четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

@Bristol Enjoys A GBP13,000 Boost

A New scheme which would allow more disadvantaged schoolchildrento visit the @Bristol complex has received a massive cash boost froma major bank.

Last year, 3,500 children visited the attraction under its SchoolBursary Programme, which brings children from less affluentbackgrounds to the centre.

It wants to raise that number to 10,000, and to do so, it needs toraise GBP100,000.

It has just received a GBP13,000 boost from HSBC, which employsmore than 1,000 people across the city.

John Durant, chief executive of @Bristol, said: "One of our keyaims is to be able to bring the educational experiences we have tooffer to the widest possible audience. …

'Dancing with the Pastors,' a benefit at Chicago State Univ.

Rev. and Mrs. Otis Moss HI (Monica). pastor and "first lady" of Trinity United Church of Christ, will show off their dancing prowess on May 20, 8 p.m., in the Jones Convocation Center of Chicago State Univ., 95th Street and King Drive. Doors open at 7 p.m. All competitors (except of Rev. and Mrs. Moss) are currently training and will dance with a professional choreographer on the night of DWTP; the Mosses will dance the tango as a couple.

Other "dancing pastors" are Rev. John Hannah, New Life Covenant Church; Rev. Ozzie Smith, Covenant United Church of Christ; Rev. Tiffany Davis, Chicagoland Christian Center Embassy; Rev. Herbert Keller, Chosen One Ministries; Rev. Greg …

Suicide blast near Islamabad police station kills more than 10 officers on key anniversary

A suicide attacker detonated explosives near a police station in Pakistan's capital on Sunday, killing more than 10 police officers, officials said.

The evening blast occurred in a kiosk in front of the police station, which is also near Islamabad's Melody Market shopping area, said Naeem Iqbal, a police spokesman. Television footage showed wounded security forces being taken away and ambulances rushing to the area.

Just moments before the explosion, an Associated Press reporter passed by the scene and saw more than 20 security officials gathered nearby. After the blast, a traffic intersection in the area was splattered with blood. Body parts were scattered …

Easing loss of post office

Bitton: After the closure last month of the village post office,a transport service is on the cards to take people who depended onit, such as the elderly, to use the one at nearby Oldland Common.

Liberal Democrat …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

China: Rivalry Hits Profits

Shanghai Dragon Corp., China's leading textile manufacturer, reported that its profits plunged 82.3% in the first half of this year from a year ago as it invested to meet stiff domestic competition.

The Shanghai-listed company, which owns brands such as "Three Gun" underwear and "Conch" shirts, earned 5.16 million yuan (US$621,600) in the first half of this year. Per share earnings dove 82.6% to 0.012 yuan. However, the company managed to maintain stable growth in revenues in the first six months at 1.5 billion yuan, up 11.6% from the year before.

"The drop in profits is mainly the result of the company's spendings on new specialty stores across the nation in the first half …

Miami easily tops No. 20 Georgia Tech, 24-7

MIAMI (AP) — Before every game, Miami safety JoJo Nicholas reaches into his gym bag and pulls out a blanket, then rubs it on his hands while saying a quick prayer.

He prays to his son, who died a few weeks ago after being prematurely born.

It's these moments that make him savor days like Saturday so much more.

Nicholas recovered a fumbled punt for a touchdown plus added an interception, Lamar Miller ran for 93 yards and a score and Miami's banged-up defense was dominant as the Hurricanes topped No. 20 Georgia Tech 24-7 on Saturday — holding the high-octane Yellow Jackets more than 300 yards and nearly 36 points below their season averages entering the game.

"The …

Prosecutors drop probe of ex-Telekom managers

German prosecutors have closed an investigation of two former Deutsche Telekom AG managers over alleged monitoring of telephone records at the company in an effort to trace media leaks.

Prosecutors in Bonn on Monday cited insufficient evidence of any wrongdoing as they closed cases against ex-CEO Kai-Uwe Ricke and former supervisory board chief Klaus Zumwinkel.

The …

Is it sweeps month or is it rerun season?, Stunt programming aside, episodes seem very familiar

NEW YORK - The war is over. Sweeps have begun.

One sign: As a ratings stunt on May 12, "Tonight" host Jay Lenoswitches jobs with Katie Couric to be guest on NBC's morning newsshow "Today." A squeaky-voiced comic in Katie's anchor chair? Theproducers must expect a slow news day.

More evidence that things are back to normal: On Thursday, Foxkicked off the latest sweeps with a two-hour special on MichaelJackson, bridging a gap back to February sweeps, when tell-allJackson specials were aired by Fox, ABC and NBC. "Michael Jackson'sPrivate Home Movies" - it was as if nothing, least of all a war, hadhappened in between.

Now here we are a week into May rating sweeps, …

Maria Kirilenko upsets No. 6 seed at Stanford

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Russian Maria Kirilenko beat sixth-seeded Julia Goerges of Germany 6-2, 6-3 Tuesday in a first-round match at the Bank of the West Classic.

Seventh-seeded Ana Ivanovic of Serbia, playing her first match with a new coach and fitness trainer, was knocked off by Japan's Ayumi Morita, 6-3, 7-5; Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchova beat newcomer Rina Fujiwara of Japan, 6-0, 6-2; Germany's Sabine Lisicki defeated Romania's Simona Halep, 6-1, 6-2; qualifier Marina Erakovic of New Zealand beat Sweden's Sofia Arvidsson, 6-2, 6-1; and Poland's Urszula Radwanska topped Ukraine's Olga Savchuk 6-2, 6-4 in a matchup of qualifiers.

The 25th-ranked Kirilenko, who reached the …

Anthony, Susan B(rownell)

ANTHONY, Susan B(rownell)

Born 15 February 1820, Adams, Massachusetts; died 13 March 1906, Rochester, New York

Daughter of Lucy (Read) and Daniel Anthony

Susan B. Anthony was the daughter of a Quaker father and Baptist mother. She received a thoroughly Quaker education, which influenced her belief in equality between men and women as well as her interest in other social issues. She began her professional life as a schoolteacher, discovering firsthand the effects of disproportionate wages. In 1849 she decided to quit teaching and returned to her family's farm.

Although she is strongly linked with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the two women did not meet until 1850, two years after the famous Seneca Falls convention during which Stanton introduced a woman suffrage amendment. From the moment of their meeting, however, the women were friends and colleagues. Anthony had already been …

SOUND OFF: WHAT YOU SAID

Last week's question:

Has your company increased its charitable giving to meet the growing demand for services as a result of the recession? Why or why not?

YES: "We have given more this year to the Homeless Vets and the Rescue Mission to feed those that are hungry. We are a small business that has seen a 35 percent downturn in the economy; and of course we have not seen a stimulus, and not interested in one from this president and the left-wing pinkos that represent his dictatorship. This bunch of Chicago goons are a disgrace to our American way."

