Thursday, March 15, 2012

CSKA Moscow opens Euro Final Four against Tau Ceramica looking for 2nd title in 3 years

Ettore Messina could find plenty of basketball players who'd say the CSKA Moscow coach has improved their game.

When it comes to former Cleveland Cavaliers shooting guard Trajan Langdon, Messina said the roles are reversed.

"He is one of the few players who made me become a better coach," Messina said.

CSKA will need both to be at their best when it aims to win back the Euroleague Final Four basketball title this weekend. The 2006 champion _ which lost to Panathinaikos of Greece in last year's final _ will make its record sixth straight appearance in European basketball's premiere event when it plays Spanish club Tau Ceramica at the …

Near North board member allegedly warned Businessman told by 3 execs of misconduct, new court filing says

Chicago businessman and Atlanta Braves chairman Bill Bartholomaywas a board member of Near North Insurance in 2000 when three seniorexecutives warned him and others of their concerns about unlawfulconduct and wild spending by the firm, court papers filed Fridayallege.

Michael Segal, then head of the firm, and Segal's wife were amongthose at Near North who responded to the warning by threatening todestroy the three executives, boasting the company would never beprosecuted because of its political ties and saying the firm couldhide its misconduct, the legal papers say.

The papers do not name Bartholomay as one of those making thealleged threats. It is the first time …

Iraq Inquiry Winds Down; Blair Suffers Political Blow

AS LORD HUTTON prepares to wrap up his investigation into the suicide of arms expert David Kelly, it seems that British Prime Minister Tony Blair will escape legal charges that his government had falsified and exaggerated prewar intelligence information on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Yet, Blair is hardly in the clear: the investigation's revelations about the Blair government's handling of intelligence and its treatment of Kelly have significantly damaged the Labor leader's political standing.

The Parliament Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) concluded in a Sept. 11 report that, during the preparation of a September 2002 dossier documenting British intelligence …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Dutch Football Results

Results from the seventh round of the Eredivisie, the Dutch first-division football league (home teams listed first):

Friday's Game

Heracles Almelo 3, ADO The Hague 1

Saturday's Games

AZ Alkmaar 3, FC Volendam 0

Willem II 1, De Graafschap 1

FC Groningen 3, Sparta Rotterdam 0

PSV Eindhoven 2, Roda JC 3

Sunday's Games

Feyenoord 2, SC Heerenveen 2

Vitesse Arnhem 0, FC Twente 2

Ajax 2, NEC Nijmegen 0

FC Utrecht 0, NAC Breda 0

Tuesday, Oct. 28

FC Volendam vs. Willem II

ADO The Hague vs. PSV Eindhoven

Roda JC …

Cats left dead, dying inside mobile home; Dozens found; man

A northwest suburban man faces multiple animal-cruelty charges after abandoning his mobile home with dozens of starving and dead cats and other pets inside.

David Heim, 56, formerly of the 7500 block of Elmhurst Road in Des Plaines, was charged Thursday with 53 misdemeanor counts of cruel treatment after Cook County sheriff's deputies found the cats, along with a rabbit, snake and turtles in the filthy mobile home, according to the sheriff's office.

On July 29, a sheriff's officer responded to an "animal problem" at the home, with a neighbor reporting the owners had left a couple of days earlier and there were still pets inside.

The officers noticed a …

Waller turns tragedy into a success story

On May 23, 1992, Will Waller was sitting in a car with members ofhis gang when some rivals drove up and fired off five shots, one ofwhich lodged in his spinal cord and put him in a wheelchair for therest of his life.

Best thing that ever happened to him, he says.

Waller was a kid looking for trouble in his neighborhood south ofBucktown and if it took a bullet in the back to straighten him out,so be it.

"I'm glad it happened to me," Waller, who is one of America's topwheelchair basketball players, said Wednesday. "Otherwise, I mightnot be in the situation I'm in. I compete at a high level in sports.I'm going to get my master's degree. I'm going to be …

Palminteri brings a taste of the Bronx to Maryland

BALTIMORE (AP) — Actor Chazz Palminteri is bringing a taste of the Bronx to Baltimore.

The actor known for roles in "The Usual Suspects" and "A Bronx Tale" says he decided to open a restaurant in Baltimore because that's where his search for the perfect Italian meal ended. Palminteri says he was so impressed with a meal he had at Aldo's Ristorante Italiano in 2009 that he went back 10 times and eventually decided to open a place with the …

Tragedy on a river: 6 teens from 2 families drown

DeKendrix Warner was splashing around in the waist-high waters of the Red River with his cousins and friends, trying to escape the oppressive Louisiana heat, when he stepped off a slippery ledge _ and was plunged into water 25-feet (7.6-meters) deep.

As the 15-year-old kicked and flailed, one cousin rushed to help _ and found himself plummeting down the severe drop-off. Then another.

In all, six teenagers tried to save DeKendrix _ and each other _ but none of them could swim. Their relatives, who can't swim either, looked on helplessly as the teens screamed out for help. Six vanished and drowned Monday; DeKendrix was rescued by a bystander.

The …

Enzyme Kinetics above Denaturation Temperature: A Temperature-Jump/Stopped-Flow Apparatus

ABSTRACT

We constructed a "temperature-jump/stopped-flow" apparatus that allows us to study fast enzyme reactions at extremely high temperatures. This apparatus is a redesigned stopped-flow which is capable of mixing the reactants on a submillisecond timescale concomitant with a temperature-jump even as large as 60�C. We show that enzyme reactions that are faster than the denaturation process can be investigated above denaturation temperatures. In addition, the temperature-jump/ stopped-flow enables us to investigate at physiological temperature the mechanisms of many human enzymes, which was impossible until now because of their heat instability. Furthermore, this technique is …

Ledger's Body Leaves NYC Funeral Home

The body of Heath Ledger left the funeral home as the family prepared to bury the "Brokeback Mountain" actor Friday, the same day police insisted they have no interest in interviewing Mary-Kate Olsen.

Details about Ledger's funeral remained shrouded in secrecy. The body was moved from the police-barricaded funeral home at about 4 p.m. amid a swarm of cameras and reporters. Ledger's publicist, Mara Buxbaum, said funeral arrangements "will continue to be kept private at the family's request."

Their immediate plans were not known, though Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said his government would do whatever is needed to help the family …

DEBRIS DID CAUSE CONCORDE CRASH

THE official report into the Paris Concorde crash has confirmedthe long-held theory that a piece of debris on the runway sparked theevents that caused the supersonic jet to dive to the ground, killing113 people.

The conclusion is part of a 400-page final report released byFrance's Accident Investigation Bureau, known by its French initials,BEA.

The report, which is also critical of the aircraft's owners AirFrance, marks an end to the investigation into what caused the jet -which was partly designed in Bristol - to crash minutes after take-off from Charles de Gaulle airport outside Paris on July 25, 2000.

A legal investigation aimed at determining …

Where's the Money?

Where's the Money?

BY JAY WEISS

I'VE OFTEN BEEN ASKED WHAT ADVICE I GIVE MY clients in this tough economic climate, specifically with regard to technology. My advice always starts this way: Figure out where-and how-the money's being spent.

Most business managers don't have an in-depth understanding of how their organizations make and spend money, so they have limited ability to affect their bottom line. For example, without being able to analyze how something that takes your firm a half hour instead of 15 minutes is costing you money, it's nearly impossible to make the changes that will help your company run efficiently and effectively. Therefore, your company should …

Italy's president dissolves Parliament, clearing way for early elections

Italy's president dissolved parliament on Wednesday, clearing the way for early elections only two years after the last parliamentary vote.

The president made the decision after Premier Romano Prodi's center-left government fell late last month and subsequent efforts to form an interim government failed.

