четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Train to Albuquerque

If any mixed martial artist could claim the title ''Mr. Chicago,'' it would be Clay Guida.

His trademark floppy hair, boundless energy and never-say-die attitude have endeared him to local fight fans.

His blue-collar work ethic epitomizes a city that appreciates hard work and lunch-bucket values. His nickname is ''The Carpenter,'' which honors his pre-MMA profession. He hasn't forgotten his hammer-swinging roots, and his roots haven't forgotten him -- the Chicago Carpenter's Union is one of his sponsors.

In his last fight in June, Diego Sanchez beat Guida in one of the most exciting matches of the year. He lost in a split decision but did win a $25,000 …

S/he said Culture, rights

"Blaine is NOT bi. He is gay, and will always be gay. I think it s very important to young kids that they know this character is one of them. "

- Ryan Murphy, co-creator of "Glee," about an online rumor that Blaine, the show's new character, would actually end up being bi instead of gay, perezhilton.com, Feb. 14. Fans are rooting for the characters, Kurt and Blaine, to become boyfriends.

"The left is trying to co-op gays and I don't think we should let them. They should be on our side. We 're for low taxes, we 're for low crime, we 're against the terrorists that want to kill gays. Gays are natural conservatives. "

-Ann Coulter, conservative commentator, in a …

England beats NZ by innings and 9 runs in third test to win series 2-0

England clinched a 2-0 series victory over New Zealand on Sunday, winning by an innings and nine runs, with Ryan Sidebottom taking 6-67 to help dismiss the tourists a second time.

New Zealand had resumed on 177-5 under sunny skies on the fourth day of the third test, and the match finished an hour before lunch as Sidebottom took four of the day's wickets.

"I never envisaged winning by an innings, but full credit to the way we've played our cricket," England captain Michael Vaughan said.

The Kiwis had been forced to follow on after being dismissed for 123 in their first innings on Saturday.

Gareth Hopkins only added five runs …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

African-American high school seniors honored

The National Achievement Scholarship Program will announce todaythe winners of a combined $2.5 million in scholarships nationwide.

The program, which is conducted by the National Merit ScholarshipCorp., honored 800 scholastically talented black high school seniors.The scholarships can be used at any regionally accredited U.S.college or university.

Here are the Illinois and Indiana winners:

ILLINOIS

Chicago: Roderick G. Baker, Akilah Terry and Bardford R. Williamsof Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, Corinne N. Charity and EmilyH. Harris of Walter Payton College Preparatory, Precious A. Edmonds,Devry Advantage Academy, Abdel H. Halloway, …

Kato Proves Comical in `Watcher' Role

Tonight, America's favorite freeloader debuts in "a town where awar is raging - a war between dark and light, right and wrong, goodand evil." That town is not the Los Angeles of the O.J. Simpsontrial, it's the Las Vegas of UPN's "The Watcher" (8 to 9 p.m. onChannel 50.)

Kato Kaelin, who had his nationally televised audition on thewitness stand, plays a sleazy businessman who is murdered, then has achance to redeem himself. The amusing, "Quantum Leap"-like premisehas Kaelin coming back …

Braga beats Partizan 2-0 in Champions League

BRAGA, Portugal (AP) — Rodrigo Lima scored a stunning free-kick to set Braga on its way to a 2-0 win over Partizan Belgrade on Tuesday, the Portuguese club's first victory in the Champions League group stage.

The Brazilian forward struck after 35 minutes, lifting the ball over the defensive wall with pace to beat Partizan 'keeper Vladimir Stojkovic from 30 yards (meters).

Braga wrapped up the win in injury time when substitute Luis Aguiar squared the ball for Matheus to tap into an empty net after a swift counter-attack.

Braga, who finished second in the Portuguese top flight last season, qualified for the group stage for the first time by beating Celtic and then …

Pakistan police: Plot foiled on hotels, diplomats

Two highly experienced Taliban militants were arrested while planning to attack top hotels and kidnap diplomats in Pakistan, and one of the men claimed to have helped plan previous strikes.

The two men, both deserters from a government paramilitary force, were arrested recently in a hotel in Rawalpindi, a crowded city near Islamabad, said Islamabad Police Chief Bin Yamin.

He declined to say Monday when the men were arrested or what information lead authorities to them. The militants' identities and the specific targets weren't disclosed.

The announcement comes, though, as top Pakistani officials head to Washington for bilateral talks. Pakistani …

SORENSTAM'S STREAK

With a playoff victory in The Office Depot on Saturday, AnnikaSorenstam won her record-tying fourth consecutive LPGA title. Here'sher …

Police: Calif. student's disappearance a homicide

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — While police on Monday said conclusive evidence in the case of missing Northern California nursing student Michelle Le points to homicide, her family said they believe she is still alive and urged everyone to remain hopeful.

Hayward police Capt. Darryl McAllister said a forensic examination of Le's car and the parking garage where the vehicle was found, video evidence from the garage, and other evidence have led them to believe the 26-year-old was killed.

No suspects have been arrested, but detectives are questioning people of interest. McAllister said more than 25 people had been interviewed so far, and the Alameda County district attorney is evaluating …

Survey: Gas prices flat in 2-week span

CAMARILLO, Calif. (AP) — A new survey finds the average price of regular gasoline in the United States has stayed flat in the last two weeks.

The Lundberg Survey of fuel prices released Sunday says the price of a gallon of regular remains at $2.69.

Analyst Trilby Lundberg says the average price for a gallon of mid-grade was $2.84, and premium was at …

Harnessing Electricity's Lost Heat

Energy now lost as heat during the generation of electricity could be harnessed by silicon nanowires synthesized using a technique developed by researchers at the U.S. Dept. of Energy's (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (www.lbl.gov) and the Univ. of California (UC) at Berkeley. Potential applications of the technology range from DOE's hydrogen fuel-cell-powered Freedom CAR to personal power-jackets that could use heat from the body to recharge cell phones and other electronic devices.

"We've shown that it's possible to achieve a large enhancement of thermoelectric energy efficiency at room temperature in rough silicon nanowires that have been processed by wafer-scale …

Business leaders give nod to Yablonsky

Dennis Yablonsky has been a small business owner. He knows the technology sector. He likes golf. A colleague calls him effective but "blunt."

And if the state Senate confirms his appointment, which could occur as early as this week, the resident of western Pennsylvania will become the state's top economic development official.

Although well known in the Pittsburgh area, some of his peers in Central Pennsylvania don't know much about the 50-year-old who was the founding chief executive officer of the Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse and the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse, where he served from 1999 to 2003.

Representatives of the York County Chamber of Commerce said they didn't know Yablonsky, who declined to be interviewed for this article. The York officials said they liked that he had been a smallbusiness owner. They would like to see Yablonsky focus oil "Brain Gain" initiatives to encourage college graduates to stay in the state, said Joe Rice, director of the chamber's pro-business group.

