четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Hatton predicts change of style

Ricky Hatton admits his old bulldozing style of fighting won't be good enough to beat Manny Pacquiao in Las Vegas on May 2 and he will rely instead on handspeed and punching power.

A former world light-welterweight champion who has never lost at 140 pounds (63.5 kilos), Hatton is taking on a fighter who moved up two weight divisions to easily beat Oscar De La Hoya at 147 pounds (67 kilos) in December.

Hatton says that means he will have to produce a repeat of the performance he produced to stop Paul Malignaggi in 11 rounds in November, the British fighter's first fight since losing for the only time to Floyd Mayweather Jr.

A powerful body …

Sanitary Dist. contest offers $1,000 prize for new name

Now is the time for all good men - women and children, too - tocome to the aid of their sanitary district.

If this noble appeal doesn't stir your civic fervor, think aboutwinning $1,000.

Hoping to spruce up its image, the Metropolitan SanitaryDistrict Monday announced a public contest to rename the agency.

The winner gets a $1,000 cash prize, donated by veteranCommissioner James C. Kirie, who has battled for years to get a moredescriptive title.

"Our name doesn't tell the story," he said. "We do more thanjust treat sewage. We reclaim and purify used water, protect LakeMichigan, keep the rivers clean and now we're responsible for …

Cal uses Rice errors to win 6-3, eliminate Owls

HOUSTON (AP) — California scored three runs on three errors in the eighth inning and eliminated Rice, the No. 8 national seed, with a 6-3 victory in the Houston Regional on Sunday.

California (33-21) moved on to face Baylor in the regional championship round.

After a lightning delay of 2 hours, 43 minutes in the middle of the eighth, Cal loaded the bases on two errors. With two outs, two runs scored on an error by second baseman …

WHO: Swine flu virus is top strain worldwide

The World Health Organization's flu chief said the swine flu virus has now become the predominant flu strain worldwide.

In some countries, swine flu accounts for up to 70 percent of the flu viruses being sampled, said Dr. Keiji Fukuda, WHO's top flu official.

While most people recover from the illness without needing medical treatment, officials are also continuing to see severe cases in people under 65 _ people who are not usually at risk during regular flu seasons.

"We remain quite concerned about the patterns that we're seeing," Fukuda said during a press briefing Thursday.

He said the swine flu virus appeared to be fairly …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Give your home's art museum-quality care

Art and antiques may be expected to increase in value over theyears, but that won't happen if the items are neglected and allowedto deteriorate.

Knowing how to care for art and antiques in a home is no lessimportant than understanding what to buy and for how much.

Dealers may be reluctant to discuss the kinds of care theobjects they sell will need. Such information could scare buyersaway.

Collectors can obtain information more easily from talking withmuseum curators or conservators, or by reading books on the subject,which many museum libraries have.

Most museums these days have high-tech temperature and humiditymonitoring systems controlling …

Summer Dance set to start in Grant Park

Special to Defender

The Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events in partnership with the Chicago Office of Tourism and Culture presents the 15th annual Chicago SummerDance festival this summer. Each Thursday through Sunday from July 7 to September 18. the Spirit of MusicGarden in Grant Park blossoms into an urban dance space. Last year over 100.000 people enjoyed the Chicago SummerDance series, making it the largest festival of its kind in the United States.

The Spirit of Music Garden in Grant Park will serve as a venue for World Music Festival Chicago on its opening weekend. September 16 - 18. The events will follow the Chicago SummerDance format with …

Judge tells jury to deliberate in fen-phen trial

A federal judge told deadlocked jurors to go back and deliberate again for the seventh day Wednesday as the possibility of a mistrial loomed in the case of two lawyers charged with defrauding their clients out of $65 million in a diet-drug settlement.

U.S. District Judge William Bertelsman sent the jurors back to reconsider the case one more time an hour after the panel reported it remained deadlocked.

Suspended lawyers William Gallion and Shirley Cunningham Jr. each face a charge of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. They were charged with taking more money from their clients than allowed in a $200 million settlement involving the diet-drug fen-phen.

Don't miss it

RICKY MARTIN

8 p.m. Feb. 2, Chicago Theatre, 175 N. State

The Latin pop sensation will begin 2006 by touring the UnitedStates in support of his latest CD, "Life," his first …

Community Service Award Winners

Volunteerism is a big priority in the lives of many CAs. This nonth, we profile three CAs who exemplify the charitable LOS shared by so many of you: Douglas (Doug) Adams, CA; Jennifer Bettiol, CA; and Maurice Bouchard, CA.

Doug Adams, CA, CFP

Doug Adams has been deeply involved in the community of Salmon Arm since he and his family first moved there from Manitoba in 1979.

He and his wife Donna had been looking to leave Winnipeg, where Doug worked with the local office of BDO Dunwoody LLP, since the winter of 1978/79-the coldest Manitobans had experienced in 30 years. So when opportunity knocked the following fall, Doug, Donna, and their two kids (daughter Angie, now a …

Obama expected to bolster FDA oversight of imports

The Food and Drug Administration, bedeviled by a salmonella outbreak and tainted medicine from China, is likely to monitor imports and fresh produce more closely under an Obama administration.

With President Bush no longer a roadblock, health officials also can expect new powers to control tobacco, from cigarettes to the recently introduced smokeless products called snus.

President-elect Obama, a former smoker struggling to avoid relapse, is a sponsor of legislation giving the FDA authority to control, but not ban, tobacco and nicotine.

Long seen as the government's premier consumer protection agency, the FDA stumbled under Bush. Recurring drug …

Porter scores on second try, set for Illinois

Marshall's Sheryl Porter, the Sun-Times' girls basketball Playerof the Year for 1985-86, scored 15 on her ACT and will be eligible toplay as a freshman at Illinois next season.

But Simeon's Nelison Anderson, the Sun-Times' boys basketballPlayer of the Year, scored 11 on his ACT and will not be eligible atIllinois.

Both took the ACT test twice and both fell short of the NCAAminimum requirement of 15 on the first occasion. But Porterimproved from a first score of 7 to gain a 15, while Andersonimproved from 10 to 11.

"I'm really proud of that (the improvement)," Porter said.

"I wasn't working as hard as I know I could have," Andersonsaid.

Fitness Vibrations Trendy, Perhaps Risky

CHICAGO - What if you could burn fat while shaking a martini? Actually, it's your body that shakes like a martini on a new type of fitness machine that's generating lots of buzz and celebrity use. Even NASA has tested the concept.

These machines use vibrations to tone muscle and claim to do it faster. Aggressive promoters also say the equipment improves flexibility and strength, reduces pain and stress, builds muscle and reverses osteoporosis.

However, researchers warn of possible injuries ranging from back pain to cartilage damage. One even warns that the high-powered jiggling might harm the brain. They say the science is thin and too little is known about the long-term …

Theatre

Cinderella Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch Until January 14 JoinCinderella on a magical adventure from rags to riches.

