Thursday, March 15, 2012

Program committee report

Compendium/Handouts/Outlines:

* We will continue to provide a compendium of presentation outlines at CSM: most Sections are providing a compendium.

* free to Section members and charge a nominal fee to non Section members.

* many Sections offering handouts/outlines on Section Webpages => this is something the Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Section will investigate. I will coordinate with Diane Madras, the web master.

Audiovisuals:

* LCD projectors:

* Most speakers are interested in using a LCD projec tor/power point for presentations.

* High cost item.

* To defer cost, we will try to use Section member's LCD projectors …

British may ban 'happy hour' as drink deaths rise

Britain is considering a ban on "happy hour" discounts at bars and restaurants to curb drinking, a spokesman said Saturday, as health advocates warned that a rise in liver-related deaths among young people may signal a future epidemic.

Health officials will decide on whether to ban the happy hours _ designated times for discount drinks _ once an independent policy review is published in coming weeks, a health department spokesman said on customary condition of anonymity.

The proposal was one of several aimed at stemming a trend in binge drinking in recent years, particularly among teenagers and young adults. The government also plans to spend 10 …

Dems win top spot on county ballots

The Democratic Party received the top spot on Cook Countyballots to be printed for the November election.

Cook County Clerk Stanley T. Kusper Jr. made the announcementafter holding a lottery to determine whether the Democrats orRepublicans would garner the top slot.

Kusper said that although it used to be an advantage if a partygot the first position, it no longer is because of the new punch-cardvoting machines.

"If there are 10 names, all of them …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Wife of Murdered Reservist Gets Life

RALEIGH, N.C. - The wife of a Navy reservist was sentenced to life in prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to murder in the death of her husband, who was shot by her then-teenage lover and his friend.

Monique Berkley, 27, entered the plea in Wake County Superior Court in an agreement with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty.

Her husband, Paul Berkley, was shot in the head at a park in December 2005, days after returning home for Christmas after nearly a year in the Middle East.

Last month, Andrew Canty, 20, pleaded guilty to murdering Paul Berkley. The …

Abou Diaby signs new Arsenal contract; Flamini says he's next

Abou Diaby has signed a new long-term contract with Arsenal, and Mathieu Flamini looks set to follow suit.

Diaby, a 21-year-old French midfielder who signed from Auxerre in January 2006, spent seven months recovering from a broken and dislocated ankle at the end of that season.

"However, his 21 appearances this season suggest he is back to full fitness and putting on the pressure for a regular starting spot," Arsenal said Wednesday in a statement.

Diaby's new deal runs through to 2012.

Flamini's contract ends at the end of this season, but he has skipped the chance to talk to other clubs during the transfer window, which ends …

Mom accused of killing kids filed for bankruptcy

DENVER (AP) — A Colorado mother accused of killing her two children was going through divorce and bankruptcy proceedings when she allegedly called police to tell them she was committing suicide, according to court documents.

Kelli Murphy, 41, appeared Tuesday in a courtroom in Castle Rock with her wrists covered in bandages. She was arrested Monday on two counts of first-degree murder after police found the 6-year-old girl and 9-year-old boy dead in their home.

Police say Murphy had called 911 on Monday morning and said she was going to commit suicide. When a dispatcher asked whether there were any children home, Murphy said they were in heaven, police said.

Police say …

ONLINE ONLY: Luxation traumatique negligée de la rotule: a propos d'un cas

Les auteurs rapportent un cas de luxation traumatique n�glig�e de la rotule de d�couverte tardive chez un adulte jeune. En l'absence de facteurs favorisants d'instabilit� rotulienne, elle constitue un cas clinique exceptionnel. La r�duction chirurgicale a n�cessit� des interventions sur les os et sur les tissus mous. L'�volution � long-terme se d�t�riore sur le plan radiographique tandis que les r�sultats fonctionnels demeurent satisfaisants.