Members of the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry, based in Harrisburg, have worked with Yablonsky and were pleased with his appointment.

"He has an outstanding reputation among chamber people," said state Chamber Vice President Maura Donley.

As a former executive for a technology company, Yablonsky also understands the needs of technology startups, said Kevin Shivers, president of the Pennsylvania chapter of the National Federation of Independent Business.

"He understands the struggles and needs of entrepreneurs," Shivers said. "From that perspective, I think he would be a good spokesman for economic development in Pennsylvania."

Don Smith, acting head of the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse, said Yablonsky will be successful in his new role if he approaches it like he did his golf game. He was a casual golfer until about four years ago, Smith said. That's when he started taking lessons. Now he is a very good player, boasting a handicap of 10.

"He developed a plan. He worked the fundamentals, and he accomplished a great deal," said Smith, who also is director of economic development for Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh. "I think that's the way he accomplishes everything."

Although his appointment needs Senate approval, a senate committee has recommended him for the job of secretary of the state Department of Community and Economic Development. At a hearing on Feb. 25, Yablonsky said he would balance technology interests with other industry sectors. He wants to focus investments in sectors that have had rapid growth, such as information technology, life sciences, financial services and health care.

Yablonsky said accountability would be "one of the hallmarks" of his new job. Before committing additional state funds, he would evaluate projects so that he could measure their improvement, he said.

Yablonsky, who is originally from Pittsburgh, spent 12 years working his way up through a startup software company called Cincom Systems, based in Cincinnati. He became president of Cincom, which grew to 1,500 employees.

He returned to Pittsburgh in 1987 as CEO of Carnegie Group, an early-stage artificial intelligence company spun off of Carnegie Mellon University. It grew to become a public company with more than 300 employees.

In 1999, he became the founding CEO of the Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse. In 2001, he became the founding CEO of the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse. The greenhouses share offices but are run separately and have different funding sources.

Colleagues said that Yablonsky has a straightforward, almost blunt style. He is collaborative and can quickly generate support for an idea or a project.

"He sells it in a pleasantly aggressive way," said D. Lansing Taylor, a businessman and board member for the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse. "He's very forceful, but in a logical noncombative way."

Yablonsky got the Digital Greenhouse running quickly and successfully something that attracted the Life Sciences Greenhouse board to him, said Maxwell King, a board member. His "no-nonsense, unpretentious style" also appealed to King.

"One of the nice things about Dennis is that he is marvelously direct," said King, president of The Heinz Endowments. "You don't have to waste a lot of time with Dennis."

As head of the greenhouses, Yablonsky kept his own staff small. He also would draw on the expertise of alreadyestablished organizations, Smith said.

Yablonsky proved to be a diligent fundraiser, Smith said. Yablonsky will remain on the board of the life sciences greenhouse in Pittsburgh. He also has accepted a position as a nonvoting member of the Life Sciences Greenhouse of Central Pennsylvania, said Michele Washko, a spokeswoman for the greenhouse. Yablonsky's predecessor, Tim McNulty, also served on the board.

King said Yablonsky is a good choice for Gov. Ed Rendell because they are "fast-paced" and like to try new ideas. King said that Yablonsky would work well with other state Cabinet members, as long as they consider his straightforward approach. "There may be times when people find Dennis blunt," he said.

GBP2m family pub planned

A NEW GBP2 million pub and restaurant aimed at families with youngchildren is planned in Weston-super-Mare.

Whitbread wants to build one of its Brewsters outlets alongsidethe main road into the resort from the M5 junction at St Georges atthe junction of Herluin Way and Aisecombe Way on the Great Westontrade park.

A Whitbread spokeswoman said it would create about 50 full andpart-time jobs, and described Brewsters as "a heaven for kids and ahaven for parents." The restaurant would have a children's funfactory, filled with games and play equipment.

It would be covered by CCTV so that parents could watch theirchildren at play from the restaurant.

A planning application for the Brewsters has been submitted toNorth Somerset Council.

It will be in competition with two other pub/restaurants along thelink road. The Bucket and Spade, on the West Wick roundabout at thejunction with Summer Lane, has an indoor children's play area calledthe Wackey Warehouse.

There is also the Pavilion Beefeater restaurant and travel lodgeclose to Hutton Moor leisure centre.

Councillor Elfan ap Rees, North Somerset's Executive member foreconomic development, said Weston needed jobs but was not sure if theproposed Brewsters would be in the right place.

He said: "Competition is something which every good businessneeds.

"The question which has to be judged is whether its appropriate tointroduce this type of use into an area which is really developed forlight industrial type of employment."

Councillor ap Rees said the application would have to beconsidered in the light of the council's planning policies and itwould be for the west area committee to make a final decision.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Woman accused of snatching baby from NZ hospital

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand police say a woman faked being pregnant for nine months before snatching a newborn from a hospital and whisking the baby to a nearby car before getting caught.

Police spokeswoman Ana-Mari Gates-Bowey says 24-year-old Neha Narayan has been charged with abduction and faces up to seven years in prison if convicted.

Gates-Bowey said Tuesday that Narayan told her partner she was pregnant months before walking into Middlemore Hospital in Auckland on Jan. 3 and "patrolling" the baby ward before snatching a 2-day-old baby. Gates-Bowey said a suspicious nurse followed Narayan out of the hospital and confronted her when she reached a car, where her partner was waiting.

Narayan has handed authorities her Fijian passport and was released on bail. She could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Bush to welcome like-minded South Korean president after 7 years of awkward ties

After seven years of uneasy relations with South Korean leaders whom the White House considered soft on North Korea, President George W. Bush will welcome Friday a South Korean counterpart who talks tough about the North.

Bush and Lee Myung-bak will be eager to signal a new, cooperative tone as they push a reluctant Congress to ratify an ambitious free trade deal, work to settle a spat over South Korea's ban of American beef and discuss ways to persuade the North to fulfill commitments in six-nation nuclear negotiations.

The beef ban may be a non-issue by the time the two men meet. Yonhap, the South Korean news agency, reported late Thursday that South Korea had tentatively agreed to resume U.S. beef imports.

But with only nine months left in Bush's presidency, and with the nuclear talks at an impasse, it may be too late for the leaders to settle a top foreign policy goal for the Bush administration: a deal to rid North Korea of its atomic bombs.

Lee, a former construction chief executive nicknamed "The Bulldozer" for his determination to get things done, has ended a decade of rule in which South Korea sought to reconcile with the North. The relief in Washington has been evident in the Bush administration's praise of Lee's insistence that the North follow through on nuclear pledges before receiving aid from its southern neighbor and rival.

