четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Private investigator Anthony Pellicano convicted in Hollywood wiretap scheme; victims grateful

The nine-week trial of Hollywood private investigator Anthony Pellicano often had seamy plot lines and suspense worthy of a movie: death threats, offers of murder and extramarital affairs.

But for those who believe they were targets of Pellicano's ruthless tactics, reality could be terrifying. Their cars were vandalized, their homes broken into and, worst of all, they say, their private conversations were wiretapped.

On Thursday, they welcomed the 64-year-old private investigator's conviction on racketeering and wiretapping charges.

"We are certainly relieved," said actor Keith Carradine, whose phones prosecutors say were wiretapped by …

Dr. Wilbur F. Britt, 73, Glenview neurosurgeon Navy veteran served on ship in S. Pacific for two years

Dr. Wilbur F. Britt chose a career in neurosurgery for the samereason many people shy away from it.

"He said it was the most challenging thing he could think of," Dr.Britt's son, Derrick Britt, said.

Dr. Britt, of Glenview, died of pancreatic cancer July 28 atGlenbrook Hospital. He was 73.

A neurosurgeon for almost 40 years, Dr. Britt was a well-liked,talented doctor whose wry sense of humor was matched only by hisskill on the golf course, relatives said.

"He shot a 67 one day, which is an unbelievable score, and one ofhis golfing cronies called from Italy in the middle of the night whenhe heard," Derrick Britt, 37, said. "The first thing Bill …

Funding Science in America: Congress, Universities, and the Politics of the Academic Pork Barrel

Funding Science in America: Congress, Universities, and the Politics of the Academic Pork Barrel. By James D. Savage. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999. 256 pp. Cloth, $49.95; paper, $19.95. ISBN: cloth 0-521-64315-5, paper 0-521-79461-7.

Reviewed by Marcel C. LaFollette

During fiscal year (FY) 2000, academic earmarking-the practice of awarding money via special legislative provision rather than by merit review-set an all-time record. University pork-barrel appropriations exceeded $1 billion, far outstripping even FY1999's remarkable $797 million.

Funding Science in America probes the origins and dynamics of this practice, combining economic analysis of …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Polls apart: Why polls vary on presidential race

Barack Obama is galloping away with the presidential race. Or maybe he has a modest lead. Or maybe he and John McCain are neck and neck.

Confusing? Sure, thanks to the dueling results of recent major polls.

In the past week, most surveys have shown Democrat Obama with a significant national lead over Republican McCain. Focusing on "likely voters" _ as many polling organizations prefer this close to Election Day _ an ABC News-Washington Post survey showed Obama leading by 11 percentage points. A Wall Street Journal-NBC News poll had the same margin, while the nonpartisan Pew Research Center gave Obama a 14-point edge.

But others had the race …

Gold up

Gold for current delivery closed at $1107.40 per troy ounce Friday …

Caption Only [Color Photo: THAT'S THE TICKET: Bring your Cubs ticket stub...]

Caption …

SKorean official travels to NKorea to monitor aid

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — A South Korean official will help monitor the distribution of humanitarian aid to North Korean children for the first time in three years, the Seoul government said Friday.

He is the first South Korean government official to travel to Pyongyang to monitor aid distribution since conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in 2008 with a tough policy toward North Korean aid. The visit is seen as a key sign that relations are improving after years of tension.

The divided Korean peninsula remains in a technical state of war because their three-year conflict ended in 1953 with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

Relations have been particularly …

Canada imposes tougher sanctions against Iran

Canada has imposed new unilateral sanctions against Iran, joining an international campaign to force Tehran to drop its nuclear program.

Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Monday the new measures will include a ban on any new Canadian investment in Iran's oil and gas sector, and restrictions on exporting goods that could be used in nuclear programs.

Iranian banks will also will be …

CJP September 2006 Cover Photograph

Dear Editor:

I was surprised to see such an unrealistic photograph on the cover of The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry

(Vol 51, No. 10).

To be specific:

1. The injecting needle is at an almost perpendicular angle to the vein-not at an acute angle as would be expected if one hoped to actually inject into (the goal) rather than through the vein (which causes abscesses and wastes the "hit").

2. There is no blood in the syringe from the drawback (done to check that one is in the vein).

3. There is no blood droplet on the skin consistent with the use of blunt needles.

4. There are no typical "track marks," tattoos, bruises, cigarette burns, or …

Seasick woman quits 1,000-day sea voyage off Australia; boyfriend continues

A woman who set out with her boyfriend on a 1,000-day sailing trip has abandoned the quest about one-third of the way through, saying she was plagued by seasickness.

"It was such a hard decision to make," Soanya Ahmad said after landing Friday at John F. Kennedy International Airport, having left the 70-foot (21-meter) yacht off the coast of Australia late last month. "We'd been through so much."

Ahmad and Reid Stowe left from Hoboken, New Jersey, on April 21, 2007. Their aim: to sail around the world for 1,000 straight days without touching land, beating a 657-day record set by Australian Jon Sanders. He circumnavigated the globe three …

Heading for big things

Russell has been signed by Avalon, one of the leadingentertainment companies in the UK, has supported such names as PhilKay, Daniel Kitson and Lee Mack, and completed his first full-lengthsolo show at the Edinburgh Festival last summer.

With high praise and endorsement from the likes of Ross Noble,Daniel Kitson and Johnny Vegas, national exposure beckons ...

How would you describe your stand-up style? "That's a reallytricky question. It's just stories, improvisation and mucking aboutreally."

What are you up to at the moment? "I'm still living in Thornburyand very involved in the Bristol comedy scene. Every Tuesday at TheRichmond Spring I run a gig alongside …

Charleston wins bid to host state high school volleyball tournament

The boys and girls high school state basketball tournaments willnot be the only ones using the Charleston Civic Center nets nextschool year.

Charleston won a bid with the Secondary School ActivitiesCommission for November's state volleyball tournament to make itsfirst visit to the state capital for the next two seasons.

The addition now gives the Civic Center four state competitions.

The facility also hosts the boys and girls basketball, volleyballand cheerleading.

Charleston also hosts the state baseball tournament, the track andfield championships and the boys and girls tennis tournament.

Twenty-four teams, eight in each Class, will be in Charleston forthe three-day volleyball championship Nov. 10-12.

Mountain State Athletic Conference teams George Washington,Capital, Spring Valley and Parkersburg were the final four in ClassAAA this past season at the tournament held at Robert C. Byrd HighSchool in Clarksburg.

Bush Cuts Threat Reduction Budget

President George W. Bush's 2008 fiscal year budget request calls for more cuts in programs related to nonproliferation activities in the former Soviet Union, although some individual threat reduction programs would see gains or maintain funding.

Some proposed reductions reflect the winding down or closure of programs, while other cuts may reflect a shift in priorities away from traditional U.S.-Russian programs such as Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) to more regional or international programs.

Department of Defense

Money requested for the CTFR program in the Department of Defense budget is down again this year to $348 million. The $24 million reduction for fiscal year 2008 follows a $44 million cut the previous year. The CTR program seeks to better control the weapons of mass destruction (WMD) complex in the former Soviet Union by securing chemical, biological, and nuclear facilities and finding employment for former weapons scientists and technicians.

The Pentagon budget would increase spending by $75 million in fiscal year 2008 for biological threat reduction efforts, including securing pathogens and facilities and setting up monitoring equipment for border posts and customs. Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), however, said he plans to offer an amendment to increase funding for biological weapons nonproliferation by $100 million. If approved, this would bring overall spending to $244 million in the next fiscal year.