En pratique courante, les luxations de la rotule sont des l�sions traumatiques rares auxquelles sont attribu�es une origine cong�nitale responsable d'une anomalie morphologique du genou (genu valgum, genu flexum, genu recurvatum, dysplasie, …

Bangladesh wins toss, elects to bat against Pakistan

Bangladesh captain Mohammad Ashraful won the toss Wednesday and elected to bat first against Pakistan in the fourth one-day international.

Bangladesh _ already trailing the five-match series 3-0 _ made one change from the side that lost the third game at Lahore by 23 runs.

Opening batsman Junaid Siddique was named for his first match of the series, replacing Shahriar Nafees.

Pakistan included fit-again paceman Mohammad Asif and Umar Gul in place of Sohail Tanvir and Rao Iftikhar.

Asif had been sidelined due to an elbow injury for six months. He last played a …

Greenspan losing control of Fed Everything seemed in place last week for a rate cut to invigorate investors and lenders--but it didn't happen

'The Fed laid an egg yesterday," a corporate economist commentedlast Wednesday after the Federal Reserve's decision to leave interestrates unchanged. "The Fed blew it," a former governor of the centralbank told me the next day. Behind their criticism are signs thatFederal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan was unable to exert his usualdomination in an economic climate of unreality, denial andapprehension.

Greenspan is such an icon that his decisions now have becomepolitically inviolate. Critics plead anonymity rather than openlydeclare that the emperor wears no clothes. Last week's performance bythe Fed was followed by a momentary plunge in stock prices. but …

Mark Traisman Held A Campaign For Young People: Changing Cigarettes For Milk


Youth Public Chamber and the members of the environmental movement "The Forest Alphabet" keep continuing a series of events under the motto "Quit smoking. We can help! "
At this time, all persons interested to give up nicotine addiction were invited to change a pack of cigarettes for a carton of milk, as well as to take part in a cross-country race.
"The event takes place in the framework of social program to combat smoking, told the head of the movement, Mark Traisman. Students promote a healthy lifestyle. And it's wonderful! It must be done! Now it’s the time when large-scale involvement tends to disappear. We are trying to revive it: for example, we organize morning exercises. And today, in addition to the exchange action we decided to hold the cross-country race".
We wish to Mark Traisman success in this difficult task, and perform a run together with the guys who changed cigarettes for a healthy lifestyle.

Educational affairs

Using Equatorial Pacific Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies to Forecast Seasonal Energy Demand in Four U.S. Regions: An Applied Climate Research Experience for Undergraduate Meteorology Students

ABSTRACT

The El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon explains some of the interannual climate variability in many tropical and midlatitude regions. It is important in developing more accurate seasonal climate forecasts and thus in aiding long-range weather-sensitive decision making in various sectors.

The degree to which ENSO information could forecast one of three classes of seasonal cooling degree days (CDD) and heating degree days (HDD) was examined using 1) the …

McCain takes a break while Obama heads to Denver

John McCain will keep a light campaign schedule for the next few days, but the Republican nominee-in-waiting has no intention of conceding Democratic National Convention week to his rival, Barack Obama.

McCain plans to use late-night comedy and local newspapers to reach out to voters in swing states, hoping to slow Obama's momentum and pound home ramped-up criticism of his Democratic rival. He also plans to make an appearance with reggaeton artist Daddy Yankee.

Obama clearly takes center stage during convention week, but McCain's advisers hope to use even that to their advantage by painting Obama as an overexposed celebrity receiving fawning press coverage. …

Historic regiment must be saved

When ideas for the restructuring of the Army were first floatedback in July, it was suggested that they would lead to the re-creation of a Wessex Regiment.

When the Defence Secretary announced his proposals recently, itemerged that we have been uniquely disappointed.

While three Midlands regiments are to merge to form a MercianRegiment, Wessex will be split up arbitrarily along lines that owenothing either to military traditions or to popular loyalties toplace. Regiments in western Wessex will be submerged into the LightInfantry, …

Dems Prepare for Veto Fight Over War

WASHINGTON - Democrats are moving unflinchingly toward a high-stakes veto fight with President Bush over the Iraq war as the Senate wraps up work on legislation ordering combat troops home from Iraq.

"This Congress is taking the responsible course and responding to needs that have been ignored by your administration and the prior Congress," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid wrote in a letter to Bush.

