Jay.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Naperville North nets Du Page Valley title

Naperville North snapped Glenbard East's streak of sevenconsecutive Du Page Valley Conference titles in boys' gymnasticsFriday night, but its gymnasts were left with a feeling of falseaccomplishment.

That's exactly how coach Brad Foerch prefers it. The hostHuskies counted several errors to score 146 points to beat NapervilleCentral (135.9), Wheaton North (132.95), Glenbard East (130.7) andGlenbard North (119.9).

"We were ready to win, we've been second the last three years,"Foerch said. "I've looked past this meet for so long because wecouldn't win it with Glenbard East around and prepared for state. Wewere out here going for a 150 score, and we counted a 5.4 …

SAfrica: Joy, sadness as Mandela's party turns 100

BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa (AP) — Tens of thousands of chanting and dancing revelers waved the green and gold colors of the African National Congress as Africa's oldest liberation movement celebrated its 100th anniversary Sunday, though many South Africans say the party hasn't delivered on its promises since taking power in 1994.

A dozen African leaders and more former heads of state along with African kings and chieftains attended a midnight ceremony where President Jacob Zuma lit a flame, expected to stay alight the entire year, at the red brick, tin-roofed Wesleyan church where black intellectuals and activists founded the party in 1912.

Absent because of his frailty was …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

ROCKIES ABSORB ANOTHER FISHY LOSS COLORADO HITS NEW LOW AS FLORIDA COMPLETES SWEEP WITH 2-1 WIN.(Sports)

Byline: Tracy Ringolsby News Staff Writer

MIAMI -- The expectations for the Colorado Rockies were great.

The results, however, haven't been.

A season that began with visions of a pennant has turned into a question of personal pride.

A team that expected to battle for the National League West championship finds is at the bottom of the NL West standings.

The Rockies face the challenge of trying to hold off Florida and Montreal, teams whose combined payrolls are about half the Rockies' $58.5 million, to avoid the humiliation of finishing with the worst record in the league.

As far as trying to catch the NL West-leading Arizona Diamondbacks . . . …

ROCKIES ABSORB ANOTHER FISHY LOSS COLORADO HITS NEW LOW AS FLORIDA COMPLETES SWEEP WITH 2-1 WIN.(Sports)

Byline: Tracy Ringolsby News Staff Writer

MIAMI -- The expectations for the Colorado Rockies were great.

The results, however, haven't been.

A season that began with visions of a pennant has turned into a question of personal pride.

A team that expected to battle for the National League West championship finds is at the bottom of the NL West standings.

The Rockies face the challenge of trying to hold off Florida and Montreal, teams whose combined payrolls are about half the Rockies' $58.5 million, to avoid the humiliation of finishing with the worst record in the league.

As far as trying to catch the NL West-leading Arizona Diamondbacks . . . …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Group hopes to start creative-reuse center in Lancaster

LANCASTER COUNTY

A midstate nonprofit is working to begin a place that provides a constructive use for the area's cast-off materials.

The effort to begin Lancaster Creative Reuse is being led by Andrea Stoner Leaman, a Lancaster County native who is earning her master's degree in social work at Temple University.

Creative-reuse centers - about 60 exist nationwide - collect items such as factory seconds, wallpaper samples, discarded decorations from events and surplus supplies, then sell or give away the items.

"The general idea is for a store that builds on the exploding interest in crafting and reuse, as well as Lancaster County's thriftiness and thriving art …

Lufthansa Cargo showcases MD-11 freighter in celebration of 100 years of air cargo flight in Germany.

AIRLINE INDUSTRY INFORMATION-(C)1997-2011 M2 COMMUNICATIONS

Lufthansa Cargo on Thursday showcased is MD-11 freighter in centenary livery to celebrate 100 years of air cargo flight in Germany.

Celebrations mark that on 19 August 1911, a single-engined Harlan took off from a grass strip in Berlin-Johannisthal carrying just cargo. On board that initial cargo flight bound for Frankfurt on the Oder …

JUDGE REJECTS SUIT OVER CIVIC CENTER ALBANY RESIDENTS SEEK TO BLOCK PROJECT.(Local)

Byline: Carol DeMare

Albany County's proposed $41.5 million civic center won a round Friday when a state Supreme Court justice dismissed a lawsuit brought by five residents to block the project.

The ruling was based on the judge's decision that the lawsuit wasn't filed within the required time limit.

The decision applied only to a lawsuit against Albany County. An action against the state, which is financially backing the proposed downtown Albany facility, is still pending, and arguments are scheduled for Oct. 31 in state Supreme Court.