Expect magic, mayhem and comedy capers from your favourite pantocharacters. With everything you want from panto - catchy songs,spectacular sets, colourful costumes, side-splitting slapstick andof course lots of audience participation. Tickets from Pounds 14,with concessions, on 01708 443333 or at www.queens-theatre.co.uk TheVentriloquist Mercury Theatre, Colchester Tuesday, January 10 and 11The Circus of Horrors are back with a new show inspired by moviesDevil Doll and The Dead of Night. Set in Berlin during the roaring20s, a decedent decade seeing the birth of the Cabaret, Dr Haze'sVampire Vaudeville show features hair hanging beauties, twistedcontortionists, flying aerialists, demon dwarfs, gyrating jugglers,voodoo warriors, pickled people, sword swallowers, and its latestand greatest new found star, The Ventriloquist. Sure to send ashiver down your spine. Starts 7.30pm. Tickets from Pounds 17.50with concessions on 01206 573948 or go to www.mercurytheatre.co.uk AChristmas Carol Mercury Theatre, Colchester Thursday, January 12Mike Maran performs this yuletide classic with musical accompanimentfrom Norman Chalmers. Starts 7.30pm. Tickets from Pounds 14 toPounds 19.75 on 01206 573948 or e-mailboxoffice@mercurytheatre.co.uk

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Canadian polygamist leaders arrested

Two top leaders of a polygamous community in western Canada have been arrested and charged with practicing polygamy, British Columbia's head lawyer said Wednesday.

Attorney General Wally Oppal said that Winston Blackmore has married 20 women, while James Oler is accused of marrying two women.

"This has been a very complex issue," Oppal said. "It's been with us for well over 20 years."

Blackmore, long known as the Bishop of Bountiful, runs an independent sect of about 400 in Bountiful, British Columbia. Blackmore once ran the Canadian arm of the Utah-based Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but was ejected from the sect in 2003 by its leader, Warren Jeffs.

Oler is the bishop of Bountiful's FLDS community loyal to Jeffs. Even though many the town's residents are related or have same last name, followers of the two leaders are splintered and are not allowed to talk with each other.

The FLDS practice polygamy in arranged marriages, a tradition tied to the early theology of the Mormon church. Mormons renounced polygamy in 1890 as a condition of Utah's statehood.

Last June, Oppal appointed a special prosecutor to look into allegations of criminal abuse at Bountiful, despite two earlier legal opinions that said it would be difficult to proceed with criminal charges for polygamy itself.

Blackmore openly admits to having numerous wives and dozens of children but has said the community abhors sexual abuse of children.

Oppal said some legal experts have believed that the charge wouldn't withstand a constitutional challenge in Canada over the issue of freedom of religion.

"I've always taken the position that's a valid offense in law," Oppal said. "And if someone says that it's contrary to their religion, let a judge make that decision."

The FLDS, with an estimated 10,000 members, is headquartered in Colorado City, Arizona, and Hildale, Utah. In 1947, a small group moved just across the U.S. border into Lister, British Columbia. The newcomers dubbed the pristine spot at the base of a snowy mountain range Bountiful.

In addition to an estimated 1,000 Canadians who live in Bountiful, the U.S. Embassy estimates there are about 300 Americans loyal to Blackmore, and another 200 who follow Jeffs, who is in jail awaiting trial in Arizona on four counts of being an accomplice to sexual conduct with a minor.

Last April, U.S. authorities raided an FLDS ranch and placed more than 400 children into foster care. The children were returned to their parents in June after the Texas Supreme Court ruled the state had overstepped in removing all the children when it only had evidence of abuse or neglect involving about a half-dozen teenage girls.

Oppal has said British Columbia's attorney general's office has had a file on the Canadian community for two decades. Bountiful was previously investigated in a three-year review that was launched in 2004. No charges were brought.

Oppal said last year that investigators saw what happened in Texas and wanted to avoid a repeat of the situation.

Harris gets return ticket to Halas Hall

The roster overhaul continued for the Bears three days after the draft, although the equation was somewhat unusual.

They added a player they had previously subtracted, which prompts this question: Are the Bears admitting they made a mistake in trading safety Chris Harris during the 2007 offseason?

After being selected in the sixth round of the 2005 NFL draft, Harris flashed potential in 20 starts for the Bears, intercepting five passes and making bone-crunching tackles.

But after trading him to the Carolina Panthers for a fifth-round pick, Harris ramped up his game, forcing eight fumbles in 15 games during the 2007 season. The Bears, meanwhile, started their safety shuffle, and they've pressed eight different players into the two starting spots over the last three seasons.

Yet here's the catch, the reason why the Bears made a wise move: cornerback Zackary Bowman.

With that fifth-round pick from the Panthers, the Bears selected Bowman in the 2008 draft. Cornerback is a premium position, and Bowman intercepted six passes and defended 10 others last season.

There's no doubt Harris would have provided stability at safety, but how much of a difference would he have made?

Harris is a solid player, and he may well have changed the outcome of a couple of games in each season, which might have been enough to get them into the playoffs, especially in 2008. But, the Bears' precipitous fall since appearing in Super Bowl XLI can't be pinned on that position alone.

Now the Bears fill the safety need by trading linebacker Jamar Williams, who clearly was a luxury. His 19-tackle game against the St. Louis Rams last December was impressive, but the Bears have other players to fill the void.

Williams also was looking for a long-term deal, something the Bears couldn't commit to given their investment in linebackers Lance Briggs and Brian Urlacher, while Harris basically accepted a pay cut to become an unrestricted free agent a year earlier. Harris is set to make $3.5 million over the next two seasons, according to the National Football Post. That's nearly a $1million savings from his previous contract, which also was scheduled to pay him $2.9 million in 2012.

''This kind of completes our overhaul of our safety position,'' coach Lovie Smith told the team's Web site. ''I'm excited. Chris was a good player for us. We know what he brings to the table.''

There's now a logjam at the position, particularly since the Bears spent their top pick (in the third round) on Major Wright.

Harris gives them the flexibility to bring Wright along slowly and provide options. Danieal Manning, whom Smith had penciled in atop the depth chart at strong safety, has been working out with the team for about two weeks after initially sitting out because of his dissatisfaction with a one-year tender designation.

If Smith wants to keep Manning at strong safety, Harris has proven he can play free safety. And it's not a big deal, since the Bears utilize a cover-2 scheme in which the safeties often split the field.

But Harris said on WMVP-AM (1000) that he can play either safety spots, although he prefers to be closer to the line of scrimmage.

''I love playing strong safety,'' he said. ''I love being in the box. That's one of my strengths, playing down in the box, being a physical player.''

The other players (Al Afalava, Josh Bullocks, Craig Steltz and Kevin Payne) will battle for a roster spot, and they'll have to bolster their standing on special teams.

Just before free agency, the Bears talked to Pro Bowl safety Antrel Rolle. But it's believed they did so in case they weren't able to secure their top priority: defensive end Julius Peppers.

But the Bears got Peppers, and Rolle's steep price tag (five years, $37 million) was prohibitive. Harris is a player they know, and he's a player for whom they don't have to break the bank.

Now, the only glaring hole appears to be at guard. The Bears had been in touch with the agent for perennial Pro Bowl guard Alan Faneca, who was released last weekend by the New York Jets. He agreed to terms on a one-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals on Tuesday. However, it was believed that the Bears had maxed out the budget provided them by the McCaskeys.

The Bears only spent one draft pick on a lineman and that came in the seventh round (J'Marcus Webb), so they may simply count on offensive line coach Mike Tice to magically turn the unit around with essentially the same players.

Chris Williams and Frank Omiyale are likely the tackles, Olin Kreutz the center, and Roberto Garza the right guard. There could be an open competition at left guard.

But the Bears certainly won't close the door on someone not presently on their roster.

In the coming days and months, other clubs will release veterans, and the Bears may find one discounted player too sweet to pass up.