The date of the election was to be decided at a Cabinet meeting starting at 1200 GMT.

The election must be held within 70 days of the dissolution of parliament, and April 13-14 was seen as the most likely date as it would give candidates more time for campaigning.

Prodi will continue as caretaker premier until the election.

Italy was plunged into political crisis when Prodi's government collapsed Jan. 24 after only 20 months in power.

"Such early elections represent an anomaly," Napolitano said Wednesday, explaining why he had tried to avoid them. He added that he regretted that new elections would be held without a reform of the election law, which is widely blamed for contributing to the country's chronic government instability.

Napolitano had originally asked the Senate speaker, Franco Marini, to try to gather the necessary cross-party support for an interim government that could oversee a change in the country's electoral law.

But the attempt ended in failure Monday, and Napolitano was left with little choice but to dissolve parliament and call immediate elections. The legislature was the second-shortest one in Italy's postwar history, according to Italian media.

Early elections represent a victory for Silvio Berlusconi, the conservative leader who has repeatedly demanded a return to the polls since the fall of Prodi's government.

Berlusconi has firmly rejected any possibility of an interim government, effectively sinking Marini's efforts. The 71-year-old former premier is hoping for a new stint in power as domestic opinion polls suggest his center-right coalition would win an early election.

The center-left coalition trails in opinion polls. Its leader and expected candidate for premier, Walter Veltroni, had hoped to delay a vote by supporting the possibility of an interim government.

Veltroni had been pushing for a change in the election law before any new parliament vote is held, saying the risk of instability is too high for whichever coalition wins the next election.

The current law, a proportional-representation system, was passed in the last months of Berlusconi's 2001-06 tenure but was later criticized even by its proponents. It is widely seen as giving too much power to small parties, thus increasing the risk of instability.

Prodi had to resign after a small centrist party withdrew its support, causing the government to lose a confidence vote in the Senate, where the premier's forces had a minimal edge. Throughout his time in office, Prodi had to mediate between positions in a varied coalition that included several small parties.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Nolasco's 7 sharp innings lead Marlins past Cubs

Ricky Nolasco pitched seven sharp innings, and Cody Ross and Gaby Sanchez homered as the Florida Marlins defeated the Chicago Cubs 3-2 on Tuesday night.

Nolasco (3-2), a former Cubs farmhand, allowed one run on five hits for the Marlins, who have won two straight after losing five of its six previous games. Nolasco, who was traded for Juan Pierre in 2005, struck out three and walked one.

Leo Nunez pitched a perfect ninth for his seventh save in nine opportunities.

Chicago lost for the seventh time in eight games and tied a season high with its fourth straight loss.

Cubs starter Randy Wells (3-2) pitched eight strong innings, allowing three runs on four hits. He struck out eight and walked one.

Highly touted Cubs shortstop Starlin Castro, who was called up Friday, committed his fourth error in two days and fifth of the season on pinch-hitter Wes Helm's grounder in the eighth inning.

In his last start, Wells allowed six earned runs on five hits in the shortest outing of his career in an 11-1 loss to Pittsburgh on Thursday and he didn't fare much better early against the Marlins. In the second inning, Wells walked Dan Uggla, and with two outs, Ross hit Wells' 1-2 pitch into the left-field bleachers. It was Ross' second of the season.

With two outs in the third, Sanchez took Wells 2-1 pitch into bleachers for his third of the season to make it 3-0.

The Marlins and reliever Chris Leroux overcame a scare in the eighth inning. Leroux walked Kosuke Fukudome with one out. Ryan Theriot moved Fukudome to third on a single to right, and Marlon Byrd's sacrifice fly made it 3-2.

Lee followed with a double to left, but Theriot was wisely held up at third. Leroux limited the damage by striking out Aramis Ramirez on a high fastball to end Chicago's threat.

Lee, who was dropped from the third spot in the order to the fourth, doubled to right after Ross misjudged the ball on the warning-track and scored Byrd from first in the sixth inning to make it 3-1.

NOTES: Marlins CF Cameron Maybin made a nice running catch into the ivy-covered brick wall to rob Geovany Soto of extra bases in the fifth. Maybin was holding his left wrist after the catch, but stayed in the game after getting it looked at by the team trainer. ... The Marlins won its first road series since April 13 at Philadelphia.

Sarkozy: Prospect slim of finding plane survivors

French President Nicolas Sarkozy says the prospects of finding any survivors from an Air France jet that disappeared over the Atlantic Ocean carrying 228 people are "very small."

Sarkozy says "no hypothesis is excluded" in the search for causes of the disappearance of the Rio to Paris flight.

Sarkozy met Monday at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport with some of families of those aboard the plane, including "a mother who lost her son, a fiance who lost her future husband."

Sarkozy said, "I told them the truth. The prospects of finding survivors are very small."

He said finding the plane "will be very difficult" because the search zone "is immense."

He said France has asked for help from U.S. satellite equipment to locate the plane.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

SAO PAULO (AP) _ A missing Air France jet carrying 228 people from Rio de Janeiro to Paris ran into a tower of thunderstorms and heavy turbulence over the Atlantic Ocean, officials said Monday, fearing that all aboard were lost.

The area where the plane could have gone down was vast. Brazil's military searched for the plane off its northeast coast, while the French military scoured the Atlantic off the West African coast near the Cape Verde Islands.

Chief Air France spokesman Francois Brousse said "it is possible" the plane was hit by lightning, but aviation experts expressed doubt that a bolt of lightning was enough to bring the plane down.

Air France Flight 447, a 4-year-old Airbus A330, left Rio on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. local time (2230 GMT, 6:30 p.m. EDT) with 216 passengers and 12 crew members on board, said company spokeswoman Brigitte Barrand.

The plane left Brazil radar contact, past the Fernando de Noronha archipelago, about three hours later (10:48 Brazil time, 0148 GMT, 9:48 p.m. EDT), indicating it was flying normally at 35,000 feet (10,670 meters) and traveling at 522 mph (840 kph).

About a half-hour after that, the plane sent an automatic signal indicating electrical problems while going through strong turbulence, Air France said.

The plane "crossed through a thunderous zone with strong turbulence" at 0200 GMT Monday (10 p.m. EDT Sunday) and an automatic message was received fourteen minutes later reporting electrical failure and a loss of cabin pressure.

That was the last communication sent from the plane, when it was about 60 miles (100 kilometers) south of the Cape Verde Islands, according to the Brazilian Air Force.

Meteorologists said tropical storms are much more violent than thunderstorms in the United States and elsewhere.

"Tropical thunderstorms ... can tower up to 50,000 feet (15,240 meters). At the altitude it was flying, it's possible that the Air France plane flew directly into the most charged part of the storm _ the top," Henry Margusity, senior meteorologist for AccuWeather.com, said in a statement.

Brazil's air force was searching near the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha, about 180 miles (300 kilometers) northeast of the Brazilian coastal city of Natal. The region is about 1,500 miles northeast of Rio.

Portuguese air control authorities say the missing plane did not make contact with controllers in Portugal's mid-Atlantic Azores Islands nor, as far as they know, with other Atlantic air traffic controllers in Cape Verde, Casablanca, or the Canary islands.

In Washington, a Pentagon official said he'd seen no indication that terrorism or foul play was involved. He spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the subject.

Sobbing relatives of people aboard the plane arrived at an airport in Sao Paulo to fly onto Rio de Janeiro, where Air France was assisting relatives. Andres Fernandes, his eyes tearing up, said a relative "was supposed to be on the flight, but we need to confirm it," Globo TV reported.

At the Charles de Gaulle airport north of Paris, family members who had arrived to meet passengers refused to speak to reporters and were brought to a cordoned-off crisis center.