Albany Attorney Rosemary Nichols, who represents the residents, said she would file a notice of appeal …

Driving in circlesCity's first two-lane roundabouts open.

Byline: Karina Gonzalez

Nov. 14--Traff ic began flowing through Chattanooga's first set of two-lane roundabouts Monday as construction crews continued work on the circular intersections. "We are trying to make sure we get the word out that the roundabouts are here and how to drive through them," said John Van Winkle, traffic engineer for Chattanooga. The two roundabouts, located at Access Road at Lake Resort Drive off state Highway 153, were built to draw traffic away from the Chickamauga Dam and locks, where construction will take place in upcoming years. Mr. Van Winkle said the roundabouts, which direct traffic around a center island, are safer and more …

Man charged under Official Secrets Act with possessing explosives

A 23-year-old man who was arrested under Britain's Official Secrets Act was charged on Saturday with possessing explosives, police said.

Risk analyst Peter Stephen Hill was taken into custody in Leeds on Wednesday. He will appear before magistrates in Leeds on Monday, and officials said the explosives allegation did not appear to involve a suspected terrorist activity.

Police could not confirm a report on the front page of The Sunday Telegraph saying that Hill, a former British soldier, also was arrested on suspicion of spying for the Russian intelligence services. The paper said he was detained under the Official Secrets Act for allegedly …

Court upholds Indiana school drug test plan

A federal appeals court here has upheld a ruling permitting anIndiana school district to require random drug testing of high schoolathletes and cheerleaders.

The three-judge U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals Wednesdayunanimously upheld a lower court ruling backing the Tippecannoe(County) School Corp. in requiring drug testing.

The school board in August, 1987, passed a rule requiringcheerleaders and athletes at Harrison and McCutcheon high schoolsnear Lafayette, and their parents or guardians, to sign agreements tosubmit to random urine testing. The rule has not gone into effectwhile challenged in court.

"We're disappointed," Indiana Civil Liberties …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Research from INRA in the Area of Food Science Published.

"During pasta processing, structural changes of protein occur, due to changes in water content, mechanical energy input, and high temperature treatments. The present paper investigates the impact of successive and intense thermal treatments (high temperature drying, cooking, and overcooking) on aggregation of gluten protein in pasta," scientists in Montpellier, France report.

"Protein aggregation was evaluated by the measurement of sensitivity of disulfide bonds toward reduction with dithioerythritol (DTE), at different reactions times. In addition to the loss in protein extractability in sodium dodecyl sulfate buffer, heat treatments induced a drastic change in disulfide …

Typhoon boom.

A EUROFIGHTER Typhoon jet based at RAF Coningsby suffered a 'system failure' - causing it to exceed the speed of sound.

The plane had to drop 30,000ft while flying over Shropshire, inadvertently causing it to exceed the speed of sound and causing a sonic boom, which many people in Shrewsbury thought was an …

Georgia's advance voting turnout light.

Byline: Ruth Finch

Jul. 15--Casting a ballot before election day is more possible than ever in Georgia this year, but that doesn't mean it's been popular, local election officials said. "It's been awfully slow this time. We expected more," Jeanette Paraham, election registrar in Chattooga County, said about activity prior to Tuesday's primary elections.

New laws have gone into effect that make this the second election in which advance voting has been staged, and this is the first statewide election with relaxed rules for absentee voting. Advance voting was approved in 2003 and allows voters to bypass the election day lines and stop by their county …

China: Car with 3 inside burns near Tiananmen

A passenger car at an intersection near Beijing's Tiananmen Square caught fire Wednesday with three people inside, police said, in what may have been a desperate attempt to draw attention to personal grievances.

The official Xinhua News Agency said there were two men and a woman inside the car when it was approached by police and a fire broke out. A man and a woman, a couple, were taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, the agency reported, without saying what happened to the second man.

The people in the car had come to the Chinese capital to seek help with "personal problems," the police statement said. It did not elaborate, but …

JULY'S HOT NEW PRODUCTS

1

What's good for you, but tastes like dessert? While Barlean's TOTAL OMEGA SWIRL 3-6-9 in Orange Cream tastes like an ice-cream truck favorite, it also supplies complete omega-3, -6, and -9 fatty acids. Made with organic flaxseed oif, EPA/DHA fish oil, and pure borage oil, this premium supplement is highly bioavailable. And instead of tasting oily or fishy, it has an amazingly delicious flavor that tastes great in smoothies, drizzled over granola, or all on its own.