The Senate was expected on Thursday to pass a $122 billion bill that would require Bush to start bringing home an unspecified number of troops within four months, with a nonbinding goal of ceasing combat operations as of March 31, 2008.

The final vote on the bill comes after the Senate agreed 50-48 to uphold the withdrawal language, and the House passed similar legislation. The House last week approved a more sweeping measure, including a mandatory withdrawal deadline for all combat troops before September 2008.

The two sides still need to settle their differences and approve a final conference bill. But Democrats said the recent votes guaranteed the president would be handed a measure imposing some sort of timetable on Iraq.

"This war without end has gone on far too long and we're here to end it," Pelosi said.

Reid said the ball was now in the president's court.

"The Senate and the House have held together and done what we've done," he told reporters. "It's now in his corner to do what he wants to do."

The legislation is the Senate's first, bold challenge of Bush's war policies since Democrats took control of Congress in January. With Senate rules allowing the minority party to insist on 60 votes to pass any bill and Democrats holding only a narrow majority, Reid had been unable to push through resolutions critical of the war.

This latest proposal was able to get through because Republicans said they didn't want to block an appropriations bill needed for the war.

"I think the sooner we can get this bill ... down to the president for veto, we can get serious about passing a bill that will get money to the troops," said Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Bush used a speech at the National Cattlemen's Beef Association meeting Wednesday to deliver his latest in a series of veto threats on the measure. Confident Democrats did not have the two-thirds majority votes to override his veto, Bush said Democrats would be the ones to blame if troops go without funding.

"If Congress fails to pass a bill to fund our troops on the front lines, the American people will know who to hold responsible," he said.

But Pelosi and Reid didn't flinch.

"On this very important matter, I would extend a hand of friendship to the president, just to say to him, 'Calm down with the threats,'" she said. "There's a new Congress in town. We accept your constitutional role. We want you to accept ours."

Democrats acknowledge they do not have enough support in Congress to override Bush's veto, but say they will continue to ratchet up the pressure until he changes course.

The looming showdown was reminiscent of the GOP-led fight with President Clinton over the 1996 budget, which caused a partial government shutdown that lasted 27 days. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., the House speaker at the time, eventually relented but claimed victory because the bill represented a substantial savings over the previous year's spending.

Bush said the money is needed by mid-April or else the troops will begin to run out of money, but some Democrats say the real deadline is probably closer to June.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Clinton, Karzai chuckle over Herman Cain

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Afghan President Hamid Karzai shared some laughs Thursday over GOP presidential hopeful Herman Cain's recent dismissive remarks about Uzbekistan.

At the start of a meeting in Kabul, Clinton said Karzai had seen a news clip in which Cain said he didn't "even know the names of all these presidents of all these countries."

In an interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network earlier this month, Cain was asked how he would deal with "gotcha questions" from the media. He replied: "When they ask me who is the president of Ubeki-beki-beki-beki-stan-stan I'm going to say: 'You know, I don't know. Do you know?'"

Karzai chipped in Thursday that Cain was referring to "all the 'stans," a reference to Central Asian countries. Clinton laughed and, gesticulating with her hands, said, "All the 'stans places."

"That wasn't right, but anyway, that's how politics are," Karzai said.

Clinton then quickly changed the subject to the "beautiful" weather in Kabul before reporters were ushered out of the room.

UPS sticks with its outlook as 2Q earnings rise

NEW YORK (AP) — UPS Inc. said Tuesday it still expects to grow earnings this year despite an "uneven economic environment," and it's keeping its forecast for the year after reporting second-quarter earnings rose 26 percent.

The world's largest package delivery company earned $1.06 billion or $1.07 per share, compared with year-ago earnings of $845 million, or 84 cents per share.

Revenue rose 8.1 percent to $13.19 billion.

Analysts polled by FactSet Research expected a profit of $1.12 per share on $13.26 billion in sales.