Air France said it expressed "its sincere condolences to the families and loved ones of the passengers and crew members" aboard Flight 447. The airline did not explicitly say there were no survivors, but no sign of the plane had turned up more than 12 hours after it disappeared.

Air France-KLM CEO Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, at a news conference, said the plane's pilot had 11,000 hours of flying experience, including 1,700 hours flying this aircraft.

"We are without doubt facing an air catastrophe," Gourgeon said.

Aviation experts said the risk the plane was brought down by lightning was slim.

"Lightning issues have been considered since the beginning of aviation. They were far more prevalent when aircraft operated at low altitudes. They are less common now since it's easier to avoid thunderstorms," said Bill Voss, president and CEO of Flight Safety Foundation, Alexandria, Va.

He said planes have specific measures built in to help dissipate electricity along the aircraft's skin, and are tested for resistance to big electromagnetic shocks and equipped to resist them. He said the plane should be found soon, because it has backup locators that should continue to function even in deep water.

Experts said the absence of a mayday call meant something happened very quickly.

"The conclusion to be drawn is that something catastrophic happened on board that has caused this airplane to ditch in a controlled or an uncontrolled fashion," Jane's Aviation analyst Chris Yates told The Associated Press. "Potentially it went down very quickly and so quickly that the pilot on board didn't have a chance to make that emergency call."

Air France crisis center said 60 French citizens were on the plane. Italy said at least three passengers were Italian.

If all 228 people were killed, it would be the deadliest commercial airline disaster since Nov. 12, 2001, when an American Airlines jetliner crashed in the New York City borough of Queens during a flight to the Dominican Republic, killing 265 people. On Feb. 19, 2003, 275 people were killed in the crash of an Iranian military plane carrying members of the Revolutionary Guards as it prepared to land at Kerman airport in Iran.

The worst single-plane disaster was in 1985 when a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 crashed into a mountainside after losing part of its tail fin, killing 520 people.

Airbus would not further comment until more details emerged.

"Our thoughts are with the passengers and with the families of the passengers," said Airbus spokeswoman Maggie Bergsma.

She said it was the first fatal accident of a A330-200 since a test flight in 1994 went wrong, killing seven people in Toulouse.

The Airbus A330-200 is a twin-engine, long-haul, medium-capacity passenger jet that is 190 feet (58.8 meters) long. It is a shortened version of the standard A330, and can hold up to 253 passengers. There are 341 in use worldwide today. It can fly up to 7,760 miles (12,500 kilometers).

Rick Kennedy, a spokesman for GE Aviation, expressed doubt that the engine was at fault. He said the CF6-80E engine that powered the Air France plane "is the most popular and reliable engine that we have for big airplanes in the world." He said there are more than 15,000 airplanes flying in the world with that engine design.

__

Keller reported from Charles de Gaulle airport in Roissy, France. Associated Press reporters Emma Vandore, Laurent Lemel and Laurent Pirot in Paris and Marco Sibaja in Brasilia, Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Belgium, Barry Hatton in Lisbon and Airlines and Transportation Editor Greg Stec in New York contributed to this report.

Iran conquers caviar conduit: Switzerland

LACHEN, Switzerland (AP) Iraqi planes bombing Tehran airport in1980 left Iranian paper merchant Mohamed Porkar stranded inSwitzerland where he had gone on a business trip.

After six weeks of waiting for the fighting to stop, he decidedto stay and start a new career: Porkar, 37, has turned the alpinecountry into the world's biggest caviar conduit.

Whether it's for the Washington party circuit, ritzy Parisrestaurants or first-class airline travelers, Iranian caviar passesthrough Porkar's hands and cold storage at Zurich airport.

In only three years, he pulled Iran's caviar export out of aslump that followed the Iranian hostage crisis and the outbreak ofthe war with Iraq. Iran now controls most of the internationalmarket, which represented 305 tons last year.

One country that gets special treatment by Iran is the SovietUnion, the world's other big producer. Iran sets aside for it 60tons of caviar yearly under a bilateral contract, Porkar says.

"In good hotels and restaurants in Moscow, you have Iraniancaviar," he says.

Why?

"Russian caviar turns to plastic," because it's more processed,Porkar claims.

Porimex, Porkar's company, sold 110 tons of caviar last year,worth about $150 million.

It cornered three-quarters of the finicky French market with 40tons.

Next came the United States at 32 tons, and the rest wentmainly to European countries.

The Soviet Union exported 60 tons of its own caviar last year.

Much of the recent revival came in the American market, a factPorkar rates among his proudest achievements.

The United States once was the biggest Western customer but U.S.sanctions against Iran after the taking of the hostages had adevastating effect.

"Banking relations stopped, so U.S. importers lost contact withthe Iranian state caviar marketer," Porkar says. U.S. imports fellfrom 50 tons a year to five or six, he said.

Although the U.S. government didn't restrict the import ofIranian caviar, American distributors turned to European suppliers.

But they found that those suppliers saved the top grades forestablished customers and were powerless against war-induced deliverydelays.

Things changed after Porkar became his government's caviaragent.

Supply is more constant now that Porimex's caviar store acts asa buffer, and Porkar built up a transport network in Iran that letshim fly out at least one shipment a month - crucial during thehigh-sales Christmas season.

And the hostage crisis is history.

"U.S. wholesalers were a little suspicious when we started,"says Porkar. "But the trust came back within six months."

Porkar says the state marketer was so impressed by hisreconquering the U.S. market that it gave him the exclusive worldfranchise last year and dropped its other two distributors.

"We have good clients in Washington. When there is a reception,caviar must be there.

"There are two types, and I don't think people in Washingtonprefer Russian caviar," he says with a smile.

STATEMENTS FROM JERRY KRAUSE AND JERRY REINSDORF

STATEMENT FROM JERRY KRAUSE

"The rigors and stress of the job have caused me some minorphysical problems in the past few years. Those problems can beeliminated if I lessen my load for a while and concentrate onovercoming them. My first obligation is to accomplish that for mywife, children and grandchildren.

"It is only fair to the players and staff that Jerry Reinsdorf beable to select my successor as soon as possible prior to the draftjust as he did with me on March 26, 1985.

"I take great pride in what we've accomplished here. The staff,players and coaches will always be a bright spot in my heart.

"Upon leaving, I'm very confident that we have assembled the keypieces so that the franchise can return to the NBA's elite teams inthe very near future.

"I am not retiring. I'm going to take some time off and spend itwith my family before making any decision on my future. I will leavemy options open.

"I want to thank Jerry Reinsdorf for giving me the opportunity tofulfill a lifelong dream, to be able to general manage a team in mybirthplace, the greatest city in the world.

"I have chosen not to have a press conference with regard to thisannouncement. This was an extremely hard decision to make, and Ibelieve there is no need to belabor it."

STATEMENT FROM JERRY REINSDORF

"Jerry Krause is one of a kind. He brought with him a vision ofhow to build a champion, and he proceeded to create one of the mostdominant champions of all time. No basketball fan in America canbegin to imagine the World Champion Chicago Bulls without hisimprint. There would not have been a coach Phil Jackson. There wouldnot have been Scottie Pippen, Bill Cartwright, Dennis Rodman or ahost of others who wore Bulls uniforms during those championshipseasons. He creatively surrounded the best player in the world,Michael Jordan, with the kind of talent to be a consistent andexciting winner.

"I am already considering successors and plan to announce onewithin the next month. It is vital that the new general manager be inplace as soon as possible to evaluate talent both on the current teamand throughout the league to take maximum advantage of the upcomingdraft and free-agent signing season. We now have the nucleus for thenext elite Bulls team and are enthusiastic about our prospects forthe next few seasons.

"Personally, Jerry has always been a battler, and the Bullssupport his decision to put his health first. We wish him, and hisfamily, the very best."