Nonetheless, in a Jan. 25 interview with Inside the Pentagon, Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C), a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, said broader increases for CTR funding were unlikely. Spratt said that although he wanted to see increased funding for securing fissile material and a more "rigid" scheme of accounting for sites in Russia and the United States, "I don't think the budget will come to us...with enough money in [in it] to do these extra things." He said he would work to find an offset for increased funding of nuclear nonproliferation activities but would not take it out of funding for the war in Iraq or other essential activities.

Indeed, money proposed for the Nuclear Weapons Storage Security program was down to $23 million for fiscal year 2008, a decrease of $64 million from current spending. This reflects the completion of a number of significant upgrades to Russian facilities and a shift to maintenance.

No funds were requested for the chemical weapons destruction program in fiscal year 2008. Although work on the weapons destruction facility at Shchuch'ye in Russia is still unfinished, the program is scheduled to end this year. Independent experts estimate the facility needs at least another $200 million to he completed.

The Nuclear Weapons Transportation security program, on the other hand, is slated to receive $38 million for fiscal year 2008, a $5 million increase over the current spending. This will help to transport 48 trainloads of nuclear warheads to more secure facilities for storage and dismantlement.

The administration also requested a $2 million increase in funding for the Strategic Offensive Arms Elimination program. The $78 million in funds requested for fiscal year 2008 would be used to carry out such tasks as eliminating 65 ICBMs, defueling and storing another 20 ICBMs, and decommissioning or eliminating 44 ICBM silos.

The request for the WMD Proliferation Prevention Initiative to create better monitoring facilities on the borders of former non-Russian Soviet states was slightly higher than the previous year, at $38 million.

Department of Energy

The administration's fiscal year 2008 budget request for a number of Department of Energy nonproliferation programs would also be below current spending. The International Nuclear Materials Protection and Cooperation (INMP&C) program was cut by $41 million to $372 million.

The INMP&C program works to secure the former Soviet nuclear complex, both personnel and material. Part of its funding is dedicated to goals agreed to in a 2005 joint statement between Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Bratislava. The Energy Department has explained that the decreases reflect completion of many of the upgrades.

The Energy Department cut $40 million out of the Strategic Rocket Forces (SRF) and 12th Main Directorate program, citing contractor and technical access problems as well as poor weather conditions. The program seeks to secure vulnerable nuclear weapons and weapons usable materials at SRF and 12th Main Directorate sites in Russia. 1 he Bush administration also indicated that it projects further large cuts in funding to programs in "closed" Russian cities once dedicated to designing and testing nuclear weapons. In 2005 at Bratislava, however, the United States promised to continue to support such programs.

The Elimination of Weapons Grade Plutonium Production program also will receive less funding this year as its projects in Russia continue to wind down. Some $182 million is requested for fiscal year 2008, down $25 million from current spending. The projects were created to replace Russian plutonium reactors with generators powered hy fossil fuels at Severnsk and Zhelenznogorsk. They are on schedule to be completed by fiscal year 2008 and fiscal year 2011, reflectively.

Rinding for the Russian Fissile Materials Disposition program will be cut to zero for fiscal year 2008. This comes after a dispute over Moscow's refusal to pay for a mixed-oxide fuel-fabrication facility. This refusal angered Congress and halted the program, which converts weapons-grade plutonium into fuel for civilian nuclear reactors. The greater Fissile Materials Disposition program, which focuses on cutting stockpiles in the United States through similar techniques, was slightly increased to $609 million after the Senate concluded it was still worthwhile.

By contrast, funding for the Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRIl continues to increase, up $13 million to $119 million. The program works to reduce and protect nuclear and radiological material internationally.

Department of State

The administration requested $464 million for the Nonproliferation, Anti-terrorism, De-mining and Related Programs line item in the Department of State's budget. Funding for all of the subprograms within this section devoted to nonproliferation were down, something that was noted by Sens. Barack Obama (D-IIl.) and Lugar in a Feb. K hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee with secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Export Controls and Border Related security was set at $41 million, the Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund at $30 million, and the Global Threat Reduction Program, formerly the Nonproliferation of WMD Expertise Program, is presently allocated $53.5 million.

Obama in particular took issue with the cuts, saying that these are "modest, but cuts nevertheless." He added, "Now, I recognize that budgets are about priorities, but given how important, potentially, interdiction and some of these other programs are, you know, I'd like to see us at least stay constant.. .not go backwards."

In response, Rice, while noting that these programs may be in less demand than in past, said, "I don't think that we want to be complacent, and obviously we'll keep examining it." The administration, however, requested a $36 million increase for small arms ami light weapons destruction activities globally. This proposed boost would raise future spending to $44.7 million. -DANIEL ARNAUDO

[Sidebar]

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C.) discusses President George W. Bush's 2008 fiscal year budget during a Feb. 5 press conference on Capitol Hill.

[Sidebar]

President George W. Bush holds a copy of his 2008 fiscal year budget request following a Feb. 5 Cabinet meeting at the White House.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Hicks comes out fighting in battle to seize control of Liverpool

Liverpool co-owner Tom Hicks has come out fighting.

After a series of verbal attacks by estranged partner George Gillett Jr., CEO Rick Parry and former chairman David Moores in the past month, Hicks hit back in a wide-ranging response to the Reds turmoil.

Hicks, who also owns NHL's Dallas Stars and baseball's Texas Stars, dismissed suggestions that he lacks the financial clout to take full control of Liverpool by buying part or all of Gillett's 50-percent stake.

"I have substantial assets, and, if I were majority owner, I would invest additional cash," he said in quotes provided to The Associated Press.

"More importantly, I have a 25-year track record as a successful investor and owner, and can attract additional equity capital from individuals and institutions that want to invest with me."

That is unlikely to include Dubai International Capital despite its continuing interest in buying Liverpool, with Hicks vowing to block the oil-rich consortium from buying any of Gillett's stock.

"DIC really has no seat at the table, but they continue to stir media controversy," he said.

The American businessman plans to "formally request" Gillett's backing to fire Parry, whom he called upon to quit Thursday and who he says has been "arrogant" and "provides no leadership."

"If he chooses not to, the record will be clear," Hicks said of Gillett. "The board of Liverpool Football Club can be changed at any time by George and me.

"After watching him operate, I have come to the conclusion that (Parry's) inability to manage an organization, his seemingly arrogant attitude to our supporters, and his lack of communication with (manager) Rafa (Benitez) made it time to ask him to resign."

Hicks claims that Parry has snubbed Ian Ayre, the commercial director brought in last July to generate more revenue by taking advantage of the five-time European champion's famous branding.

"Parry has refused to interact with Ian or the team he has put together and provides no leadership or support," Hicks said. "I reached my decision a few weeks ago, but waited until after we played the important games against Everton and Arsenal.

"It is important to try to have a new CEO in place by May so we can begin working with Rafa on player transfers."

Liverpool beat Arsenal 4-2 Tuesday to advance to the Champions League semifinals 5-3 on aggregate, while the Reds defeated Everton 1-0 last month to strengthen its hold on the final spot for the next edition.

Gillett and Hicks bought Liverpool for 218.9 million pounds in March 2007, which included an agreement to pay off about 45 million pounds of debt and a pledge to build a 60,000-seat stadium.

When the loan used to buy Liverpool was refinanced in January, the club was burdened with debt topping 105 million pounds (US$205 million; euro141 million).