Color Photo: Chris Park, AP / Chris Harris stepped up his game the last three seasons while wearing a Panthers uniform. Color Photo: Al Bello, Getty Images / The Bears were interested in guard Alan Faneca, but he signed Tuesday with Arizona. Color Photo: Tom Cruze, Sun-Times / Harris also was a big hit when he played for the Bears.

Lawyer: No Jail for Noe in Donation Case

TOLEDO, Ohio - A prominent GOP fundraiser who pleaded guilty to funneling $45,000 to President Bush's re-election campaign should be sentenced to community service instead of prison time, his lawyer said Wednesday.

Tom Noe, who was a high-level fundraiser for Bush's campaign, has been publicly humiliated and probation and community service are a more appropriate punishment, said his lawyer, Jon Richardson.

"Leniency is not just possible, it is appropriate," he said.

Prosecutors want Noe to serve at least two years in prison, but they indicated Tuesday they like more time added because Noe was involved in a "systematic and pervasive corruption of the federal and state election process."

Noe admitted in May to arranging a contribution scheme to fulfill his promise to generate $50,000 for a Bush fundraiser in 2003.

Federal prosecutors said in October the campaign money-laundering scheme was the largest prosecuted under the 2002 campaign finance reform law, which set limits on donations.

Noe had used his political connections to win political appointments to state boards that oversee the Ohio Turnpike and Ohio's public universities. He also was an official Bush-Cheney fundraiser.

Richardson said no one was harmed in the scheme and that Noe was not a public official who abused his power or took anything of monetary value. But federal prosecutors said that Noe took advantage of his position as a high level fundraiser for Bush's campaign.

Noe is to be sentenced next week in U.S. District Court for violating federal election laws. He faces from 2 to 5 years in prison on three charges, including exceeding federal campaign contribution limits.

Noe, a rare coin dealer, still is charged in an ill-fated $50 million coin investment that he managed for the state workers' compensation fund. The scandal led to ethics charges against Gov. Bob Taft, who pleaded no contest for failing to report gifts such as golf outings.

The coin investment has given Democrats a better shot at winning state offices this year, including the governor's office that has been under GOP control since 1991.

Israeli police arrest 6 suspects in settler riot

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police say they have arrested six Jewish extremists wanted for their role in a riot at a military base earlier this month.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says police made the arrests overnight in several West Bank settlements and in Jerusalem. He said on Thursday those arrested are five adults and a minor.

Several dozen settlers and supporters entered the West Bank base on Dec. 13, attacked soldiers and vandalized military property. The riot appeared to be linked to rumors that the military was about to evacuate an unauthorized settlement outpost.

The attack was condemned by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said he had ordered police to take action against extremists among Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

Obama using popularity for down-ballot Democrats

Presidential candidate Barack Obama is using his popularity to help give down-ballot Democrats a boost, with plans to back House and Senate candidates in radio commercials during the campaign's final days.

Obama's campaign is working with those charged with building Democratic majorities in the House and Senate to carefully pick which races and which audiences are best to target for additional help.

"In different states, we ask for different things, and they have been great," said New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

Obama has a particular interest in helping Senate candidates, since it's a longshot possibility that they could reach 60 seats _ enough to prevent Republicans from blocking Democratic legislation.

Some Democrats have suggested that Obama should start donating from his record fundraising haul to help down-ballot candidates and spend the final days traveling to states with contested Senate races. But those are not steps campaign officials say he is going to take when he's still in a close race for the White House against Republican John McCain.

"I spoke to Barack Obama yesterday," Schumer said Wednesday, "and I said to him, 'You have been great and you have helped us in all the ways we have asked.'"

At Schumer's request, Obama cut an ad encouraging voters to back Senate candidate Jeff Merkley of Oregon, a state Obama is expected to easily win and where Merkley is looking to unseat Republican Sen. Gordon Smith. That's the only television ad Obama's done for another candidate in the general election, but his campaign said Obama is recording radio ads for a handful of congressional candidates.

A personal show of support from Obama may not be helpful to Democratic candidates in conservative districts. In Alabama, Republican House candidate Jay Love is running an ad suggesting that Democratic opponent Bobby Bright supports Obama.

"Teams matter," an announcer says over an image of the Obama-Biden campaign sign altered to say "Obama-Bright." "Bobby Bright is on a tax-and-spend team we can't afford."

Obama's biggest boost for down-ballot candidates could come from his robust organizing machine. The higher Obama's organization can turn out blacks and other Democratic voters, the more likely challengers like Kay Hagan in North Carolina, Ronnie Musgrove in Mississippi and Jim Martin in Georgia will be able to take over seats held by Republicans.

Obama has sent e-mail to millions of supporters across the country, encouraging them to volunteer and vote for local candidates. He and running mate Joe Biden have also sent fundraising appeals for the congressional campaign committees, and Obama has signed off on the Democratic National Committee taking a $10 million line of credit to split between the House and Senate efforts.

Since the Democratic National Convention, Obama has contributed more than $21 million to state party committees, including nearly $4 million to the Florida Democratic Party. The roster of recipients of his biggest donations reads like a map of the presidential election battlegrounds, but he has also contributed smaller amounts to states in the periphery of the contest.

Another way that Obama has been helping some candidates is by inviting those running in the battleground states where he is campaigning to address his events before he arrives. Obama draws crowds that the candidates could never generate on their own, like the 90,000 who came out to see the presidential contender in Colorado on Sunday and heard from Rep. Mark Udall, running for the Senate.

Obama rarely appears on stage with down-ballot candidates, but he often gives them a shout-out and encourages his supporters to vote for them as well. There are exceptions, though. Last week in Florida he appeared on stage with three Democrats running for Congress in South Florida against entrenched Republicans.

He also appeared twice last week on stage with former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, now running for the Senate _ but Warner is comfortably ahead and may be there more to help Obama than vice versa. Warner is running a radio ad encouraging Virginians to support Obama.

___

Associated Press writers Jennifer Loven and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Obama campaign: http://www.barackobama.com

Poll: Obama 14-points ahead on eve of last debate

John McCain faces what could be his last big hope for turning around the U.S. presidential race amid a souring economy as a new poll gave Barack Obama a commanding lead on the eve of their last debate and less than three weeks before Election Day.

The new poll by CBS News and The New York Times released Wednesday showed Obama leading McCain by a commanding 53 percent over 39 percent _ a huge leap over the 48-45 lead Obama held in the same poll before last week's town hall debate. Other polls have also shown Obama leading, but by a lesser margin.

Both Obama and McCain will pursue the image of a strong leader in troublesome economic times as they meet Wednesday night at Hofstra University outside of New York City. Obama, meanwhile, will try to avoid any slip that could undercut his lead.

The financial crisis has transformed the campaign over the past month. Obama has built leads nationally and in key states as the turmoil has returned the Americans' focus to the unpopular policies of President George W. Bush. Now, the burden is on McCain to try to reverse his slide.

McCain unveiled new economic proposals as he campaigned in the battleground state of Pennsylvania. He previewed a possible debate strategy _ arguing that he would be different from Bush and better than Obama.

Their face-off comes as Obama widens his lead in typically Democratic states and campaigns with an air of optimism about his prospects, while McCain seeks a way to gain ground and finds himself defending traditionally Republican states with less than three weeks left in the race.

"We cannot spend the next four years as we have spent much of the last eight: waiting for our luck to change. ... As president I intend to act, quickly and decisively," McCain said Tuesday in Pennsylvania.