China hikes fuel prices by 10 percent amid shortages

China raised gasoline and diesel prices by almost 10 percent on Thursday amid fuel shortages that oil companies blame on a lack of refining capacity due to price controls.

The change was made to narrow the gap between soaring crude prices and state-set retail prices, the country's main planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission, said in a statement.

"To ensure the supply of domestic oil products and the promotion of energy conservation, the state decided to properly increase the prices of oil products," the NDRC said. It said the price rise also would apply to aviation fuel.

Shortages of diesel and gasoline have led to rationing over the past week, causing long lines at filling stations and disrupting trucking in key export areas. Some customers and Chinese media accused oil companies of creating phony shortages to force Beijing to raise prices.

On Wednesday, a man was killed in a fight after he tried to cut in line for gas in the central province of Henan, according to police.

The announcement Thursday marked a reversal of a government order in September that froze prices of gasoline and other basic consumer goods in an effort to rein in rising inflation.

Chinese oil refiners are losing money due to low government-set retail prices for gasoline and diesel that prevent them from passing on soaring crude costs to consumers.

Some refineries have stopped processing to avoid losses.

Crude prices have jumped sharply, touching above US$95 a barrel in early trading on Thursday.

The NDRC said it would try to shield the public from some of the increases.

"Prices of railway tickets, natural gas for civilian use and public transportation will not be raised to reduce the impact of the price hikes on the public, and the government will provide subsidies for taxi drivers," it said.

China's No. 2 oil company, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., known as Sinopec, defended its supply efforts Wednesday, saying in a statement that producers were "painstakingly organizing resources to get them to market" and also importing fuel.

Sinopec said it would import more oil this month to "stabilize the domestic market" but gave no information on when the crunch might ease.

Trucking companies say the rationing, which has limited customers to as little as a quarter-tank, has raised costs and delayed deliveries. The impact on China's trade-dependent economy is unclear.

"Prices of railway cargo transportation, aviation passenger services and highway need to be adjusted properly," the NDRC said.

China has risen in recent years to become the world's second-biggest oil consumer after the United States, propelled by economic growth that is expected to top 10 percent this year for a fifth straight year.

Government oil companies have spent billions of dollars to secure access to foreign oil and gas, leading to criticism of their willingness to deal with such isolated governments as Iran and Sudan.

Sinopec acknowledged that refiners that have suspended operations due to rising costs were partly to blame for the shortages. But it said they also were caused by mounting demand.

The communist government has forced oil companies to shield the rest of the economy from rising world oil prices.

Authorities have rejected appeals from oil companies to raise retail prices, saying they want to avoid hurting China's poor, who have endured sharp rises in food costs this year.

___

National Development and Reform Commission (in Chinese): http://www.ndrc.gov.cn

Violence more common among kids of combat veterans

ATLANTA (AP) — A new study suggests that when parents are deployed in the military, their children are more than twice as likely to carry a weapon, join a gang or be involved in fights.

And that includes the daughters.

"This study raises serious concerns about an under-recognized consequence of war," said Sarah Reed, who led the research of military families in Washington state.

Last year, nearly 2 million U.S. children had at least one parent serving in the military. Deployment can hurt a family in a variety of ways. There's stress while that parent is overseas and in danger, as the remaining parent has to shoulder all responsibilities and family roles shift. There can also be challenges after deployed parents' return, especially if they were physically or psychologically damaged.

The effect of military deployment on kids is an emerging field of research. The new study is considered the first of its kind to focus on those affected by deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq. It's unique in that it looked at a statewide swath of the population in comparing the behavior of kids in military families to children in non-military families.

The study, to be presented Monday at a public health conference in Washington, D.C., was based on a 2008 questionnaire survey of about 10,000 students in the 8th, 10th and 12th grades in Washington. That state has the sixth largest active duty population in the country.

About 550 of surveyed children said they had a parent deployed to a combat zone in the previous six years.

The study tried to account for potential differences in educational background and other issues between military families and the general population that might skew the results.

Even after taking steps to account for such differences, the researchers found that high school-age daughters of deployed parents were nearly three times more likely than civilian girls to be in a gang or get into a fight. They were more than twice as likely to carry a weapon to school. There were similar increases among boys of deployed families when compared to civilians.

To be sure, such behavior in boys is more common — the rate of boys from deployed families involved in such violent behaviors was twice as high as for girls in deployed families. For example, 14 percent of girls from these military families said they had been in fights, compared to 28 percent of boys.

Nevertheless, experts say the findings contradict the traditional view that girls under stress exhibit "internalizing" behaviors, like becoming depressed or thinking about suicide, while boys are the ones who "externalize" through violent behavior

The new research may be something of a wake-up call for health professionals who deal with military families, one expert suggested.

"Maybe if we make assumptions about children, we may overlook other ways they may be suffering," said Dr. Gregory Gorman, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md.

Additional research is needed to confirm the findings, said Reed, who has since left the University of Washington and is now a social worker with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. For example, the survey found that 10 to 20 percent of the adolescents in deployed families said they were in gangs. That's surprisingly high — more like something seen in New York City in the 1950s. Perhaps a larger, more national study would produce a lower number.

But it's not surprising that kids in deployed families would seek out other kids to help them deal with stress, said Gregory Leskin, a UCLA psychologist who is director of a military family program at the National Child Traumatic Stress Network.

"Adolescents may be able to get lost in social networks," he said.

___

Online:

American Public Health Association meeting:

http://www.apha.org/meetings/AnnualMeeting/

Obama to meet with Jordan's King Abdullah II

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama will hold a White House meeting with Jordan's King Abdullah II on Tuesday.

Jordanian officials said last week that the talks would focus on the recent uprisings in the Mideast and North Africa.

Abdullah has faced protests demanding that he loosen his absolute control over the kingdom, but there have been no calls for him to step down.

Afterward, Obama and Abdullah will make statements to reporters.

Fact check: Bush equates Iraqi militants with al Qaida, claims uprising against bin Laden

President George W. Bush mentioned al-Qaida 14 times Wednesday in a 26-minute speech to mark the anniversary of the Iraq war. He was not coy about his point: If America stops fighting in Iraq, there could well be new attacks at home by Osama bin Laden's network.

"Defeating this enemy in Iraq will make it less likely that we'll face the enemy here at home," Bush said.

Conversely, he added: "To allow our enemies to prevail in Iraq ... would be to ignore the lessons of September the 11th and make it more likely that America would suffer another attack like the one we experienced that day."

Administration efforts to link Iraq and al-Qaida and Iraq and Sept. 11 have waxed and waned ever since the 2001 attacks in which hijacked jetliners destroyed New York's World Trade Center, badly damaged the Pentagon military headquarters outside Washington and crashed into a field in Pennsylvania after passengers rebelled against the hijackers.

Evidence has accumulated from inside and outside the Bush administration that Iraq's prewar government led by President Saddam Hussein did not collaborate with al-Qaida or have any involvement in the 2001 attacks, as was suggested before the invasion of Iraq and for some time afterward. This has stopped some, but not all, assertions by administration officials, such as Vice President Dick Cheney, of links between Saddam's Iraq and the terror network.

It has not stopped talk about al-Qaida's role in Iraq now. Bush offered plenty on Wednesday.

THE CLAIM

"The terrorists who murder the innocent in the streets of Baghdad want to murder the innocent in the streets of America."

THE FACTS

In talking about al-Qaida in his address, Bush never used the actual name, al-Qaida in Iraq, of the shadowy Sunni-based extremist group that, though weakened, still operates as a major killer there. By only referring to "al-Qaida," he was suggesting that the Iraq group and bin Laden's al-Qaida are the same.