"I plan to arrange the permanent stadium financing, reduce current indebtedness, including eliminating all debt on the team other than normal working capital and player lines of credit, and raise significant new equity from institutions and minority investors," Hicks said.

Hicks privately believes there is a campaign to undermine him. There were British media reports at the weekend that he has been holding talks with former Germany coach Juergen Klinsmann about replacing Benitez.

Hicks' camp said he has had no contact at all with Klinsmann or anyone connected with Klinsmann.

While Hicks' admission in January that Klinsmann had been sounded out for the manager's job is still a source of anger for fans, he now insists that Gillett and Parry instigated the meeting.

"George had known him from Vail (Colorado), and that Rick, George and Foster (Gillett) participated with Tom Jr., me in the meeting," Hicks said. "Rick allowed all of the controversy to build without taking any responsibility. Rafa knows he has my total support ... I think they were both disingenuous letting me take the heat on the Klinsmann controversy."

Benitez, who has been promised an extended contract by Hicks, wants to be briefed on the turmoil.

"I will talk with the board. I think it's important for me to try to understand the situation," Benitez said Sunday after Liverpool beat Blackburn 3-1 in the Premier League.

Hicks said the first game at the new stadium is scheduled for August 2011. The revised plans are set to be reviewed by local legislators next month, with September targeted as the start date for construction to begin.

Hurricanes deplete Red Cross relief fund

The wave of storms battering the U.S. has plunged the American Red Cross deep into debt as it rushes to prepare for Hurricane Ike, prompting a searching look at how to stabilize its finances.

Gail McGovern, who became the embattled charity's president in June, said even a request for federal funding is under consideration as the Red Cross seeks to become less dependent on spontaneous donations that arrive only in the wake of huge disasters.

"We are going to explore every avenue we can to ensure we have a healthy Red Cross," McGovern said in an interview Thursday as her organization deployed 1,000 out-of-state volunteers to Texas to await menacing Ike.

"We're brainstorming absolutely anything," she said. "We're looking at the possibility of appropriations, whatever _ because we want to be able to serve the American public."

As of last week, when Ike was still a distant threat, the Red Cross said it has raised only $5 million to cover costs from Hurricane Gustav that will total at least $40 million, possibly more than $70 million. It has borrowed money to meet those bills, and now is incurring more expenses as it shifts response teams to Texas and readies its shelters.

"The beautiful thing about the American Red Cross is we are going to be there when people need us," McGovern said. "As the disaster relief fund depletes, we will borrow money if we need to, to be there."

McGovern said Red Cross officials were calling Gustav a "silent disaster" because it entailed sizable costs for sheltering displaced people, yet did not trigger the flood of donations that often follows more deadly and destructive storms.

With Ike, McGovern said, the Red Cross wants to be ready even though it has no idea how damaging or costly the storm will be. It launched a new fundraising appeal Monday, and will get a plug this weekend when the NFL encourages donations with on-air and in-stadium announcements during its games.

The Red Cross endured widespread criticism _ some from within its own ranks _ after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005. An internal report cited overwhelmed volunteers, inflexible attitudes and inadequate anti-fraud measures.

One major change since then, McGovern said, is a greater focus on getting relief supplies into threatened areas before a hurricane arrives.

"With Katrina, we had the supplies, but they were in the wrong place," she said.

More broadly, McGovern said, the Red Cross needs steadier funding sources in addition to what she called "episodic fundraising" _ the gifts, often relatively small, that pour in after a large-scale disaster rouses public sympathy.

She said the Red Cross will always welcome these gifts, but wants to encourage corporation donations and large contributions from wealthy individuals that are not linked to the latest disaster.

"The American public is going to be moved when they see a time of need," she said. "It's incumbent on us to be very clear about our mission so they understand there are other times to give, too. It's our responsibility to explain our mission better."

Despite the depleted relief fund, and Ike's approach, McGovern said she was not anxious.

"The reason I'm calm and cool and collected is because the American public always comes through for us _ always," she said. "We put out a campaign for our local chapters to raise money because of Gustav. ... I've gotten e-mail after e-mail saying, `We are behind you, this is a defining moment, we can do it.'

"I just believe that this country will not let harm come to the American Red Cross."

Fundraising is only one of several major challenges confronting the Red Cross in recent years. Faced with a deficit of about $210 million, it laid off one-third of the 3,000 employees at its Washington headquarters earlier this year. Emergency response operations have not been affected, and the deficit is now about $140 million, McGovern said.

The Red Cross also had been plagued by rapid turnover of its presidents.

McGovern is the fourth full-fledged president to serve since 2001, along with three interim leaders. She replaced Mark Everson, who resigned last November because of an extramarital affair with an official from a Red Cross chapter in Mississippi.

Everson's two predecessors resigned after conflicts with the Red Cross board of governors, but the board _ formerly with 50 members _ is being gradually reduced to 20 as part of a management overhaul. McGovern, a veteran executive and professor of marketing at Harvard University, described her relations with the board as excellent.

___

On the Net: http://www.redcross.org

Principal Gets Probation in Foot-Kissing

LORAIN, Ohio - A former Catholic school principal convicted of kissing the feet of three male students to settle a bet on a volleyball game was sentenced Tuesday to two years' probation.

Robert Holloway, 50, resigned from St. Anthony of Padua School in this city west of Cleveland after the 14-year-old students and their parents reported the foot-kissing to police in February 2006.

Police later seized two school computers from Holloway's office and 400 images of adult foot-fetish behavior. Some of the photos depicted scenarios he had engaged in with the boys, police said.

Holloway entered a no-contest plea in April and was convicted of three misdemeanor counts of sexual imposition and one count of unauthorized use of public property. He could have received up to 15 months in jail.

Judge Mark Mihok ordered Holloway to register as a sex offender, pay a $1,000 fine and stay away from activities with children under 18.

A message seeking comment was left Tuesday night with Holloway's lawyer.

Holloway told authorities he paid each student $15 and kissed their bare feet 50 times each in the school's library and gym to pay off the bet on a student-teacher volleyball game.

Holloway, who is unemployed, apologized Tuesday for embarrassing the students.

"It's going to be a long road to get back to a normal life for myself," he said.

Showdown Looms Over Fired Prosecutors

WASHINGTON - A House panel cleared the way Thursday for contempt proceedings against former White House counsel Harriet Miers after she obeyed President Bush and skipped a hearing on the firings of federal prosecutors.

Addressing the empty chair where Miers had been subpoenaed to testify, Rep. Linda Sanchez ruled out of order Bush's executive privilege claim that his former advisers are immune from being summoned before Congress.

The House Judiciary subcommittee that Sanchez chairs voted 7-5 to sustain her ruling. The next step would be for the full Judiciary Committee to issue a finding that Miers, Bush's longtime friend and former Supreme Court nominee, was in contempt. Ultimately, the full House would have to vote on any contempt citation.

"Those claims are not legally valid," Sanchez, D-Calif., said of Bush's declaration, made Monday. "Ms. Miers is required pursuant to the subpoena to be here now."

The question grew more pressing when Bush ordered Miers to defy the committee's subpoena, unlike a lower-ranking former White House aide, Sara Taylor, who took a different approach Wednesday.

Acting under her own subpoena, Taylor appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee in an attempt to satisfy both Congress and the White House and thereby avoid a contempt citation. It's unclear whether she was successful. She answered some questions while saying she could not answer others under Bush's directive. The Senate committee's ranking Republican advised Taylor that she might have been on safer legal ground had she said nothing.