Now, however, Lee's position on North Korea may turn out to be even tougher than Bush's because the United States is pressing hard for an agreement. Nuclear talks are stalled over whether the North will hand over a promised full declaration of its nuclear programs in return for concessions. The Bush administration apparently has decided that the declaration's exact contents are less important than an assurance that the nuclear negotiators can check up on the Kim Jong Il's government to make sure it has told the truth.

This has prompted skepticism even from within Bush's own political party.

Republican Rep. Ed Royce said Thursday that he raised the need to verify any North Korean actions in a meeting Thursday with Lee. "Congress is carefully watching the six-party talks, and solid verification is a must if the process is to move forward," Royce said in an interview.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice tried Thursday to head off criticism that the Bush administration is being too lenient or trusting. The administration insisted it is not giving up leverage over North Korea in the nuclear talks and will not take the North at its word. During a 30-minute news conference with reporters, Rice used the word "verification" or "verify" more than a dozen times.

The highlight of Lee's Washington visit will come when he is feted at the Camp David presidential retreat in mountains north of the capital. Jack Pritchard, the State Department's special envoy for North Korea negotiations until 2003, said at a recent conference that the Camp David invitation is an "extraordinary symbolic gesture and a guarantee of success of the summit, even if they just showed up and shook hands."

Several other signs also point to the leaders hitting it off. Bruce Klingner, a Northeast Asia analyst at the Heritage Foundation, said in an interview that both men are former businessmen with conservative free-market ideas; both are Christian; both say they want to hold the North accountable to its nuclear pledges; and both view the U.S.-South Korean relationship as crucial to Asian security.

By contrast, Bush's meetings with Lee's predecessor, Roh Moo-hyun, who was elected on an anti-America platform, were often notable for their awkwardness, fueling the perception that the leaders did not like each other. Roh favored a so-called "sunshine" policy that provided aid without demanding concessions from North Korea.

Lee has also begun to address North Korea's mistreatment of its citizens, which the previous two South Korean presidents during Bush's tenure shied away from.

Klingner said that Lee, during his Washington visit, will be intent on showing that he values the U.S. relationship "and clearly wants to set a difference from five years ago, when President Roh said, `What's wrong with being anti-American?'"

Also high on the presidents' agenda will be an accord to slash tariffs and other barriers to trade. That deal could be in trouble as lawmakers, including Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama, voice increasingly anti-free trade sentiments.

The main sticking point has been the ban on American beef. South Korea suspended American beef imports after a shipment contained animal parts that had been banned over concerns about mad cow disease, Bovine spongiform encephalopathy.

BSE is a fatal disease that spreads easily causing progressive neurological degeneration in cattle.

The report of the ban being lifted followed overnight negotiations in Seoul between the sides, which were drafting an agreement to be announced later Friday, Yonhap news agency reported, citing the Agriculture Ministry.

Ministry spokesman Kim Hyun-soo said the two sides reached agreement on "key sticking points" and were fine-tuning the wording of the agreement. He did not elaborate, only saying there would be an announcement later Friday.

Yonhap reported that Seoul agreed to relax quarantine regulations to allow imports of rib bones. It was not clear if Seoul would allow imports of other previously banned parts, such as spinal columns, skulls and intestinal parts believed at risk of carrying the brain-wasting disease.

The U.S. has demanded Seoul fully open its beef market, saying it is needed for congressional leaders in Washington to back a free trade accord that the two countries signed last year. Washington has also argued that American beef has been certified as safe by the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health.

On the beef impasse, Republican Rep. Don Manzullo said Lee told lawmakers during his meeting with members of the House of Representatives that he "hoped to be able to resolve it this week before he leaves." Lee also met with senators.

`Few Good Men' performance gives up-close look at drama

`Few Good Men' performance gives up-close look at drama

The Few. The Proud. The Marines: Aaron Sorkin's taut courtroom drama about two marines charged with killing a member of their own unit made a terrific film -- but "A Few Good Men" makes even better theater.

Theater is up close and personal, never more so than at the tiny ICA performance space. You're close enough to see every detail of director Jerry Bisantz' spitshine production. Plenty of heat is generated when a rookie lawyer is pitted against a corrupt Lieutenant Colonel with a career to protect.

The circumstances surrounding the murder are shown in flashback, with Armando Acosta bearing witness to the brutal treatment his character has received at the hands of sadistic officers. Acosta's wrenching account, softly spoken through desperate letters home, is the heart of the drama. It is his murder which forces the trial.

The stakes couldn't be higher in Sorkin's yarn. Will justice prevail? Will the truth come out? The two defendants claim they were ordered to deliver a "code red" disciplinary action (which went terribly wrong) but the officers claim no such order was issued.

The truth is revealed to the audience in an eerie flashback scene when each of the individual platoon commanders receives an order from the maniacal lieutenant, played to frightening perfection by John Arnold. Each is singled out under a searing spotlight so that we concentrate on each man's face.

As platoon leaders, Keith Mascoll and Carl Gourdin must stand ramrod straight while the lieutenant rants nose to nose, and at the same time they must show the emotion behind an expressionless face. Every actor in Bisantz' cast pulls his weight and delivers the teamwork which makes this production soar like a B-52.

Owen Donovan Yarde portrays the lance corporal who, together with a private first class (Max Raynolds) is charged with the murder. Yarde plays him as the quintessential marine, the warrior who never gives up and never gives in. Yarde holds his body rigid like a clock wound too tight yet we see he is a man of deep convictions who would, if he could, protect his overwhelmed co-defendant.

Robert Sperlinga is the lawyer who can "handle the truth." His friction with Yarde goes way beyond Navy vs. Marines over how to mount a proper defense. More fireworks are sparked between Sperlinga and the female officer (Leigh Ann Price) assigned to the case and between Sperlinga and the top commanding officer, played with such intensity by Doug Marsden that you can't imagine anyone else, even Jack Nicholson, in the role. Kudos, too, to Jim Slabacheski as a simple, earnest corporal who gets a case of the jitters when he has to testify.

Less is more in Titus Blade Steele's spare courtroom set. Seth Brodie's starched and creased uniforms add to the clean, pristine military facade, John MacKenzie's lighting, especially for the flashbacks, sets the tone of each scene. Director Bisantz literally called in the marines (from Portsmouth Barracks) to train the cast and you definitely feel a military presence, an authentic attention to detail.

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00 p.m. and Sundays at 7:00 p.m. through March 5. Call 292-6406 for tickets.

Photo (Armando Acosta)

Mystery Shopping Business Booms

Carol Cherry may make her living from shopping, but you won'tcatch her at the local mall browsing for a gift.

"I hate shopping. I can't remember the last time I've been to amall," said Cherry, owner and president of Atlanta-based Shop'n ChekInc., one of the nation's largest mystery shopping companies.Businesses hire her firm to see if employees are providing goodcustomer service.