The Iraq insurgency is believed to be foreign-led and pledges loyalty to the international terror network. But although the terms often are used interchangeably, particularly by military or Bush administration officials, little or no evidence has been found of coordination between the two groups. Experts question how closely they are even associated.

Jon Alterman, head of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said al-Qaida is no longer a single organization but is made up of increasingly separate groups with often unrelated financing and operations. He said the Iraq militants are "an extension of the al-Qaida brand" with only loose connections to the leaders hiding along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

"There's no reason to think the Iraq operation is a wholly owned subsidiary while everyone else is autonomous," he said.

Also, Bush's assertion that Iraqi militants aim to wage attacks on American soil is questionable.

Al-Qaida in Iraq did not exist before the U.S. invasion. It is mostly homegrown, with its rank and file almost all Iraqis, and was created afterward to fight the American presence and establish an Islamic fundamentalist state in Iraq. There has been no evidence presented that the group is plotting or intends attacks outside of Iraq.

THE CLAIM

"Iraq has become the place where Arabs join with Americans to drive al-Qaida out. In Iraq, we're witnessing the first large-scale Arab uprising against Osama bin Laden, his grim ideology and his murderous network." Bush also said, "There are more than 90,000 concerned local citizens who are protecting their communities from the terrorists and insurgents and the extremists."

THE FACTS

The "Arab uprising" is a reference to a recent revolt by local Sunni Arabs against the al-Qaida in Iraq group and other extremists. Known as the "Anbar Awakening" because it was in the former insurgent stronghold of Anbar province that Sunni tribesman first started helping the U.S. military fight the terrorists, the movement has expanded to selected regions north and south of Baghdad.

But whether it represents "large-scale" opposition to bin Laden is difficult, if impossible, to prove.

The 90,000 number Bush cited comes from the latest quarterly Pentagon report on Iraq, issued last month. It refers to the so-called Sons of Iraq who are being paid by the United States to function as citizen guard groups. The report said only about 71,000 are Sunni, with the remainder Shiites who are working with U.S. forces against extremist groups on their side of the sectarian divide.

Bush was referring not just to these U.S.-funded groups but also to the rejection of al-Qaida methods by the broader Sunni populace, said spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

"The only way al-Qaida will ultimately be defeated is if Muslims reject the al-Qaida philosophy of hatred and death," Johndroe said. "That is what the Sunnis did in Anbar, and that is why it is of such strategic importance."

___

Associated Press writers Steven R. Hurst and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Passover seder is enriched by Israeli flavors

Passover, which this year begins Wednesday evening, is a holidaythat commemorates the flight of the Jewish people from slavery inancient times. It lasts for eight days. The first two nights areobserved with a family dinner called the seder.

In Israel during Passover, many families camp along the Red Seaand prepare their Passover seders together, cooking over campfiresand even baking foods in big earthenware pots over hot coals.

These families come from Jerusalem, Haifa, Baghdad and as faraway as California, sharing traditional family recipes, folklore,songs and ceremonies.

One of our friends who often joined these Passover camping tripsdescribed it with such enthusiasm and in such colorful detail thatthis year I was inspired to plan a special Israeli seder menu for ourfamily and a dozen friends.

The seder begins at sundown, with the reading of the Haggadah(the story of Passover) and serving of the ceremonial foods.

Round hand-made unleavened bread called shmurah matzo is eaten.This always has been available in Israel and now can be found in theUnited States.

Other ceremonial foods include hard-cooked eggs and potatoesdipped in salt, the "bitter herbs" and haroset.

For an Israeli salad, I will combine diced cucumbers, tomatoes,onions and olives. The main course is roasted chicken with avegetable stuffing. The stuffed chicken is served with anotherIsraeli-inspired vegetable - braised artichoke hearts.

Desserts include bowls of fruit and nuts, along with a fruitcompote. Passover mandelbrot makes a perfect accompaniment. ISRAELI CHOPPED SALAD

5 tomatoes, diced

3 medium cucumbers, peeled and diced

1 green bell pepper, stemmed, seeded and diced

1 small onion, diced

10 green or black olives, pitted and chopped

1/2 cup olive oil or peanut oil

2 tablespoons lemon juice

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Whole green or black olives (optional)

1 onion, thinly sliced into rings (optional)

In large salad bowl, place tomatoes, cucumbers, green pepper,onion and chopped olives. Toss gently with wooden spoon. Sprinklewith oil and lemon juice and toss. Season to taste with salt andpepper. Garnish with whole olives and onion rings, if desired.Serves 10. ROAST CHICKEN WITH VEGETABLE STUFFING

2 (3-pound) whole chickens

Vegetable stuffing (recipe follows)

1/4 cup olive oil or peanut oil

2 onions, thinly sliced

4 garlic cloves, peeled and minced (optional)

2 carrots, peeled and thinly sliced

2 cups dry white wine (approximately)

4 tomatoes, peeled and chopped

6 small sprigs fresh rosemary or thyme

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

2 oranges, thinly sliced (optional)

Clean chickens and pat dry with paper towels. Spoon cooledstuffing into both chickens; close with needle and thread orskewers.

In large ovenproof dutch oven, heat oil. Add onions, garlic, ifusing, and carrots and saute 5 minutes. Add 2 cups wine, tomatoes,rosemary and chickens. Bring to boil and simmer 5 minutes. Seasonwith salt and pepper to taste. Baste with onion-wine mixture to coatchicken. Cover and bake at 350 degrees 1 1/2 hours or until chickenis tender, basting occasionally. Add additional wine if liquidevaporates.

Remove stuffing from chickens and transfer to serving bowl.Carve chicken and arrange slices, legs and wings on large plattergarnished with orange slices. Serves about 10. VEGETABLE STUFFING

1 cup orange juice

1/2 cup raisins

1/4 cup peanut oil or olive oil

3 onions, finely chopped

3 garlic cloves, peeled and minced (optional)

4 celery stalks, finely chopped

1 bunch carrots, peeled and grated

1 parsnip, peeled and grated

2 large zucchini, unpeeled and grated

1/2 cup minced parsley

1 tablespoon grated orange peel

2 tablespoons matzo meal (approximately)

2 tablespoons Passover potato starch (approximately)

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

In small saucepan heat orange juice. Remove from heat and addraisins. Let stand 30 minutes.

In large heavy skillet, heat oil. Add onions and garlic, ifusing, and saute until soft. Add celery, carrots, parsnip andzucchini and toss. Saute 5 minutes until vegetables begin to soften.

Drain raisins, reserving juice. Add raisins to skillet alongwith parsley and orange peel and mix thoroughly. Simmer 5 minutes.

Blend in 2 tablespoons matzo meal, 2 tablespoons potato starchand enough reserved orange juice to moisten. Mix well. Add enoughadditional matzo meal and potato starch, a little at a time, toobtain moist, soft texture. Season to taste with salt and pepper.Cool, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to stuffchickens. BRAISED ARTICHOKE HEARTS

12 young artichoke hearts

Juice of 2 lemons

1/4 cup olive oil

1 teaspoon sugar

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

In large stainless steel or enameled pot, place artichokehearts, lemon juice, 2 tablespoons oil, sugar, enough water to coverand 1 teaspoon salt. Bring to boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer 20minutes, until artichoke hearts are just tender. Cut in halves orquarters.

Heat remaining oil in large skillet. Add artichoke hearts andsaute, turning to brown lightly. Season to taste with salt andpepper. Keep warm until serving time. Serves 10 to 12. PASSOVER MANDELBROT

3/4 cup oil

3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar

3 eggs

3/4 cup matzo cake meal

1/4 cup matzo meal

2 tablespoons potato starch

1/2 teaspoon salt

2 teaspoons cinnamon

Juice and peel of 1/2 lemon

1 cup sliced almonds

In bowl of electric mixer, blend oil and 3/4 cup sugar untillight. Add eggs and blend thoroughly.

