четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Tomato processing, egg products industries probed

Federal investigators say food broker Randall Rahal liked to use a simple little test to see whether he could bribe purchasing agents at the country's biggest food companies to buy from the tomato processor he represented.

Rahal would drop a $100 bill and then pick it up and ask the potential bribe recipient: "Is it yours?" If the agent said yes, Rahal knew they were open to a "business offer," he would boast, according to an FBI search warrant affidavit filed last month in Sacramento federal court as part of a bribery and fraud inquiry that also involves Rahal's client, tomato processor SK Foods of Lemoore, Calif.

That investigation was …

Future top chefs: ; Culinary programs now more popular in W.Va.

Santanah Gardner, 16, plans one day to open her own seafoodrestaurant in Florida. Jeffrey Kersey, 17, aspires to be TV's nextTop Chef.

The two high school juniors are working toward their dreams inthe ProStart program at Riverside High School.

Gardner, Kersey and 15 other students are learning how to controlportions, how to follow a recipe, how to measure and how to performmany other tasks involved in the culinary arts.

"I love to cook, and this class has given me a lot ofconfidence," Kersey said.

Donna Wilkes, ProStart coordinator for the West Virginia Officeof Hospitality and Education, said the national program offers 56ProStart 1 and ProStart 2 …

Jet With 114 Aboard Crashes in Cameroon

YAOUNDE, Cameroon - A Kenya Airways jet that took off during a midnight storm crashed early Saturday with 114 on board after sending out a distress signal over remote southern Cameroon, officials said. Nearby villagers reported hearing an explosion and seeing a flash of fire.

The jet bound for the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, went down near the town of Lolodorf, about 90 miles southeast of the coastal city of Douala, where it had taken off after midnight, said Alex Bayeck, a regional communications officer.

There was no word on survivors, Bayeck said by telephone en route to the crash site. He said search planes were flying over the forested area where the airliner gave off a …

Judge keeps Madoff assets secure for forfeiture

The government won a battle Monday in its effort to maintain control over Bernard Madoff's assets when a judge protected the assets from being disturbed by investors seeking to force the jailed financier into personal bankruptcy.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin signed a restraining order preventing more than $100 million in personal assets from being moved, sold or dissipated.

Chin said the order was necessary because there is probable cause to believe the property would be subject to forfeiture to the U.S. government because of crimes committed by Madoff.

Madoff pleaded guilty to fraud charges last month before Chin, who is scheduled to sentence …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Music has Hungarian theme

The latest Bath Symphony Orchestra takes place tomorrow eveningat the Wiltshire Music Centre Bradford on Avon at 8pm and has aHungarian theme.

On the programme are Liszt's Symphonic Poem No 3 Les Preludes, Variations on a Nursery Song by Ern Dohnnyi and one of the greatorchestral masterpieces of the 20th century Concerto for Orchestraby Bela Bartk. This was composed towards the end of his life when hewas a refugee from Nazi occupied Europe.

The work …

PBC problems aside, Blacks came out in droves for Burris, Washington

Voter turnout Tuesday proved that the Black community here was in full effect, as gubernatorial candidate Roland Burris and Lt. Governor candidate Joyce Washington lead the Chicago polls victoriously.

And although the overall support was not enough to prove the duo victorious statewide, many were pleased with the Blacks who exercised their right to vote and make a difference in their community.

Brenda Smith, campaign coordinator for Ald. Ike Carothers (29th) said the West side of Chicago came out in droves, showing that their vote can make a difference.

"The majority of all of our precincts were all over 150 and some exceeded 200," she said, describing the number of …

James Guides Cavaliers Past Timberwolves

LeBron James had 30 points and 13 assists to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 92-84 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday night.

James was a game-time decision after spraining his right ankle in Wednesday night's loss to Boston. The NBA's leading scorer had to leave that game after injuring the ankle late in the second quarter, but he returned for the second half.

James showed no effects from the injury against the Timberwolves. He fell two rebounds short of his seventh triple-double of the season.

Cleveland led for most of the second half, but Minnesota cut the lead to 79-75 with 4:37 left in the game. The Cavaliers regrouped after a …

Scotland in good shape

Scotland have a reasonable draw for the 2010 World Cupqualifiers.

But let's not start talking up their chances of pipping Hollandto win the group.

That's the English …

Dougal McKenzie

BELFAST

Dougal McKenzie

THE THIRD SPACE GALLERY

Dougal McKenzie's exhibition "Hot and Cool" explored both the continued significance of painting in an era characterized by the proliferation of screen imagery and the potential of history as a subject for painting. These concerns are neither new nor particular to McKenzie, but the show was notably forceful in its assertion of painting as a narrative form and inventive in its incorporation of other media, including collage and assemblage. Although the gallery space was dominated by four large paintings (all oil on linen, two also incorporating collage) the first work encountered was Otl's Gift, 2011. It consists of …

United Mine Workers pans MSHA belt-air proposal

Coal mines could continue what critics call the dangerous practice of using conveyer belt tunnels to pump fresh air underground under new rules proposed by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.

Flame-resistant belts, fire prevention and detection in belt tunnels and federal approval also would be required under rules MSHA published in the Federal Register on Thursday.

"The objective of this proposed rule is to improve mine safety by significantly reducing the hazard of conveyor belt fires in underground coal mines," MSHA director Richard Stickler said in a statement.

Banning belt air outright would do even better, United …

Banana Slug gets some respect as a mascot

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. - To the tune of Aretha Franklin's "Respect,"UC Santa Cruz finally bowed to popular demand and introduced its newmascot - Sammy the Banana Slug.

Students adopted the gastropod found in the hills around theiruniversity as their unofficial nickname more than 17 years ago, butschool officials resisted the change from Sea Lions. In 1986, thechancellor begrudgingly agreed to the Banana Slugs nickname, butonlyin cartoon form.

The school lacked a costumed mascot until last Tuesday, when amuscular Sammy made its first live appearance, flanked by fourcheerleaders and Chancellor MRC Greenwood at the school's annualFallFestival."There is no reason to be …

St. Vincent De Paul Center seeks thousands of alumni

St. Vincent De Paul Center seeks thousands of alumni

St. Vincent De Paul Center, once known as De Paul Settlement House, Wednesday launched a campaign in search of thousands of Chicago children, parents, staff and volunteers who once worked and attended that institution.

With the wrecking ball scheduled to demolish the two brick buildings, located at 2145 N. Halsted Street., in the Lincoln Park community, officials are looking for alumni and supporters for a reunion and good-bye ceremony, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, April 1st at the gymnasium.

"We're a center that has literally known no boundaries in the people we've helped and the lives …

Sky's not the limit

The southwest corner of Lake Shore Drive and Banks doesn't strike people as much. It's just a parking lot. But it's one of the last open parcels along Lake Shore Drive, and for a dozen years, wealthy warriors have wrangled over what can be built there. Will it ever have a high-rise that blocks views of the already high and mighty?

Apparently not. Last week, the Illinois Appellate Court, in its third ruling on an aspect in the case, said the property owner isn't entitled to put up a high-rise. Reuben Hedlund, attorney for a Gold Coast residents' group that fought the owner, speculated that the Illinois Supreme Court won't hear an appeal if one is requested. It already has ruled on another issue in the case. The litigation is complex enough for a Dickens novel.