-John Marshall

York County

From our Twitter page

From @mpriestarnold:

@CPBJ We …

Flyers-Canadiens, Sums

Philadelphia 1 3 2_6
Montreal 2 1 1_4
First Period_1, Montreal, Plekanec 4 (Brisebois, A.Kostitsyn), 4:29 (pp). 2, Philadelphia, Umberger 8 (Smith, Lupul), 10:20. 3, Montreal, Kovalev 5 (Lapierre, Komisarek), 11:28. Penalties_Thoresen, Phi (hooking), 2:43Prospal, Phi (hooking), 6:03Kovalev, Mon (hooking), 15:04.
Second Period_4, Montreal, Higgins 3 (Koivu, Gorges), 8:15. 5, Philadelphia, Richards 4 (Umberger), 14:02. 6, Philadelphia, Umberger 9 (Hatcher, Richards), 15:44. 7, Philadelphia, Hartnell 3 (Timonen), 17:00. …

Former Wigan manager Paul Jewell may return to club six months after quitting

Former Wigan manager Paul Jewell would consider returning to the Premier League club six months after he quit to take a break from soccer.

Jewell has been mentioned as a candidate to take over at the club after his former assistant Chris Hutchings was fired as manager this week.

The 43-year-old Jewell stepped down at the end of last season after helping the lowly northern club avoid relegation and has not worked since.

Writing in his column for Wednesday's edition of free British daily Metro, Jewell said he had not been offered his old job back, but that he was ready to start work again.

"I've had no contact with Wigan," Jewell said. "But after six months away, I am ready and willing to return to work. I will consider any offers that come my way."

Jewell was at Wigan for six years and led the club to two promotions and into the Premier League for the first time. Wigan finished 10th in its debut topflight season in 2006 and reached the League Cup final, but Jewell left the day after the team finished 17th last season, citing the pressure of the job.

"I needed a break as the job consumes you 24 hours a day, seven days a week," Jewell said. "I firmly believe I will return to football refreshed and a better manager."

A word to Meeks: Words do matter

James Meeks, the reverend and state senator, has a powerful voice.His reach stretches beyond the confines of his 22,000-member SalemBaptist Church on Chicago's South Side. It's bigger than thepolitical boundaries of the Illinois Legislature where he has servedsince 2002. His voice is even broadcast in 28 prisons in Illinois andLouisiana thanks to $175,000 in satellite equipment and downlinksSalem Baptist provides for inmates who could not otherwise attendMeeks' two-hour Sunday service.

When the Rev./Sen. Meeks speaks, people listen. That's why hisquote from a July 5 sermon has taken on a life of its own. In it hetalked about "house niggers."

And yes, I spelled out the n-word. Not because I think it'sanything other than a despicable, disgusting word. But because onTuesday, Meeks and I were able to talk at length about exactly whathe said and why he said it. It's a word he does not shrink from.

Meeks' remarks, though they were made three weeks earlier andgenerated no stir at the time, came into wider public view last week.That's when Meeks led a march downtown to denounce the quality ofChicago public schools under the leadership of Mayor Daley. Some ofthe protesters carried signs saying "End apartheid in Chicagoschools." Chicago public schools are overwhelmingly black andHispanic. Meeks doesn't rule out a 2007 mayoral bid.

That theme of "apartheid" was something Meeks preached about fromthe pulpit in early July. He compared white elected officials to"slave masters" who "never want the slave to learn how to read andnever want the slave to learn how to write. So now we don't haveslave masters," he said, "we got governors . . . we got mayors."Taking aim at black leaders who support those white politicians, hesaid, "What makes me so mad is . . . you got some preachers that arehouse niggers. You got some elected officials that are houseniggers."

He didn't name names but it didn't matter.

It is, to my ears, an awful charge.

Would Meeks talk to me about all of this? "I would be 100 percentglad to talk to you about that," he said. He was on a cell phone inhis car just leaving the installation of Bobbie Steele as the firstAfrican-American woman head the Cook County Board of Commissioners.Meeks had delivered the invocation there.

I asked if he regretted saying what he said. "The thing I regret,"he told me, ". . . is that it's taken the educational argument out ofits context and it's diverted attention away at a time when I canleast afford to have people focusing on something different than theeducational argument."

But, he hastened to add, he spoke to his congregation for thebetter part of an hour and offered a much larger context for hiswords. He talked about how state constitutions in the days of slaveryhad legislated black ignorance and illiteracy. That terms like "slavemaster" and "house nigger" were an accepted part of the language atthat time in history.

I know a little bit about soundbites. And I confess, I didn't hearMeeks' whole sermon. But I would argue this isn't 1865.

It's 2006. And Chicago.

Today we are in desperate need of a better civic discourse than weever seem to have. And race is always a combustible part of ourconversation in this town.

As my Sun-Times colleague, Mary Mitchell, has pointed out in herrecent columns on the use of the term "white boy," words can bethrown like rocks.

And while I understand, sort of, how black people can call eachother names that white people can't and vice versa, I don't like thedouble standard, no matter what the race or ethnicity, and neverhave.

In 1983, I covered Bernard Epton's election campaign againstHarold Washington. Epton, a white long-shot candidate, didn't evenneed epithets against Washington, a black man, to get his racialpoint across. His campaign message was only five words: "Epton . . .Before It's Too Late."

Meeks and I talked a lot about words. Words we once usedthoughtlessly, words we would never use today. As a child growing up,he admits, he and everyone he knew called Maxwell Street "Jewtown,"something he would never say today. As a beginning reporter inChicago, I can remember asking "Who's his Chinaman?" when trying tofigure out somebody's political clout. I do not ever say that now.

Words matter.

Meeks has a lot to say about the issues, and I look forward to hismessage and the debate it provokes. But unless I miss my guess, thiscould prove to be a brutal, even poisonous political season. He, andwe, need to be mindful.

Words matter.

e-mail: cmarin@suntimes.com

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Nathaniel Gerstenzang, New York Times Editor

Nathaniel M. Gerstenzang, 87, a longtime editor on the New YorkTimes' foreign desk who oversaw coverage of major global events, diedFriday in Evanston Hospital.

A Wilmette resident since November, Mr. Gerstenzang spent morethan 30 years with the Times. As assistant foreign editor, hedirected daily coverage of the rebirth of Europe during the post-waryears. During a tour of his paper's European bureaus in 1956, heremained in Vienna to edit his paper's articles on the Hungarianuprising.

He won the George Polk Award for national reporting when hecoordinated coverage of the 1959 visit to the United States by SovietPremier Nikita Khrushchev, who promised that his country would"overtake and outstrip" the West in living standards.

Mr. Gerstenzang later was in charge of reporting on the VietnamWar. On July 19, 1969, he was night news editor when the Apollo 11spacecraft landed on the moon, and he oversaw the edition thatcarried the banner headline "Men Walk on Moon."

In describing his father, Jim Gerstenzang, a reporter with theLos Angeles Times, cited a 1966 speech his father made at ColbyJunior College in New Hampshire: "Quite often the job of reportingnews fully means stepping on the toes of individuals, companies orgovernments. But the problem must be met head on if a newspaper'sintegrity is to be preserved."

As an adjunct journalism professor at Columbia University in the1950s and 1960s, he taught editing to a generation of journalists.

Mr. Gerstenzang retired from the Times in 1969 but remainedactive. For the next several years, he was a copy editor for theWall Street Journal while contributing articles for the Times' NewJersey edition. He worked his way through the New York University law school as asports reporter for the New York Post. During the 1934 baseballseason, he covered the New York Yankees and Giants, and shortly afterthat he joined the Times as a sports copy editor.

In addition to his son, he leaves his wife, Miriam; a daughter,Nina Chaitin; a sister, Elsie Gussow; six grandchildren, and agreat-granddaughter.