In separate bowl, combine matzo cake meal, matzo meal, potatostarch, salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons cinnamon. Blend into oil mixturealternately with lemon juice and peel. Fold in almonds. Batter willbe soft and sticky. Cover and refrigerate for 4 hours or overnightfor easier handling.

Divide dough into 4 portions. With lightly oiled hands, shapeeach portion into oval loaf, 2 inches wide and 1 inch high. (Doughwill be very sticky.) Place loaves 2 inches apart on greased bakingsheets. Bake at 350 degrees 20 minutes or until golden.

In small bowl, combine remaining 2 tablespoons sugar andremaining 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon. Remove loaves from oven, transferto cutting board and cut into 1/2-inch-thick slices.

Place slices, cut side up, on same baking sheets and sprinklewith sugar mixture. Turn off heat and return slices to oven. Leavemandelbrot in oven 10 minutes or until lightly browned and crisp.Turn slices over and bake exposed sides until lightly browned andcrisp. Transfer to racks and cool. Makes about 4 dozen.

The Everyman vote ; The new Ford Mondeo is at once comfortingly familiar and intriguingly different, writes Richard M Hammond

In the decade and a bit since 'New Labour' entered power on aground-swell of support from the Ford Mondeo-driving Everyman, therep-segment staple has been overtaken as the vehicle of choice formotorway journey-men by the premium BMW 3 Series model, with driversbuoyed by a booming economy and an arguably more even distributionof wealth.

As the nation continues to battle its economic woes, the FordMondeo is gunning to bring some of those premium saloon drivers backinto its fold as the age of austerity hits home.

Ford has recently restructured its price plans across theexisting line-up of models, offering far greater value across itsrange, including the Mondeo. And now the Mondeo has been revisedwith the aim of offering more power, more refinement and a morepremium feel.

Ford has concentrated its efforts, resulting in a revised modelthat is at once comfortingly familiar and intriguingly different.It's worth noting early on that the traditional four-door saloonmodel is no more in the UK. Its sales were so inconsequential thatFord has opted only to offer the sleeker five-door and accommodatingestate.

From the outside, the changes are subtle, but apparent on closerinspection. The shared front ends are more in keeping with thehugely popular Focus and S-Max models. The upper portion of thegrille is sleeker, while the lower, trapezoidal portion has beenmade larger.

LED running lamps are integrated into the fog-lamp units and,along the sides, more chrome around the windows of the upper trim-level models highlights the sleek window line and gives a greaterimpression of quality. The same affect is mostly achieved insidewith revisions to details such as the door-panel design, giving amore up-market and design-conscious feel. The centre console boastsa simple and attractive layout while the instrument binnacle isimpressive.

The changes go beyond cosmetics. Two new engine options include a197bhp version of the 2.2-litre 'duraTorq' diesel and a 237bhp, 2.0-litre 'EcoBoost' petrol.

The latter comes with Ford's six-speed, twin-clutch PowerShiftautomatic transmission.

Interior space is one of the Mondeo's trump cards. It feelshugely accommodating from the passenger seats and the boot isgenerous in five-door form.

For the driver, the impression of size remains present on theroad - making it a tight vehicle to position against an oncomingtractor - but it's a small price to pay for such accommodation.

Mondeo Man can continue to feel on top of his game for a few moreyears yet.

Author writing about Palin moves next door to her

Sarah Palin has taken to her Facebook page to complain about her new neighbor _ a writer penning a book about her.

Author Joe McGinniss has taken up residence in a house next to Palin's lakeside home in Wasilla.

McGinniss previously wrote a critical expose on Palin and her natural gas pipeline plan for the Conde Nast publication Portfolio last year, and is planning a book about the former Alaska governor and GOP vice presidential candidate. It's tentatively titled, "Sarah Palin's Year of Living Dangerously" and could be on the shelves in the fall of 2011.

"Yes, that Joe McGinniss. Here he is about 15 feet away on the neighbor's rented deck overlooking my children's play area and my kitchen window," Palin posted on Facebook late Monday, hours after returning from a trip to the Lower 48 and learning of McGinniss' presence.

"We're sure to have a doozey to look forward to with this treasure he's penning. Wonder what kind of material he'll gather while overlooking Piper's bedroom, my little garden, and the family's swimming hole?" she wrote.

McGinniss is renting the place "for the next five months or so," Palin wrote.

Neither McGinniss, author of such best-selling books as "The Selling of the President," "Blind Faith" and "Fatal Vision," nor his agent were available for comment Tuesday.

However, his publishing house, Broadway Books, released a statement.

It reads, in part: "McGinniss is the author of "Going to Extremes," a classic book about Alaska, and his work-in-progress returns him to the 49th state to examine Sarah Palin's significance as both a political and cultural phenomenon and as an embodiment of the contradictory forces that shaped Alaska as it moved into its second half-century of statehood.

"Well regarded for his in-depth, up-close reporting, Mr. McGinniss will be highly respectful of his subject's privacy as he investigates her public activities," the statement says.

Palin has promised to ensure that privacy.

"And you know what they say about 'fences make for good neighbors'? Well, we'll get started on that tall fence tomorrow," she wrote on Facebook.

Dwight Howard suspended 1 game for 16th technical

NEW YORK (AP) — Orlando Magic center Dwight Howard has been suspended for one game without pay for picking up his 16th technical foul of the season. He will serve the suspension Monday when the Magic are home against Portland.

The penalty was announced Saturday by NBA executive Stu Jackson.

Howard leads the NBA in technicals this season. His latest one came with 1:41 left in the first half Friday night against Chicago. With the Bulls up 43-29, Howard came down with an offensive rebound and was hit on the top of his head by Kyle Korver.

Korver was whistled for a foul but took a swipe at the ball moments after the play. That prompted Howard to swing his elbows. The referee separated the players and also called a technical on Howard.

DIPPR offers two databases

The Institute's Design Institute for Physical Property Data (DIPPR) has unveiled two new databases.

The Evaluated Process Design Data database supplies accurate, carefully evaluated data for process engineering. These data can also be used for other purposes, including education. The database contains 29 fixed-point and 15 temperature-- dependent properties for over 1600 industrially important chemicals.

The educational version of this database contains the same properties for 100 compounds and was modified specifically for use in chemical and chemical engineering thermodynamics and process engineering courses. More information on the main database and the educational version can be found at http://dippr.byu.edu. A demonstration program, which shows some of the features of the main database, can also be found there.

The second new database is the Environmental, Safety, and Health Data Compilation. It was created to collect, in one convenient location, accurate and carefully evaluated values of environmental, safety, and health data. This data is ideal for use by environmental and safety engineers.

This database contains 55 properties, divided into six "blocks," for 811 chemicals selected from the Clean Air Act Amendments, the OSHA list, and the EPA Risk Management Program. The academic version of this database contains data for the same properties for 32 chemicals. It should be quite useful in a number of chemistry, chemical engineering, and environmental engineering courses and will be available early this spring. Details on both the main database and the academic version can be found at http://dippr.chem.mtu.edu.

To become involved with AIChE's Design Institute for Physical Property Data, contact Marilyn Williams, staff associate, sponsored research, at 212/591-7332; e-mail mariw@aiche.org.

SAM DURANT

SAM DURANT

PAULA COOPER GALLERY

The National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC, has been roundly maligned since it opened last fall, and the sheer range of critical chargesfrom insufficient scholarly contextualization and scattershot exhibitions to annoying electronic touch displays and too many gift shops-testifies to the difficulty of addressing Native American history in the nation's capital. In Proposal for White and Indian Dead Monument Transpositions, Washington, DC, 2.005, shown recently at Paula Cooper Gallery, Sam Durant offers an alternative commemoration of this traumatic past.