Saying nothing is the strategy that Miers, on Bush's orders, adopted Thursday.

Like Taylor, Miers participated in the process of deciding which prosecutors to fire, according to e-mails released by the Justice Department. At one point, the documents showed, Miers proposed firing all 93 U.S. attorneys, but Attorney General Alberto Gonzales rejected that suggestion.

Democrats want to ask her under oath about the White House's role in drawing up the firing list. But Bush invoked executive privilege, saying he needed to protect the flow of advice he receives from close advisers. Additionally, he declared Miers immune from subpoenas and ordered her to skip Thursday's hearing.

Democrats were furious, declaring the White House had reached "novel legal conclusions" to justify withholding a former aide's testimony, based only on legal opinions regarding currently serving White House officials and no court rulings.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., said the committee must take action on Miers' non-compliance to preserve the panel's authority.

"Are congressional subpoenas to be honored or are they optional?" Conyers asked rhetorically. "Apparently we have to run this out" to set a precedent, he added.

Utah Rep. Chris Cannon, the senior Republican on the administrative law subcommittee, challenged Democrats to submit any evidence they have to justify their "incessant investigation" that has stretched all year. He warned that without evidence of wrongdoing, any court showdown with the White House would fail.

"It's time for the majority to stop swaggering its power in this Congress," Cannon said.

Legal scholars said the issue of Miers' immunity is far from clear-cut.

An argument that Miers has to testify "is certainly as tenable as that she doesn't," University of Texas law professor Sanford Levinson says.

"If I were advising the congressional committees, what I would want to argue is that they have evidence that she was involved in what might have been criminal acts; that is, subordination of civil service hiring to unlawful considerations," Levinson said.

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley said the White House "could not have picked worse ground" on which to fight executive privilege.

Many of the communications involve political operatives outside the White House; the White House already has offered to disclose the information but refused to do so under oath or with a transcript of the interviews. The issue is not in the sensitive areas of national security or diplomacy.

Legal scholars say it's unlikely the White House and Congress are bound for a head-on collision.

"We've been here many, many times before. This is not out of the ordinary," said Viet Dinh, the former assistant attorney general for legal policy during Bush's first term.

No president has gone as far as mounting a court fight to keep his aides from testifying on Capitol Hill, but court is just where the battle could end up absent the usual negotiated agreements of the past.

---

Associated Press writer Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

Former governor enjoys being partner at Baker & Daniels

Being governor, says Evan Bayh, is similar to being CEO of a large company; there are matters of vision, strategy and the coordination of a wide variety of concerns. "You never can tell when something is going to happen that you need to jump into with both feet," he says.

Such experience informs the former Indiana governor's current practice of law as a partner with Baker & Daniels in Indianapolis. Having left the state's top post about a year ago, Bayh now concentrates on business law as part of the firm's corporate finance team.

"I've been asked for advice and contacts involving mergers and development strategy overseas, and even things like how to create a job training program for a company's employees to make sure they're up to date with the latest skills," he says.

One company, he says, wants to expand through acquisitions in other states, and so officials were interested in Bayh's perspective on the business climate in those other states and how potential acquisitions might fit with the company's current interests. Another company is interested not only in training current employees but in hiring people off public assistance rolls when possible.

"There's a perfect example of an intersection between good public policy and good business practice," Bayh says.

Although his current work involves no dealings with government, Bayh brings a few observations from his eight years as governor.

"It's important to surround yourself with good people with good judgment and good experience, and I think that is one thing that clients look for," he says. "They know I've had a wide variety of experiences in a lot of different settings, and perhaps I can be a useful part of their management team--growing their business and helping to create jobs here in Indiana."

There is also the importance of coordinating strategy: "I call it the unintended consequences," Bayh says. "Sometimes businesses or individuals will think about taking an action without being completely aware of what consequence that might have in areas they hadn't thought about."

That's where the CEO analogy comes in. "As governor, you have to see the broad picture. You have to think about the entire state and everybody in the state," he says.

Despite a busy law practice, Bayh has had more time over the last year to spend with his wife, Susan, and their twin sons, now 2. "People talk about the terrible twos, but I find it's a great age so far," he says.

"We waited a while; we were married 11 years before we had children," he says. "I wanted to be a good father, not just become a father."

Life is also a little less high-profile, although Bayh still gets recognized frequently. "Most people come up and say hello ... they want to know how the family's doing, or they thank me for my years as governor," he says. "Sometimes they're surprised to see me with a ball cap on, or my tennis shoes, but that's kind of nice too. It's important to remember our public officials are human beings just like all the rest of us."

Bayh had the distinction, in 1988, of being elected the nation's youngest governor at 32. "Sometimes I look at my first official picture when I was in office, and it looks like my high school yearbook," he says with a chuckle.

Now, after two terms in office and a year with Baker & Daniels, Bayh says he continues to be impressed with the importance of a healthy business sector. "If we get the finances right and have a climate that promotes investment and growth, I think the future looks very bright for both the state of Indiana and the United States of America," he says.

Feed Back

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FEEDBACK c/o Canadian Musician,

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www.canadianmusician.com to write electronically.

Lighten up, CM!

I was reading your magazine in a quiet moment enjoying my break. I couldn't help noticing how many pictures in your issue showed unhappy faces. I took a moment to count. You have over 50 obvious unhappy faces in your layout, and only about 10 smiles (I counted them as smiles if it registered as not pouting or angry!). It feels like a weighted down issue. Just an observation.

Is everyone in the Canadian music industry going for the angry/pouty/serious look? Is anyone not willing to admit they are happy? Is anyone having fun? Is this sort of negativity truly representative of the Canadian music scene?

Lighten up, CM! I hope to find more inspiring, positive articles and photographs in your next layout! I know there are happy Canadian musicians out there having fun with inspiring stories to tell. Not everyone is complaining with drama, drama, drama. Some are experiencing great things despite those perceived limitations out there! Please, tell their stories!

Nancy Houle

P.S. I'm a big fan of CM.

P.P.S. Some of your columnists are in desperate need of new head shots! It would go a long way in helping CM portray a better, healthier, trustworthy look!

Ed. I would venture that what you're perceiving as negativity in the layout is really a reflection of musicians and writers taking their craft very seriously.

Hard Work

I am a musicologist. Many parents have a common question when they send their children to music lessons. It goes something like this:

"My child learned to read books very quickly. Why does he/she struggle to read music?"

Many students have inborn musical talent. They grasp music very quickly and have a great memory. These are the true prodigies. One may not find such abilities very often. Any student can read and play beautifully, too. It will just take a bit more hard work.

Hellene Hiner

Production Column?

Currently, the closest thing Canadian Musician has to a Production column is the Digital Music column. While this column is relevant, it tends to focus on the more technical elements of recording music. I think that there should be a column dealing specifically with production. This column should also touch upon important considerations like preproduction, planning, budgets, arranging, hiring session players, etc.

Matthew Tishler

Ed Check out Bill McBimie's Woodwinds column and Mike Turner's Recording column this issue for some of those subjects you've touched on. Meanwhile, the call is out - are there any experienced producers out there who wouldn't mind giving away a few trade secrets?

Alexisonfire

I love the magazine. I just got my first issue in the mail with oui hometown boys on the cover. I remember seeing them in bars with just 20 01 30 people, back in the good old days.