One day earlier in swing state Ohio, Obama outlined his own economic plan and showed off his own pitch. He suggested that McCain was more of the same and that putting a Democrat in charge was the only way to fix the economy's woes: "It will take a new direction. It will take new leadership in Washington. It will take a real change in the policies and politics of the last eight years."

Wednesday's debate is slated to focus entirely on the economy and domestic policy.

Both presidential contenders have used the previous debates to make and remake their main campaign points, frequently sidestepping direct questions such as how they would have to scale back their long lists of campaign promises in light of the economic crisis.

Advisers for each candidate say he will use the final debate to lay out his vision for the country and promote his economic policies while drawing differences with his opponent.

Character attacks _ subtle or not _ also could occur.

Obama has increasingly labeled McCain "erratic" and "lurching" during the economic crisis. The words suggest unsteadiness on the part of the 72-year-old four-term senator.

The Democrat's campaign released a pre-debate memo Tuesday that argued McCain was "ill-equipped" to lead during this crisis, saying his response "has careened, sometimes changing course within the span of a single day."

McCain has accused Obama of lying about his association with 1960s radical William Ayers, a founder of the violent anti-war group Weather Underground. Obama was 8 years old when the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for a series of bombings. Now a professor in Chicago, Ayers hosted a meet-the-candidate session at his home for Obama as he prepared to run for the state Senate. Later, the two worked with the same charity and social-service organizations in Chicago.

McCain has softened that attack on the campaign trail in recent days, though not in his TV and radio ads.

His campaign assailed Obama's on Tuesday for its "failure to explain how it is that Barack Obama carried on a decade-long friendship with a man who sought to topple the U.S. government through violence."

However, many voters appear to be put off by such attacks, the CBS-New York Times poll released Tuesday showed. About a fifth of voters, 21 percent, say their opinion of McCain has grown worse in the last few weeks, citing his negative attacks and choice of Sarah Palin, a first-term governor of Alaska, as his running mate.

The CBS-Times poll was conducted Oct. 10-13 by telephone with 1,070 adults nationwide, including 972 likely voters. The sampling error was plus or minus 3 percentage points.

McCain has solidified and energized his base of Republican voters, but he has problems with his support among swing-voting independents. A recent Associated Press-GfK Poll showed them divided about evenly between the two candidates. That's a problem for McCain because Democrats decisively outnumber Republicans this year.

The CBS-Times poll gave Obama a 51 percent to 33 percent lead among independents.

Compounding McCain's woes, new Quinnipiac University polls released Tuesday showed Obama leading by double digits in two states that Democrat John Kerry won four years ago and that McCain is trying to put in his column this year _ Wisconsin and Minnesota _ as well as in Michigan, which McCain abandoned earlier this month.

Also, McCain's running mate Palin is being dispatched to campaign in usually Republican states such as Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia to shore up party support. However, McCain campaigned Tuesday in Pennsylvania and was to return there Thursday as well, a signal of the campaign's sustained effort to try to pick off that state that Kerry won in 2004.

Such strategies are key to the presidential race, which is won on a state-by-state basis rather than a nationwide popular vote. Each state has a different number of electoral votes that is roughly tied to its population.

Libya cease-fire aims to outflank no-fly zone

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Trying to outmaneuver Western military intervention, Moammar Gadhafi's government declared a cease-fire against the rebel uprising faltering against his artillery, tanks and warplanes. The opposition said shells rained down well after the announcement and accused the Libyan leader of lying.

Wary of the cease-fire, Britain and France took the lead in plans to enforce a no-fly zone, sending British warplanes to the Mediterranean and announcing a Saturday crisis summit in Paris with the U.N. and Arab allies. In Washington, President Barack Obama ruled out the use of American ground troops but warned that the U.S., which has an array of naval and air forces in the region, would join in military action.

There should be no doubt about the Libyan leader's intentions "because he has made them clear," Obama said. "Just yesterday, speaking of the city of Benghazi, a city of roughly 700,000, he threatened 'we will have no mercy and no pity.' No mercy on his own citizens."

In a joint statement to Gadhafi late Friday, the United States, Britain and France — backed by unspecified Arab countries — said a cease-fire must begin "immediately" in Libya, the French presidential palace said.

The statement called on Gadhafi to end his troops' advance toward Benghazi, the rebel headquarters, and pull them out of the cities of Misrata, Ajdabiya and Zawiya, and called for the restoration of water, electricity and gas services in all areas. It said Libyans must be able to receive humanitarian aid or the "international community will make him suffer the consequences" with military action.

Parts of eastern Libya, where the once-confident rebels this week found their hold slipping, erupted into celebration at the passage of the U.N. resolution. But the timing and consequences of any international military action remained unclear.

Britain, France and NATO held emergency meetings Friday on using military force to enforce the no-fly zone, which was approved by U.N. Security Council on Thursday.

Officials announced that the leaders of Britain, France and Germany and the chiefs of the United Nations and Arab League would join other world leaders for an emergency summit on Libya in Paris Saturday.

Misrata, Libya's third-largest city and the last held by rebels in the west, came under sustained assault well after the cease-fire announcement, according to rebels and a doctor there. The doctor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared reprisals, said Gadhafi's snipers were on rooftops and his forces were searching homes for rebels.

"The shelling is continuing, and they are using flashlights to perform surgery. We don't have anesthetic to put our patients down," said the doctor, who counted 25 deaths since the morning.

Libya's deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, denied government forces had violated the cease-fire and invited four nations to send observers to monitor compliance: Germany, China, Turkey and Malta.

"The cease-fire for us means no military operations whatsoever, big or small," he told reporters in Tripoli.

He said military forces were positioned outside Benghazi but that the government had no intention of sending them into the city.

He also invited the U.N. chief to send a fact-finding mission and asserted that the rebels had committed crimes against humanity.

But Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said Gadhafi is violating the U.N. resolution. She told CNN the resolution demanded an immediate cease-fire and end to all offensive operations

"The U.S. is ready to act, along with partners from the League of Arab States and Europe," she said. "Gadhafi should be under no illusions that if he doesn't act immediately he'll face swift and sure consequences, including military action."

The rebels still hold eastern Libya, which has most of the country's oil reserves. Oil prices slid after the cease-fire announcement, plunging about $2.50 in the first 15 minutes of New York trading. They were down slightly for the week, settling at $101.07 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Mustafa Gheriani, a spokesman for the rebels, said the opposition is considering calling Gadhafi's bluff by holding new protests in Tripoli and elsewhere in Gadhafi's western strongholds to see if his forces open fire.

"The idea is that when he cannot bomb civilians, the whole world will see that Libya does not want him," Gheriani said. "I believe his troops in Tripoli will leave him. We want to make our revolution a peaceful one again, just surround his compound and make him leave."

Gheriani and Khaled Sayh, another rebel spokesman, said shelling continued late Friday in Zintan, a western mountain town; Misrata and Ajdabiya, an eastern city that has been surrounded by government forces.

But even in advanced militaries, orders can take time to make it through the ranks, and it wasn't clear if all of Gadhafi's front-line troops had received the cease-fire directive by late Friday.

In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the immediate objective of any intervention was to halt violence against civilians, but insisted that the "final result of any negotiation would have to be the decision by Col. Gadhafi to leave."

The U.N. Security Council resolution set the stage for airstrikes, a no-fly zone and other military measures short of a ground invasion. Within 12 hours, Gadhafi's government announced "an immediate cease-fire and to stop all military operations," said Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa.