Burial was private. Plans for a memorial service are pending.

Aflac sponsors college football's Heisman Trophy

ATLANTA (AP) — The insurance firm Aflac is sponsoring the Heisman Trophy next season.

The company said Friday it will offer its key accounts and brokerage partners access to Heisman-themed events. The vice president of sponsorships and emerging markets says the company is working with major universities to line up the events.

Vice president Danny Fleishman says the company is honored to be partnered with the Heisman and he is excited about the future of the sponsorship. Fleishman says the Heisman Trophy Trust and Aflac have a mutual level of respect.

The company has a multi-year deal, but the terms have not been released.

The Heisman is given each year to college football's most outstanding player.

Funeral service set for activist Battiste

Community activist Mattie Battiste, who was found beaten to death in her apartment nearly two weeks ago, will be buried Saturday in Alabama.

Battiste, 72, was a frequent critic of drug dealers and others near her home in the 6900 block of S. Prairie Ave. Many neighbors thought that is who killed her. But a few days after the murder, her 20-year-old adopted daughter, Katrina, Seith Williams, 21, and Hernandez Holeman, 20, were arrested in connection with her death. One of the men has been described as Katrina's boyfriend, and police said she is also pregnant. All three will appear in court Sept. 10 to face charges of first-degree murder.

Battiste's family and friends will now gather in Prichard, Ala., to remember a woman who tried to rid her neighborhood of crime and hopelessness.

"This is a real tragedy for our entire family," said Sandra Moore, Battiste's great-niece.

Visitation will take place Saturday, 9 a.m., at St. James Major Catholic Church, 927 W. Prichard Ave. in Prichard, followed by a service and interment. On Wednesday, at 7 p.m., a memorial service for Battiste will be held in Chicago at St. Colombanus Catholic Church, 331 E. 71st St. Father Matthew Eyerman, pastor of St. Colombanus, said Battiste was a parishioner there for five years. He said she also attended mass at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Hyde Park.

Moore hopes Wednesday's remembrance will bring closure for Battiste's friends, neighbors and co-workers at the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA).

"She didn't deserve to die in that way," Moore said. "The family has no explanation as to what happened. Katrina had a good upbringing."

Article copyright REAL TIMES Inc.

University professor turns home into haunted house that teaches kids to face fear

In the lab, psychology professor David Zald studies how fast adults react to fear.

At his home during the U.S. Halloween holiday, he watches kids adjust to it.

Zald, a professor at Vanderbilt University, turns his house in Nashville, Tennessee, into a Halloween fear lab _ with a reward of candy for those who brave it.

On the traditional day that children dress up in costumes and go door to door for treats, skeletons hang from the tree, motion-activated sensors move objects around and there is a creepy fog floating around the house. Zald decorates in classic horror motif for fun, but the psychologist in him cannot help but observe the classic fear response in children.

"They want the candy, but they're not sure they want to come up," says Zald, who in the past has dressed up as a devil but this year will be costumed as the kitschy Disco Stu character from the animated TV series, "The Simpsons."

By the end of the night, even the young children are not fazed by ghouls and goblins. They control their fear to get the reward of candy, Zald said, and they learn a healthy lesson.

Fear is a negative emotion and for millions of Americans, it is disabling. Yet people love horror movies, and Halloween is a holiday that celebrates fear while rewarding children with sweets. There are scientific reasons for this odd mix.

"One of the odder aspects of human nature is our willingness to pay money to actually get scared," Zald said. "Essentially we get off on the excitement. We get a high arousal state and we actually find that appealing."

There are physical chemical rewards in our brain when we experience fear, yet cheat an anticipated painful threat, psychologists say. And fear-induced hormones, such as adrenaline, are pleasurable at times.

"Part of the fun of Halloween is that it's a way of experiencing fear in a pretty controlled setting," said University of Michigan psychology professor Stephen Maren. "People enjoy the fun and surprises, but they're putting themselves in situations where they are really not in danger."

Some people need that kind of excitement, which is similar to the rush felt when playing sports, said New York psychologist Linda Sapadin, author of the book "Master Your Fears."

"We do need some fear in our lives, otherwise things are too placid," she said.

On the other hand, she noted, people who live in war zones, do not go to horror movies.

Bush Addresses NAACP Convention

WASHINGTON - After declining invitations for five years in a row, President Bush delivered his first address Thursday to the annual NAACP convention.

The White House said Bush wanted to address the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to show his commitment to civil rights. It was the same day the Senate was poised to renew the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

"The president has had five years to prepare for this speech," Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, past chairman of the Congressional Black Democratic Caucus, said Wednesday. "I hope that this time, he makes it worth the wait."

Democrats have called on Bush to use his appearance to renew the Voting Rights Act. "He could sign it right here on this stage," Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., told the NAACP on Wednesday, eliciting cheers from the audience.

The House voted overwhelmingly last week to extend provisions of the landmark civil rights act that President Johnson signed after violence erupted in the South over voting rights for blacks. The Senate is expected to pass it on Thursday, although probably not before Bush's midmorning appearance at the NAACP.

Every president for the past several decades has spoken to the Baltimore-based group. Until now, Bush, who received 11 percent of the black vote in 2004, had been the exception. His appearance comes in a critical midterm election year, when Republicans fear losing control of Congress.

White House press secretary Tony Snow said that while there are political differences, the NAACP's new leader, Bruce Gordon, has good relations with Bush. Gordon has met with Bush three times in the year he's headed the civil rights group. That compares to one meeting Bush had with Gordon's predecessor, Kweisi Mfume, a former Democratic congressman.

"It is clear that in this nation, racism and discrimination are legally unacceptable, but there are also residues of the past that we have to address," Snow said in previewing the speech. "We have to find ways to make sure that the road to opportunity is clear for one and all."

Snow denied claims that this was Bush's way of atoning for the government's slow response to Hurricane Katrina. The Rev. Jesse Jackson and some black elected officials alleged that indifference to black suffering and racial injustice was to blame for the sluggish reaction to the disaster. In September 2005, Bush's top advisers met with black leaders to discuss their concerns.

"I think the president wants to make his voice heard," Snow said about Bush's speech. "He has an important role to play not only in making the case for civil rights but, maybe more importantly, the case for unity."

Cummings, D-Md., said as the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches, Bush needs to explain what he plans to do to help the thousands of families in the Gulf Coast region who remain homeless and jobless.

He said the president also needs to address other issues of concern to blacks, including access to health care and the minimum wage, which has remained at $5.15 for nearly a decade.

"If the tax cuts are working, why then - at 9 percent - is the unemployment rate in the African American community nearly double the national rate?" Cummings asked.