The owner is a partnership run by Draper and Kramer Inc. It has long argued that the City Council acted illegally in April 1998 when it enacted restrictive zoning on the property just as Draper was laying plans to build under zoning rules that had applied to the tract since 1978. The old rules allowed for a 40-story building. The change permitted nothing more than nine stories.

The neighborhood group, the Near North Preservation Coalition, entered the case on the city's side. Hedlund said the case has cost the group around $2 million in legal fees and he estimated Draper and Kramer spent at least $3.5 million. Draper's chief executive, Forrest Bailey, and his attorney could not be reached.

Draper made a frontal assault on the city, challenging the constitutionality of the zoning change, which it asserted sliced the property's value by about two-thirds. It lost in Cook County Circuit Court and then on appeals. Draper sued the city separately on whether it had a "vested right" to rely on the 1978 zoning once it planned its project.

It lost in Circuit Court and got its biggest victory when the appellate court remanded the case in 2001. But the appellate court ordered the Circuit Court to decide if Draper had spent enough on the planning to show it earned a "vested right." That issue produced years of lawyering, with the circuit and appellate courts ruling for the city and the local group. Then the Supreme Court remanded it all, finding the lower courts should consider expenses under a broader definition.

Circuit Judge Stuart Palmer held last March that Draper could claim expenses totaling $272,000, less than one-half of 1 percent of an estimated $76 million project. He said that wasn't enough to establish rights under the older zoning. A three-judge appellate panel upheld his reasoning last week.

The case demonstrates how many dollar signs dance around zoning decisions.

BLOCKED 37: CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. is in charge of the Block 37 project downtown, but that hasn't prevented a duel breaking out over who should take credit for every inch the retail development moves forward. Joseph Freed and Associates LLC, the owner and developer, insists it negotiated the latest eight leases CB claims to have delivered for the site. Freed, which could lose the property in foreclosure, said it sent seven of the eight leases to Bank of America Corp. for approval nine months ago. The bank is attempting to gain ownership of the project and its 240,000 square feet of retail space. Freed said the bank hurt the project's value by sitting on the deals.

The eight new leases are with hair care and makeup seller Ladies and Gentlemen, iCandylicious, sandwich maker Which Wich, Alternative Shoes, Simply Thalia, Andy's Frozen Custard, fashion boutique Michelle Tan and Comic Vault. CB said the stores will open in late summer.

LET'S EAT: Will these restaurant concepts fly in these tighten-the-belt times? Deca restaurant and bar opens in early May in the Ritz-Carlton Chicago, 160 E. Pearson, positioning itself as an elegant spot for a neighborhood crowd. Menu items will include steamed mussels with french fries and mini Kobe beef sliders.

At 1578 N. Clybourn, former Levy Organization executive John McLean leased 7,000 square feet for two operations, a gourmet burger bar and a wood-fired pizza restaurant and wine bar. @properties and Cornerstone Real Estate Services were the brokers. For years, the property was the home of the Golden Ox German restaurant.

David Roeder reports on real estate at 6:22 p.m. every Thursday on Newsradio 780 WBBM. The reports are repeated at 10:22 p.m. Thursday and 7:22 a.m. Sunday.

Map: (See microfilm for map).

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Exec's tips to porn star net jail time

NEW YORK A former top Wall Street executive who gave insideinformation on bank stocks to an X-rated movie actress was sentencedto eight months in prison Thursday.

James McDermott Jr., 49, turned toward more than 50 spectators athis sentencing and apologized to his wife and two daughters.

"Where I see weakness and cowardice, they saw strength andcourage," he said in a firm voice, which had become a fixture on TVfinancial programs when he was chief executive of the New Yorkinvestment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.

McDermott lost his job after he gave inside information to KathrynGannon, a Canadian woman known as "Marylin Star" in the X-rated movieindustry.

Gannon, 31, allegedly shared some information with AnthonyPomponio, 45, of North Caldwell, N.J., who was convicted of insidertrading after acknowledging his own affair with Gannon. Gannon andPomponio allegedly made $170,000 in illegal profits.

U.S. District Judge Kimba Wood, commenting that insider trading"undermines investor confidence in the securities markets," alsofined McDermott $25,000 and ordered him to perform 300 hours ofcommunity service.

The sentence was less than half of what federal sentencingguidelines recommended for his April conviction for conspiracy andsecurities fraud.

The judge said she could sentence McDermott to a shorter prisonterm because he was needed at his home in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., tocare for a daughter who had extraordinary needs. She did notelaborate.

McDermott disputed prosecutors' portrayal of him as an arrogantWall Street big shot who broke the law despite a $4 million-a-yearjob.

"I was called a stud stock picker, a master of the universe,"McDermott said. "Those things couldn't be further from the truth. I'mjust an average person who tried to work hard and give back."

Gannon was arrested in May in Vancouver, British Columbia, and isfree on $50,000 bail. Extradition proceedings are under way to bringher to the United States.

Republican Dan Benishek wins Dem Stupak's old seat

DETROIT (AP) — Republican Dan Benishek of Crystal Falls has won the race to succeed veteran Democrat Bart Stupak in Congress.

Stupak had announced in April that he wouldn't seek a 10th term in Washington, after helping rescue President Barack Obama's health care plan.

Benishek is a general surgeon and political novice who tapped into the growing tea party movement and voter angst in northern Michigan's 1st District to beat 58-year-old state Rep. Gary McDowell of Rudyard, a moderate Democrat supported by Stupak.

The 58-year-old Benishek has called for deep cuts in government spending, favors repealing the health care law and pledged not to seek any funding "earmarks" for projects back home.

Former official sues NASCAR over harassment claims

A former racing official is suing NASCAR, alleging racial and sexual discrimination, sexual harassment and wrongful termination.

Mauricia Grant worked as a technical inspector responsible for certifying cars in NASCAR's second-tier Nationwide Series from January 2005 until she was fired last October.

Grant, who is black, alleges she was referred to as "Nappy Headed Mo" and "Queen Sheba," by white co-workers. She also claims she often was told she worked on "colored people time," and was frightened by one official who routinely made references to the Ku Klux Klan.

The lawsuit, which seeks $250 million, was filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

FC Copenhagen parts ways with coach Nilsson

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Danish champion FC Copenhagen says it has parted ways with Swedish coach Roland Nilsson halfway through his first season with the club.

The club says both sides have agreed that "the cooperation has not proved satisfactory," and that sporting director Carsten V. Jensen will take over the coaching job.

Nilsson is a former Sweden international who signed a three-year contract with Copenhagen in May after leading Malmo FF to the Swedish league title.

Copenhagen tops the Danish league standings after 18 rounds, but failed to reach the Champions League this year and was eliminated from the Europa League group stage.

Voters lose trust in government ; The Government will face fresh questions over the loss of millions of voters' personal data today amid a massive slump in public confidence.

The Government will face fresh questions over the loss ofmillions of voters' personal data today amid a massive slump inpublic confidence.