The U.S. was proceeding cautiously in the face of Libya's announcement, as Obama attempted to navigate between exercising too much U.S. military power and doing too little to help rebels seeking Gadhafi's ouster.

"The driving consideration is what comes next if a no-fly zone doesn't work," said Aaron David Miller, a former Mideast adviser to six U.S. secretaries of state.

"I think Gadhafi's capacity to survive has little or nothing to do with us. If anything, we've lent to his bizarre system of government through the way we've demonized him in the past. To some degree, we've played into his hands," said Miller, now with the Woodrow Wilson Center think tank.

After the resolution passed, a crowd watching the vote on an outdoor TV projection in Benghazi — the first city swept up in the uprising that began Feb. 15 — burst into cheers, with green and red fireworks exploding overhead. In Tobruk, another eastern city, happy Libyans fired weapons in the air to celebrate.

"We think Gadhafi's forces will not advance against us. Our morale is very high now. I think we have the upper hand," said Col. Salah Osman, a former army officer who defected to the rebel side. He was at a checkpoint near the eastern town of Sultan.

Western powers faced pressure to act quickly as Gadhafi's forces gained momentum.

"We're extremely worried about reprisals by pro-government forces and security agents in Libya. No one knows what's going on in the towns recaptured, and what's going on in prisons and other state security premises across the country," said Rupert Colville, spokesman for the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. "We are very concerned that the government could resort to collective punishment and we have no illusions about what this regime is capable of."

More than 300,000 people have fled Libya since fighting began, the U.N. said Friday, and the exodus shows no signs of slowing. The U.N. said between 1,500 and 2,400 people have been crossing the borders with Egypt and Tunisia each day.

Melissa Fleming, the spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency, said officials were working with Egypt — which borders eastern Libya — to prepare for a potentially "massive influx of people fleeing the violence in Libya."

"It is also possible that the current conflict could cut off access to safe places and passage out of the country," she said.

___

Lucas reported from Benghazi, Libya. Associated Press writers Slobodan Lekic in Brussels; Jill Lawless in London; and Jamey Keaten in Paris contributed to this report.

Potluck problems faced by American churches

United States

Churches across the United States are facing increasing legal problems when it comes to holding potlucks.

"Indiana inadvertently banned potlucks this year when a 2001 law took effect requiring nonprofit groups to hire certified food handlers," writes Rebecca Barnes.

Similar health regulation issues are being faced in Alabama, Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa. The latter's Food Policy Council claims that "annual and one-time events, like potlucks can be particularly susceptible to becoming sources of an outbreak [of food poisoning]."

However, Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich came to the rescue in that state, saying potlucks "are a long-standing tradition that do not warrant government intrusion."

The American Centers for Disease Control (CDC) would appear to back that up. According to Barnes's article, in 2000 alone, 76 million Americans were affected by food-borne illnesses. However, in the five-year period between 1990-95, the CDC linked less than 3,000 cases to churches.

Many churches are unaware of the food preparation and handling regulations in their jurisdiction, or even if they exist. However, that won't stop a food inspector who might want to look at a church's "bread" before they break it.

-From an April 2005 Christianity Today article

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

4 NY terror plot suspects plead not guilty

Four men accused of crafting a terrorist plot targeting synagogues and military planes in New York have pleaded not guilty to additional charges.

James Cromitie, Laguerre Payen (lah-GAYR' PAY'-en), David Williams and Onta (ON'-tay) Williams continue to be held without bail. They appeared Wednesday in federal court in White Plains.

They were arrested May 20 after an elaborate FBI sting and charged with conspiracy counts. The new charges include attempting to use weapons of mass destruction and conspiracy to kill U.S. officers and employees.

They could face life in prison if convicted.

The men are ex-convicts, and relatives have said they were struggling. Payen's lawyer says his client is schizophrenic and bipolar.

Venezuela's Chavez says alliance with Russia will protect his country from the U.S.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, visiting Moscow to pursue weapons and energy deals, on Tuesday called for a strategic alliance with Russia to protect his country from the United States.

Chavez has repeatedly accused Washington of plotting an invasion to destabilize his government, despite U.S. denials.

The alliance would mean "we can guarantee Venezuela's sovereignty, which is now threatened by the United States," Chavez told reporters shortly after his arrival in Moscow.

Chavez is in Russia to broker a number of deals involving weapons purchases, oil exploration and possibly the creation of a joint financial institution.

Welcoming Chavez at Meiendorf Castle, his residence outside Moscow, President Dmitry Medvedev said Russian-Venezuelan relations "are one of the key factors of security in the (South American) region."

It is the presidents' first meeting since Medvedev took office in May.

Venezuela's state-run oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA signed separate deals with three Russian energy companies _ Gazprom, Lukoil and TNK-BP _ during the first day of Chavez's visit.

In addition, Russian media have reported that Chavez is expected to reach a number of agreements for purchasing Russian military hardware while in Moscow, with one paper reporting the deals could be worth up to US$2 billion.

The newspaper Kommersant, generally regarded as reliable, reported Tuesday that Chavez is looking to order Ilyushin jets, diesel-powered submarines, Tor-M1 air defense systems and possibly tanks. It did not specify its sources.

"We want peace, but we are forced to strengthen our defense," Chavez said when asked about the potential deals upon his arrival.

Rosoboronexport, Russia's state-owned arms trader, declined to comment on potential deals.

Venezuela, which spent US$4 billion on international arms purchases between 2005 and 2007, mostly from Russia and China, has a defense budget of US$2.6 billion, according to the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.

The U.S. stopped supplying arms to Venezuela in 2006.

The three energy agreements involve exploring new oil fields in Venezuela. Chavez said they signified the "creation of a new strategic energy alliance" between Russia and Venezuela.

The deal with TNK-BP was particularly striking given the company's ongoing dispute between its Russian and British shareholders.

"For TNK-BP it is a positive sign that the shareholders' conflict has had no effect on the business," said Valery Nesterov, an analyst at Troika Dialog, an investment bank.

On Tuesday BP announced it would recall 60 technical specialists from Russia.

Chavez also wants to discuss the possibility of creating a joint bank, according to Alexis Navarro, Venezuela's ambassador to Moscow.

The Venezuelan president also met Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and was to meet Russian military and business leaders.

Commercial trade between Venezuela and Russia reached US$1.1 billion last year, almost double the US$517 million in trade during 2006, according to statistics cited by Venezuela's state-run news agency.

Columbia, competitors spar over fixed prices for natural gas

Columbia Gas of Pennsylvania Inc. wants to offer fixed-rate contracts for natural gas, but some of its competitors object that the move could stifle them.

Columbia makes money by delivering gas to customers but does not earn a profit on the commodity itself. If Columbia's plan is approved, the utility could compete on the price of the gas - a business that other natural-gas providers control.

Customers who choose a fixed rate would be better off if the price of gas rises and worse off if the price drops.

"But what it would provide is predictability," said Rob Boulware, a spokesman for Columbia Gas.

Shipley Energy of York and other competitive suppliers are asking the state Public Utility Commission to reject Columbia's plan, said Matt Sommer, manager of natural-gas supply and government relations with Shipley Energy.

Shipley welcomes competition, but Sommer said Columbia would have unfair advantages.

"That could deter future entrants to the market, or it could encourage someone who's in. ... to pull out," Sommer said.

Specifically, Sommer said that as the utility delivering the natural gas, Columbia has marketing clout and access to customer information. The utility could use its regular, adjusting-rate business to unfairly bolster the fixed-price business, he said.