---

On the Net:

The White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov

NAACP: http://www.naacp.org

WE WILL BE FISH

WE WILL BE FISH by JP King, 101 pgs., PistolPress, 58 Claxton Blvd. Toronto, ON M6C 1L8, pistolpress.com, $12

We Will be Fish is both an art book and a poetry collection. Heavy in illustration and wild in energy and effort, King's work is fresh and irreverent. "I am watching my little brother drop one of those thick, heavy dictionaries with alphabetical indents that we got for Christmas onto the windshield of a car traveling at a speed you wouldn't want to hit anything at." It seems effortless, magical and full of whimsy. "I check for crescent moons of fingernail and spit down a few of my own." The poetry is largely esoteric, bold, courageous and declarative. "She said her arms were real strong, said she was a hoister, said she lost her legs playing in the back of a garbage truck." Very enjoyable. Read the poem 'About the Bees." It's quite good. A mighty debut. (Michael Peckham)

U.S. Army-Sponsored eCYBERMISSION Launches Third Competition

The U.S. Army announced the kickoff of the third annual eCYBERMISSION competition, a free Web-based science, math and technology competition for 6th through 9th grade students. This highly successful program was designed to increase students' interest in science, math and technology disciplines, and is now accepting student registrations at www.ecybermission.com. Participation in eCYBERMISSION last year culminated in the 2004 National Judging and Educational Event, where 16 first-place teams, four from each region and grade, participated in an array of educational activities, presented their projects to a panel of professional judges and were honored at a prestigious awards banquet hosted by the U.S Army.

"The success of the 2003-2004 eCYBERMISSION competition demonstrates that our Nation's children are interested in making a difference, contributing to their communities and exploring a variety of science, math and technology disciplines," said Kelly Stratchko, eCYBERMISSION Program Manager. The structure of eCYBERMISSION allows students to identify a community problem and then use science, math and technology to solve it. During the competition, teams conduct research and experiments to test their hypotheses, reach out to community leaders and communicate with online CyberGuides - Army personnel who are experts in science, math and technology. Teams must identify how their solution affects the community and what their plans are for implementation and next steps.

Registration for eCYBERMISSION began Sept. 1, 2004, and is open through Dec. 13, 2004. The competition is open to all students in grades 6 through 9 across the United States and to students enrolled in DOD Education Activity schools throughout the world. The deadline to submit completed projects is Feb. 21, 2005. For more information about eCYBERMISSION, go to www.ecybermission.com.

In addition, volunteers are needed to help spread the word about eCYBERMISSION and encourage students of diverse backgrounds and proficiency levels to participate. Over the past 2 years, eCYBERMISSION volunteers have included hundreds of Active and Reserve military personnel and DOD civilians with security clearances serving as CyberGuides and ambassadors. CyberGuides must be able to spend 4 hours per week interacting with students online to provide guidance and support. Ambassadors promote the competition to their local schools and community groups, contributing 15-20 hours per month between August and November.

For additional information, contact either the U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command Public Affairs Office at (410) 436-4345 or public.affairs@ apgea.army.mil or the eCYBERMISSION Mission Control at 1-866-GO-CYBER or missioncontrol@ ecybermission.com. To register as a volunteer, go to www.ecybermission.com.

Did You Know?

Results from the 2004 ArmyAL&TMagazine Readership Survey can be found on the U.S. Army Acquisition Support Center's Web site. Please visit http://asc.army.mil to see our readers' survey responses.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

With 1 month to go, World Cup of contrasts awaits

The World Cup kicks off in South Africa in a month, and what awaits hundreds of thousands of visitors is a nation of contrasts.

A country once defined around the globe by its brutal, institutionalized racism will be the showpiece of Africa, the first nation on the continent to host the top tournament of the planet's most popular sport.

A region beset by poverty, crime and AIDS is hopeful that its moment of worldwide attention _ from the opening game June 11 to the final on July 11 _ will propel it up the ranks of global competitors in business and tourism.

"I think South Africans want to celebrate this event," said Udesh Pillay, who oversaw research looking at what the World Cup could mean to South Africa, resulting in the book "Development and Dreams."

"They want to use it to showcase their country, its beauty, its ability, its competence."

The World Cup is a chance "to re-brand and give our country a new image," Greg Fredericks, chief of staff for tournament organizer Danny Jordaan, told lawmakers in Johannesburg who summoned him for month-to-go update on preparations.

"We know that Africa is seen as a dark continent," he said, citing stories by foreign journalists who have focused on unemployment, inequality and high crime in reporting on South Africa and the World Cup.

"I don't think they could believe that a country here on the tip of Africa could organize an event as big as the World Cup," Fredericks said. "This World Cup will definitely help people to change their perceptions of Africa."

Visitors will be warmly welcomed by black and white South Africans, who traditionally place great importance on showing hospitality to strangers and who have been admonished by tournament organizers to be on better than best behavior during the World Cup.

Fans will see five new stadiums and one _ Johannesburg's Soccer City _ that was so completely overhauled it might as well be new. South Africa spent $1.3 billion to get 10 stadiums ready for the World Cup, while road and airport construction was speeded up for the tournament.

South Africa's scars also will be on display.

Tourists will be wary of crime, and there's no guarantee the country's famously restive work force won't use the World Cup platform to strike for more pay.

The April death of a white supremacist leader, Eugene Terreblanche, focused attention on racial tensions, though police blame black farm workers they say had had a wage dispute with Terreblanche. South African police have announced they had confiscated weapons and arrested suspects linked to white right-wing groups, but stressed there was no threat to the World Cup.

Blacks for the most part still live in poverty, and the gap between rich and poor has only grown since 1994.

The end of apartheid was also the beginning of a national experiment in building unity. Sport has been used to move the process. Recalled by last year's hit film "Invictus," black President Nelson Mandela made a statement at the 1995 rugby World Cup final by wearing the green and gold jersey of the Springboks, the country's national rugby team many blacks associated with the most racist whites.

Pillay, a researcher at South Africa's Human Science Research Council, said the World Cup "now is the emotional glue that holds the country together."

While football fans might be shocked to see beggars _ black and white _ outside gleaming shopping malls, South Africans are used to living in two worlds at once.

Think of the legions of black maids who leave shacks without running water or electricity, boarding buses before dawn to travel into white areas to clean palatial homes.

Or think of the whites who knew but did not acknowledge the price of their apartheid privileges. In his memoirs, novelist Andre Brink described an idyllic childhood in rural South Africa, where everyone noticed when two unmarked graves appeared on a farm, but did not act on that evidence of how the farmer had dealt with black workers who had challenged him over wages.

Brink writes that he did not fully wake to apartheid until he was a college student in Paris in 1960, reading with horror about police officers in Sharpeville killing 69 black South Africans, including women and children, to put down a peaceful protest.

Johannesburg businessman Mandla Sibeko summed up the contrasts: "South Africa, we're a crazy nation.

"The world is going to be amazed at how hopeful and how patient South Africans are."

Sibeko, 31, grew up in eastern South Africa, one of the country's most impoverished regions. He studied under a tree when he was a boy because his village had no school building.

A teen when apartheid ended, Sibeko went on to university, earned a law degree, then started an investment business. He began planning for the World Cup soon after South Africa won the bid in 2004. In 2008, he went into partnership with a British company that specializes in advertising at stadiums, and together won the bid to coordinate ads at the World Cup venues.

He won't say how much the contract is worth, but says "it definitely will put me in a place to go even bigger."

The World Cup, Sibeko said, "is the moment when we stand on a platform and show the world how far we have come."

Bribery sentencing put off for onetime 9/11 hero

NEW YORK (AP) — Sentencing has been postponed for a former official who was hailed for helping two people escape the World Trade Center on 9/11. He was later convicted of taking bribes related to the terrorist attacks' aftermath.

Mark Jakubek (jah-KHOH'-behk) had been set for sentencing Monday on the second of two bribe-taking convictions. The sentencing is now scheduled for Friday.