One poll showed those backing Labour's ability to handle economicproblems had been more than halved to 28%, with just a quarterdeeming Gordon Brown's administration "competent and capable"

And another gave the Tories a nine-point overall lead, itsstrongest position for 15 years, just weeks after Labour enjoyed an11-point advantage in the same poll.

The revelation on Tuesday that two CDs containing theinformation, including bank details, had failed to reach theNational Audit Office in London after being sent through HM Revenueand Customs' internal post system sparked fears they could fall intothe hands of fraudsters.

The Opposition seized on the release of Whitehall emails aboutthe transfer of 25 million individuals' personal details to pilefurther pressure on Chancellor Alistair Darling.

Tories said the exchanges cast fresh doubt on Mr Darling's claimsthat the loss of the database was down to a junior official ignoringproper procedures.

The emails, released by the NAO, showed the NAO had only askedthe HMRC to send limited details from its database - stripping outinformation such as bank account numbers.

A covering letter said a senior HMRC manager was copied in toanother email rejecting the request to remove the data as this wouldinvolve additional costs.

Sweden: 23 women convicted of child pornography

STOCKHOLM (AP) — A Swedish court on Tuesday convicted 23 women and one man of child pornography offenses in what investigators called a unique case because of the number of female perpetrators.

The Falu District Court gave the women, aged between 38 and 70, conditional sentences and fines ranging from 2,500 to 18,000 Swedish kronor ($380 to $2,700). It also sentenced a 43-year-old man to one year in prison for aggravated child pornography.

The court said the women received scores of sexually explicit video clips and photographs of children from the man and discussed them online with him. Some said they liked the images or shared sexual fantasies about the children, and one woman sent pornographic images of children to the man, the court said.

The material showed girls and boys of various ages, from toddlers to teenagers.

The man made contact with the women on the Internet and had sexual relations with about half of them, but they had no connection to each other, the court said.

Some 1,181 pictures and 40 films with child pornography were found in the man's computer, including brutal images of shackled children being raped by adults.

Swedish police said reactions they have received from Interpol indicate this is the first child pornography case worldwide to involve so many women.

The court noted that the man appeared to be seeking out women that had been "struck by tragedies within the family, or had been generally mentally worn out."

"Even though they (the women) ... obviously must take full responsibility for their actions, nothing else can be said than that he has abused their weak psychological state and longing for human contact. This has been systematical," the court said.

It added that the majority of the women would probably not have looked at child pornography had they not been introduced to it by the man.

The man confessed to committing a child pornography offense of the lower degree but denied aggravated crime.

A 39-year-old woman denied any involvement, claiming someone else must have used her computer, while five of the women confessed. The others admitted they had received the files, but denied criminal guilt, saying they weren't aware of what kind of files they had received or had suffered memory loss.

In Sweden, defendants in such cases are not named by the nation's media.

Lawyer Staffan Uvabeck, who represents the 39-year-old woman, says he assumes his client wants to appeal.

"She has denied that she used her computer for this," he said. "Since this happened a very long time ago, five years ago, we believe there is room for other interpretations of what has happened."

Lawyers of other defendants didn't immediately return calls seeking a comment.

___

Malin Rising can be reached at http://twitter.com/malinrising

English Soccer Capsules

Brief details of Saturday's Premier League games:

Manchester City 1, Arsenal 3 (1-2)

Bacary Sagna ran into the box and crossed to Emmanuel Adebayor, whose shot was partly deflected by City defender Micah Richards past goalkeeper Joe Hart in the 21st minute. Adebayor set up the second goal in the 26th, beating two City defenders in the air to head a left-wing cross down to Eduardo da Silva, who appeared to be offside when he turned to shoot home from six meters. City hit back two minutes later when Arsenal left back Gael Clichy lost the ball to Vedran Corluka, who laid the ball back for Gelson Fernandes to slide it home inside the area. Adebayor's second goal two minutes from the end came when Alexandre Hleb and Cesc Fabregas exchanged passes on an Arsenal breakaway, and the striker arrived unmarked to drive the ball in from 13 meters.

Tottenham 1, Manchester United 1 (1-0)

Dimitar Berbatov gave Spurs the lead in the 21st minute when Jermaine Jenas broke out of defense and passed to Aaron Lennon. The winger's cross was parried by goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar but Berbatov netted from close range. In late United pressure near the end, Carlos Tevez equalized in the 90th minute when he forced the ball home while pressurizing Spurs defender Michael Dawson on the goal line.

Reading 0, Bolton 2 (0-1)

Royals goalkeeper Marcus Hahnemann saved a penalty in the 23rd minute from Matt Taylor after Marek Matejovsky tripped Gretar Steinsson. But Hahnemann was beaten in the 33rd when Kevin Davies won the ball in the air from a clearance from Bolton goalkeeper Jussi Jaaskelainen and Kevin Nolan fired home. Heidar Helguson added the second goal in the 58th when he fired home the rebound after Hahnemann had blocked Taylor's shot.

Portsmouth 1, Chelsea 1 (0-0)

Nicolas Anelka gave the visitor the lead in the 55th minute at Fratton Park when Florent Malouda went on a breakaway and his cross was set up for the striker by Joe Cole. Nine minutes later, Milan Baros, on loan from Lyon, flicked on a clearance by goalkeeper David James to Jermain Defoe who celebrated his debut with an equalizer.

Wigan 1, West Ham 0 (1-0)

Kevin Kilbane, a winger converted to a left-side defender, headed the only goal of the game deep into first half injury time from a long ball by Ryan Taylor. Michael Brown should have added a second early in the second half but his shot was blocked by the legs of Hammers goalkeeper Robert Green.

Birmingham 1, Derby 1 (0-0)

Sebastian Larsson gave the Blues the lead in the 68th when he met a cross from David Murphy and fired into the roof of the net. Only a minute remained when Emanuel Villa scored his first goal since his transfer window move from Mexican club UAG Techies when he headed home a cross from Dean Leacock..

Blackburn 0, Everton 0

Andy Johnson had a goal disallowed for offside seven minutes from the end. James Vaughan set up the chance, beating Rovers goalkeeper Brad Friedel to a through ball and laying off a pass to the striker who appeared onside to shoot home.

Liverpool 3, Sunderland 0 (0-0)

Peter Crouch headed Liverpool ahead in the 55th minute from a cross by Jamie Carragher and Fernando Torres added a second in the 69th from Crouch's flick. After Sunderland was denied a penalty for Carragher's hand ball, Liverpool was awarded a spot kick a minute from the end when Nyron Nosworthy fouled Jermaine Pennant and Steven Gerrard added the third.

Disgraced Dem Donor Arrested in Colorado

SAN FRANCISCO - Disgraced Democratic fundraiser Norman Hsu was arrested in Colorado late Thursday on a warrant a judge issued after he failed to show up for a court appearance related to a felony theft conviction.

FBI agents took Hsu into custody at St. Mary's Hospital in Grand Junction, Colo., said FBI spokesman Joseph Schadler.

Hsu had been scheduled to appear in court Wednesday to turn over his passport and ask a judge to cut in half the $2 million bail he posted last week when he turned himself in after spending 15 years on the lam from a felony theft conviction.