2

Stressed out? Too much tension can rob your body of precious nutrients. SuperFoods DAILY POWER SHAKE with PGX from Natural Factors helps put them back. These delicious convenient shakes are rich in …

Studies from Royal College Reveal New Findings on Obstetrics and Gynecology.

"Estimates of the increased risk of maternal complications after caesarean section posed by placenta praevia differ between studies and may not reflect current practice. We assess the impact of placenta praevia on maternal complications after elective caesarean section (CS)," scientists in London, United Kingdom report (see also Obstetrics and Gynecology).

"We undertook a retrospective cohort study of women who had an elective CS for a singleton at term in the English National Health Service between 1 April 2000 and 28 February 2009 using routine data from the Hospital Episode Statistics database. Multiple logistic regression was used to estimate the effect of placenta praevia …

Front-line Bevacizumab in combination with Oxaliplatin, Leucovorin and 5-Fluorouracil (FOLFOX) in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer: a multicenter phase II study.(Research article)(Drug overview)(Clinical report)

Authors: Christos Emmanouilides [1]; Georgia Sfakiotaki [2]; Nikolaos Androulakis [2]; Kostas Kalbakis [2]; Charalambos Christophylakis [3]; Antonia Kalykaki [2]; Lambros Vamvakas [2]; Athanasios Kotsakis [2]; Sofia Agelaki [2]; Eleni Diamandidou [1]; Nikolaos Touroutoglou [1]; Adam Chatzidakis [4]; Vassilis Georgoulias [2]; Dimitris Mavroudis [2]; John Souglakos (corresponding author) [2]

Background

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major cause of cancer morbidity and mortality worldwide [1] accounting for 8% of all malignant tumors in adults [2]. Despite that macroscopically curative surgical resection is possible in 70-80% of patients at diagnosis, almost half of them will develop local or/and metastatic recurrence and will die of the disease.

Although, historically, chemotherapy was used for palliation of symptoms, during the last few years the median overall survival of patients with advanced CRC has been substantially increased from 12 months to about 21-22 months when all of the available chemotherapeutic agents are administered [3]. Therefore treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) has changed considerably in the recent years. Combinations of 5-fluorouracil/Leucovorin (5-FU/LV) containing both bolus (Roswell Park) and infusional administration (De Gramont schedule) combined with a second active drug, either irinotecan [4] or oxaliplatin are accepted as the mainstay of first-line treatment, while the choice of a particular drug to combine with 5FU does not influence overall survival[5].

The advent of targeted therapy further expanded treatment options for patients with mCRC. In particular, inhibition of angiogenesis by blocking Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) using the monoclonal antibody bevacizumab led to further improvement in the outcome of patients with mCRC. Indeed, randomized studies demonstrated that the addition of bevacizumab to either 5FU/LV [6, 7, 8], or to an Irinotecan-5FU/LV combination (IFL) [9] as first-line treatment of mCRC was associated with improved objective response rate, time to tumor progression and overall survival.

During the last years, the IFL regimen (weekly irinotecan and IV push administration of 5FU and LV) no longer represents the gold standard of front line treatment of mCRC and it was replaced by the combinations of irinotecan or oxaliplatin with the infusional 5-FU regimens (FOLFIRI and FOLFOX, respectively) [10, 11]. A recent study (E3200) [12] demonstrated that the addition of bevacizumab improved the activity of second-line oxaliplatin-containing combination in patients with mCRC. However in this study the effect of the combination on survival and response rate was modest, reflecting the more advanced stage of the disease in such patients.

Since there was no information concerning the efficacy and tolerance of the combination of FOLFOX4 plus bevacizumab as front line treatment of patients with mCRC, the Gastrointestinal (GI) Working Group of the Hellenic Oncology Research Group (HORG) decided to conduct this multicenter phase II study.

Methods

Eligibility criteria

Chemotherapy na�ve patients, aged [greater than or equal to] 18 years with histologically documented mCRC were enrolled; other eligibility criteria included: patients who had received prior adjuvant 5-FU-based chemotherapy were eligible if they had remained free of disease for at least 6 months after the completion of adjuvant therapy; performance status (ECOG) 0-2; at least one bidimensionally measurable lesion of [greater than or equal to] 2 cm; a life expectancy of at least 3 months; adequate hematologic parameters (absolute neutrophil count [greater than or equal to] 1.5 x 10

9 /L and platelets [greater than or equal to] 100 x 109 /L); creatinine and total bilirubin [less than or equal to] 1.25 times the upper limit of normal; aspartate and alanine aminotransferases [less than or equal to] 3.0 times the upper limit of normal; absence of active infection or malnutrition (loss of more than 10% of body weight); absence of a second primary tumor other than non-melanoma skin cancer or in situ cervical carcinoma; patients receiving palliative radiotherapy had to have measurable metastatic disease outside the irradiation fields.