The former Port Authority of New York and New Jersey official was convicted in 2009 on charges of taking bribes to let a company overbill for work on the trade center cleanup and other projects. He has challenged his conviction.

The case had arisen after Jakubek spent about a year in prison. In that case, he pleaded guilty to taking kickbacks to speed payments to contractors whose bills were lost in the attacks.

Witnesses say missiles hit Somali border town, wounding 8

Planes fired three missiles at a Somali town held by Islamic extremists early Monday, destroying a home and seriously injuring eight people, including four children, residents and police said.

The missiles that struck Dobley, some four miles (six kilometers) from the Kenyan border, were from military aircraft, but it was not clear from which country they originated, witnesses said. Remnants of an Islamic force that had once ruled much of southern Somalia took over Dobley last week.

Last year, the U.S. shelled suspected al-Qaida targets in Somalia, one of the most lawless and violent countries in the world. Neither U.S. Africa Command nor U.S. Central Command said it was aware of Monday's missile strike. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, whose mandate covers Somalia, referred calls to the U.S. Defense Department.

"We woke up with a loud and big bang and when we came out we found our neighbor's house completely obliterated as if no house existed here," a resident of the town, Fatuma Abdullahi, told The Associated Press. "We are taking shelter under trees. Three planes were flying over our heads."

A police officer who gave only his first name, Siyad, because he was not authorized to speak to the media said the eight wounded were hit by shrapnel. He also said the planes were military aircraft.

An aid worker in Dobley said up to six people were still trapped in the rubble by midday. It was not clear if these victims were included in the police officer's tally.

"A minimum of two bombs were dropped," the aid worker, who asked that his name not be used because he is not authorized to speak to the media, told the AP by telephone. "Between four and six people are in the rubble."

Clan elder Ahmed Nur Dalab said a senior Islamic official, Hassan Turki, was in town Sunday to mediate between his fighters and a militia loyal to the government. Turki's forces took over Dobley last week.

In early 2007, Somali troops and their Ethiopian allies drove out a radical Islamic group to which Turki is allied that had taken over much of southern Somalia. The Islamic forces have fought to regain power.

Somalia has been mired in chaos since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on each other.

On Monday, a rights group said all sides in Somalia's long-running conflict are united in at least one goal _ trying to curtail independent media by "killing, arresting and threatening" reporters.

The report by London-based Amnesty International was released a day after government raids shut down three independent radio stations in Mogadishu. The soldiers forced the stations off the air, arrested a journalist and seized equipment.

"The troops came in, took our equipment and arrested our boss without explanation. We do not know why they are targeting us," Mohamed Abdullahi, a Shabelle radio staff member, told the AP. Shabelle's director, Muqtar Mohamed Hirabe, was arrested.

Mohamed Abukar, a presenter and producer at Radio Horn Afrik, said troops broke down its doors and ordered the station off the air. The other shuttered station was Simba.

Government officials declined to comment on the raids.

The targeted media houses have criticized both the government and the Islamic militants who have been trying to topple the administration through a bloody insurgency.

At least nine journalists have been killed since February 2007 and death threats and arrests have forced at least 50 others to seek refuge in neighboring countries, Amnesty said.

"The killings, arrests and death threats targeting Somali journalists are not just another unfortunate byproduct of the conflict and general insecurity in Somalia _ they are a deliberate and systematic attempt by all parties to the conflict to stem the flow of information out of the country," said Michelle Kagari, deputy director of Amnesty's Africa program.

Body Found in Iraq Is Calif. Soldier

TORRANCE, Calif. - About a month ago, the family of Pfc. Joseph Anzack Jr. endured the most frightening of rumors: The soldier was dead in Iraq.

After messages were posted on MySpace.com, South High School, where he had been a football star, put a message on a sign outside that said: "In Loving Memory Joseph Anzack Class of 2005." It wasn't until the Red Cross helped his father speak with him by phone that the family could put the rumor to rest.

On Wednesday, the family relived the trauma - only this time, it was real. Anzack was identified as the soldier whose body was found in the Euphrates River in Iraq after being abducted with two comrades a week and a half ago, a relative said.

"They told us, 'We're sorry to inform you the body we found has been identified as Joe,'" said the soldier's aunt, Debbie Anzack. "I'm in disbelief."

Military officials told Anzack's family that a commanding officer identified the body, but that DNA tests were still pending, she said.

Anzack, 20, of Torrance, was one of three soldiers who vanished after their combat team was ambushed May 12 about 20 miles outside of Baghdad. Five others, including an Iraqi, were killed in the ambush.

The three U.S. soldiers were members of 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment of the 10th Mountain Division's 2nd Brigade combat team. The 10th Mountain Division, based in Fort Drum, N.Y., has spearheaded a search that has included 4,000 U.S. troops and 2,000 Iraqis. Two soldiers, not yet identified, have died in the search.

If the soldiers were taken alive, it would be the single biggest abduction of U.S. soldiers in Iraq since Pvt. Jessica Lynch and six others were captured on March 23, 2003.

In the soldiers' hometowns, the discovery of the body cast a pall after days of optimism that all the soldiers might be found alive. Still missing are Pvt. Byron Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Mich. and Spc. Alex Jimenez, 25, of Lawrence, Mass.

In Lawrence, Mass., a yellow ribbon was tied to the front door of the home of Jimenez's father, Ramon "Andy" Jimenez. Ramon Jimenez, who speaks Spanish, said through a translator that he has been bouyed by the support of friends and family.

"The hope is very high that God is going to give Alex back to him," said Wendy Luzon, a family friend who translated the conversation and has served as the family's spokeswoman.

He last spoke with his son three weeks ago, she said, but the conversation was brief because of a bad connection.

Neighbors and friends in the former mill city north of Boston waited anxiously. Francisco Urena, the city's veteran services director and a former Marine who served a tour as a tank commander in Iraq, said he could hardly contain himself as he awaited news.

"I just wish I could grab my pack and start searching for him myself," he said.

In Commerce Township, Mich., about 25 miles northwest of Detroit, a dozen trees that line the road leading to Fouty's high school were adorned with yellow ribbons.

Fouty's step-grandmother, Mary Dibler of Oxford, Mich., said the family was heartened by the support but saddened by the news about Anzack.

"We're just continuing the same as we have been, one day at a time," Dibler said. "We continue to pray; that's all we can do."

At Fort Drum, soldiers were carrying out their training and other operations with a "business as usual" attitude as news of the body's recovery quickly made it around the post, said Sgt. Kevin Stewart, 25, a six-year veteran from San Antonio.

"We're focused on training, but I think everyone is concerned and hoping for a positive outcome," Stewart said, while standing in a shopping center parking lot off post. "As soldiers, we can all relate, and we can all imagine what it's like for the families."

Lori Kenner said that while soldiers might be concentrating on training, many spouses have probably followed the search much more closely. Kenner's husband is set to come home within the month following a 15-month deployment in Afghanistan.

"I know the waiting and not knowing must be horrible," said Kenner, 28, of Seattle, Wash. "But at least as long as they are still missing there is a possibility that they are still alive."

---

Associated Press writers Glenn Johnson in Lawrence, Mass., David Aguilar in Commerce Township, Mich. and William Kates at Fort Drum, N.Y., contributed to this report.