Instead, Hsu failed to show up at the bail reduction hearing and a judge issued a new arrest warrant for him.

California Attorney General spokesman Gareth Lacy said Hsu's lawyers told prosecutors Hsu arrived by charter jet at the Oakland airport about 5:30 a.m. Wednesday local time and then wasn't heard from again.

When it became apparent that Hsu had fled the state, California authorities sought the assistance of the FBI, whose agents arrested him Thursday night on charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution, Schadler said.

Once he is returned to state custody, the federal charges will be dismissed, Schadler said.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Medaglia d'Oro, Volponi 1-2 in Whitney

Handicap by a length Saturday at Saratoga Race Course in SaratogaSprings, N.Y.

Medaglia d'Oro, a 4-year-old ridden by Jerry Bailey and trained byBobby Frankel, finished the 11/8-mile course in 1:47/?240-208? on afast track.

"Deep down I knew, and Bobby told me, he was ready," Bailey said."He was fit and 100 percent. I knew as soon as I asked the questionif he was ready, I was going to find out pretty quick, and hecertainly had enough."

Medaglia d'Oro, owned by Edmund Gann, paid $3.60, $2.50 and $2.30in the 76th running of the Grade I race for 3-year-olds and up.Volponi returned $2.80 and $2.40. Evening Attire paid $3 to show.

The Whitney was a rematch between Volponi and Medaglia d'Oro. Ninemonths ago, Volponi beat Medaglia d'Oro and War Emblem as a 43-1 longshot to win in the $4 million Breeders' Cup Classic at ArlingtonPark.

Medaglia d'Oro, the winner of last year's Jim Dandy Stakes andTravers Stakes at Saratoga, broke well and settled into second placebehind Northern Rock. Volponi, ridden by Jose Santos, seemed tostumble out of the gate but regained his stride and moved intofourth. Through the halfway mark, the horses kept a fast pace asMedaglia d'Oro stayed on Northern Rock's tail and Volponi made a moveinto third. As the field entered the final turn, Medaglia d'Orocharged into first. Volponi gained on the winner in the final furlongbut couldn't catch him.

"I thought down the stretch that maybe Volponi was going to run byhim, but he dug in and showed his guts," Frankel said.

Volponi, trained by P.G. Johnson, has failed to reach the winner'scircle this year, finishing second in four consecutive starts.

"He was a little wild going down the backstretch," Johnson said."He was all over the place. But he does that sometimes, and I thinkhe's looking for a place to run."

In the Grade II Amsterdam, Zavata, with Bailey up, ran away from apack of six to win the six-furlong race in 1:08.64. It was Zavata'sthird stakes victory.

DEL MAR: Katdogawn ($12.20, $4.60 and $3.60) defeated 6-5 favoriteAtlantic Ocean by two lengths to win the $150,000 San ClementeHandicap for 3-year-old fillies. Ridden by Julie Krone, Katdogawncovered a mile on the turf in 1:33/?240-208?, a stakes record thatbettered the mark of 1:33ª/?240-208? set by Little Treasure lastyear.

AP

Favre a no-show as Rodgers takes over for Pack

With the Brett Favre standoff still simmering, Aaron Rodgers took his place Monday as the Packers' new starting quarterback. Rodgers is trying to ignore what has become a daily soap opera involving the three-time MVP.

Favre is considering filing for reinstatement with the NFL and reporting to camp this week, a move likely intended to pressure Green Bay to grant him his release _ something the Packers refuse to do _ or trade him. The NFL had not received reinstatement paperwork from Favre as of Monday evening.

"I feel like this is really between Brett and the organization, and I'm just trying to stay focused on the things I can control," Rodgers said after the team's first practice at camp.

General manager Ted Thompson spoke twice with Favre on Saturday, for about 45 minutes each time. They decided it would be best for Favre to stay away from Green Bay for now.

"We still have not gotten to the point where we agree on what the best option is," Thompson said Monday. "We have sort of agreed to disagree, and at that time he suggested he would probably delay coming to training camp for at least a couple of days to see how things worked out."

The Packers aren't going to allow Favre to play for an NFC North rival and aren't going to trade him without getting value in return. And Favre might not want to play for any of the teams showing interest, a group that includes Tampa Bay and the New York Jets. Thompson acknowledged talking to other teams.

"There have been some 'kicking of tires'-type conversations," he said.

Favre wants to be released, something Thompson opposes. The Packers hold Favre's rights until his contract expires after the 2010 season.

"A release just doesn't make a lot of sense from the Packers' point of view," Thompson said. "I've not heard many people say that's a good option _ even people that would like to hang me in effigy outside."

The Packers have filed tampering charges against Minnesota, suspecting Favre's latest flip-flop on his future was spurred mainly by interest from the Vikings.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell is trying to help the sides reach a settlement.

"I'm glad to see that there are productive discussions and they're talking directly to one another," Goodell said from Buffalo Bills training camp Monday. "They're both important to the league going forward, and I'm hopeful they'll reach a proper resolution."

Goodell said the league was working toward a resolution of the tampering investigation.

Thompson said Favre wanted people to know he doesn't want to become a distraction.

"His reasoning behind that is he cares very much about this team, cares about these players, his former teammates, so he doesn't want to do anything to disrupt from that," Thompson said.

Packers coach Mike McCarthy downplayed that possibility.

"We talked about it as a team yesterday," he said. "I don't foresee Brett Favre coming in here as a problem. Brett Favre is a big part of the Green Bay Packers history, and he may be a part of the future as we move forward, and that's an option that he has if he reinstates."

Thompson reiterated that if Favre were to return to the Packers, it would not be as the starter. Thompson also did not make much of the idea of an open competition with Rodgers.

"We have to continue down this path," Thompson said. "Where that leads, I don't know, but I didn't want to be dishonest or disingenuous and say 'OK, we can do this and then change our mind.' I think Brett Favre deserves more than that, so we told him the way we felt."

Veteran offensive tackle Mark Tauscher lauded Rodgers for his handling of an "uncomfortable situation."

"I think he's stepped in and really taken the reins of what we're doing here," Tauscher said. "I think everybody in this locker room has a lot of confidence in what he can do."

Wide receiver Donald Driver spoke to Favre over the weekend.

"He's a legend," Driver said. "It's just like if anybody else walked in here and wanted to come back and play, you have to welcome 'em back in. You take your hat off to him. He's one of the greatest players in Packers history, as well as the NFL."

Rodgers believes he has earned his teammates' respect.

"They've seen the hard work I've put in," Rodgers said. "I think I've earned a lot of respect from the guys playing on the scout team, being here 100 percent the last three offseasons. Obviously they want to see a guy who's consistent on the field on Sundays, and obviously that's going to take a few weeks to prove that to some of the older guys, but I look forward to that challenge."

Monday's practice attracted more national coverage than usual, but it wasn't exactly a media circus.

"I was expecting elephants and different things to kind of be out there," Tauscher said. "There's a lot of media and stuff, but it wasn't a case where there were trapeze artists."

Favre's presence could change that in a hurry.

___

AP Sports Writer John Wawrow contributed to this report from Pittsford, N.Y.