Patients with operable metastatic disease, clinically significant cardiovascular disease or major surgery within one month prior to study registration were excluded from the study. Other exclusion criteria included: pregnancy or lactation, regular use of aspirin (more than 325 mg per day) or other …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

MINORITY HIRING UP IN NBA.(SPORTS)

Byline: FRED BAYLES Associated Press

Minority hiring of coaches and front-office personnel in professional sports has improved only slightly in the last year, with the NBA showing the most improvement and baseball the least.

"On the field we're looking at the most integrated workplace in this country, but off the field, except for the NBA, we see what is more representative in America," said Richard Lapchick, whose Center for the Study of Sport in Society at Northeastern University issued its fourth annual "racial report card" Thursday.

The report, drawn from team rosters of personnel on and off the field, gave the NBA an overall A and praise …

Merck 1Q net profit falls 76 percent

German pharmaceutical and chemical company Merck KGaA said Monday that its first-quarter net profit dropped by 76 percent as demand for chemicals declined due to the world economic slump.

Darmstadt-based Merck said net profit for the January-March quarter fell to euro57 million ($75 million) from euro239 million a year earlier.

Sales in the first quarter were stable at euro1.9 billion.

"This year will be a challenge for Merck, but I am happy to say that our pharmaceuticals business remains strong," chief executive Karl-Ludwig Kley said.

Liquid crystals, used in products including television and computer screens, were a weak …

U.S. Requests Dismissal Of Clifford BCCI Charges

WASHINGTON The Justice Department today asked a judge to dismissfederal charges against Washington powerbroker Clark Clifford and hislaw partner, Robert A. Altman, but reserved the right to bring new,broader charges in the future.

The department said its decision was made for several reasons,including a desire not to prejudice or interfere with the currentprosecution of Altman on state charges in New York, and because ofClifford's heart problems. He underwent open-heart surgery lastmonth, and it was not known when he would be well enough to assist inthe preparation of his defense.

U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens Greene in Washington …

'MILLIONAIRE'S TAX' GAINS IN SURVEY.(Main)

New Yorkers support a "millionaire's tax" with an overwhelming majority backing a tax hike on people making over $250,000 a year, according to a Quinnipiac poll released Wednesday.

Another part of the poll revealed voters would rather cut state services than raise taxes.

The poll focuses on plans used to solve the state budget crisis and objections faced by some of the proposals.

Poll highlights on taxes include:

By a 61-point margin, 79 percent to 18 percent, respondents support a so-called "Millionaire's Tax," a higher state income tax rate on people making more than $1 million a year.

That margin drops to 47 percent, 72 percent …

TYPE O TESTS POSITIVE FOR GOTHIC ROCK SOUND.(PREVIEW)

Byline: GREG HAYMES Staff writer

Merging melodic pop songcraft with gothic-rock tone and imagery, Type O Negative layers it all with a base of sludgy heavy metal. It's a unique, thrilling sound with Peter Steele's distorted wall of bass and fell-to-the-bottom-of-the-well vocals underpinned by the ominous keyboard playing of co-producer Josh Silver.

The Brooklyn-based band made its debut five years ago with ``Slow, Deep and Hard'' and followed it up with their controversial '92 album.

Type O Negative seemed about as far from national rock stardom as they could possibly get, but they soon found themselves climbing up the charts with their third album …

Steven Tyler tells AP: Rehab was for meds

Steven Tyler sought the "safe environment" of rehab last month to recover from more than just surgery _ the Aerosmith frontman now says was fighting a dependency on pain and sleep medication.

"To have your feet done, to have your leg done, you have to be on narcotics," Tyler told The Associated Press on Friday. "You have to be on sleep aids at night. I don't know about Joe (Perry) but I was off and running and I didn't like the me that was me."

Tyler released a statement in late May saying he checked into a rehab facility in search of a "safe environment" to recover from several …

Danger signs in Iran.(News)

When it became known that Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was to address Friday Prayers at Tehran University, there was a sense of anticipation.

Having initially endorsed the official election victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and then sanctioned a partial recount, the ayatollah had seemed to give ground. His decision to speak in one of the hotbeds of support for the main opposition candidate, Mir Hossein Mousavi, raised hopes that further concessions might be in the offing.

How quickly were those hopes dashed. The ayatollah delivered a long and at times menacing address, in which he conjured up once again the old image of the enemy: the UK, …