I was hoping that you guys could please, please do an article on my favourite Canadian band. The Musical Box. They are the premier tribute band in the world in re-creating Genesis concerts. Have seen them 18 times in two years all over North America. They have embarked on their "farewell" tour and have shows all over Canada. Would love to see an interview on them, and how they did the show, and the equipment they used.

Luke

Slain boys victims of a 'sick fantasy' Prosecutors open trial seeking to convict Hansen a second time in 1955 slayings

Chicago, 1955.

Dwight Eisenhower was in the White House, Rocky Marciano was worldheavyweight champion, China was "Red" and Howdy Doody was on TV.

So when three dead boys were discovered in a Northwest Side ditch--naked, beaten, stabbed and strangled; their mouths and noses taped--the news hit the city like a guided missile.

For many Chicagoans, especially those growing up on the NorthwestSide, the world never looked as bright and innocent as before theslayings of Anton Schuessler, 11, his brother John, 13, and theirfriend Robert Peterson, 13.

But there is no statute of limitations on murder.

So Kenneth Hansen, 69, leaned heavily on his cane on his way tothe defendant's seat in Cook County Criminal Court Monday to beretried for murders nearly half a century old. He looked like anabsent-minded professor, his rumpled tie askew. But he studied papersclosely with his dark-rimmed glasses and greeted prospective jurorswith a chipper "Good morning. Thank you for being here."

When his victims were last seen in October 1955, they were "threeordinary American boys, dressed in baseball jackets and jeans. Threeordinary young boys hitchhiking down Milwaukee Avenue," prosecutorLinas Kelecius said.

Hansen picked them up as they hitchhiked near Lawrence andMilwaukee because he wanted to have sex with two young boys at thesame time to live out a "sick sexual fantasy," Kelecius said.

He killed "these three angels" out of fear they would report hismolestation, the prosecutor said.

Defense attorney Steven Weinberg derided the state's case, tellingjurors it was built on seasoned criminals, con men, an accusedarsonist, a pornographer and paid informants.

Hansen was convicted of the slayings in 1995, but a stateAppellate Court ruled in 2000 that his trial was tainted whenprosecutors were allowed to present evidence that he picked up boysfor sex.

Living witnesses and transcripts from those now dead will showthat on nearly 20 occasions, Hansen discussed killing the boys orhinted he was involved in their slayings, Kelecius said. Some weregay sexual partners afraid to go public; others, he threatened withviolence, the prosecutor said.

The three youths spent their last night at a Montrose Avenuebowling alley. They were hitchhiking home in the rain when a driverapparently offered them a ride.

"They made the biggest mistake of their entire lives," Keleciussaid. "They got in the car of this man."

Hansen took them to the Idle Hours stable in the 8600 block ofHiggins Road and killed them, Kelecius said, rationalizing themurders by saying: "It was either the boys or me."

For in 1955, Kelecius said, "Being gay was unacceptable."

Later, the prosecutor said, Hansen confessed the crime to anotheryouth he had molested, saying he was assaulting the two Schuesslerboys when Peterson walked in and he killed Peterson to silence him.Hansen said "he had no choice at that point, he had to kill the othertwo," Kelecius said.

Hansen told another witness, William Wemette--who would later tipoff authorities--that he was performing a sex act on 11-year-oldAnton Schuessler when the two older boys came in and a strugglebegan, Kelecius said. Hansen said he strangled the youths and hisbrother helped to injure one of them, Kelecius said.

After the boys were killed, Kelecius said, notorious stable ownerSilas Jayne entered, saw the bodies and said, "This could ruin me."

Investigators believe Jayne helped dispose of the boys' bodies.

Until his 1987 death--from natural causes--Silas Jayne was widelyfeared and had connections to some of the Chicago area's most brutalcrimes and men. He had a hand in murdering his half-brother and rivalhorseman, George Jayne, with whom he had a violent feud.

In 1995, a swindler and associate of the Jayne family, RichardBailey, was convicted of conspiracy in the disappearance and presumedmurder of candy heiress Helen Brach, who may have gotten wise tohorse scams Bailey was pulling and threatened to tell authorities.

Weinberg warned jurors they were about to enter the world of theChicago horse industry and said they wouldn't like what they wouldsee. "You're not going to like the defendant either," Weinberg said.But "whether you like him or not is irrelevant."

The state's first witness, Hetty Salerno, testified she was athome near the stables when she heard screams the night of themurders. "The first scream--a loud, piercing, to me a frightenedscream--came from the direction of the stables ... The second screamcame then. It was softer, more subdued."

Her husband or a neighbor said: "Someone is beating the hell outof a kid."

Rise in complaints due to 'fluctuations' - top officer

A 66 per cent increase in complaints against police officers andstaff in Carmarthenshire is down to "fluctuation", according to asenior police officer.

But Detective Superintendent Mel Evans, head of professionalstandards at Dyfed-Powys Police, said it was a matter he would keepan eye on.

The number of complaints levelled at officers and staff acrossthe force fell by 28 percent to 129 between July 1 and September 30this year, but 58 of those concerned Carmarthenshire, compared to 35during the same period the year before.

At a meeting of Dyfed-Powys Police Authority's standardscommittee, chairman Alisdair Kenwright asked Mr Evans to explain theincrease.

Mr Evans said: "45 per cent of the complaints were borne byCarmarthenshire. Last year it was Powys.

"It is fluctuations unfortunately. It depends where the businessis coming from.

"We are keeping an eye on it.

"Carmarthenshire because of the population and the staff theyhave got can, law of averages, pick up more anyway."

He said one reason for the reduction in complaints force-wide wasa move towards addressing issues at the outset where possible. Forexample, if someone was upset because the law on licence plates hadnot been properly explained to them then somebody would call andexplain it, he said.

Figures relating to how allegations were dealt with during theJuly to September period showed nearly a quarter were resolvedlocally and just under 14 per cent were upheld.

One upheld complaint concerned an assault victim who was upsethis attacker had received a caution for a violent and unprovokedattack.

The officer should have established the full extent of theinjuries and had a case to answer for misconduct and mismanagement,the report said. In another case, where a complainant was unhappythat the arrest of her live-in carer left her without any care, theinvestigator concluded the arrest was necessary but the officer hadnot given sufficient thought to arranging temporary care, the reportstated. The officer was "given management action", it added.

Mr Evans also produced some statistics on allegations betweenApril and June 2011, which showed the force took 289 days tocomplete local investigations, compared with 130 nationally and 239days in authorities with similar demographics.

It also had more allegations per employee, with 81 per 1,000compared to an average of 49 nationally and 56 in similarauthorities. But only 14 per cent of cases were upheld on appeal,compared with 35 per cent nationally and 38 per cent in similarauthorities. Mr Evans said the data showed the force's robust regimeof recording and investigating complaints meant it lost fewerappeals. The 35 Carmarthenshire complaints lodged in the summer of2010 was eight down on the same period in 2009.