Officer who shot Brazilian testifies at inquest

A police marksman who shot dead an unarmed Brazilian aboard a London subway train said Friday he was sure he faced "immeasurable" danger from a suicide bomber.

The officer told jurors at an inquest into the July 22, 2005, killing of Jean Charles de Menezes that he believed the man he was pursuing had been identified as one of the failed suicide bombers who had tried to attack London's transport system the day before.

"It was left in no doubt as to the type of suspect we were trying to intercept and they were prepared to take their own lives as well as others and the danger was immeasurable," said the marksman, who was granted anonymity by the inquest and identified only by his code name, C12.

An inquest, which is not a trial, is required by British law when someone dies unexpectedly, violently or of unknown causes. De Menezes' family and their supporters hope that it will provide more information about de Menezes' death than has so far been revealed publicly.

De Menezes, a 27-year-old electrician, was followed from his apartment building _ which was also home to one of the would-be bombers _ and onto a subway train by armed officers who fired seven shots into his head.

Friday's testimony was the first time either of the officers who shot de Menezes has spoken publicly about the events. The dead man's mother, Maria Otone de Menezes, 63, and brother Giovani da Silva, 36, were at the inquest to hear him.

The inquest has heard testimony about confused communications between police officers as the London force mounted a huge manhunt for the failed bombers. Tensions were high in the city following suicide bombings two weeks earlier that killed 52 subway and bus passengers.

The officer said he was frustrated by a lack of orders from his superiors in the moments before the shooting.

"We were very, very close to the Tube station as the subject went in and I remember there being a radio silence and I was frustrated by this," he said.

The officer told the inquest that he had been a specialist firearms officer since 1998 but had never fired his gun at a suspect until the day de Menezes was killed.

No individual has been charged in de Menezes' death, although a court convicted the police force last year of health and safety violations for endangering the public's safety during the shooting.

NASA test flight delayed by cloudy weather

Cloudy weather is holding up a test launch of NASA's newest rocket.

The Ares I-X rocket came within two minutes and 39 seconds of launching Tuesday morning. But the countdown was halted when a big cloud settled right over the pad after minor problems held things up earlier.

NASA has until noon (1600 GMT) to get the experimental flight going.

This is the first step in NASA's effort to return astronauts to the moon.

The flight will last two minutes. Parachutes will drop the first-stage booster into the Atlantic for recovery. The upper portion of the rocket _ all fake parts _ will fall uncontrolled into the ocean.

NASA expects to learn a lot, even if it's for another type of rocket. The White House is re-evaluating the human spaceflight program.

Nation's top recruit quickly finds a home at Miami

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — It's a few minutes before sunrise, morning dew soaking the manicured grass of the Miami football complex, and offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland is shouting words of encouragement as the biggest Hurricanes run through some drills.

When it was Seantrel Henderson's turn, Stoutland stopped yelling — a rarity for the high-energy coach.

For a few seconds, he just watched in silence.

It's easy to stand and marvel when seeing a 6-foot-8, 340-pound man-child hop over barriers with the agility of a ballerina, hits a blocking sled with such force that his imprint on the foam rubber padding is still there when the next guy comes through, and can pull two teammates off the ground at the same time.

Henderson came to Miami with expectations as long as his copious shadow, and so far, he's fulfilling them all. The nation's No. 1 recruit a year ago is already a first-stringer on the right side of the Hurricanes' line, played a full game in last weekend's win over Duke, and is proving that he was worth every bit of the hype that has followed him for years.

"From Day 1, when he starting pushing everybody off the line, when he was moving guys back from the first day, he was showing that it was well-deserved," Miami running back Damien Berry said. "He was ready, ready to come in, ready to play. The way he picks stuff up, his footwork, his speed, it's kind of amazing."

The book on Henderson from his teammates goes like this: He's gregarious, a video-game savant, loud, funny and outgoing. The one subject he doesn't apparently like discussing is himself. Henderson has routinely declined interview requests, which may be the only way he shakes extra attention — because opposing teams are starting to give him plenty of that.

When No. 25 Miami (4-2, 2-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) hosts North Carolina (4-2, 2-1) on Saturday night, it's certain that the Tar Heels will always know what No. 77 is doing.

"He's big, he's physical, he's looks an awful lot like Bryant McKinnie when I was at Miami," said Tar Heels coach Butch Davis. "He's just a big, massive human being. ... Obviously, he's a good athlete because he was a former basketball player, so he's got good feet. He's playing very, very well for a freshman."

The numbers prove what Davis is seeing.

Henderson has played 164 snaps this season, including 77 against Duke (with a season-high five pancake blocks), and has graded out at 83 percent or higher in every game — 90 percent twice.

Henderson took a long way from St. Paul, Minn. to Miami. He didn't pick the Hurricanes originally, choosing USC first and shunning offers from just about every big-time program in the process.

The Trojans had Henderson until this summer, losing him after getting hit by NCAA sanctions. Henderson was released without transfer restrictions, meaning he could not only go anywhere that wanted him and wouldn't have to sit out a season, either.

In the end, Henderson picked Miami.

"Coach Stoutland and Seantrel, they both take a lot of pride in what they're doing," Miami coach Randy Shannon said. "He's really, really picked up the system faster than what most people do. Mentally and physically, Seantrel came here ready to get it done."

Henderson's listed weight seems like guesswork, really. Some estimates said he arrived on campus closer to 370 pounds. Others say he's now about 330.

Regardless, he's done everything the Hurricanes have asked from the outset.

"Recruiting's recruiting," Miami center Tyler Horn said. "You can have all the stars in the world and it doesn't mean you're going to be a good football player. It means you have the potential to be a good football player. I've always been told potential is a nine-letter word for bad. You've got to be able to go out there and prove how good you are."

The Hurricanes didn't make it easy on Henderson. Ever since Shannon took over in 2007, he's preached that the locker room should be the most competitive place on earth. So he wanted other offensive linemen to fight for their jobs. He wanted defensive linemen to battle Henderson like he was a real opponent, not a teammate.

So Henderson got his first college test even before classes began. His grade: A-plus.

"He came out on the field and proved it. He came up in the film room and proved it," Horn said. "He's proved it in every aspect of the game. He didn't come in here like, 'Oh, I'm so-and-so, No. 1 recruit.' He came in here like, 'I want to earn y'all's respect. I want to earn it the right way.' And he's done that. It's been a great thing and I respect Seantrel a whole lot because of it. I'm really proud of him."

Portland mayor won't resign over lying about teen

The mayor of Portland, Ore., said Sunday he would not resign despite calls for him to do so after he admitted he lied and asked a teenager to lie about their sexual relationship.

"Tomorrow, I go back (to) work as your mayor. I know I have let you down and made mistakes. I ask your forgiveness," Mayor Sam Adams said in a statement. "I believe I have a lot to offer the city I love during this time of important challenges."

Adams, who was just sworn in on Jan. 1, publicly apologized this past week for lying early in his campaign about the relationship with an 18-year-old man in 2005.

The scandal has resulted in an investigation by the Oregon attorney general and has divided the city and its gay and lesbian community. The police union and four Portland newspapers have called for his resignation, but Adams has found strong support to remain, including a Friday rally on his behalf at City Hall that drew more than 400 people.