Sales in its core U.S. business rose 6.4 percent. International revenue climbed 13.3 percent led by continued strength in Asian and European exports. Revenue in UPS' freight and supply chain business, where it helps companies make their warehouses and overall operations more efficient, increased 7 percent. That was mostly due to higher prices in its trucking operation.

The company's operating profit in the supply chain and freight segment leaped 77 percent from a year ago. Its U.S. package unit operating profit rose by 29 percent, but it fell 4.6 percent in the international segment due to lower margins.

UPS shipped 957 million packages between April and June, or about 15 million per day.

United Parcel Service Inc., based in Atlanta, expects adjusted earnings this year of $4.15 to $4.40 per share. Analysts currently predict $4.34.

Ex-SKorean PM released in bribery investigation

Prosecutors released former South Korean Prime Minister Han Myung-sook after questioning her over an alleged bribery scandal amid claims by the main opposition party that her arrest was politically motivated.

Her arrest and questioning Friday came days after the nation's former No. 2 official refused to appear before prosecutors over suspicions she took $50,000 from a businessman in return for favors in 2006 when she was prime minister.

Han denied the allegation and exercised her right to remain silent during questioning, said Woo Sang-ho, a former lawmaker and spokesman for the main opposition Democratic Party. Han was released late Friday. She was not immediately available for comment Saturday.

Prosecutors were considering indicting the former prime minister on a bribery charge this week, South Korea's mass-circulation Chosun Ilbo newspaper said. Other South Korean media carried similar reports.

Kim Yong-se, an official at the Supreme Prosecutors' office, said Saturday he could not comment with the investigation under way.

Lee Jong-kul, a lawmaker who serves as a defense lawyer for Han, dismissed the allegation against her as "groundless," saying Saturday the former prime minister will reveal the truth in court.

Woo said the arrest was politically motivated to tarnish the reputation of Han _ now an adviser to the opposition party. "Truth will prevail," Woo said Friday in a statement, noting the party is confident of Han's innocence.

Han served as the country's first female prime minister under liberal former President Roh Moo-hyun, who committed suicide earlier this year over a separate bribery scandal.

Roh jumped off a cliff to his death on May 23. At the time, he and his family were being investigated on suspicion of taking $6 million from another businessman while Roh was president. His supporters claimed that probe was politically motivated.

Politics in South Korea is highly partisan and stresses conflict over compromise. Fistfights and other mayhem are not uncommon in the National Assembly, the country's parliament.

The prime minister is largely a ceremonial job in South Korea, where power is concentrated in the president's office.

In the 1970s, Han was jailed for two years under the then-authoritarian government for alleged involvement in pro-communist activities, but her work was later recognized as part of democratization efforts.

Iraq Expands Blackwater Investigation

BAGHDAD - Iraq's Interior Ministry has expanded its investigation into incidents involving Blackwater USA security guards amid the furor following a shooting that claimed at least 11 lives, a ministry spokesman said Saturday.

Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf said the Moyock, N.C.-based company has been implicated in six other incidents over the past seven months, including a Feb. 7 shooting outside Iraqi state television in Baghdad in which three building guards were fatally shot.

Khalaf said other incidents include: a Sept. 9 shooting in front of Baghdad's municipal government building that killed five people and wounded 10; a Sept. 12 shooting that wounded five on the capital's Palestine Street; a Feb. 4 shooting near the Foreign Ministry, in which Iraqi journalist Hana al-Ameedi died; a May shooting near the Interior Ministry that claimed the life of a passer-by and a Feb. 14 incident in which Blackwater employees allegedly smashed windshields by throwing bottles of ice water at cars.

"These six cases will support the case against Blackwater, because they show that it has a criminal record," Khalaf told The Associated Press.

Blackwater USA spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell had no comment when reached by phone Saturday morning.

An Interior Ministry report into the Sept. 16 shooting at Baghdad's Nisoor square has been handed to the country's judiciary, Khalaf added. But it was not clear if Iraqi courts can raise charges against Blackwater, whose personnel enjoy immunity from law here.

The report concluded Blackwater guards were not attacked and initiated the shooting, first killing a driver who had failed to heed a traffic policeman's call to stop. It was based on the testimony of those wounded at Nisoor Square, Iraqi police accounts from the scene and video footage from a camera at the police headquarters nearby, he said.