?Complaints by station in Carmarthenshire, July 1 to September 302009/2010/2011: Ammanford 5/1/10 Carmarthen 23/9/14 Llandovery 0/0/1 Kidwelly 3/4/0 Newcastle Emlyn 0/1/0 Llandeilo 2/0/0 St Clears 3/0/1 Crosshands 0/0/8 Dyfed-Powys Police allegations recorded July 1to September 30, 2011: Neglect of duty 36 Incivility 24 Otherassault 11 Irregularity in evidence/ perjury 8 Oppressive conduct 7Lack of fairness & impartiality 7 Others 36, including serious non-sexual assault 1, unlawful arrest/ detention 6 and corrupt practice1. Completed investigations July 1 to September 30, 2011: Upheld/substantiated 13.72 per cent Resolved locally 24.51 per cent Notupheld/ unsubstantiated 48.04 per cent Withdrawn/dispensed/discontinued 13.72 per cent

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Ford, Firestone fight class-action ruling Firms hope to block group suit covering owners of SUVs, tires

Last November, U.S. District Judge Sarah Evans Barker certifiedclass-action status for the lawsuit, in which none of the plaintiffssuffered either physical injury or property damage. In appealing,Ford lawyers called it a "crazy-quilt class" and a "mishmash."

The case stems from the recall of millions of Firestone tiressince August 2000, mostly on Explorer sport-utility vehicles, aftercomplaints the tires failed and the SUVs rolled over.

Barker ruled that the class action could cover virtually allowners of Explorers built from 1990 to 2001 and people who bought anyof 60 million Firestone tires from 53 different product lines.Plaintiff's lawyers say these people paid more for their vehicles andtires than they would have had they known about safety issues, thatthe Explorers have lower resale value and that both Explorer andFirestone owners have breach-of-warranty claims.

Much of Wednesday's arguments to the appeals court centered onwhether Barker is right to apply Michigan's consumer-protection lawto the Ford part of the case because Ford is based in Michigan. Thetire side of the case would be tried according to state law inTennessee, where Bridgestone/Firestone is based. Usually, consumer-protection cases are heard in the states where they occurred. Nofederal laws apply.

The appeals court is expected to rule within a month.

Gannett News Service

JUNOs Unveil New Statue Design, Release 40th Anniversary Book, & Announce New Category

During the recently held JUNO launch party, the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS) unveiled the new statue design, announced the release of Music From Far and Wide: Celebrating 40 Years of the JUNO Awards, and introduced the 40th category for eligibility. Electronic Album of the Year.

Designed by Stoney Creek artist Shirley Elford, who has handcrafted over 2,200 JUNO awards over the past decade, the latest incarnation features a laser engraved figure inside a glass block.

CARAS also announced the November 9, 2010 release of Music From Far and Wide: Celebrating 40 Years of the JUNO Awards, a hardcover retrospective of the past 40 years of the JUNOs. Blue Rodeo singer Jim Cuddy, who wrote the foreword and was on hand to promote its launch, says that the book "is a great addition to any house with a coffee table."

Also new this year, CARAS is introducing a 40th category for eligibility, Electronic Album of the Year. The new category is defined as album-length original recordings composed with electronic equipment as the essential songwriting tools and defined by their electronic elements.

"Over the past 40 years, CARAS has evolved and expanded to constantly reflect Canada's musical landscape. This new category is more evidence of our ongoing commitment to recognize the depth of Canadian music and the innovation that our artists continue to put forth," says Melanie Berry, President and CEO of CARAS.

Submissions to all categories can be made online at www.junosubmissions.ca.

`God's right by your side' // Despite official ban, altar girl feeling special

As her mother sees it, Regina Semmler has always been an"out-of-the-ordinary little girl."

At least on Sundays, when the 13-year-old dons a cassock at St.Barbara's Roman Catholic Church on the Southwest Side. Striding intothe sanctuary alongside the priest and altar boys, Regina is theparish's only altar girl.

"It's special being . . . up there (at the altar)," Regina saidof being an altar server. "You feel like God's right by your side."

Joseph Cardinal Bernardin also may be on the side of altargirls, whose numbers here have grown steadily the last few years.Among the Archdiocese of Chicago's 440 parishes, the number usingaltar girls has increased from about 10 in 1983 to 111 today.

Although Bernardin said he still recognizes the Vatican'sofficial ban on altar girls - and asks his parishes to obey it - he lent somelegitimacy to altar girls here recently when he said that, for thetime being, he will not discipline parishes that use them.

But area Catholics who look to Rome are criticizing Bernardin'sindulgence as yet another step away from the Vatican's rules - andanother step toward the eventual ordination of women priests.

"The broader issue is a matter of obedience, not only theobedience of the laity but the obedience of the (church) hierarchy,"said Phyllis Diez, a conservative Chicago Catholic.

"I see the young girls being used by people pushing for theordination of women. This (altar girls) is a foot in the door."

Diez has filed a canonical "suit" with the archdiocese on behalfof other disgruntled people, asking Bernardin to put a stop to altargirls on the grounds that they violate liturgical law.

Bernardin seems unlikely to halt the practice.

Earlier this month, he said he does not "consider this matterof such importance in itself as to warrant an action on my part whichwould only cause more confusion and controversy."

The Rev. Al Ciciora, Regina's pastor at St. Barbara's, deniedthat there "is any linking" of altar girls with the women'sordination lobby.

He, like many other priests here, said he wanted only to extendto girls more involvement in the liturgy, an ideal that won supportfrom a bishops' pastoral letter proposed two weeks ago.

And the Rev. William Stenzel, pastor of Holy Rosary Church onthe Far South Side, who also uses altar girls alongside altar boys,waved off the conservatives' argument as "contrived."

He said they fail to see the difference between areas governedby theological law, such as the church's ban on the ordination ofwomen, and those covered by the more flexible liturgical law, such asusing girls as altar servers.

"I have never had a girl who served in the mass make an issue ofbecoming a priest," Stenzel said.

Regina, whose favorite subject at St. Barbara's School isreligion, said, "I didn't understand when I was little why only a mancan be a priest, and I still don't understand why girls can't becomepriests."

And before Regina was recruited by Ciciora a year ago, she alsodidn't understand why she couldn't be an altar girl when her mother,Rose, could be a lay minister of communion - technically a moreimportant function in the mass.

Bernardin's statement said he also recognizes the"inconsistency" and that he anticipates "eventually there will besome adjustment" of the Vatican's position.

Diez's fellow conservatives, such as Dorie Gruss of Catholicsfor Responsible Action here, have warned that "little boys don't wantto do what little girls are doing."

They said they fear that if boys decline to be altar servers forthat reason, the pool of future priests will dwindle.

Regina admitted that when she became an altar girl, many of St.Barbara's altar boys weren't "too keen" about her.

But she said the boys have taken her into their fold now,helping her through Holy Week masses and making her feel "like partof the group."

Barbara Duffy, 70, longtime South Side florist

Barbara Duffy owned and operated the John J. Duffy Floral Co., afixture on the South Side for more than 80 years.

The business was founded in 1921 by John J. Duffy, president ofthe Cook County Board and then-19th Ward alderman. Initially locatedat 54th and Halsted and later at 3219 W. 111th in the Mount Greenwoodneighborhood, it was one of the city's leading florists.

Duffy's son, John Jr., took over, and Barbara, his wife, workedthere part-time while rearing her family. The business closed for 10years in the mid-1970s, but she reopened it and operated it with adaughter, also named Barbara.

Mrs. Duffy, 70, died Thursday of cancer at Palos CommunityHospital in Palos Heights.

She grew up in the Beverly neighborhood and graduated fromLongwood High School. Her best friend introduced her to her brother,John Duffy Jr., and they were married in 1955 after he returned fromthe Korean War.

She was attending Barat College in Lake Forest at the time, butmarriage put an end to her college career.

She was on the board of the women's auxiliary of Little Company ofMary Hospital and a longtime member of Ridge Country Club.