Report: Blair intervened on tobacco ban

Tony Blair intervened as Britain's prime minister to get an exemption from a ban on tobacco advertising at sporting events for Formula One, a British newspaper reported Sunday.

Citing documents obtained through freedom of information requests, The Sunday Telegraph reported that hours after meeting Formula One chief Bernie Ecclestone, Blair sought the exemption.

Blair, who served as Britain's prime minister for 10 years, has said the 1997 meeting with Ecclestone _ a governing Labour Party donor _ did not influence the government's decision to seek the exemption.

But the newly disclosed documents _ briefing notes drafted by government staffers _ indicate otherwise, according to the Telegraph.

Blair's government have insisted that the decision to exempt Formula One was not made by him right after his meeting with Ecclestone on Oct. 16, 1997. Instead, government officials have said it was a joint decision made with the Department of Health at a later date.

However, The Sunday Telegraph said the newly released documents indicate that within hours of the meeting, Blair instructed his chief of staff, Jonathan Powell, to inform Tessa Jowell, then the public health minister, of his support for an exemption.

The following day, Jowell was informed in writing by 10 Downing St. that "the prime minister would like your ministers to look for ways of finding a permanent derogation for sport in particular, F1," the newspaper reported. The revelations are contained in briefing notes drafted by officials who worked for Jowell, according to the newspaper.

A spokesman for Blair told The Sunday Telegraph there was nothing new in the story.

A call to a Blair spokesman by The Associated Press was not immediately returned Sunday.

___

On the Net:

The Sunday Telegraph:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

Consumer Confidence Drops in October

NEW YORK - With Christmas only about eight weeks away, shoppers are feeling more forlorn about the economy than they have since hurricanes Katrina and Rita battered the Gulf Coast two years ago.

The New York-based Conference Board said Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index fell to 95.6 from a revised 99.5 in September. It was the lowest reading since 85.2 in October 2005 when gas and oil prices soared after the hurricanes deluged New Orleans and shut down a large chunk of the nation's oil refineries. Analysts had expected a reading of 99.5 Tuesday.

For retailers, the consumer confidence report, which showed its third monthly decline in a row, heightens worries that the holiday shopping season will be challenging after a disappointing fall. For investors, it raised concerns that consumers' growing wariness was another sign that the economy may be slowing too much. Consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.

The report helped nudge stocks lower as Wall Street waited warily for a decision on interest rate policy from the Federal Reserve, which is meeting Tuesday and Wednesday. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 55.84, or 0.40 percent, to 13,814.42.

Souring confidence is "certainly not what retailers want to see going into the holiday season," said Wachovia Corp. economist Mark Vitner. He added that consumers have more hurdles going into the season than even two years ago.

The Present Situation Index, which measures how shoppers feel now about the economy, declined to 118.8 in October from 121.2 in the prior month. The Expectations Index, which measures shoppers' outlook over the next six months, declined to 80.1 from 85.0.

Shoppers are contending with a slew of problems: higher food and gas prices, a deepening housing slump and tighter credit, among them.

A report on U.S. home prices Tuesday offered little hope that housing prices will recover soon. According to the S&P/Case-Shiller index, U.S. home prices fell nationwide in August for the eighth consecutive month.

And while the Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates on Wednesday to soften the impact of the housing woes on the economy, economists say the move is probably too late for the holiday season, which accounts for up to 40 percent of retailers' annual revenue.

"Further weakening in business conditions has, yet again, tempered consumers' assessment of current-day conditions and may very well be a prelude to lackluster job growth in the months ahead," said Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center, in a statement. "In addition, consumers are growing more pessimistic about the short-term future and their rather bleak outlook suggests a less than stellar ending to this year.

For those who watch the economy, the big concern is that a slowing housing market and rising fuel prices will undermine what has been, until now, a healthy jobs market, Vitner said. The Labor Department is expected to show an increase of 80,000 jobs in October when it releases its monthly report on Friday. Unemployment is expected to remain steady at 4.7 percent.

Vitner noted that already layoffs are starting to rise.The Consumer Confidence report - derived from responses through Oct. 23 - showed a weakening of confidence in the job market.

Those saying jobs are "hard to get" increased to 22.6 percent from 22.4 percent. Those claiming jobs are "plentiful" decreased to 24.1 percent from 25.6 percent in September.

The outlook for the labor market was also less optimistic. The percentage of consumers expecting more jobs in the months ahead was unchanged at 13.5, but those anticipating fewer jobs increased to 20.1 percent from 18.7 percent.

Desmond Tutu: Obama's 'complexion' helps in Africa

Retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu says that President Barack Obama's background and race will help him influence African leaders.

The anti-apartheid icon says Obama would be freer to make demands on African politicians because he can tell them: "Look here you guys, I am one of you, don't let me down."

"They can't accuse him of being a neocolonialist," Tutu said during a visit to London Thursday. "Complexion helps."

Tutu was speaking at the launch of a report on the Group of Eight's aid commitments to sub-Saharan Africa. As the discussion turned to the issue of African leadership, Tutu said Obama would be in a good position to influence Africa's ruling class.

Obama plans to attend the G-8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy, from July 8-10 and is following the meeting with a visit to Accra, Ghana _ his first presidential stop in Africa.

Obama, America's first black president, has roots in Kenya.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

The Politics of Disaster

Q: Is it ethical to use images of 9/11 in an ad to sway voters? What if those images are combined with an image of fire "Photoshopped" onto an image of the Statue of Liberty or another U.S. landmark? What is too far?

A: Images of 9/11, either manipulated or accurate, can be used to create false associations that deceive the public, and such use is always unethical.

Images have a much stronger and lasting emotional impact than words alone, so the use of images of 9/11 should be carefully considered. If the images are used to recall the horrors of the event, they can have a number of effects, both psychological and sociological. (Go to www.campaignline.com to read about the effects.)

Because so many of the possible, and even unintended, effects of the use of 9/11 images are negative and contribute little to helping people think clearly or deliberate carefully, there are few uses of 9/11 images that could be deemed ethical. It would be unethical to use 9/11 images in a general way, as a tactic to induce a general atmosphere of fear, and it would also be unethical to manipulate them to escalate their fearful aspects.

A case might be made that unmanipulated 9/11 images could be used to draw attention to a failed anti-terrorism policy, to the denial of promised funds for rebuilding, to unfulfilled recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, or other such issues directly related to the events of 9/11. However, given the possible unintended outcomes of such images, it would be the high road to show images of the actual problems resulting from failed policy, rather than past traumas.

Q: Should campaigns play on the fears of voters in ads, whether for social or national security issues?

A: The coercive use of fear has a long tradition in American society, beginning with the Calvinist Puritans of the seventeenth century. Much religious revivalism in American Christianity still relies on fear of damnation and hell, so the use of fear may seem warranted. Playing on people's fears can be very effective, but stirring up images, unspecified, or overblown fear is not ethical. Using fear to destabilize a society and control a population are among the goals of terrorism. Encouraging fear as the basis of decision-making tends to make people intellectually rigid and emotionally gullible. Neither trait is conducive to the maintenance of a healthy democracy.

Although real danger sometimes means important decisions have to be made under fearful conditions, people's capacities to make choices based on evidence, analysis, and careful consideration are reduced when they are especially fearful or anxious. In addition, the frequent use of fear tactics can inure the public to real danger, as the boy who cried wolf too many times learned.