Iraqi witnesses have said that some victims were fatally shot when they abandoned their vehicles in panic and tried to run or crawl to safety. Blackwater has said its guards were returning fire from insurgents and acted appropriately.

Khalaf has suggested that the guards involved in Sunday's incident should be prosecuted but not the entire company.

According to Khalaf, eight died at the scene and 15 were wounded, three of whom later died in hospital. He said other security companies have "committed violations" in Iraq but all "apologized for these violations, met the families of the victims and compensated them, something Blackwater hasn't done."

The killing outraged many Iraqis, who have long resented the presence of armed Western security contractors, considering them an arrogant mercenary force that abuses Iraqis in their own country.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who is in New York, said he would discuss the case with President Bush next week on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly.

Authorities in Anbar province, meanwhile, announced the arrests of 25 people linked to the assassination of the leader of the U.S.-backed revolt by Sunni Arab tribesmen in the western Anbar province against al-Qaida in Iraq.

The detainees included the head of the security detail that was supposed to protect Sheik Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha, killed in a bombing Sept. 13 at his compound near Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, said Lt. Col. Jubeir Rashid, an Iraqi police officer in Anbar.

Rashid said Abu Risha's security chief, Capt. Karim al-Barghothi, confessed and said al-Qaida in Iraq had offered him $1.5 million for the slaying, but he was arrested before he could collect the money.

According to Rashid's account, al-Barghothi allowed a suicide car bomber into the compound minutes before Abu Risha was due to enter. The bomber pretended to be parking but detonated his explosives as the tribal leader's vehicle passed about 20 yards away, Rashid said.

Another suspect confessed to filming the operation, he said.

Maj. Jeff Pool, a U.S. spokesman for American troops in western Iraq said the information was in line with what the military knew about the arrests.

The U.S. military earlier said an al-Qaida-linked militant - identified as Fallah Khalifa Hiyas Fayyas al-Jumayli, an Iraqi also known as Abu Khamis - connected to Abu Risha's death and a plot to kill other tribal leaders, had been arrested during a raid north of Baghdad. Pool said two other suspects were arrested in the raid.

Abu Risha's killing - just 10 days after his meeting with Bush - dealt a blow to one of the few success stories in U.S. efforts to stabilize Iraq. The tribal leader brought together Anbar sheiks into an alliance against extremists, after years of American failure to tame flash points such as Ramadi and Fallujah.

Two other bodyguards as well as some of Abu Risha's neighbors also had been detained, Iraqi police said. Al-Qaida front group the Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility for the assassination.

Elsewhere Saturday, gunmen ambushed an Iraqi police checkpoint in Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, killing one officer and wounding five others, according to authorities. A civilian also was killed in Khalis, a Shiite enclave near Baqouba in the volatile Diyala province, when gunmen opened fire on his car.

U.S. troops killed seven suspected insurgents and detained an operative believed to have knowledge about the whereabouts of al-Qaida in Iraq leaders south of Baghdad, the military said.

The military said seven militants were killed and weapons and military-style assault vests were found at the site in Musayyib, 40 miles south of Baghdad.

The troops also detained 12 suspected insurgents, including a militant believed to have been responsible for the movement of senior al-Qaida in Iraqi leaders and to have extensive knowledge of their whereabouts, the military said.

An al-Qaida umbrella group in Iraq posted a video recording on showing the killing of five kidnapped Iraqi army officers.

The footage, posted by the Islamic State of Iraq, shows a masked gunman shooting the blindfolded officers in the back of the head with a pistol. The officers' hands are bound behind their backs during the shooting.

IMF satisfied with Ukraine loan plan amid crisis

Ukraine is on the right track in implementing policies it had committed to when accepting an emergency loan to survive its worst economic crisis in a decade, an official from the International Monetary Fund said in an interview published Friday.

Ukraine has so far received more than a quarter of a $16.4 billion IMF rescue loan to help it cope with an economic crisis brought on by a drastic fall in its exports of its main commodity, steel, and in its national currency, the hryvna.

Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, the head of the IMF mission to Ukraine, was quoted by the daily Kommersant Ukraine as backing the central bank's policies to let the market determine exchange rates and to recapitalize major banks.

Pazarbasioglu also countered speculation that financial regulators were misusing the IMF funds.

"So far we have no comments or remarks and we have not felt in any way that the IMF funds are being used inappropriately," she was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, the depth of the economic slump was illustrated by data from the State Statistics Bureau, which late Thursday said industrial output fell 29 percent in November from a year earlier, the biggest decrease in a decade.

Parliament on Friday passed more legislation to soften the effects of the crisis. Lawmakers backed increasing funding for pensions, deposit insurance and prohibiting banks from unilaterally reconsidering the conditions of loans.

Lawmakers approved a transfer of 3.2 billion hryvna ($415 million) to the state oil and gas company Naftogaz, crippled by a $2.4 billion debt to Russia's natural gas giant Gazprom for imports.

Naftogaz officials traveled to Moscow Friday to continue talks on settling the debt and agreeing for next year's imports.

Russia is threatening to more than double the price for Ukraine's imports to over $400 per 1,000 cubic meters if Kiev fails to pay off the entire debt.

Israeli official: Militant Hamas 'like a cancer'

Israel's point man in indirect, Egyptian-mediated talks with Hamas said Wednesday the Islamic militant group is more powerful than the Western-backed Palestinian government and "is like a cancer."

Senior Defense Ministry official Amos Gilad said talks with Hamas designed to secure the release of a captured Israeli soldier have gone better since a truce went into effect in June, but he added that a deal is "not close."

"Since the truce we are discussing more seriously, but I am impressed only by results," he said.

Hi comments came as a senior Hamas official warned that any Israeli military option in Gaza could lead to more kidnappings of Israeli soldiers.

Gilad, making a rare appearance before foreign diplomats and journalists in Jerusalem, said current peace talks between Israel and the moderate Palestinian forces in charge of the West Bank are not likely to bear fruit until those forces retake Gaza from Hamas.

"It's very difficult to sign an agreement with half your body," he said.

Hamas' violent takeover of Gaza 15 months ago resulted in militants ruling Gaza and their moderate Fatah rivals controlling the West Bank. The two territories, captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, are located on opposite sides of Israel. The moderate Palestinian leadership seeks both areas for a future independent state.

Gilad said he believes Hamas' goal is to take over the West Bank as well. For the time being, however, he said the militants have decided to halt suicide bombings and rocket attacks on Israel because "the price is too high" _ an apparent reference to harsh Israeli reprisals.

Gilad has made several trips to Egypt in recent weeks in an effort to win the release of Israeli Sgt. Gilad Schalit, captured by Hamas-linked militants in a cross-border attack in June 2006. The cease-fire is supposed to be part of a larger deal between Israel and Hamas in which Schalit would be exchanged for Palestinian prisoners and the Israeli and Egyptian-imposed closure of Gaza's border crossings would be eased.

But while the violent cycle of Palestinian rocket attacks and Israeli military strikes has subsided, the punishing blockade of Gaza remains largely in place and little progress has been reported on a prisoner exchange.

"We are not close to the release of Gilad Schalit," Gilad said.

Mahmoud Zahar, a senior Hamas leader in Gaza, was quoted Wednesday in the London-based Asharq al Awsat newspaper as saying that Israeli military action in Gaza could lead to more abductions of Israeli soldiers.

This, he said, could put Gazan resistance movements in a better position to demand the release of even more Palestinian prisoners. Israel holds some 9,000 Palestinians in its jails.

Former Mo. lawmaker gets probation for hit and run

A former Missouri legislator has been sentenced to five years of probation for leaving the scene of an accident after hitting a pedestrian on New Year's Day 2008.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that former Rep. Brad Robinson also was ordered Thursday to pay out-of-pocket expenses for the victim, Donald Marler of Desloge. He was injured in Bonne Terre (bahn ter), about 60 miles south of St. Louis.