"She was the one who would organize a party, decorate the partyand be the last to leave the party," said her son Terry Duffy, who ischairman of the board at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. "Mom was alot of fun."

He added, "She always said she lived her life for her children.Being in business with her daughter meant the world to her."

Mrs. Duffy had a summer home in Lake Geneva, Wis., for 34 years.Her husband died in 1996.

In addition to daughter Barbara and son Terry, survivors include adaughter, Janice Ross; a son, John Duffy III, and sevengrandchildren.

Visitation will be from 2 to 9 p.m. today at Andrew J. McGann &Son Funeral Home, 10727 S. Pulaski. Mass will be offered at 10:30a.m. Tuesday at Christ the King Catholic Church, 9235 S. Hamilton,with burial in St. Mary's Cemetery, Evergreen Park.

Make Thugs Enemy No. 1

Avon and Somerset Police has been ordered to make robbery,burglary, car crime and loutish behaviour its priorities for the nextthree years.

In the first ever National Policing Plan, Home Secretary DavidBlunkett has told the force to concentrate on fighting both seriousand antisocial crimes.

Now Avon and Somerset will be expected to incorporate thosepriorities into its own three-year policing plan, which must be inplace to start next April.

Mr Blunkett insists it is his job to tell individual forces whichcrimes they should target in order for them to retain the confidenceof the public.

But local police chiefs are likely to complain that the planinvolves another layer of red tape and does not take account of localpolicing differences.

The Home Secretary stepped back from imposing specific targets oneach police force for cutting crime in each of the key areas.

Under existing targets, Avon and Somerset is expected to cut carcrime by one third, domestic burglary by a quarter and robbery by 14per cent between 1999 and 2004.

Mr Blunkett also pledged that the police service nationally wouldenjoy a funding boost of 5.4 per cent next year and at least four percent in 2004 and 2005.

However, Avon and Somerset must wait until next month's annualfunding announcement to find out exactly how much extra cash it willreceive.

Chief Constable Steve Pilkington has already written to local MPsto warn that his force could lose up to 180 officers under a proposedshake-up.

Speaking in Harrogate, Mr Blunkett said: "Police authorities andforces have to reflect national aims in their local policing plansand implementation locally will be key to their success.

"Parliament has agreed our police reform agenda and it is now downto police authorities and forces to implement it.

"Operational responsibility means they must be accountable,professional and responsive to public needs in their communities."The policing plan will expect every force in the country toincorporate standard intelligence methods - to boost detection rates -by April 2004.

And they will be expected to both build local partnerships anddevelop specialist expertise to investigate complex crimes.

Forces have been told to draw up their own three-year strategiesbecause of a recognition that the priorities will take more than 12months to achieve.

BASEBALL NOTEBOOK Renteria, Bosox reach deal; Sexson goes home to M's

All-Star shortstop Edgar Renteria has agreed in principle to afour-year, $40 million contract with the Boston Red Sox, who beat hisSt. Louis Cardinals in the World Series when he grounded to thepitcher for the final out.

The agreement, which contains a team option for 2009, wasconfirmed Wednesday by a baseball official, speaking on condition ofanonymity. Renteria must pass a physical, expected to be givenFriday, for the deal to be finalized.

A Red Sox spokesman declined to comment, but Renteria's brotherEdison told the Associated Press that an agreement on the terms wasreached Tuesday night.

"We will travel to Boston later this week to define the details,"he said. "Edgar is very happy. The conditions are excellent."

"An All-Star and Gold Glove infielder would be a great addition tothis or any other team," Red Sox president Larry Lucchino said, notspecifying a player, at a news conference to announce a one-year, $1million agreement with pitcher John Halama.

HOMECOMING FOR SEXSON: The Seattle Mariners added power to one ofthe weakest lineups in baseball, agreeing to a four-year, $50millioncontract with free-agent first baseman Richie Sexson.

"I am very excited about coming home to play for the Mariners,"said Sexson, who is from Brush Prairie, Wash. "My preference allalong was to sign with Seattle and to return to the Northwest."

Sexson, a career .271 hitter, is coming off an injury-shortenedseason with the Diamondbacks. He hurt his left shoulder twice and didnot play after May, batting .233 with nine homers and 23 RBI.

Still, his proven power made him an attractive free agent. Sexson,who turns 30 on Dec. 29, hit 45 homers for the Brewers in 2001 and2003, and he has four career 100-RBI seasons.

MARTINEZ MAKES IT OFFICIAL: Pedro Martinez passed his physical,and the New York Mets finalized their four-year, $53 million contractwith the pitcher they hope will take them to the postseason.

The Mets scheduled a news conference for today at Shea Stadium tointroduce Martinez, who turned down a three-year, $40.5 million offerfrom the Red Sox.

OTHER MOVES: Shortstop Craig Counsell returned to the ArizonaDiamondbacks, agreeing to a two-year, $3.1 million contract.

Arizona traded Counsell after the 2003 season to the MilwaukeeBrewers, who declined a $4.25 million option on Counsell.

*Right-handers David Weathers and Ben Weber agreed to one-yearcontracts with the Cincinnati Reds. Weathers and Weber, both 35, joina bullpen that had a 5.12 ERA last season, second-worst in the majorsahead of only Colorado.

*The Brewers traded infielder Keith Ginter to the OaklandAthletics for right-handed pitcher Justin Lehr and minor-leagueoutfielder Nelson Cruz.

AP

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

NIU Under QB Gilbert's Wing // Redshirt Junior Is Key In the Post-LeShon Era

The predictable-yet-potent era of LeShon Johnson off-tackle left,LeShon Johnson sweeping right and LeShon Johnson up the middle is amemory at Northern Illinois.

It's time to wing it.

Unproven redshirt junior Aaron Gilbert is the wingman coachCharlie Sadler is betting will get the Huskies off the ground.

Johnson led the NCAA last season in yards rushing per game(179.6) and all-purpose yardage (189.3). He left De Kalb hours afterthe Huskies' finale and was drafted by the Green Bay Packers.

Now it's Gilbert's chance to retool the offense. Put on yoursafety belts.

In high school and junior college, Gilbert directed the Wing-Toffense, which …

Pound: WADA plans to go ahead with presidential election despite European request for delay

The World Anti-Doping Agency plans to proceed with the election of a new president Saturday despite calls for a postponement by European ministers opposed to the sole candidacy of former Australian finance minister John Fahey.

"An election is planned," outgoing WADA president Dick Pound said Friday. "That's been the process since the beginning, and I'm certain that the elections will take place."

However, Pound didn't rule out the possibility that WADA could fail to elect a new leader.

"Maybe," Pound said. "If it's the case, it will be the fault of the governments."

Pound, who has headed WADA …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Al-Jazeera cameraman freed from Guantanamo, repatriated to Sudan

The Al-Jazeera cameraman released from U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay who returned home to Sudan early Friday after six years of imprisonment, will be free to resume his work and his movements will not be restricted in any way, a Sudanese presidential adviser said.

The official, Mahjoub Fadul, said Khartoum would do everything it can to help the released detainees reclaim their dignity.

"Let me state very clearly here that Sami al-Haj and his colleagues will exercise all their rights," Fadul said during a press conference in Khartoum. "We are not taking dictates from any quarters ... how we treat our citizens."

Al-Haj, whose …

Al-Jazeera cameraman freed from Guantanamo, repatriated to Sudan

The Al-Jazeera cameraman released from U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay who returned home to Sudan early Friday after six years of imprisonment, will be free to resume his work and his movements will not be restricted in any way, a Sudanese presidential adviser said.