Q: Some conservative commentators have been critical of several Democratic ads portraying Michael J. Fox and his support of stem cell research. Both sides use celebrities and others in ads and on campaigns to drive their point. Is it ethical to use a person with an illness to make a point?

A: If celebrities or others with an illness give their knowing consent to support an ad and public campaign about their illness, it is ethical for them to do so. Such actions constitute a willing choice to make their illness public. It would be unethical to use people with an illness without their consent. In cases where obtaining consent is impossible, it would be doubly unethical to use them.

Q: Web ads have grown in popularity this cycle. Is it ethical to be more vicious or have a different standard for ads that are made for the Web and may never appear on TV?

A: I think this question is somewhat like saying someone is a little bit pregnant. Public communication is just that: public. The question of ethics in ads does not relate to the means of public communication, but to what is communicated. Though web ads may have a smaller audience than TV, the same standards for public communication apply.

[Author Affiliation]

Rita Nakashima Brock, Ph.D., a member of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), is founding co-director of Faith Voices for the Common Good. She was a religion professor for 20 years and is an award-winning author of books in Christian theology.

Missouri not content with bid: Tigers look to hand WVU another bowl loss

DAILY MAIL SPORTSWRITER

Missouri is a little like the average Blockbuster patron.

The Tigers might watch a film they consider good or they mightview one that leaves their faces scrunched like a lemon-biter.Missouri (7-4) and West Virginia University (8-3) will exchangefilms this week to prepare for their Dec. 26 meeting at theInsight.com Bowl in Tucson, Ariz. The 8 p.m. EST game will betelevised by ESPN.WVU accepted a bid last week. Missouri officially became its foeSunday afternoon as the Big 12 Conference filled its slots. TheInsight.com received the No. 5 pick from that league."We are just ready to go and beat West Virginia," Missouri seniorquarterback Corby …

Our great green spaces ; Essex has some great country parks and seven of them have just been awarded Green Flag Awards

Seven Essex country parks have been awarded Green Flags, markingthem out as some of the best green spaces in the UK.

The country parks at Danbury, Weald and Thorndon near Brentwood,Great Notley near Braintree, Belhus Woods at South Ockendon,Hadleigh and Cudmore Grove at East Mersea will all proudly displayGreen Flags showing that they are well maintained and managed andhave excellent facilities.

A record number of Green Flag awards have been awarded this year,showing how many great green spaces there are in the country.

Standards "The Green Flag Award Scheme, and its growth, isessential in driving up the standards of our parks and greenspaces," said Phil Barton, Green Flag Plus Partnership chairman.

"Access to quality green space is something we all desire and thescheme plays a key role in providing it."

All award-winning sites now have the chance to receive a furtheraward from the Green Flag Plus Partnership, the People's ChoiceAward.

This award is voted for by the public, so if you want to see yourlocal park in Essex receive a national accolade as the people'schoice, then visit the Green Flag Award website atwww.greenflagaward.org.uk now to register your vote.

Belhus Woods Country Park has a diverse landscape of ancientwoodland, grassland and lakes. It is ideal for fishing and birdwatching, complete with a cafe and visitor centre.

Cudmore Country Park can be found at the eastern end of MerseaIsland. Its coastal location makes it perfect for walking the seawall, exploring the shore and watching birdlife. Behind the sandybeach lies an area of cliff top and grassland, providing a tranquilopen landscape for picnics, flying kites and other outdooractivities.

Danbury Country Park has been created from the lakesideornamental gardens of Danbury Palace. On site visitors can enjoywalks through the woodlands, picnics, fishing, flying kites orwandering through the ornamental gardens and enjoying thespectacular rhododendron displays.

Great Notley Country Park and the Flitch Way covers an area of100 acres with views across open farmland to the west, and a link toover 15 miles of walking and cycling paths along the Flitch Way. Thesite offers many facilities including a sensory trail, playequipment, cycle hire centre, fishing facilities, a visitor centreand bistro, sports and educational facilities, plus an extensiveevents programme. Hadleigh Country Park is one of the largest parksin Essex and gets its name from Hadleigh Castle, an impressive ruinof a fortress built over 700 years ago. Hadleigh Country Park is agreat place for a picnic, flying a kite or taking a walk along theseawall between Leigh and Benfleet. The park is also an excellentarea for all wildlife lovers and bird watchers.

Thorndon Country Park and Hartswood provide a large area ofcountryside and woodland. Visitors can enjoy walks in beautifulwoods and historic parkland. The site is steeped in history andfilled with the scent of wildflowers and the call of birds.

Weald Country Park offers a mixture of woodland and grassland,plus two lakes and a number of ponds. There is a network ofpathways, a well-established visitor centre and a deer paddock. Thedeer were reintroduced in 1987 as a reminder that the park was oncea royal hunting estate.

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Huddle with Hriniak helps Hurt

Frank Thomas worked with Walt Hriniak before Tuesday's game andafterward downplayed the extra hitting session.

I just did some extra work," Thomas said. Like I told peoplebefore, it's no secret. We've worked together for years. There's nomiracle answers there. He knows my swing and helps me tremendously. Ijust want to do the right thing and work like I'm capable of workingand try to be the positive force I can be for this team."

The session paid immediate dividends. Thomas hit a home run in theeighth inning to break a tie. The Royals rallied to win 8-5.

It seems one of the realizations Thomas had this offseason is thatat 34 (he will be 35 on May 27), he doesn't have many more years tobe productive.

I'm not going to sit here and waste my talent and not get out ofmy talent what I'm capable of getting out of it," he said. That'simportant to me. I'm in a stage in my career where I have to worryabout what I can do to help this team win. For me, working with thisguy really helps my swing."

Manager Jerry Manuel suspects that after a few days with Hriniak,Thomas will be set to go for the long haul.

I don't think he'll always need that," Manuel said. Once he getsgrounded, I think he'll take off and do very well.

It's just a matter of them getting their keys. [Hitting coach]Gary Ward is right along with it, so we have no problem with it."

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Epilepsy's woes unique for women

NEW YORK Although more than 1 million women in the United Stateshave epilepsy, a lack of understanding of the brain disorder'seffects on women often makes adequate health care elusive.

"Women's victimization and how they're uniquely affected by thischronic condition have been largely ignored," said Patricia Shafer,an epilepsy nurse specialist at Boston's Beth Israel DeaconessHospital.

Epilepsy, a generic term for a number of neurologic disordersmarked by seizures, is equally common among men, but women areuniquely vulnerable to complications, according to the foundation.Seizures and women's reproductive health affect each other, saidDr. Martha Morrell of …

Researchers from University of Alabama, Department of Epidemiology provide details of new studies and findings in the area of anemia.

Researchers detail in 'Predictors of anemia among pregnant women in Westmoreland, Jamaica,' new data in anemia. "Anemia in pregnancy is a worldwide problem, but it is most prevalent in the developing world. This research project was conducted to determine the predictors of anemia in pregnant women in Westmoreland, Jamaica," researchers in the United States report (see also Anemia).