In his statement, Adams said he would "work harder than I ever have in my life" to help see the city through the tough economic times.

Two of the leading business associations in Portland had taken a wait-and-see stance.

Steve Holwerda, Chairman of the Portland Business Alliance, said in a statement the board had differing views on whether Adams should resign but they agreed it was a critical time for the city and some of its major development projects.

"Whether or not he stays in office should be based on whether he can lead our city effectively and with the integrity that all our citizens deserve," Holwerda said.

But the board of the Portland Area Business Association went further and said Adams should remain in office, but added, "pending the outcome of official investigation."

The teenager, Beau Breedlove, was a legislative intern when he met the mayor at age 17. He and the mayor both say their sexual relationship started after his 18th birthday, in June 2005.

Breedlove, now 21, told The Oregonian on Saturday that the relationship was consensual.

"I do not see any relationship that I ever had with Sam as me being taken advantage of," Breedlove told the newspaper. "I do not feel like I was ever a victim."

When Adams confirmed the relationship this past week, he said it was inappropriate because of the age difference; Adams is now 45.

He also said he lied early in his mayoral campaign and asked Breedlove to lie as well because rumors at the time falsely suggested the relationship involved a minor.

___

On the Net:

A video version of the mayor's statement was available on his Web site at http://www.mayorsamadams.com.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Friday's Sports Scoreboard

All Times Eastern
National League
Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati 4 F
Atlanta 5, San Francisco 4 -11 Innings
National Football League
No games today.
National Basketball Association Preseason
Orlando 93, Indiana 86 F
Detroit 115, Milwaukee 110 F OT
Chicago 107, Washington 96 F
Miami 103, Oklahoma City 96 F
Denver 109, Portland 99 F
Golden State 127, L.A. Clippers 87 -4
National Hockey League
Carolina 2, Minnesota 1 (SO Carolina 1-0) F 2OT
San Jose 3, Columbus 2 F
Dallas 4, New Jersey 3 F OT
Detroit 4, Anaheim 0 F
Buffalo 2, Ottawa 1 F
Atlanta 4, Washington 2 F
Top 25 College Football
No games today.
WNBA Basketball Playoffs
No games today.
Major League Soccer
No games today.

Australia denies residency to German over son's Down syndrome

Meraiah Foley The New York Times Media Group
International Herald Tribune
11-05-2008
Australia denies residency to German over son's Down syndrome
Byline: Meraiah Foley The New York Times Media Group
Edition: 4
Section: NEWS

SYDNEY --

In a country with a serious shortage of doctors, many Australians are perplexed by their government's decision to reject the residency application of a German doctor on the grounds that his son's Down syndrome would place too great a burden on the national health care system.

Dr. Bernhard Moeller moved to Australia nearly three years ago after answering an international advertisement seeking a specialist in internal medicine to work in Horsham, a working-class town of 20,000 people in the southern state of Victoria.
Moeller and his wife, Isabella, were looking for a quiet home in a friendly community. But most of all, they wanted a normal life for their 13-year-old son, Lukas, who has Down syndrome.

The couple chose Australia because of its reputation for allowing children with Down syndrome, a chromosomal abnormality that causes varying degrees of intellectual disability, to attend mainstream schools along with their nondisabled peers.

Moeller took a job as the sole internal medicine specialist at the Wimmera Base Hospital, a public hospital that serves around 55,000 people in western Victoria, and the family began settling in. Lukas learned to play cricket and joined an Australian-rules football club.

"We were thinking right from the beginning that if we liked it here, if it worked out well for us, that we would like to stay," Moeller said. "We had a house; I had a good job. We are Germans, so it was a big move, a big change, but we didn't regret it. It was all good."

So good, in fact, that the family decided to apply for permanent residency.

But last month, the Moellers were shocked to discover that their application had been rejected because Lukas did not meet Australia's stringent health requirements.

Australia, which provides free health care to its citizens and permanent residents, has a longstanding policy of factoring medical conditions into its visa decisions. Residency applicants are required to take a battery of tests, including screening for HIV and tuberculosis, and must be rejected by law if they are found to have any health condition that would incur a significant cost to Australian taxpayers.

"This is not discrimination," a spokesman for the Department of Immigration and Citizenship said in a statement. "It is a question of the cost implications to the community."

The case has caused an outcry across Australia, where doctors and nurses are in short supply.

The Australian Medical Association, disability groups, talk radio hosts and politicians across the ideological spectrum have called for a review of Moeller's case. An editorial the Melbourne newspaper The Age called the decision an "echo of Nazism," while a headline in the rival Herald Sun declared, "Let the Good Doctor Stay."

Foreign medical staff make up about 40 percent of the work force in Australia's regional hospitals and clinics, according to the Rural Doctors Association of Australia. Still, the organization estimates that around 17,000 medical positions, including 1,800 vacancies for doctors, remain unfilled in rural areas.

"Overseas-trained doctors should get all the gratitude and support we can offer, because without them the pressure on the health system would be enormous," the association's president, Dr. Nola Maxfield, said in a statement supporting a review of the Moeller case. "We should be doing everything possible to ensure that the 1,800 hole gets smaller rather than larger."

The staff shortage is no news to Pam Clarke, mayor of Horsham. If the Moellers are forced to leave when their temporary visas expire in 2010, local residents would have to drive as much as four hours to see another specialist.

"We have a need for three physicians, and we have one," Clarke said. "If we aren't able to keep him, then we're back to square one."

Clarke is among the many state and federal politicians calling on Immigration Minister Chris Evans to review the decision. Last week, the Victoria state premier, John Brumby, and the federal health minister, Nicola Roxon, both said the ruling should be overturned because it fails to take into account Moeller's work as a doctor in an underserved community.

"It's really about a federal government policy that says that if you have a member of your family that has a disability that may be a burden on the taxpayer in the future, you may not stay here," Clarke said. "We're wanting the government to review that black-and-white policy in light of the contribution his family will make to our community."

This is not the first time Australia has been taken to task for its sometimes contradictory approach to immigrants with disabilities.

In 2004, immigration officials used the health requirement to reject the residency application of an Indian social worker whose 12- year-old son was autistic. The case made headlines when it was found that another government department had used the boy's photo on a taxpayer-financed calendar celebrating the International Day of People with Disability. Six months later, the immigration minister at that time, Amanda Vanstone, quietly overturned the decision and allowed the family to stay.

Moeller said he hopes for a similar outcome. Nevertheless, he believes the damage to Australia's reputation has already been done.

"It makes us even more sure we want to stay, because we've had so much support," Moeller said.

But, he added: "It will not make skilled people, qualified people, well-trained people, more prone to migrate to Australia.

"I think it is internationally very damaging."

(Copyright 2008)
Australia denies residency to German over son's Down syndromeMeraiah Foley The New York Times Media Group
International Herald Tribune
11-05-2008
Australia denies residency to German over son's Down syndrome
Byline: Meraiah Foley The New York Times Media Group
Edition: 4
Section: NEWS

SYDNEY --

In a country with a serious shortage of doctors, many Australians are perplexed by their government's decision to reject the residency application of a German doctor on the grounds that his son's Down syndrome would place too great a burden on the national health care system.