As a utility, Columbia delivers gas to all customers, whether they buy directly from Columbia or from competitive suppliers such as Shipley.

Big users of natural gas easily can buy at fixed rates from such competitive suppliers.

There generally is much less competition for small customers, including small businesses, according to the state small-business advocate and consumer advocate. Shipley serves big businesses and smaller users.

But many of those small customers remain dependent on utilities such as Columbia, which pass on the changing cost of gas without markups or discounts.

Columbia serves York County and 26 other Pennsylvania counties, including Adams and Franklin. The Lancaster and Harrisburg areas are served by UGI Utilities Inc.

State Consumer Advocate Sonny Popowsky said the ability to offer fixed-price contracts is a key edge for smaller, competitive suppliers.

"That's one of the few things they have to offer customers," Popowsky said.

It is difficult for competitive suppliers to beat the utility on price alone, he said, because they all operate in the same wholesale market.

Popowsky and Small Business Advocate William Lloyd Jr. also have voiced concerns that Columbia could boost its fixed-price business at the expense of customers who stay on the regular, adjusting-rate plan.

For example, Popowsky said, a utility could buy some natural gas for one wholesale price and some natural gas for a lower wholesale price. It could divert the cheaper natural gas to its fixed-price customers, to make sure it earns a profit on that business. it could then pass on the more expensive gas to other customers, who must reimburse it for the wholesale cost.

The solution to that concern lies in complicated formulas, and Popowsky said his office was satisfied with the latest one Columbia has proposed. Lloyd said Columbia had made significant improvements to its plan, although his office would still like to see some more changes.

Meanwhile, businesses should brace for an expensive winter, Sommer said.

Prices could double over last winter, Sommer said, driven by a wholesale market that was already high before the Gulf Coast hurricanes struck.

"In the last month, the natural-gas prices have gone up astronomically," Sommer said.

Columbia gas instituted a major price increase Oct. 1, based on soaring wholesale costs.

Looking back at the Rowell [...]

Looking back at the Rowell revolution Six copies of new Bath bookto be won, plus Ulster tickets up for grabs - pages 107-111

Germany takes third place in women U20 World Cup

Marie Pollmann scored a first-half hat trick Sunday to steer Germany to a 5-3 win over France and third place in the women's under-20 World Cup.

Pollmann found the net in the 10th, 29th and 31st minutes to set Germany on its way, while Julia Simic struck in the 67th and Lisa Schwab in the 80th to seal victory.

Marine Pervier scored twice for France, her first coming just before halftime and her second in the 75th minute, while Marie-Laure Delie added the team's third in injury time.

The United States and defending champion North Korea play later in the tournament final.

Canada agrees with US on rejecting auto plans

Canadian officials said Monday they agree with President Barack Obama that neither General Motors nor Chrysler has proposed changes comprehensive enough to justify further long-term bailouts.

But Canada will go ahead with up to 4 billion Canadian dollars ($3.2 billion) in interim loans to keep the companies afloat temporarily. Canadian Industry Minister Tony Clement said that without the interim funding Chrysler would not have been able to meet payroll demands.

"That was the stark choice we were faced with," Clement said after announcing that the first installment of 250 million Canadian dollars ($198 million) would be loaned to Chrysler by the end of Monday.

Obama asserted unprecedented government control over the auto industry Monday, rejecting turnaround plans from General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC and raising the prospect of controlled bankruptcy for either ailing auto giant.

Clement said he agreed with Obama that they must consider the possibility of court supervised restructuring.

Clement said GM and Chrysler must present plans that lead to a viable North American industry and maintain the 20 percent Canadian share of production.

"In conjunction with our American colleagues we have determined that further fundamental changes for both companies are needed," Clement said.

Clement said GM and the Canadian Auto Workers union will have to reopen their recent agreement and agree on even more cost-cutting measures because they didn't make enough progress on legacy costs.

"We are expecting General Motors and the CAW to continue their discussions particularly on the issue of legacy costs where it has become apparent there wasn't as much progress as we would have liked to have seen," Clement said.

GM Canada didn't return messages seeking comment.

Canadian Auto Workers President Ken Lewenza said they wouldn't open the agreement again just a month after first reopening the GM agreement.

"There's no reason for us to go back to the bargaining table with General Motors," Lewenza said. "We can't resolve the crisis that we have in the auto industry at the bargaining table so the answer today is no."

Lewenza said he was shocked by the developments and added that he now knows why he was unable to reach a new agreement with Chrysler last week.

Obama said Chrysler's situation is more perilous, and the government will give the company 30 days to overcome hurdles to a merger with Fiat SpA, the Italian automaker. If they are successful "we will consider lending up to $6 billion to help their plan succeed," Obama said.

The Bush administration late last year approved $17 billion in federal funds to help GM and Chrysler survive. It also demanded both companies submit restructuring plans that the Obama administration would review.

Canadian officials said they are working in tandem with the U.S. to maintain the current 20 percent share of North American auto production in Canada. As a result, Canada will be anteing up roughly one-fifth the U.S. financial bailout package.

The auto industry directly employs over 150,000 Canadians plus another 340,000 Canadians indirectly.

"We've worked closely with the governments of Canada on GM and Chrysler as both those companies have extensive operations there. The Canadian government has indicated its support for our approach," Obama said in Washington.

Ottawa and Ontario first offered the 4 billion Canadian dollars ($3.2 billion) in interim loans in December but they've yet to be drawn upon. They are prepared to lend GM about 3 billion Canadian dollar ($2.4 billion) and Chrysler 1 billion Canadian dollars ($793 million) to stay in business until they present restructuring plans acceptable to the governments.

"These companies will not look the same after the restructuring takes place," Clement said.

Another 500 million Canadian dollars ($396 million) will be loaned to Chrysler in early April and the remainder by May 1. The schedule of loans to GM is still being worked out.

Ottawa and Ontario, which are contributing two-thirds and one-third respectively, say they will be paid a minimum of five percent interest on the three-year loans.

The governments are placing other conditions, including that none of the money be used for executive compensation or to pay back taxes.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Pregnancy pounds can boost cancer risk More than 38-pound gain can put breasts in danger

SAN FRANCISCO--In a new twist on the dangers of extra weight, astudy found that women who gain too much during pregnancy face anincreased risk of breast cancer later in life.

Doctors have long known that obesity increases a woman's chance ofbreast cancer. Staying slim is one of the few things a woman can dothat clearly lowers her risk.

But the latest study suggests that piling on the pounds duringpregnancy may be especially hazardous.

The study, presented Tuesday, found that women who put on morethan 38 pounds during pregnancy had a 40 percent increased risk ofdeveloping breast cancer after menopause. The risk before menopausewas no higher than usual.

Fat cells produce estrogen, and many believe the extra hormone iswhat puts overweight women at higher risk of breast cancer. Dr. LeenaHilakivi-Clarke, who directed the study, said that getting a burst ofestrogen during pregnancy may be especially bad.

"During times when the breast is rapidly developing, estrogenmight be particularly harmful. Pregnancy is one such period," shesaid.

Hilakivi-Clarke, a researcher at Georgetown University, presentedthe findings at a meeting in San Francisco of the AmericanAssociation for Cancer Research.

But Dr. Eugenia Calle, director of analytic epidemiology at theAmerican Cancer Society, questioned whether weight gain duringpregnancy is any worse than weight gain in general.