The official, Mahjoub Fadul, said Khartoum would do everything it can to help the released detainees reclaim their dignity.

"Let me state very clearly here that Sami al-Haj and his colleagues will exercise all their rights," Fadul said during a press conference in Khartoum. "We are not taking dictates from any quarters ... how we treat our citizens."

Al-Haj, whose …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

China's SFDA Following through on GMP Efforts

Since China's State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) revised its GMPs last year (they became effective Mar. 1, 2011), the agency has been making other improvements to enhance the quality of its pharmaceutical manufacturing industry. Many improvements are tied to the 2015 deadline SFDA has placed on existing domestic drug manufacturers to implement the revised guidelines. Newly created companies are expected to meet the new GMPs from the start.

Recent announcements on the SFDA website (eng.sfda.gov.cn) note ongoing changes and requirements. For example, SFDA is working to strengthen the way it manages drug GMP inspections by standardizing its inspection and certification …

Whiteville.(Eastern)

WHITEVILLE--Nasdaq issued a noncompliance notice to Waccamaw Bankshares because the bank holding company did not file its second-quarter results on time. Waccamaw …

SALARY AN ISSUE COYNE TO ANNOUNCE ON SPORTS JOB.(Local)

Byline: Tim Layden Staff writer

Albany County Executive James J. Coyne, admitting an appetite for the position, said Monday he would make public his decision on whether to pursue the commissionership of the Continental Basketball Association or withdraw his name from consideration at a Wednesday morning press conference.

Coyne, who for five years has served as the non-salaried president of the Albany Patroons of the CBA, has been contacted and encouraged by original CBA Commissioner Jim Drucker and at least two people since Thursday, when The Times Union reported he was the leading preliminary candidate for the post being vacated by Carl Scheer.

"I've …

THOROUGHBREDS BOTTOM LINE IS BEYOND FINISH LINE.(Business)

Byline: Cailin Brown Business writer

E ven off the track in the Capital District, thoroughbreds hit paydirt.

And while it takes a bit longer than the slowest mile and an eighth to show a profit, breeders with good horse sense and some luck often can become part of a profitable winner's circle.

In New York state, for example, the thoroughbred breeders and owners who make it to the payoff line had their incomes bolstered by $13 million from the state's Thoroughbred Breeding and Development Fund.

Financed from racing proceeds in the state, it is a fund that has been growing - and for good reason, according to thoroughbred industry officials and analysts. In the mid-1970s, for instance, the 16-year-old fund provided less than $900,000 a year, according to Harry Snyder, a commissioner of the New York Racing Commission.

"The breeding fund is attracting new operations to the state, and it's happening at a time when nationally the industry is going through a bust cycle," said William H. Lesser, associate professor of agricultural economics at Cornell University.

According to Lesser, who worked on an as-yet unreleased equine survey for the state Department of Agriculture and Markets, thoroughbred farms statewide …

Chavez to Slow Socialism Drive

President Hugo Chavez is putting the brakes on his drive for revolutionary change in Venezuela, shifting away from radical socialist reforms in favor of a pragmatic focus on everyday problems from soaring crime to trash-strewn streets.

The turn comes one month after voters rejected reforms that would have greatly expanded his power and enshrined socialist principles in the constitution.

"I'm forced to reduce the speed of the march," Chavez said Sunday, telling new members of his Cabinet to "accept reality" and "put their feet on the ground."

"This will be the year of the three R's: Revision, rectification and …

Fuel-related airfare increases

American Airlines' cheapest round-trip coach fares

Current Effective

fare Friday Chicago-Dallas $249 $274 Chicago-Los Angeles $343 …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Egypt Welcomes National Dialogue in Bahrain.

Cairo--July4(BNA)Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Al-Orabi today welcomed the National Dialogue, which started on July2, following the call of His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa.

"Egypt always considers that there is no other option but open and unconditional National Dialogue to achieve Bahrain people's legitimate aspirations", Foreign Ministry official spokesperson Minha Bakhoum said, quoting Mr.

Al-Orabi.

The newly-appointed foreign minister reaffirmed Egypt's rejection of any encroachment on Bahrain's …

Around the region.(Capital Region)

TODAY

COMMUNITY

Winter Time Tunnel Camp, State Museum, Empire State Plaza at Madison Avenue, Albany When: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Cost: Call for prices Contact: 474-5877 or http://www.nysm.nysed.gov Notes: Offers children in first through seventh grades entertaining education, hands-on enrichment and recreation. Registration required.

FAIRS & FESTIVALS

New York in Bloom, State Museum, Empire State Plaza at Madison Avenue, Albany When: 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Cost: Friday, $4; Saturday and Sunday, $6 each; children 12 and younger free (Includes 15th Annual Gem, Mineral and Fossil Show) Contact: 474-5877 or http://www.nysm.nysed.gov Notes: An exhibition …

FIREBIRDS TRADE QB LOOTS.(SPORTS)

Byline: MARK SINGELAIS Staff writer

The Albany Firebirds know that in Mike Pawlawski, they have the best quarterback in the Arena Football League. And the job rookie Raymond Philyaw has done in the preseason gives the Firebirds confidence he can fill the backup role.

That left Jeff Loots, Albany's second-string quarterback the past two years, as the odd-man out. So, the Firebirds traded Loots to the expansion Carolina Cobras on Monday, just before the deadline for Arena teams to cut down to their 24-man regular-season rosters.

In return, the Firebirds reacquired wide receiver/defensive back Montrell Williams, who the team let go to Carolina in last …

Dillon plans to step up this season.

Byline: Bruce Pascoe

Sep. 6--Three reasons why Daniel Dillon became a defensive specialist over the first two years of his UA basketball career: strength, quickness and toughness. Here are three others reasons: Salim Stoudamire, Hassan Adams and Chris Rodgers. With those guys around in the backcourt -- and taking the bulk of the UA's perimeter shots -- there hardly was a need for Dillon to take advantage of all but the most obvious looks at the basket. He knew his best chance to get on the floor was not to score, but to stop others from doing so. "My first couple of years here, other guys could do that," Dillon said. "Pretty much, I've been a defensive player …

Fla. student suspended from bus for passing gas

An eighth-grader was suspended from riding the school bus for three days after being accused of passing gas. The bus driver wrote on a misbehavior form that a 15-year-old teen passing gas on the bus Monday to make the other children laugh, creating a stench so bad that it was difficult to breathe. The bus driver handed the teen the suspension form the next day.

Polk County school officials said there's no rule …

Herrick Scholarship Fund honors six during Annual Award Reception

Charles "Sweet Charlie" Brown, who broke the color line in college basketball, and Helen Sinclair, who has dedicated her life to serving as chaplain to Cook County inmates, received Lifetime Achievement Awards when the Board of Directors of the Mary Herrick Scholarship Brown Fund for DuSable Students hosted its 26th Annual Awards Reception & Program at University Church. Proceeds fund scholarships for graduating seniors at the three small schools located on the DuSable High School campus.

Other awardees: Fr. Michael Pfleger, pastor of St. Sabina Catholic Church and champion for social justice, and Odis Richardson, Pfleger Golden Apple Award-winning teacher counselor, and …

Phosphates Lineup.

The Jordanian Transport Ministry has qualified four companies for the concession to run Aqaba Railways (Aqaba) and expand the railway network that serves a mine at Shidiyeh owned by Jordan Phosphate Mines. The qualifiers are Petra …