Dr. Bernhard Moeller moved to Australia nearly three years ago after answering an international advertisement seeking a specialist in internal medicine to work in Horsham, a working-class town of 20,000 people in the southern state of Victoria.
Moeller and his wife, Isabella, were looking for a quiet home in a friendly community. But most of all, they wanted a normal life for their 13-year-old son, Lukas, who has Down syndrome.

The couple chose Australia because of its reputation for allowing children with Down syndrome, a chromosomal abnormality that causes varying degrees of intellectual disability, to attend mainstream schools along with their nondisabled peers.

Moeller took a job as the sole internal medicine specialist at the Wimmera Base Hospital, a public hospital that serves around 55,000 people in western Victoria, and the family began settling in. Lukas learned to play cricket and joined an Australian-rules football club.

"We were thinking right from the beginning that if we liked it here, if it worked out well for us, that we would like to stay," Moeller said. "We had a house; I had a good job. We are Germans, so it was a big move, a big change, but we didn't regret it. It was all good."

So good, in fact, that the family decided to apply for permanent residency.

But last month, the Moellers were shocked to discover that their application had been rejected because Lukas did not meet Australia's stringent health requirements.

Australia, which provides free health care to its citizens and permanent residents, has a longstanding policy of factoring medical conditions into its visa decisions. Residency applicants are required to take a battery of tests, including screening for HIV and tuberculosis, and must be rejected by law if they are found to have any health condition that would incur a significant cost to Australian taxpayers.

"This is not discrimination," a spokesman for the Department of Immigration and Citizenship said in a statement. "It is a question of the cost implications to the community."

The case has caused an outcry across Australia, where doctors and nurses are in short supply.

The Australian Medical Association, disability groups, talk radio hosts and politicians across the ideological spectrum have called for a review of Moeller's case. An editorial the Melbourne newspaper The Age called the decision an "echo of Nazism," while a headline in the rival Herald Sun declared, "Let the Good Doctor Stay."

Foreign medical staff make up about 40 percent of the work force in Australia's regional hospitals and clinics, according to the Rural Doctors Association of Australia. Still, the organization estimates that around 17,000 medical positions, including 1,800 vacancies for doctors, remain unfilled in rural areas.

"Overseas-trained doctors should get all the gratitude and support we can offer, because without them the pressure on the health system would be enormous," the association's president, Dr. Nola Maxfield, said in a statement supporting a review of the Moeller case. "We should be doing everything possible to ensure that the 1,800 hole gets smaller rather than larger."

The staff shortage is no news to Pam Clarke, mayor of Horsham. If the Moellers are forced to leave when their temporary visas expire in 2010, local residents would have to drive as much as four hours to see another specialist.

"We have a need for three physicians, and we have one," Clarke said. "If we aren't able to keep him, then we're back to square one."

Clarke is among the many state and federal politicians calling on Immigration Minister Chris Evans to review the decision. Last week, the Victoria state premier, John Brumby, and the federal health minister, Nicola Roxon, both said the ruling should be overturned because it fails to take into account Moeller's work as a doctor in an underserved community.

"It's really about a federal government policy that says that if you have a member of your family that has a disability that may be a burden on the taxpayer in the future, you may not stay here," Clarke said. "We're wanting the government to review that black-and-white policy in light of the contribution his family will make to our community."

This is not the first time Australia has been taken to task for its sometimes contradictory approach to immigrants with disabilities.

In 2004, immigration officials used the health requirement to reject the residency application of an Indian social worker whose 12- year-old son was autistic. The case made headlines when it was found that another government department had used the boy's photo on a taxpayer-financed calendar celebrating the International Day of People with Disability. Six months later, the immigration minister at that time, Amanda Vanstone, quietly overturned the decision and allowed the family to stay.

Moeller said he hopes for a similar outcome. Nevertheless, he believes the damage to Australia's reputation has already been done.

"It makes us even more sure we want to stay, because we've had so much support," Moeller said.

But, he added: "It will not make skilled people, qualified people, well-trained people, more prone to migrate to Australia.

"I think it is internationally very damaging."

(Copyright 2008)

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Restore balance in national parks

National parks have been around since the Civil War, but debateover their proper role has never ended. Should they be naturalpreserves, havens from the encroachment of man and his machines? Orshould they be recreational playgrounds, places of easy accessibilityand manmade creature comforts?

The answer has swung back and forth, with the pendulum from timeto time going too far in either direction. It is one of those timesnow, with the pendulum under the Reagan administration appearing tolurch far away from the concept of natural preservation.

It's time to restore the balance.

Despite popular misconceptions, the first national parks werepurchased in the …

Plan to Limit Interbank Risk.(Market Monitor)(Brief article)

Byline: Joe Adler

The federal banking regulatory agencies on Friday warned about "correspondent concentration risk," which generally arises when an institution's credit exposure to one source is greater than 25% of its Tier 1 capital.

They agencies …

1910 POLITICAL CARTOON OF ARSENAL VALID TODAY.(MAIN)

Byline: TIM CRONIN Averill Park

I was recently laid off from Watervliet Arsenal after 14 years and found the political cartoon from 1910 (Dec. 26 Perspective section) very interesting.

A lot of current and former arsenal employees feel that since Sam Stratton died, the arsenal has been seriously neglected. With a …

Bankleer (Christopher Leither, Karin Kasbock) Kunstbank, Berlin.

The Devil's Platform is a carnival game played by drunken visitors to Munich's Oktoberfest, hosted by an MC with a microphone. The object of the game is to stay on a spinning platform as long as possible without loosing one's balance or being thrown off by the other players, the MC's provocation or his large leather ball. The artist duo Bankleer used the game in a video as a metaphor for the Germany economy, the MC narrating the action with statements from Germany's Minister of Employment, and quotes critical of the Minister's policies and the market economy in general.

The video's title, Rotate: Work Simulation, refers to the Ministry's attempt to force the …

Official Says Castro Fit to Run in 2008

HAVANA - Fidel Castro will be in "perfect shape" to run for re-election to parliament next spring, the first step toward securing yet another term as Cuba's president, National Assembly head Ricardo Alarcon said Thursday.

"I would nominate him," said Alarcon, the highest-ranking member of parliament. "I'm sure he will be in perfect shape to continue handling his responsibilities."

Mobbed by foreign reporters following a parliamentary session to discuss Cuba's upcoming elections, Alarcon said Castro "is doing fine and continuing to focus on recovery and rehabilitation."

A lengthy process of nominating candidates for municipal elections will begin this summer, …

Michelle talks Chicago in Mexico

On her first trip to Mexico, first lady Michelle Obama on Wednesday talked about Chicago's Mexican-American communities in Pilsen, Little Village and the Southeast Side.

"Growing up in Chicago on the South Side, I lived next to one of the largest Mexican-American communities in the city," Mrs. Obama said in a session with six print journalists following her in Mexico.