The project calls for the relocation to the Mall of thirty of the dozens of national monuments marking massacres that occurred during the "Indian Wars" of the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth. Here they would take their place alongside memorials to the fallen of World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Despite the perennially hot-button subject matter, the work reveals a quieter Durant than the one to whom we are accustomed: Formal allusions are more contained than usual and pop-cultural references all but absent, and Durant looks the stronger for it. The artist selected monuments from locations across the US that honor both vanquishers and vanquished. There are many more of the former, and he has modeled twenty-five of them in gray MDF in heights from two to twelve and a half feet, which were arranged in even rows of five in the main gallery. The remaining five replicas, monuments to the Native American dead and also in gray MDF, here stood in the front room near a wooden architectural maquette that stages the thirty monuments' dispersal around the Mall. Durant proposes that those in honor of white dead flank two sides of the reflecting pool, while those devoted to Native Americans be placed on the lawn surrounding the Washington Monument. Also included in the show were thirty pencil drawings of the landmarks-depicted upside-down and resembling daggers. These hung across from the reception desk where the books Custer Died for Your Sins (1969) by Vine Deloria and Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1970) by Dee Brown were available for sale.

Durant has stripped his models of all the text and most of the texture visible in the largely faithful pencil renderings. A few are adorned with decorative folderol, and some are unusually shaped (the Little Bighorn monument is squat, the one for the Friendly Chippewa rough-hewn), but most echo the form of the sleek obelisk that honors George Washington. Memorials to those killed under the dystopic banner of Manifest Destiny are thus congruent to the one for our first President, and the maquette dramatizes the irony of this similarity. The monuments tower as one walks amid the grid, but when seen as scale models in comparison to the Washington Monument, they become miniature. Monuments in one context, objects in another: Durant's intervention takes up the reception of Minimalist sculpture as much as it does the problem of historical memorialization.

That nothing concrete will come of Proposal for White and Indian Dead Monument Transpositions-that these monuments join the list of Durant's other unattainable "antimonument" projects for Friendship Park in Jacksonville, Florida, and Altamont Raceway in Tracy, California-is integral to its achievement. Perhaps nothing should come of such markers, he seems to suggest: That little distinguishes the killers from the killed seems proof positive that memorializing is distinct from memory, and that commemorating past violence anywhere is a dicey enterprise. At the very least, the project's implausibility calls into doubt the function of site-specific monuments to the dead-a skepticism that, here in New York, could not be more timely.

-Lisa Pasquariello

[Sidebar]

View of Sam Durant, "Proposal for White and Indian Dead Monument Transpositions, Washington, DC," 2005.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Steel structure completed on 2012 cycling venue

The track cycling venue for the 2012 London Games is on course to become the first sports facility completed in the Olympic Park.

Olympic organizers say work has been completed on the steel structure of the 6,000-seat velodrome, and work is now under way to install the double-curved net roof.

Construction of the velodrome began in March 2009, and the venue is on track to be completed in early 2011.

Also under construction in the park complex in east London are the main Olympic stadium, aquatics venue and main media center.

After 2012, the velodrome will be used by elite athletes and the local community. It will include a cafe and bike rental and workshop facilities.

City questions? Tap ChiTEXT

Instead of tying up the city's 311 non-emergency lines, Chicagoans can now get their routine questions answered via text messages, thanks to a technology upgrade unveiled Wednesday.

The new 311 ChiTEXT messaging service allows callers to choose from a menu of information options and get a text message in response.

Callers are advised to start by texting the word "Chicago" to 311311. An automated response then asks the caller to choose between: contact information for a government …

Monday, March 5, 2012

A 1967 poem

I am writing to tell you about a poem that has recently come intomy possession.

It is a poem written by my aunt.

My aunt was born in 1930, in Farm Road, Street, in one of thewooden bungalows, and lived there until she left home in 1946, atthe age of 16, and went to work in a Dr Barnado's home in Porlock.

My aunt's name is Esther Lovett (nee Norton). After a spell ofworking for Barnardo's she went to work in children's homes aroundthe West Country and eventually joined the police force in the mid-1950s and moved to Sussex.

In the 1960s she became a teacher, which she remained until sheretired. She now lives in Barnstaple.

As you can …

Ducks for grownups: Jack Spicer, Larry Kearney, Jamie MacInnis 1964. (poets)

In 1964, a number of young writers from New York joined the Spicer circle in San Francisco's North Beach. Because all had some college education and two of them came from Catholic homes, they became known as "the Jesuits." Andy Cole and Tom Wallace, both from Brooklyn Catholic backgrounds, came onto the scene. They were soon joined by Larry Kearney, also from Brooklyn.

Kearney had known Andy Cole at the State University of New York at Binghamton. There Kearney had become interested in the work of Duncan and Spicer from reading Don Allen's anthology, and from listening to the poets' recorded voices on the Evergreen LP "San Francisco Poets Reading," the companion record to the 1957 Evergreen Review issue of "The San Francisco Scene." He listened to it a lot when drunk - to Robert Duncan's oracular "This Place Rumord to Have Been Sodom," and Jack Spicer's insistent, edgy "Psychoanalysis: An Elegy." Playing the record became sort of an obsession. And he was restless at school. He called Cole and Wallace, who were staying at the painter Nemi Frost's apartment at Grant and Union. There was no more room at that inn, but if he was really serious about coming, they promised to look for a place for the three of them. He hung up the phone, committed already.

The morning Kearney arrived in San Francisco he took a cab to North Beach and walked into the first bar he saw, an inconspicuous place in the middle of the block. As it happened, the bar was Gino & Carlo's. Larry checked into the Swiss-American Hotel, opposite Mike's Pool Parlor on Broadway; hung out with his Binghamton friends at Nemi's; tried a couple of the bars everyone talked about. Life was pleasant. At Nemi's he met the painter Tom Field, and the poets Stan Persky and Gary Snyder. Another poet, Joanne Kyger, lived across the hall. Larry had never seen apartments decorated so dramatically as these, with plants, pictures, and mirrors everywhere. He felt far from Brooklyn. Stan gave him a copy of the latest Open Space - he thought it arcane and somewhat frivolous: but within a few weeks his poems would be appearing in the next issues. He was being drawn into a world of poetry and bohemia for which Binghamton had not prepared him.

Then, one night in Gino's, he met Jack Spicer. Larry was sitting at a table by the jukebox when Jack came into the bar, talking with the printer Graham Mackintosh and two others, and Larry joined the conversation. Spicer was charming. The next day, after Larry learned who he had been talking to, his interest deepened. He was twenty-one years old.

After two weeks Larry moved, with Andy and Tom, into an apartment at 1156 Kearny Street - a grim place, but a handy location some two blocks from the Green Street bars. Larry first took a job repairing ovens in Daly City. Another job, at Architectural Models, on Brannan Street, south of Market, lasted three-and-one-half months.(1) The days were all the same: the drinking was pretty heavy, and the bars conveniently located. San Francisco was hot and hazy in April 1964. The gang spent a lot of time drinking on the roof of Nemi's building. "It took me awhile to get my balance," Larry remembered. "I don't know if I ever got it, to tell you the truth."