"Mystery shopping lets you see yourself as your customers seeyour business," she said. Cherry founded the company in 1974 andtoday has about 50,000 freelance shoppers in the United States andabroad. They visit restaurants, department stores, gas stations,bowling alleys and anywhere else people shop, eat or play."This industry can really help a small business, especially onewith two locations when the owner can't be in two places at once,"said Cherry, whose client list reads like a Who's Who of Americanbusiness, discounters, oil companies, recreational sites and hotelchains. (Client confidentiality precludes her from naming any names.)Cherry said the industry began years ago as a way for bigretailers to learn why certain appliances weren't selling. Thenemployers started hiring outsiders to make sure employees weren'tstealing from them. But so-called honesty shopping, Cherry said, hasbeen outlawed in most states unless it's performed by licensedprivate investigators.Mystery shoppers, however, are regular folks who are observantand like to deal with people. They are paid per assignment, whichinvolves filling out a detailed questionnaire immediately after avisit. They note how they were greeted by salespeople. They examinethe way merchandise is displayed and how salespeople handle theirquestions, complaints and returns. At a resort, a mystery shopperwill also often check on whether employees offer information aboutspecial promotions or explain company services properly.A good mystery shopping service will spend time learning aboutyour business and how you expect your employees to behave. And itwill be objective."A lot of people try to use their friends and relatives to dothis," Cherry said. "You'll collect some information, but there isusually some bias involved."Mystery shoppers set their own hours and do the work more forfun than money. A shopper might earn $10 to $20 for a night at alocal bowling alley, Cherry said."We also rotate shoppers because you can only eat so manyhamburgers," she said.Cherry suggested that small businesses rely on local mysteryshopping services. In most cities, they are listed in the YellowPages under "shopping services."Many services specialize. For example, Melinda Brody &Associates in Orlando, Fla., focuses on tourism, travel and homebuilding.Brody, who worked as an apartment leasing agent and salestrainer, knows the real estate business and so focuses on that. Herpartner, Marilyn Whelan, works on the hotel accounts.One of their company's specialties is checking on real estatesalespeople. Home builders get permission to tape their salespeoplewhile they are speaking with customers. The salesperson never knowswhether those nice people looking to buy a condo are real customersor one of Brody's mystery shopping teams.In its work with hotel chains and resorts around Florida, thegroup relies on a statewide network of 500 freelance shoppers. Lastyear was the best for the 10-year-old company - its sales approached$1 million."We are the Rolls-Royce when it comes to pricing, but we prideourselves in the caliber of our shoppers," Brody said.Jane Applegate's column appears Thursday. Her radio reports canbe heard on WNIB-FM 97.1 and WNIZ-FM 96.9 weekdays at 6:15 a.m. and 3p.m. She can be reached at P.O. Box 637, Sun Valley, Calif.91353-0637.

The Last Post-Mortem // County Medical Examiner Wraps It Up After 17 Years

If the fates were just, the last autopsy by Dr. Robert J. Steinwould have been a big, Page One, top-of-the-evening-news case, likethe ones that distinguished his 17-year career as Cook County medicalexaminer.

Something like the John Wayne Gacy murders in 1978. Or acomplicated whodunit, like the Tylenol slayings in 1982.

But Stein's last post-mortem, Medical Examiners Case 613, was a50-something-year-old man who was found in a chair two days after hisdeath. Stein could tell the death was due to natural causes beforehe made his first incision.

For Stein, 80, it was still a milestone.

"Needless to say, I'm doing this with really mixed emotions,"said Stein, strapping on a pair of rubber gloves. "But if there'ssomething up above or down below, depending on where I'm going when Idie, I'll see many familiar faces. Not too soon, I hope."

Since October, 1976, Stein faced a never-ending line ofdecomposing bodies and victims of horrific crimes and accidents.From Chicago alone since the day he took office until the day heretired, there were 12,959 murder victims. Stein's job was to wielda scalpel and saw and find out how they died.

He was the county's first medical examiner, chosen after a 1972referendum abolished the old patronage-rife coroner's office. Underthat system, a jury empaneled by the coroner would determine thecause of a death.

Stein has investigated some of the biggest crimes and accidentsof the century. He squatted in the crawl space of Gacy's home asinvestigators found the bodies of 29 young men and boys.

"As soon as I walked into the house, there was a smell," Steinsaid. "It was just like the smell in (this autopsy room). It wasjust the smell of death. The next day they started digging, then itwas one body, two bodies, five, eight, 15. . . ."

Stein oversaw efforts to identify 273 victims of the AmericanAirlines DC-10 crash at O'Hare Airport a year later. He was inBoulder, Colo., when the accident occurred.

"I got a phone call and was told it was a cargo plane thatcrashed with four dead," he said. "Then the instant I hung up, I gotanother call."

Stein said he does not keep track of the number of autopsies hehas performed as medical examiner. However, he said he has done morethan 20,000 in his career.

Not bad for the Bronx, N.Y., native who said he was scared whena family physician took him to an autopsy room when he was a16-year-old.

Stein said his work is a sanctuary from what he really fears.

"I'm afraid of living people," he said. "I can't conceivesometimes of the brutality and the sadism people do."

The subject of Stein's final autopsy was wheeled in by Stein'sright-hand man of 25 years, Chief Autopsy Technician DouglasChildress. The two have been friends since Stein was a part-timepathologist in the old coroner's office.

"A friend of his (at the morgue) hired me in 1968," Childresssaid. "And the doctor and I have been together since."

During the autopsy, Stein jabbered details about the victim intoa handheld tape recorder, noting the man's clothes, physicalcondition and that his flesh was peeling.

Then Stein made a quick incision from shoulder to shoulderacross the chest then down the center to the belt line, and theautopsy began.

"My wife attributes my (stamina) to my taking two fingers of gineach day," he said. Then, gesturing with an index finger and littlefinger: "These two fingers."

New Athens archbishop distances himself from predecessor's legacy

Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens was officially enthroned Saturday and promised to avoid interfering in party politics, distancing himself from the position take by his predecessor as leader of the Greek Orthodox Church.

Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis, the cabinet and other Greek officials, representatives from other Orthodox churches as well as thousands of faithful _ many from Ieronymos' former diocese of Thebes _ attended the ceremony at Athens' Metropolitan Cathedral.

In his enthronement speech, Ieronymos, 70, emphasized that he would rule as president of the 75-member Holy Synod of Greece's bishops and would not interfere "in party politics."

This was seen as a direct jab at his late predecessor, Christodoulos, who favored the ruling conservatives and who considered himself the leader of all Greeks.