Many women fail to take off all the extra pounds after they givebirth. Calle said women who put on an extra 30 to 50 pounds duringadulthood face about double the usual risk of breast cancer afterthey reach menopause. "The message to women is to maintain theiryoung adult weight through life," she said.

Hilakivi-Clark said her team has not yet examined whether womenwho gain extra weight during pregnancy and then take it all off havean increased risk of later breast cancer.

Her study was based on a followup of 4,020 postmenopausal women inFinland, 185 of whom developed breast cancer at an average age of 58.The researchers checked medical records to see how much the womengained during pregnancy.

Guidelines from the Institute of Medicine say how much women needto put on depends on their body mass index, a widely used measure offatness.

A woman who is underweight should gain 28 to 40 pounds. One who isnormal weight should gain 25 to 35 pounds. Someone who is overweightshould add 15 to 25 pounds. And obese women should put on no morethan 15 pounds. AP

Islamic summit told Jews control world, Muslims must unite to achieve "final victory"

ROHAN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer
AP Worldstream
10-16-2003
Dateline: PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia
The biggest summit of Islamic leaders in three years opened Thursday with calls for the world's 1.3 billion Muslims to unite against "a few million Jews" who allegedly rule the world and get others to fight and die for them.

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said Muslims for years believed mistakenly that Islam rejected new technology and progress. He urged Muslims worldwide to ignore teachings by religious fundamentalists that scientific studies are somehow un-Islamic.

"We need guns and rockets, bombs and warplanes, tanks and warships for our defense," Mahathir told leaders from 57 nations gathered for a summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference in Malaysia's new capital, Putrajaya.

"But because we are discouraged from learning of science and mathematics ... today we have no capacity to produce our weapons for our defense," said Mahathir, chairman of the two-day summit.

Malaysia, a moderate, mostly Muslim nation in Southeast Asia, has long been a critic of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories and of U.S. policy in the Middle East, including the war in Iraq and its strong backing of the Jewish state.

Mahathir launched a blistering attack on what he described as Jewish domination of the world and Muslim nations' inability to adequately respond to it.

"The Europeans killed 6 million Jews out of 12 million, but today the Jews rule the world by proxy," Mahathir said. "They get others to fight and die for them."

"We are up against a people who think. They survived 2000 years of pogroms not by hitting back but by thinking," Mahathir said. "They invented Socialism, Communism, human rights and democracy so that persecuting them would appear to be wrong, so that they can enjoy equal rights with others."

"With these they have now gained control of the most powerful countries and they, this tiny community, have become a world power."

Mahathir said that "1.3 billion Muslims cannot be defeated by a few million Jews. There must be a way."

He suggested new tactics other than lashing out violently against "the enemy," including leveraging the political, economic and demographic forces at the disposal of Muslim nations, calling for a "strategic retreat" and reassessment that would lead to "final victory."

For Mahathir, a senior statesmen in the developing world who has turned his country into the world's 17th-ranked trading nation, the summit marks one of the last opportunities to take the podium on the world stage before retiring on Oct. 31 after 22 years in power.

U.S. Ambassador to Malaysia Marie Huhtala declined to comment on Mahathir's speech. Washington was angered over a speech he made in February, as host of the Non-Aligned Movement of 117 countries, in which he described the looming war against Iraq as racist.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai said he supported Mahathir's analysis.

"It is great to hear Prime Minister Mahathir speak so eloquently on the problems of the ummah (Muslim world) and ways to remedy them," Karzai said. "His speech was an eye-opener to a lot of us and that is what the Islamic world should do."

The summit, held every three years, is the first since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks reshaped global politics and comes at a time when many Muslims _ even U.S. allies _ feel the war on terrorism has become a war against them.

"It is well known that the Islamic community is being targeted today more than at any other time before in its creed, culture and social and political orientation," said Qatar's ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, who hosted the U.S. headquarters in the Iraq war.

The status of Iraq has been a divisive issue at the summit. Malaysia resisted inviting the U.S.-picked Iraqi Governing Council, describing it as a puppet of American occupation, but Arab countries who had already recognized the body prevailed and its representatives are here.

However, members of the council declared Wednesday that they may seek to scuttle a draft resolution welcoming them but insisting that the United Nations should have a "central role" in Iraq and set a schedule for the full return of Iraqi sovereignty.

Council members insisted that they have the central role. They also are awaiting the outcome of U.N. Security Council deliberations on a U.S.-introduced resolution that would give the Governing Council until Dec. 15 to set a timetable for a constitution and elections.

Iyad Allawi, current holder of the Governing Council's rotating presidency, said Wednesday that elections would "definitely" be held in 2004.

Leaders attending the summit include Jordan's King Abullah, Syrian President Bashar Assad, Morocco's King Mohammed VI, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo are attending as special observers because of their large Muslim minorities.

Copyright 2003, AP News All Rights Reserved
Islamic summit told Jews control world, Muslims must unite to achieve "final victory"ROHAN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer
AP Worldstream
10-16-2003
Dateline: PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia
The biggest summit of Islamic leaders in three years opened Thursday with calls for the world's 1.3 billion Muslims to unite against "a few million Jews" who allegedly rule the world and get others to fight and die for them.

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said Muslims for years believed mistakenly that Islam rejected new technology and progress. He urged Muslims worldwide to ignore teachings by religious fundamentalists that scientific studies are somehow un-Islamic.

"We need guns and rockets, bombs and warplanes, tanks and warships for our defense," Mahathir told leaders from 57 nations gathered for a summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference in Malaysia's new capital, Putrajaya.

"But because we are discouraged from learning of science and mathematics ... today we have no capacity to produce our weapons for our defense," said Mahathir, chairman of the two-day summit.

Malaysia, a moderate, mostly Muslim nation in Southeast Asia, has long been a critic of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories and of U.S. policy in the Middle East, including the war in Iraq and its strong backing of the Jewish state.

Mahathir launched a blistering attack on what he described as Jewish domination of the world and Muslim nations' inability to adequately respond to it.

"The Europeans killed 6 million Jews out of 12 million, but today the Jews rule the world by proxy," Mahathir said. "They get others to fight and die for them."

"We are up against a people who think. They survived 2000 years of pogroms not by hitting back but by thinking," Mahathir said. "They invented Socialism, Communism, human rights and democracy so that persecuting them would appear to be wrong, so that they can enjoy equal rights with others."

"With these they have now gained control of the most powerful countries and they, this tiny community, have become a world power."

Mahathir said that "1.3 billion Muslims cannot be defeated by a few million Jews. There must be a way."

He suggested new tactics other than lashing out violently against "the enemy," including leveraging the political, economic and demographic forces at the disposal of Muslim nations, calling for a "strategic retreat" and reassessment that would lead to "final victory."

For Mahathir, a senior statesmen in the developing world who has turned his country into the world's 17th-ranked trading nation, the summit marks one of the last opportunities to take the podium on the world stage before retiring on Oct. 31 after 22 years in power.

U.S. Ambassador to Malaysia Marie Huhtala declined to comment on Mahathir's speech. Washington was angered over a speech he made in February, as host of the Non-Aligned Movement of 117 countries, in which he described the looming war against Iraq as racist.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai said he supported Mahathir's analysis.

"It is great to hear Prime Minister Mahathir speak so eloquently on the problems of the ummah (Muslim world) and ways to remedy them," Karzai said. "His speech was an eye-opener to a lot of us and that is what the Islamic world should do."

The summit, held every three years, is the first since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks reshaped global politics and comes at a time when many Muslims _ even U.S. allies _ feel the war on terrorism has become a war against them.