At Gino & Carlo's Spicer and Kearney developed "a funny relationship. Jack was capable of great intimacy, a kind of kids' thing of being understood at the level of the in-joke, the remark that means one thing to two people at the table, but something quite special to a third person at the table. He had a very expressive face and when he was talking to you he would project an intimate concern over what you were thinking or saying. He gave me a copy of Billy The Kid and said, 'I think you're ready for this now.'" Spicer told Larry that he, Spicer, had been the true winner of the Ingram-Merrill Award which earlier in the year had come to the financial rescue of the ailing poet Helen Adam, allowing her to leave North Beach for New York after fifteen years. He, Jack, in a grand act of pity for one even needier than himself, had had it "transferred" to Adam.(2) Kearney believed Jack and was suitably impressed by his generosity. But the fantasy spun by Spicer was not created solely to seduce Kearney: it was also a desperate man's dream of rescue from the poverty, humiliation, and excess that were plunging him closer and closer to the edge.

Soon baseball season was upon them, and Jack and the "Jesuits" took Nemi Frost to Candlestick Park for her first ballgame. Frost recalled:

Before we got to the ballpark, we had to drive miles out of the way to a certain deli where Jack got a certain submarine sandwich. I couldn't believe it. Right in the ballpark you can get beer and hot dogs, but Jack said, "You never want to eat that garbage at the ballpark. It's a - " I don't think they had the expression "ripoff" then, but you know...

So our seats are in the bleachers, right? We were the only white faces up there, or just about. Andy and Kearney and [Nemi's boyfriend] Tom Wallace. Then me and then Jack. And next to Jack were his famous …

STARR EX-SPOKESMAN FACES TRIAL.(MAIN)

Byline: JOHN SOLOMON Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Kenneth Starr's former spokesman has been charged with criminal contempt and ordered to stand trial next week in a case involving news leaks during the Monica Lewinsky investigation.

Charles Bakaly is being prosecuted by the government before U.S. District Judge Norma Holloway Johnson, who as the chief judge of the federal court in Washington oversees matters involving grand jury secrecy.

A trial has been scheduled for July 13, according to documents at the U.S. District Court.

Johnson signed an order June 29 granting Bakaly's request for a public trial in the previously sealed case …

Loop's Trust Looks to Win One at a Time: Northern Trust sells the same product as its competitors. what stands out? Returns. And cubs tickets.

It's a fickle business. The products are largely commodities, yet investors seem more than willing to jump ship if returns don't measure up. The keys to growth and staying power? Investment performance is certainly important. So, too, is size-not to mention breadth of offerings. But when it comes to maintaining lucrative personal business, it's mostly about relationships. And few banks do a better job of cultivating those than Northern Trust.

The Chicago company has been on a tear of late, having grown assets under management 49 percent, to $435.7 billion, in the past year. Fees have jumped as well orthern got $304 million from trust fees, or 55 percent of its total, …

Capital punishment or race control?

The execution of Stanley "Tookie" Williams in California raises once again the issue of capital punishment in the United States. The constitutionality of executions has been a constant subject of litigation. In 1976 the US Supreme Court ruled that capital punishment is not "cruel and unusual punishment." Since then, 1,004 prisoners have been put to death.

Death is final! The increasing number of prisoners who have been exonerated by DNA tests suggests that a number of innocent defendants must have been put to death. It is a severe miscarriage of justice for …

Bournonville, Jacques de

Bournonville, Jacques de

Bournonville, Jacques de , French harpsichordist and composer; b. probably in Amiens, c. 1675; d. Paris, c. 1754. He was either the grandson or the great-grandson of Jean de …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Italgas bids for E.on's gas distribution assets in Italy.

(ADPnews) - Oct 23, 2009 - Italgas, a unit of Italian natural gas network operator Snam Rete Gas SpA (BIT:SRG), has submitted an offer for the Italian gas distribution assets of German E.on (ETR:EOAN), an Italgas spokeswoman said Friday, without providing further details.

The offer launched by Italgas is one of a total three E.on has received so far. The other two offers filed within the October 15 deadline were submitted by consortia led by fund F2i and Axa Private Equity and by Erogasmet and private equity fund 3i, respectively.

French utility GDF Suez (EPA:GSZ) and Assicurazioni Generali's (BIT:G) …

ART FOR THE AGES ARTISTS PURSUE THEIR CRAFTS AFTER 50.(Show)

Byline: Irene Gardner Keeney Staff writer

*America is graying. Local people in the performing and visual arts aren't just getting older, they're getting better. Here is what several of them had to say about this period of post-modern maturity.

Someone recently asked Gertrude Hallenbeck what she did at the Hallenbeck School of the Dance.

"You are not still dancing - at your age?" the incredulous acquaintance asked. Hallenbeck says she answered: "No one ever told me I couldn't. Yes, I'm still dancing at 68."

Hallenbeck, a petite bundle of energy, will begin her 50th year of teaching dancing in January. "I don't know how I got here this fast," she laughs. "Once I got 'over the hill,' I seemed to pick up speed. I just hope the second 50 years are as good as the first."

Dancing into her second half-century keeps Hallenbeck on her toes, literally and figuratively. In addition to teaching a full schedule at her studio on Colvin Avenue in Albany, she travels around the country conducting workshops for dance teachers.

She's not the only "mature" dancer these days. "There's a dance explosion right now, and not just for young people," she says. "There are more adults taking lessons, some in their early 50s and some in their late 70s."

Dance has been a way of life for Gertrude Hallenbeck. She's been teaching since 1939 at the school founded by her father, the late Oscar J. Hallenbeck, in 1920. She has a good role model to follow. He was actively involved in the administration and teaching until his retirement in 1976 at age 79.

Hallenbeck is a graduate of the Albany Academy for Girls, where she returned to become head of the dance department for 16 years. She studied with the School of The American Ballet, which is the school of the New York City Ballet, and at Jacob's Pillow and with the Vilzak-Schollar School.

She's a consultant, clinician and choreographer for Kimbo Educational Records; a master dance teacher since 1952 for every major dance teacher organization. She's also the author of a ballet text book,"A Touch of Ballet"; a guest choreographer for the Empire State Institute for the …

SCHENECTADY PAIR ACCUSED OF IMPRISONING VICTIM.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: BECHETTA JACKSON Staff writer

SCHENECTADY -- Police arrested two city residents Tuesday in connection with the robbery and imprisonment of a Sloansville man last week.

Leon Davis Jr., 34, and Cynthia Johnson, 35, both of 953 Albany St., are charged with felony unlawful imprisonment. Davis is also charged with first-degree robbery.

According to a police report, Davis allegedly jumped into the 18-year-old man's car at 10 a.m. Aug. 30 while it was stopped at a red light at the corner of Hulett Street and Delamont Avenue.

Police said Davis pointed his right hand -- which was wrapped in a red jacket …

Agriculture, agriculture operations and related sciences Total Minority Baccalaureate.(Top 100 Degree Producers 2004)(Illustration)

 Agriculture, Agriculture Operations and Related Sciences TOTAL MINORITY BACCALAUREATE                                                        Preliminary 2003                                     '01-'02       2002-2003 Rank   Institution              State     Total    Men   Women   Total    1    UNIVERSITY OF        CALIFORNIA-DAVIS         Calif.     265     127    171     298   2    TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY     Texas       73      56     42      98   3    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA    Fla.        19      29     60      89   4    CORNELL UNIVERSITY-        ENDOWED COLLEGES         N.Y.         0      27     36      63   5    CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC        STATE UNIV.-SAN LUIS        OBISPO                   Calif.      39      39     23      62   6    MICHIGAN STATE        UNIVERSITY               Mich.       43      29     32      61   7    TENNESSEE STATE        UNIVERSITY               Tenn.        0      10     24      34   8    CALIFORNIA STATE        POLYTECHNIC        UNIVERSITY-POMONA        Calif.      15      12     19      31   9    UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS        AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN      Ill.         3       7     21      28  10    NEW MEXICO STATE        UNIVERSITY-MAIN CAMPUS   N.M.         8      13     14      27  10    CALIFORNIA STATE        UNIVERSITY-FRESNO        Calif.      15      17     10      27 …