Ieronymos also pointedly praised Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, "a man deeply rooted in tradition, but who also understands the issues of our times" and called for the unity of the Orthodox churches around the Istanbul-based Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Bartholomew, the spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox Christians, and Christodoulos had an often testy relationship over matters of jurisdiction.

Also in contrast to his predecessor, who often railed in sermons against globalization and the European Union, claiming that they were bent on imposing conformity, Ieronymos spoke of the "challenges and opportunities" of globalization and promised to cooperate with the state on fighting poverty and preventing the marginalization of the mentally ill, helping integrate immigrants and debating issues such as stem-cell research.

The new Greek prelate also promised a church free of the financial scandals that have rocked it during recent years and called for better-educated parish priests. Ieronymos, who holds graduate degrees in theology and archaeology had ensured that most priests in his former diocese of Thebes, which he had administered since 1981, held graduate degrees as well.

Ieronymos did promise to continue Christodoulos' opening of the church to the young and said he would set up a Youth Council to advise him. He is also expected to continue Christodoulos' steps to improve relations with the Catholic Church, despite opposition from some conservative elements within the Greek Orthodox Church.

Ieronymos was elected on February 7 to replace Christodoulos, who died January 28 at 69, from complications of liver and intestinal cancer. He defeated the presumed favorite, Bishop of Sparta Efstathios, who was seen as a safe conservative choice.

Vent line

* I see where the governor is going to require a dress code. Willhe be paying for all the new clothes I will have to buy? I trust hewill at least be giving us a cleaning allowance. Oh, yes, thatsright, were actually going to have to take a pay cut this year to payfor the insurance premium hike. Wise up, governor, we cant afford todress like you. n I agree with all the vents regarding poor grammar.However, dont leave out our West Virginia school teachers who get bigraises for the great job they are supposed to be doing to educate ourchildren. My job requires that I talk to teachers every day, and Imsurprised at their terrible use of the English language. Therefore,our children learn what theyre taught. So, next time, stop and thinkbefore you criticize, and ask yourself, I wonder if this poor personhad a teacher who actually knew a noun from a pronoun? * Im callingto the venter who talked about how years ago people went to church toworship the Lord Jesus Christ and spread the Gospel. I have to agreewith him 100 percent. Churches today are entertainment centers,recreation centers, gymnasiums, heath clubs, computer clubs itseverything but what God wants in his house. God said my house wouldbe called the house of worship and prayer and weve gotten so far awayfrom that. Weve turned it into just about anything, everything goeson now in Gods house, which is a disgrace. * The current ethicssystem should be abolished, then the governor can be the top dog andvolunteers of good character from all counties can hear the facts anddecide each case. Why not? * The drugs here in Rand are out ofcontrol. Why doesnt the drug enforcement police do something about itnow? * Is the governor actually going to call a special session toraise teachers salaries? * Why does the state government grow whenthe general population does not? * As soon as Manchin becamegovernor, the first thing he wanted to do was raise teacherssalaries. Our taxes are going to be so high that were not going to beable to live on a seniors income. These teachers know what this jobpays when they become teachers, and the first thing they do is starthollering about a raise. I think its terrible. What ever happened toteachers who taught because they loved children? * To the person whosaid that Clinton had a brain and Bush has straw in his head: WellClinton sure did have a brain and we all know where it was. * Why areschool buses not required to have seat belts? * Ive got a great ideato fix workers comp in West Virginia. Lets let all the stateemployees who didnt do their jobs of collecting money from companiesthat owed workers compensation pay the premiums. They came outsmelling like fat cats, still got their jobs, and workers comp is inruins. What a great government. * I cant believe that people are sostupid that they would say that more Iraqis are killed on a weeklybasis under Bush than under Saddam on a weekly basis. Do they notknow how many thousands and thousands of people were found in massgraves? Read, people, read, dont just talk against Bush because yourea stupid Democrat. * To the person who called in and bet that neitherJenna nor Barbara Bush would get drafted: Well, I dont know anyonewho has gotten drafted lately. We no longer have a draft. * The olderGeorge Bush has 14 grandchildren and not a one of them is in themilitary. The Bush family is too rich for that. It will never happen,even though their grandfather did serve in the military. * Bush givesus a tax break, and the Democrats in West Virginia want to take itaway. Tax, tax, thats the Democratic plan always. This will be thedeath of the Democratic Party. * I agree with the new governor. Donot pass payroll taxes on to the people who are working. * To all theBible thumpers out there: Why is it that your God allowed all thoselittle children to be swept up and taken out to sea and drownedduring the tsunami? What did they do wrong? * This is to all thosehollowed-headed editorial writers at the Daily Mail: Perhaps youdidnt notice, but when you advocated this war for democracy whatyoure really missing is the fact that Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are ourallies and dont have democracies. Why is it that were killingthousands of people and sacrificing thousands of American lives toput democracy in Iraq when we turned a blind eye to the king in SaudiArabia and the emir in Kuwait? Heres a big hint oil. Wake upeditorial writers. * The best ethics position for public officials isto ask for nothing, accept nothing and owe nothing. * To the callerwho wanted to know why there were so many stories about Marshall inthe Daily Mail: Maybe he should realize that Marshall is only 45miles away from Charleston. A lot of people in Huntington read theDaily Mail. There are more Marshall alumni in the Kanawha Valley thanWVU alumni, and there are more students going to Marshall from theKanawha Valley than WVU, so maybe thats why there are more aboutMarshall. They by far have the majority of the coverage, as it shouldbe.

British Airways cabin crew strike vote due

Britain's leading union is due to announce the results of a strike ballot among cabin crew at British Airways PLC on Monday, raising the threat of a damaging walkout at the airline over the busy Christmas period.

More than 14,000 cabin crew have been voting on industrial action after a dispute with BA over job losses and changes to work practices.

The struggling carrier has announced sweeping changes as part of its bid to cut costs, including axing 1,700 jobs, freezing pay for current staff and offering lower wages for new employees.

The result of the ballot is scheduled to be announced early afternoon local time during a meeting of workers organized by the Unite union at Sandown Park racecourse on the outskirts of London.

The prospect of a "yes" vote appears more likely after the failure of talks last week between BA executives and leaders of Unite. That would mean that the union could order strikes beginning a week from now _ on Dec. 21.

A series of walkouts over the Christmas and New Year break would likely make BA's perilous financial state even worse.

The airline, which is struggling as the global downturn eats away at demand for air travel, has defended the cost-savings measures as necessary to move back to profitability. It posted a net loss of 208 million pounds ($346 million) for the six months ending in September, its first-ever loss in the period, as revenue fell by 13.7 percent.

BA also revealed on Monday that its pension deficit has blown out further to 3.7 billion pounds, from 2.1 billion pounds in 2006, and said it would consult with employees about a recovery plan.

Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh, who has warned that the full-year results will be similarly dismal, said that the cabin crew had been misled by the union over the necessity and fairness of the airline's new pay and work proposals.

"Our cabin crew union refuses to acknowledge what is going on around it," the outspoken Walsh wrote in Monday's Daily Mail newspaper. "Like King Canute, it sits by the water's edge shouting at the waves of recession and competition to go back."

"This cannot work," he added. "And though the union may be bent on self-destruction, I will not allow British Airways to be pulled under."

The union has argued that the changes, introduced in mid-November, has stopped members from doing their jobs properly and were imposed in breach of contract.

Cabin crews agreed last month to fly with reduced staffing after failing to win a court injunction banning the changes last month until a High Court decision on the dispute is due on Feb. 1.

If the cabin crew do go on strike it will be the first since three days of action in 1997.

Shares in BA were trading at 201.6 pence on Monday, up just 0.2 percent.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Rangers finally end playoff dry spell

Matt Cullen banged in a shot off the crossbar and bounced the NewYork Rangers into the second round of the playoffs for the firsttime in a decade.

Cullen fired a rolling puck from just inside the blue line thatsmacked the iron and dropped on its side just over the goal line2:06 into the third period Wednesday night. It withstood a lengthyvideo review and snapped a tie, and the Rangers completed a four-game sweep of the visiting Atlanta Thrashers with a 4-2 victory.

New York, which earned its first home playoff victory since 1997a night earlier, won a postseason series for the first time sincethat year. It was the Rangers' first sweep since the opening roundof the 1994 playoffs and ended the Thrashers' first venture into thepostseason.

Cullen stepped into his series-winning shot, meeting the puck asit rolled on edge. It smacked the bar and landed as it was whenCullen let it go. Play continued for another 16 seconds untilHedberg stopped another scoring chance.

Cullen stretched and talked to teammate Petr Prucha while Hedbergstrolled during the five-minute video review. Finally, referee MikeHasenfratz hung up the phone with the NHL office in Toronto andpointed to center ice. Cullen was mobbed by teammates at the benchas Hedberg shook his head in the crease.

"They can take all night as long as they get it right," Rangerscoach Tom Renney said.

SABRES IN COMMAND: Chris Drury scored twice, and Ryan Miller made24 saves to help Buffalo beat the New York Islanders 4-2, giving thetop-seeded Sabres a 3-1 lead in the first-round series.

Thomas Vanek and Jason Pominville also scored for the Sabres, inposition to end the series Friday night in Buffalo.

Jason Blake and Mike Sillinger scored for the Islanders, and RickDiPietro stopped 27 shots in his third start since returning from aconcussion.

DEVILS GET EVEN: New Jersey didn't need a spectacular game fromMartin Brodeur to even their playoff series against host Tampa Bay.A big night for Zach Parise and Scott Gomez's overtime goal wereenough.

Parise scored his fifth and sixth goals of the series, and Gomezblocked a shot then chased down the loose puck and skated in to blowthe winner past goalie Johan Holmqvist with 7:06 left in the extraperiod to give the Devils a 4-3 victory and tie the series at twogames apiece.

Brodeur had 30 saves, but squandered a two-goal lead in thesecond period. He has given up 12 goals in four games after enteringthe postseason with a career 1.89 goals-against average in 153playoff games.

Game 5 is Friday night in Nashville, where the Sharks willattempt to close out the Predators for the second straight spring.

SHARKS IN CHARGE: Milan Michalek scored two goals as host SanJose took a commanding lead in its first-round playoff series with a3-2 victory over Nashville.

Wall St. futures head higher on manufacturing data

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stock futures are getting a boost from solid manufacturing data from around the world as attention turns toward the state of the U.S. economy before a crucial jobs report.

Dow futures are up 86 points at 12,663, while the broader Standard & Poor's 500 futures are up 9 points at 1,317. The Nasdaq composite is up 15 points at 2,479.

Figures released Wednesday showed that China's manufacturing sector is growing steadily and Europe's is performing better than forecast. That gives investors hope that U.S. manufacturing figures coming later will show the world's largest economy continues its recovery.

Not his turf

A federal judge has ruled that opponents of Chief Illiniwek cantry to persuade high school athletes not to come to the University ofIllinois because it is sticking with its honored Chief Illiniwektradition. We believe in freedom of speech, so we wouldn't say thiscampaign shouldn't happen. However, it's being led not by theIllinois athletic staff but by some scholars, most notably StephenKaufman, a professor of cell biology. This campaign would strike usas a little less sanctimonious if Kaufman were telling prospectivebiology students not to come to the school and urging current biologymajors to transfer elsewhere. But we guess this outrage over thechief runs only so deep.

Oil spill called `disaster'

((PHOTO CAPTION))

76ers Rout Lakers for 6th Straight Win

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

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

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

China's Hu urges unification with rival Taiwan

BEIJING (AP) — China's president on Sunday used the centennial of a revolution that ended imperial rule to make an appeal to further relations with Taiwan, saying they should move beyond the history that divides them and focus on common economic and cultural interests.

At a ceremony in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Hu Jintao said that China and Taiwan should end antagonisms, "heal wounds of the past and work together to achieve the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation."

"Achieving reunification by peaceful means best serves the fundamental interests of all Chinese, including our Taiwan compatriots," Hu said, adding that the sides should increase economic competitiveness, promote Chinese culture and build on a sense of a common national identity.

President Hu has sought to move beyond the threatening rhetoric that long characterized Beijing's response to Taiwan's refusal to unify with the mainland. His government has talked of ending the state of hostility with Taiwan.

Tensions have also eased as Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou facilitated several trade agreements linking Taiwan's high-tech economy to China's lucrative markets.

On Sunday, a large portrait of the founding father of modern China, Sun Yat-Sen, hung over the stage on which sat current and former top leaders of China including the retired President Jiang Zemin, who made a rare public appearance months after speculation that he was close to death.

The ceremony in Beijing marks the Oct. 10, 1911, armed uprising led by rebels associated with revolutionary leader Sun on a Qing dynasty garrison. The attack set in motion events that led to the overthrow of imperial rule and raised hopes that China could emerge from a century and a half of national humiliation it had endured at the hands of foreign powers.

The Republic of China was established 2 1/2 months later, but its government fled in disarray to Taiwan in 1949 following the victory of Mao Zedong's Communists over Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists in the Chinese civil war.

China regards Taiwan as part of its territory and threatens to invade should it seek formal independence.

In his speech, Hu said Sun was "a great national hero, a great patriot and a great leader of the Chinese democratic revolution." He also said the Communist Party is the "core power" that drives China's success.