We're on the campus of Universidad Iberoamericana, and Mrs. Obama just delivered a speech to college and high school students to inspire them to help others. She ended her address with the rousing battle cry of President Obama's 2008 presidential quest -- "Si, se puede -- Yes we can" -- but the crowd did not …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

WELL AND GOOD.(Health)

Holistic health

http://blog.timesunion.com/holistichealth/

On the Holistic Health blog, Judi England takes charge of her decisions and tells us how to do the same:

My life isn't much different than anyone else's I suppose. I try to look ahead, organize and schedule. I do my homework, make the calls, remember the dates and still I'm caught by life happening. At that point there are only two choices -- you can say "yes" or you can say "no" -- you can't change the fact that you need to make a choice.

One of the gifts of getting older is just getting more comfortable with who you are and the decisions that you make. The opinions of other …

SENATE GOP FRACTURED BY UPSTATE- DOWNSTATE POWER FIGHT.(Local)

Byline: Jeannie H. Cross United Press International

While speculation at the Capitol is rampant that Senate Majority Leader Warren M. Anderson is headed for retirement, few are focusing on the major reason for him to stay: He is the glue that is keeping the increasingly fractured Republican Senate majority together.

Cracks in what was once a monolithic majority have been developing for at least 10 years, as the GOP lost seats in upstate cities and gained them in New York City and its suburbs.

At the moment, the downstaters have a one-seat edge over the upstaters but they also have been asserting their ascendancy more.

This was particularly …

CANADA AUDITS INDIAN RESERVE BOOKS AMID ALLEGATIONS.(MAIN)

Byline: Associated Press

TORONTO -- In the Rocky Mountain foothills of Alberta, a government-hired consulting firm decides how to spend millions in tax dollars to help an Indian reserve -- a task of tribal leaders until accusations mounted of fiscal abuse in native communities.

Auditors are checking the books of at least two Alberta tribes, and a taxpayers' lobby, Canadian Taxpayers Federation, is demanding an audit of spending for all 600 Indian reserves. In Parliament, the main opposition faction, the Reform Party, wants to take matters further, recommending all federal spending programs for aboriginals -- $4.5 billion a year -- be phased out.

Gene profiles could improve AML diagnosis, provide insight on better treatments.

2004 AUG 12 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- The results of a microarray analysis of genes from both children and adults with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) could significantly improve the ability to make accurate diagnoses and prognoses for the major genetic (molecular) subtypes of the pediatric form of this disease and lead to better treatments.

This finding, by investigators at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, has been published in the journal Blood.

AML is a cancer that arises in bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) or progenitor cells that are destined to become myeloid cells (cells normally committed to fighting infections). Gene microarray …

US prosecutors tell jurors ex-police officer strangled woman who was carrying his baby

A former police officer in Ohio went on trial Monday on charges alleging he strangled a woman who was pregnant with his child, dumped her body, then lied to investigators as crews of thousands searched for her body.

The 2 1/2-year-old son of the victim and the defendant gave investigators some of their first clues after his mother disappeared, saying: "Mommy's in the rug."

Bobby Cutts Jr. was feeling the pressure of his crumbling marriage, financial debt and supporting several children, Stark County assistant prosecutor Chryssa Hartnett said in her opening statement at Cutts' trial.

"We are here because of physical pressure _ the …

State rejects all Sox arena bids // Team mulls a $10 million contribution

The state Monday rejected all four bids for construction of anew White Sox stadium as team officials mulled a $10 millioncontribution to ease the crisis caused by higher-than-expected costs.

The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority will spend this weeknegotiating with construction giants Gust K. Newberg and Dugan &Meyers in an attempt to reduce their $129.9 million low bid by 15percent to 20 percent.

The joint bid submitted Friday by Newberg/Dugan was $30 millionhigher than stadium authority officials had anticipated.

Officials aid the price must be cut by at least $19.5 million orthe stadium project cannot go forward. The Sox will be free to …

FFBH - Bulgaria Morning Update - Mar 8, 2010.

MARKET WRAP-UP

The last trading session of last week finished colored in green but with insignificant volume. The total turnover was BGN 0.88m, where 31% were formed from the three most traded names - Albena (6AB, 2 387 volume, BGN 42,49, -1,19%), Monbat (5MB, 15 354, BGN 6,53, 1,24%) and Insurance Company Euroins (5IC, 53 951, BGN 1,5, 2,67%). Another 27% came from the bond sector. SOFIX (425.84 points, 0.9, 0.21%) and BGTR30 (328.25, 0.54, 0.16%) moved lightly up led by Orgachim (5ORG, 125, BGN 81,809, 4,88%). BG40 (118.05, 0.52, 0.44%) advanced the most, led by gainer Technology and Innovation Corporation Saedinenie (5T3, 32 850, BGN 0.189, 6.18%). Only three names in BGREIT (44.09, 0.01, 0.02%) were traded and the index took the direction of gainer FairPlay Properties REIT (6F3, 4 000, BGN 0.40, 1.27%).

    Sofix BG 40 BGREIT BGTR30 Value   425.84 118.05 44.09 328.25 1-day change (%) 0.21 0.44 0.02 0.16 7-day change (%) 0.49 -0.03 -1.21 0.53 90-day change (%) -5.93 -2.42 -9.82 -4.10 365-day change (%) 58.58 35.75 9.40 68.88 BSE … 

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

MORE MEAT NEEDED, PLEASE.(BUSINESS)

Bruegger's Bagel Bakeries says it changed dispensing techniques for ease of sandwich-making, but the bottom line is this: Customers were getting less meat.

Regular patrons were finding that sandwiches had just two slices of meat, rather than three or four. Apparently there were enough complaints that the company will go back to the old way of making sandwiches. In other words, the squeaky meal gets the meat.

``What was going on was, instead of weighing by the ounce, they were looking at going by the slice,'' said Manuela Eckert, director of marketing for franchise owner Flour City Bagels LLC of Fairport. ``We are now going back to the ounces. It looks as …

Sandretto now sells machines from Taiwan.(INJECTION MOULDING)

MACHINES from the biggest manufacturer in Taiwan are now available in Britain from Sandretto UK. The company has taken on the agency for Fu Chun Shin, better known as FCS Machinery, which builds around 2,800 machines a year at two factories in China and one in Taiwan. The range stretches from 30 to 3,500 tonnes.

FCS machines are no strangers in the UK. They were once sold here by Mike Smith International, and the FCS web site still shows JET Industrial Services as the British representative. What Sandretto reckons to offer that previous agents didn't have is the size of support operation which makes it one of the bigger injection machine sales companies in Britain: it …

Memorabilia dealer testifies at Simpson hearing, saying football star burst into hotel room

A memorabilia dealer accusing O.J. Simpson of robbing him testified that the former American football star burst into a hotel room with a handful of other men, including one wielding a gun, and carried off hundreds of collector's items.

Bruce Fromong, one of two dealers allegedly robbed, said he had expected to meet with an anonymous buyer on Sept. 13, when Simpson arrived with others "in a military invasion fashion" and shouted that the items belonged to him.

"O.J. was screaming, 'This is all my s---. This all belongs to me. You stole this from me. Let's pack up. Let's get out of here,'" Fromong said.

Simpson, 60, and two …

Hurd. (Vinyl Windows).

Monument vinyl windows come in white and almond and feature fusion-welded mitered corners and multiple hollow chambers for strength, says the firm. The windows …