"It is well known that the Islamic community is being targeted today more than at any other time before in its creed, culture and social and political orientation," said Qatar's ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, who hosted the U.S. headquarters in the Iraq war.

The status of Iraq has been a divisive issue at the summit. Malaysia resisted inviting the U.S.-picked Iraqi Governing Council, describing it as a puppet of American occupation, but Arab countries who had already recognized the body prevailed and its representatives are here.

However, members of the council declared Wednesday that they may seek to scuttle a draft resolution welcoming them but insisting that the United Nations should have a "central role" in Iraq and set a schedule for the full return of Iraqi sovereignty.

Council members insisted that they have the central role. They also are awaiting the outcome of U.N. Security Council deliberations on a U.S.-introduced resolution that would give the Governing Council until Dec. 15 to set a timetable for a constitution and elections.

Iyad Allawi, current holder of the Governing Council's rotating presidency, said Wednesday that elections would "definitely" be held in 2004.

Leaders attending the summit include Jordan's King Abullah, Syrian President Bashar Assad, Morocco's King Mohammed VI, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo are attending as special observers because of their large Muslim minorities.

Copyright 2003, AP News All Rights Reserved

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Surprises turn up in survey of retailers

The customer might always be right, but not every video-storeowner knows what the customer wants.

That was the big puzzle at the recent Video Software DealersAssociation show in Las Vegas. As competition intensifies in thevideo retail world, the only way for the independent store owner tobeat the big chain stores is to customize to suit its clientele.

A study by Nielsen Media Research and consultant Michael Shalettshowed that many store owners have no idea what the public wants.

The video dealers' group commissioned Nielsen to conduct ahousehold research project in late spring and early summer todetermine how people use their videocassette recorders and …

Research from Setsunan University reveals new findings on inflammation.

According to recent research published in the journal Toxicologic Pathology, "Alloxan-induced diabetic rats frequently exhibit proliferative lesions of squamous hyperplasia accompanied by chronic inflammation and Candida albicans infection in the forestomach, and some lesions progress to squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Candida infection causes not only hyperplastic changes with inflammation but might also lead to SCC in human oral mucosa."

"Thus, the present study was conducted to examine the effects of the antifungal agent itraconazole (ITCZ) on proliferative and inflammatory changes of the forestomach in alloxan-induced diabetic WBN/Kob rats. Diabetes was induced by alloxan …

FORMER HEAD OF AGENCY SENT TO PRISON FOR THEFT.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Associated Press

ALBANY -- The former head of an agency that coordinates emergency medical services in five northern counties was sentenced to two to six years in prison for stealing nearly $335,000 from the agency.

Francis Beaudet, 44, had pleaded guilty to a felony count of grand larceny for stealing the money from the Mountain Lakes Regional Emergency Medical Services Council.

He was sentenced Thursday in Albany County Court.

State officials say Beaudet stole nearly $240,000 by writing checks to himself and stole the rest by raising his …

The McQuay[R] GeneSys[TM] 100-to 210-ton air-cooled screw compressor chiller's ultra-quiet operation.(Advertisement)

The McQuay[R] GeneSys[TM] 100-to 210-ton air-cooled screw compressor chiller's ultra-quiet operation is perfectly suited to schools and offices where noise is a concern. Sound pressure levels at 30 feet are as low as 67 dBA per ARI Standard 370. The single rotor--two …

Abby Wambach Leads U.S. Over China 2-0

CLEVELAND - The U.S. soccer team couldn't find a way to score against China - until Abby Wambach leaped into action. Wambach scored twice on headers in the second half to give the Americans, ranked No. 1 in the world, a 2-0 win Saturday night.

"This was a difficult game for us," U.S. coach Greg Ryan said.

He attributed a flat first 60 minutes to the effects of a rigorous training regimen before the match - the first in a six-game exhibition series for the United States leading up to the World Cup in September in China.

While other players were a bit worn, Wambach's energy level seemed to rise in the final 30 minutes.

"Abby is just so determined," Ryan …

Male relatives carry risk from breast cancer genes: study

Doctors are encouraging a new group to consider getting testedfor genes that raise the risk of breast cancer: men.

Male relatives of women with BRCA-1 or BRCA-2 genes often do notrealize they, too, may carry them, and face greater odds ofdeveloping male breast cancer, as well as prostate, pancreatic andskin cancer, new research suggests. The genes are most prevalentamong those of Eastern European Jewish descent.

"Everyone thinks of breast and ovarian cancer and just …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Book Review: The Quants By Scott Patterson (Crown Bus 2010).(Financial Well Being)(Book review)

By John M. Mason

Let me just start out by saying that, in my mind, this is a terrific book! It has people and places, it has history, it has theory, and it is very readable. I could not stop reading it once I got started. I highly recommend it to anyone.

Most recent books on the financial crisis focus on the events of September 2008, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, and AIG. This book focuses on August 2007 and the meltdown of hedge funds run by Quants. The terrain is not as familiar as that pertaining to the former date.

I will come back to this part of the book later. First I want to highlight some of the points made in the book that can get lost in the excitement of the story Patterson tells.

The initial point I would like to make is this: Finance is just about information; and Information is just 0s and 1s. Continuing, you can say that 0s and 1s are just about computers. This is the essence of the story that resides in this book.

It is interesting to me that the beginning of the story Patterson tells is how a Math/Physics whiz, the Godfather of the Quants, Ed Thorp started out on the path to "Quant-dom." Thorp, as a new member of the MIT staff, took some of his early work on how to predict outcomes of roulette wheels to a well-known member of the MIT faculty named Claude Shannon.

Shannon is known as one of the founding fathers of Information Theory, a theory that has to do with the transmittal of information and the ability to receive and discern the message conveyed in the information transmitted. Information, however, is a technical matter, completely devoid of meaning and content: it is purely statistical and encodable. Information can be put into 0s and …

Comptroller reviewing trustee office.

Byline: Ian Berry

Feb. 7--The Tennessee comptroller's office has begun its review of Hamilton County Trustee Carl Levi's office, which was requested in November after a county auditor's report.

Three auditors from the comptroller's office arrived in county offices Monday. County Auditor Bill McGriff said they had interviewed County Mayor Claude Ramsey and were in the auditor's office Monday afternoon. They probably will be here for "a few days," he and other officials said.

"They're going to review our working papers, which is what we use to back up our report," Mr. McGriff said. "And they'll probably re-interview some of the employees in the …

DELTA AIRLINES CHIEF TO RETIRE.(BUSINESS)

Byline: Associated Press

ATLANTA -- After leading Delta Air Lines' return to healthy profits, Ronald W. Allen said Monday he's retiring as the airline's chairman and chief executive at age 55.

Allen's abrupt resignation ends a 34-year career at Delta, the nation's third largest airline. The Atlanta native was instrumental in …

Kansas State University Sociology Professor Studies Girls in the Juvenile Justice System.

Byline: Kansas State University

MANHATTAN, Kan., Sept. 23 (AScribe Newswire) -- The needs of girls and girls' experiences have been pretty much ignored in the juvenile justice system.

That's the view of L. Susan Williams, associate professor of sociology at Kansas State University.

"Most of the crime is committed by boys, and most of the system has responded to boys and boys' experiences," she said.

Recently, she's been working on part of a project called "The Going Home Initiative for Re-entry of Serious Juvenile Offenders" to try to improve the system for girls.

Williams said her role in this specific part of the project has …