Also onstage was the 85-year-old former president Jiang, who was dressed in a dark blue suit and red tie and wore his signature large, square-rimmed glasses. His hair was slicked back as usual but was obviously thinning, and he appeared at times to be tired as he sat listening to speeches with his hands on the table in front of him.

Jiang's failure to appear at a celebration of the 90th anniversary of the ruling Communist Party's founding in July sparked intense online speculation that he had died. While the rumors were suppressed on the mainland, they were widely reported in Hong Kong, the semiautonomous Chinese territory that's promised Western-style civil liberties, including freedom of speech.

The Chinese government dismissed such reports as rumor. Beijing is very secretive about the health of top leaders and is particularly sensitive ahead of a leadership transition that starts late next year at a major Communist Party congress.

The death of Jiang, a retired but still very influential figure, could cause some of his proteges to shift allegiances, affecting the jockeying for power among China's rising political elites.

___

Follow Gillian Wong on Twitter at http://twitter.com/gillianwong

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Mapping Cell-Matrix Stresses during Stretch Reveals Inelastic Reorganization of the Cytoskeleton

ABSTRACT

The mechanical properties of the living cell are intimately related to cell signaling biology through cytoskeletal tension. The tension borne by the cytoskeleton (CSK) is in part generated internally by the actomyosin machinery and externally by stretch. Here we studied how cytoskeletal tension is modified during stretch and the tensional changes undergone by the sites of cell-matrix interaction. To this end we developed a novel technique to map cell-matrix stresses during application of stretch. We found that cell-matrix stresses increased with imposition of stretch but dropped below baseline levels on stretch release. Inhibition of the actomyosin machinery resulted in a …

PetroChina buys 45.5 pct of Singapore Petroleum

Chinese oil and gas giant PetroChina says it has acquired a 45.5 percent stake in Singapore Petroleum Co. for 1.47 billion Singapore dollars ($1.02 billion) and plans to make an offer for the company's remaining shares.

The purchase is the latest in billions of dollars of overseas energy and resource-related acquisitions by cash-rich Chinese companies taking advantage of relatively low prices to expand their overseas assets.

PetroChina is paying S$6.26, through its Singapore subsidiary, for each Singapore Petroleum share, the company said in a statement late Sunday to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

The …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Iraqi Translator for Reuters Killed

BAGHDAD - An Iraqi translator for Reuters was shot to death in Baghdad, an apparent victim of sectarian death squads, the third employee of the news agency killed in the Iraqi capital this week, Reuters reported on Saturday.

The London-based news agency did not identify the translator at the request of relatives, apparently to avoid publicizing the family's link to the company. The announcement of his death came a day after an Iraqi journalist for The New York Times was killed by gunmen.

The 30-year-old translator was killed Wednesday while driving with two of his brothers in southeast Baghdad, an area where Shiite and Sunni militants operate.

"It appears the …

RINCON BEACH RESORT OPENS IN APRIL.

Rincon Beach Resort in Anasco will open in April, says Rick Newman, president of Flagship Services Corp., reports The San Juan Star (January 10, 2001). The US$15 million beachfront resort on Playa Almirante beach has 60 hotel rooms, 24 condo-villas, a restaurant, beach-side pool and two …

Fundraising campaign a United effort; Employee, corporation and individual donations help United Way of the Greater Capital Region give back to the community.(Capitaland Quarterly)

Byline: LEIGH HORNBECK - Staff Writer

U nited Way CEO Kathy Pelham tells a story of conservative, grown men who dressed in sumo wrestler costumes and charged at each other while their employees watched - all in the name of charity.

September through December is United Way fundraising time, and campaign managers will stage spectacles and offer incentives to encourage co-workers to contribute.

"Things that make it fun and appeal to people's sense of humor seem to work the best," said Pelham, who leads the new United Way of the Greater Capital Region following the May merger of United Way's Northeastern New York and Schenectady County chapters.

The motivation tactics work: 80 percent of the budget at the local level comes from employee and corporate donations. In all, more …

COLONIE GOP BASHES NICHOLS' MACHINE TIES.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: MARC CAREY - Staff writer

Democratic Albany County Legislator Tim Nichols reacted with vim and venom Tuesday to Republican allegations that he is a paid lackey of the county Democratic machine.

On Monday, town Republicans pointed to campaign funding Nichols received last year that showed the majority of his money came directly from the Albany County Democratic Committee.

That, they claimed, put him securely in the pocket of the county machine. "Hypocrite" was one of the kinder terms used by Republican officials to describe Nichols, who defeated longtime GOP incumbent Ed Buhrmaster. Republican town Councilman James Egan, who is up for …

FDA lifts Boston Scientific's product approval ban

Boston Scientific said Wednesday the Food and Drug Administration has lifted some restrictions imposed more than two years due to quality control problems.

In 2006 the FDA issued the company a rare "corporate warning letter," which barred the approval of significant new products. Boston Scientific Chief Executive Jim Tobin said the agency has lifted the ban on product approvals. The formal letter remains in place due to issues surrounding the company's reporting of complaints and malfunctions of its devices.

Tobin told analysts on an earnings call that the company was actively working to resolve those issues.

Many analysts had …

Programs propel Hispanics' success

When Manuela Hernandez was a child, college "was one of thoseunreachable goals."

Hernandez, 22, of Chicago, now is a senior in education at theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago. And she's part of a 92 percentincrease in the number of Hispanic students enrolling in four-yearundergraduate and graduate programs in Illinois schools over the lastdecade.

Hernandez said she made it to where she is because of the EarlyOutreach support program, where she is a student coordinator of thementorship program.

Early Outreach provides Saturday morning classes eight months ayear in math, science and English. At least as important, Hernandezsaid, teachers of Latino descent …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

... And a Contract to Revamp Refinery in Greece.

Technip Italy has won a contract from Motor Oil Hellas (Athens) for the front-end design, detailed engineering, procurement, supply of materials, construction, and …

Youth set to rock in Park.(Obituary)

High Peak is getting ready to rock with a county council-led youth music and arts event.

Bands and DJs from across the county will perform at Infusion - a free all-day festival being held at the Memorial Park in Chapel-en-le-Frith on July 10.

Aimed at 13 to 19-year-olds, the event will encourage young people's involvement in music and dance, bring young people and communities together and showcase local talent.

Acts will include a group of DJs from Chapel-en-le-Frith called Cold Blooded Creatures, Tideswell band Reserve for Stuart and acoustic guitarist Ben Stafford.

A professional stage has been hired with a high quality PA system and …

ALBANY HIGH TAKES TEAM APPROACH.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: RICK KARLIN Staff writer Albany Nikita Cobb spends most of her school day with the same group of about 20 kids, rather than switching classes throughout the day. -

``Sometimes it's fun, sometimes the boys get on my nerves,'' said Cobb, 15, a freshman at Albany High.