"A cross-sectional study design was conducted, and descriptive, bivariate, and multiple logistic regression analyses were used. Body mass index (BMI), mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC), and the number of antenatal care visits showed a statistically significant association with anemia," wrote A.M. …

RATS FALL ON ROAD.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

Penguins6 River Rats3 WILKES-BARRE, Pa. -- Tomas Surovy had a hat trick Saturday night as the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins defeated the Albany River Rats 6-3 in the American Hockey League.

Surovy's first two goals, scored in a span of 2:40, broke a 1-1 tie late in the first period. Surovy took a pass from Tom Kostopoulos and fired a shot through the pads of Albany goalie Scott Clemmensen to give the Penguins a 2-1 lead. Surovy …

Oral pain.(drug approval )(Brief Article)

Biovail Corp. has won approval of Tramadol ODT, a painkiller. The FDA will allow the Canada-based …

North Korean heir lauded as 'supreme commander'

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — North Korea vowed Saturday to uphold Kim Jong Il's son as "supreme commander" as the campaign to install the young man as the next leader of the socialist nation sped up one week after his father's death.

As the grieving continued for Kim Jong Il, state media also emphasized successor Kim Jong Un's bloodline and legacy in carrying out the Kim family claim to lead and protect the North Korean people.

Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and was unveiled last year as his father's choice as successor, will be the third generation Kim to rule the country since its inception in 1948.

The call to rally behind Kim Jong Un, dubbed the "Great …

Some watermelon could have same effect as Viagra: ; Big red slice, or little blue pill?

LUBBOCK, Texas - A slice of cool, fresh watermelon is a juicy wayto top off a Fourth of July cookout and one that researchers say haseffects similar to Viagra - but don't necessarily expect it to keepthe fireworks all night long.

Watermelons contain an ingredient called citrulline that cantrigger production of a compound that helps relax the body's bloodvessels, similar to what happens when a man takes Viagra, saidscientists in Texas, one of the nation's top producers of theseedless variety.

Found in the flesh and rind of watermelons, citrulline reactswith the body's enzymes when consumed in large quantities and ischanged into arginine, an amino acid that benefits …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

New blood testing findings from Singapore General Hospital published.

Scientists discuss in 'Colorectal cancer screening: yield of faecal occult blood testing' new findings in blood testing. "The incidence of colorectal cancer is rising and increasing public awareness of this condition has stimulated interest in screening tests. Colorectal cancer is treatable and curable in its early stages and clear benefits are present if the cancer can be detected in its early stages," scientists in Singapore, Singapore report (see also Blood Testing).

"Sensitivity of the faecal occult blood test (FOBT) by immunochemical techniques for colorectal (CRC) cancer screening has been reported as 67% to 89% in certain population screening programs. Although much …

CONSUMERS HUNG OUT TO DRY.(Business)

Byline: MARLENE KENNEDY

There it was, a sight to behold: a he-man-edition clothes-drying rack with wooden dowels thicker than toothpicks. I felt like letting out a whoop.

I'd been searching for it too long, store after store, weekend after weekend. The clothes-drying rack, if you're unfamiliar with its ingenuity, is a godsend for anything damp.

Jogging clothes sweaty from a run? Hang them on the rack. Towels clammy after your morning shower? Hang them on the rack. Sweater that can be machine-washed but not baked in the dryer? Hang it on the rack.

This trusted friend of many years can stand tall in a corner, ready for service, or fold flat …

GATEKEEPERS HOLD THE KEY TO BIG SALES.(BUSINESS)

Byline: Harvey Mackay

As every salesperson knows, the key to the sale is knowing who's got the hammer.

The purchasing manager?

Maybe.

If it isn't the purchasing manager, is it the person who writes the specs the purchasing manager has to follow?

More likely.

OK, is it the person who draws up the budget for the person who writes the specs the purchasing manager has to follow?

Quite possible.

All right, is it the person who heads the department of the person who draws up the budget for the person who writes the specs the purchasing manager has to follow?

Best bet.

Any peddler worth his …

TDK acquires battery company.(Batteries Newstries)(Amperex Technology Ltd)(Brief Article)

TDK Corp. has acquired Amperex Technology Ltd., a Hong Kong-based maker of polymer lithium batteries, for about $100 million.

Pope vacations in northern Italy

Hundreds of admirers greeted Pope Benedict XVI on Monday at the start of his vacation in a hamlet in German-speaking northern Italy where he often spent holidays when he was a cardinal.

A visibly happy pope returned the welcome, extending his greetings in both Italian and his native German, a linguistic balancing act that recognizes the region's bilingual status. South Tirol was part of Austria until after World War I.

"I am very happy to be back with you in Brixen, which holds so many happy memories for me," the pope said, using the German name for Bressanone.

Benedict visited Bressanone a dozen times when he was a cardinal, often in the …

It's beginner's pluck for Cubs fan Series: -DATELINE-

Sometimes good fortune is catch-as-catch-can.

As Dennis Springman can attest.

Taking a day off from high school in South Bend, Ind., he andclassmate Tim Taylor traveled by train to attend the Cubs' homeopener Monday.

They had planned the trip for a while.

"Three months ago, we thought about it," Taylor said. "But itwasn't realized until about a week ago, when our parents actuallytold us we could. We probably would have gone anyway."

"Just came to see a game," Springman said. "We winged it."

And how.

They arrived early enough to buy tickets at the Wrigley window andspent some time wandering around the outside of the park.

They …

For Both Cross and Flag: Catholic Action, Anti-Catholicism, and National Security Politics in World War II San Francisco.(Book review)

FOR BOTH CROSS AND FLAG: CATHOLIC ACTION, ANTI-CATHOLICISM, AND NATIONAL SECURITY POLITICS IN WORLD WAR II SAN FRANCISCO By William Issel (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2009, 216 pp., $40.00 cloth)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

RELIGIOUS BELIEVERS and institutions are among the forces that contribute to the life and viability of a modern metropolis. Churches and religious people create places of worship, educational and social welfare institutions, and "intentional" communities of adherents who exercise their own distinctive influences on city life. William Issel's fine book highlights a dimension of Catholic influence and agency on San Francisco exercised by the …

PETE'S BACK FLAMBOYANT WHISENANT SCOUTING FOR WHITE SOX.(Sports)

Byline: Paul Schwartz

He had those black cowboy boots and those gold chains, with a hefty braclet. "Pete" was carved into it in thick, shiny gold letters.

The well-groomed, salt-and-pepper hair was still in order and that Southern voice was accompanied by an engaging smile.

Pete Whisenant was back in town.

Monday night, Whisenant, the former manager of the Albany-Colonie A's, made a return to the town he was abruptly asked to leave three years ago.

"I always wanted to get back into baseball," said Whisenant.

So he did.

Whisenant is at Heritage Park this week on official business. Last week, he accepted a job as a scout for the Chicago White Sox, and his first assignment is to look at certain players in the Yankee organization because the White Sox are still owed a player in the recent trade between the clubs and it's his job to tell the White Sox who a good "player to be named later" might be.

It's …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

CORNING'S WIDOW IS HOSPITALIZED.(Local)

Elizabeth P. Corning, the widow of Mayor Erastus Corning 2nd, was in serious condition this morning with a lung ailment at Albany Medical Center Hospital.

Corning, 78, of Corning Hill, was brought to the hospital in an ambulance Sunday afternoon and initially diagnosed as being in critical condition, according to Elmer Streeter, a medical center spokesman.

She was admitted to the hospital's intensive …