Her teachers, though, are convinced that this approach will help her and some 85 other freshmen who have been assigned to ``teams'' that attend classes together and are taught by the same teachers.

Middle schools, including Albany's Hackett and Livingston, have been using teams for years and now high schools are embracing the concept.

It's viewed as a way of easing the …

LATHAM BUSINESSMAN PLEADS GUILTY TO TAX FRAUD.(Local)

Byline: United Press International

A Latham businessman pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to a felony charge of filing a false income tax return, a prosecutor said Wednesday.

David McCleary, 58, waived an indictment and pleaded guilty to filing a fraudulent 1983 tax return, Assistant U.S. Attorney Bernard Malone said.

McCleary understated his income in 1983 by more than $15,000 and his tax by more than $2,300, Malone said.

In a plea bargain, McCleary also admitted …

Officials: Helicopter rescue of dog was right move

The Los Angeles Fire Department is defending its decision to deploy about 50 firefighters and a helicopter to rescue a dog from the Los Angeles River.

Fire Capt. Steve Ruda said Monday the risk involved with saving the German shepherd from the storm-swollen river Friday was not as intense as it appeared.

The department has received high praise for the rescue, …

Alzheimer's Cases May Quadruple by 2050

WASHINGTON - More than 26 million people worldwide have Alzheimer's disease, and a new forecast says the number will quadruple by 2050. At that rate, one in 85 people will have the brain-destroying disease in 40 years, researchers from Johns Hopkins University conclude.

The new estimates, being presented Sunday at an Alzheimer's Association conference in Washington, are not very different from previous projections of the looming global dementia epidemic with the graying of the world's population.

But they serve as a sobering reminder of the toll to come if scientists cannot find better ways to battle Alzheimer's and protect aging brains.

"If we can make even …

NASCUS Urges SEC To Exempt State Charters.

The National Association of State CU Supervisors (NASCUS) is urging the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to exempt state-chartered credit unions from Commission regulation just as it has done with savings and loans and savings banks. NASCUS said that under the rule, common credit union transactions such as sweep accounts and trustee functions could trigger "broker" or "dealer" SEC rules and subject the state credit union to registration and regulation of these functions.

The commission exempted banks and thrifts from …

Schenectady County calendar.(Capital Region)(Calendar)

TODAY

COMMUNITY FARE

Dinner and show, Hungarian Benevolent Society, 933 Pleasant St., Schenectady When: 6 p.m. Cost: $30; students, $20; concert only, $25 Notes: Traditional Hungarian food and live music by Anna Peller accompanied by Bango Bela and his Gypsy Band.

ENTERTAINMENT

"The Gospel According to Bob: An Evening of Hootenanny, Harmony and A Cappella," Old Chapel, Union College, Schenectady When: Barbecue, 4 p.m.; concert, 7 p.m. Cost: Free, but donations collected for the Chris Ryan Scholarship Fund Contact: 388-6124 Notes: The 1Oth Annual Bob Dylan Birthday Celebration features emcee Michael Eck (as well as band mates from his bands …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

ST. PIUS X SCHOOL PROMOTES ADMINISTRATOR TO PRINCIPAL.(CAPITAL REGION)

LOUDONVILLE -- Dennis Mullahy, a former assistant principal and English teacher at St. Pius X Parish Grammar School, was named principal Tuesday. Mullahy has been acting principal since Nicholas Audi resigned in June. Mullahy had taught 7th- and 8th-grade language arts at St. Pius for seven years and spent on year as the school's assistant principal. He also spent a year teaching at Christian Brother's …

Intel posts biggest quarterly profit in a decade

Intel Corp. has booked its largest quarterly net income in a decade as the chipmaker benefits from a stronger computer market and more sophisticated factories.

Large corporations bought more computers that use Intel's most expensive chips, an encouraging sign for the economy that emerged from Intel's second-quarter numbers, reported Tuesday after the stock market closed. Corporations have been stingy on upgrading their workers' personal computers, a trend Intel is now seeing reverse. Intel gets most of its profit from the sale of chips that go into PCs.

Intel CEO Paul Otellini said companies are starting to replace 4- and 5-year-old PCs now that they have some …

Income Tax Day, Paying for War

This month, most of us will pay our income taxes. Few look forward to this experience, and some will howl with rage. Indeed, the person purported to have first introduced an income tax, the Chinese Emperor Wang Mang, was summarily overthrown in A.D. 23 and ended with his severed head prominently displayed atop the walls of Wancheng. Late 18th-century British efforts to impose an income tax generated half the revenue envisioned because the initiative was so unpopular and so generally evaded. In our own country, an income tax was expressly unconstitutional as the Constitution was originally written. Given such broad unpopularity, why are we still going to forward or acknowledge such fat …

Porsche launches four retrofit items for 911.

Auto Business News-12 May 2010-Porsche launches four retrofit items for 911(C)2010 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Auto Business News - 12 May 2010(c)2005 - Electronic News Publishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Porsche AG (Porsche) (Xetra: POR3) (FWB: POR3), a Germany-based automaker, has launched four retrofit items for the 911 and …

LEBANESE TROOPS ENTER FORMER ISRAELI-HELD ZONE.(MAIN)

Byline: HUSSEIN DAKROUB Associated Press

KFAR TIBNIT, Lebanon -- Lebanese security forces moved into the former Israeli-occupied zone in southern Lebanon early today, restoring a semblance of state authority for the first time in 24 years to a region torn by conflict.

Before dawn, a force of soldiers and police officers headed down the coastal highway from the capital, Beirut, in central Lebanon to the south and the border areas Israel vacated in May.

The first units were led by a military police vehicle followed by four armored vehicles carried on two trailer trucks. They crossed the former front line outside this village between what was the …

NATO: 4 US service members dead in Afghan blast

A roadside bombing killed four U.S. service members, the first American combat deaths of the year in Afghanistan, while a British soldier died during a foot patrol elsewhere in the volatile south of the country, officials said Monday.

A statement from NATO's International Security Assistance Force said the explosion that killed the U.S. service members took place Sunday in the south, but did not give further details on the location or the victims' branch of service.

The deaths are the first U.S. fatalities from hostile action in Afghanistan this year. One U.S. service member has died of non-combat causes so far in 2010.

The British soldier died …

Construction spending hits 17-month high in November.

Construction spending totaled $807 billion in November 2011, the highest level since June 2010, as homebuilding, private nonresidential construction and public construction all increased compared to October, the Associated General Contractors of America reported following an analysis of new Census Bureau data. Association officials cautioned, however, that public spending on construction will drop during 2012 because of delays in enacting needed infrastructure bills and planned cuts to many federal construction programs.

"Several segments of construction appear to be climbing out of a hole," said the associationas chief economist, Ken Simonson. "The new year should reinforce …