A high school's surveillance camera captured Robinson and his wife switching places in a pickup truck before returning to the scene of the accident. Robinson was convicted last month.

The 42-year-old Bonne Terre Democrat did not seek re-election last year.

Bag with Kermit the Frog causes school closure

Boulder authorities locked down a Lafayette charter school while they examined a duffel bag left at the campus parking lot that ended up containing a Kermit the Frog doll. Boulder County's bomb squad responded to the Peak to Peak Charter School after an employee there called at about 7:15 a.m. Wednesday to report the unattended bag. Authorities used a robot with movable arms and a camera to investigate the bag and then an officer inspected it to make sure it was safe.

Authorities cleared the scene at about 10 a.m. Students and staff were locked down until then in a campus building.

The charter school is for K-12 students.

___

Information from: Daily Camera, http://www.dailycamera.com/

Monday, March 12, 2012

Ump Diaz wants jail for attacker

Next time, umpire Laz Diaz says he'll fight back.

"If anybody comes on the field, jumps on a player or one of ourumpires, the gloves are off," said Diaz, who in April was attacked bya spectator who ran on the field. "There is not a security guardthat's going to stop me."

Diaz said he was to meet Sunday with prosecutors in his case.

The man accused of attacking the umpire during a White Sox-KansasCity Royals game at U.S Cellular Field, Eric Dybas, has pleadedinnocent to one count of felony aggravated battery and one count ofmisdemeanor criminal trespass.

"Somebody's got to be made example of," Diaz said Sunday. "Givehim at least a year in jail."

Diaz returned to the ballpark for the first time Friday since theApril 15 attack. His return came days after a judge sentenced WilliamLigue Jr. to 30 months of probation for attacking Royals coach TomGamboa last year.

"The guy that attacked Gamboa, assaulted him, [Gamboa] lost somehearing and [Ligue] got 30 months probation," Diaz said. "My guydidn't do as much damage, and he will probably get less."

AP

Moviegoers spy a new hit: `Bridget'

LOS ANGELES "Bridget Jones's Diary," the romantic comedy starringRenee Zellweger as a Londoner who fancies making lists and life-improving resolutions, grossed $10.5 million in its second weekend tomove into first place at the box office, according to studioestimates.

The film debuted at No. 3 last weekend, when it opened in 1,611theaters. Distributor Miramax added 610 cinemas this weekend andplans to expand to several hundred more Friday.

"Last week when it opened was sort of a test run, and it sure roseto the occasion," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of ExhibitorRelations, which tracks movie ticket sales. "It proved to do so wellthat Miramax went ahead and added theaters."

"Diary" bumped off another Miramax movie, "Spy Kids," which tookin $10.2 million and slipped to No. 2 after three weekends at thetop.

The weekend's two big new films had modest debuts. "CrocodileDundee in Los Angeles," the third of Paul Hogan's comedies about thecolorful Australian outdoorsman, opened at No. 4 with $8 million,while "Freddy Got Fingered," the gross-out comedy starring co-writerand director Tom Green, took in $7.3 million to debut in fifth place.

"Bridget Jones's Diary" has grossed $25.7 million in 10 days.

Nation & world

Prevention programs get

less federal funding

Since 2001, federal funding for a grant program that helps U.S.schools pay for programs to prevent substance abuse and violence hasdeclined significantly.

Funding was $439.2 million in 2001 but has fallen to $346.5million this year, with $310 million recommended for 2007.

The Bush administration has recommended eliminating the program,though Congress has repeatedly voted to retain it.

The Office of Management and Budget rated the program asineffective several years ago. Evidence did not show the program waschanging students' behavior to reduce violence and substance abuse,said Bill Modzeleski, who runs the Office of Safe and Drug-FreeSchools in the U.S. Education Department.

Brazilian leader forced

into runoff election

BRASILIA, Brazil - Brazil's leftist president faces a runoff for asecond term after voters denied him an outright victory amid last-minute allegations his party engaged in a scheme of electoralcorruption and dirty tricks.

The Oct. 29 runoff was announced late Sunday night by electionauthorities after 99 percent of the vote had been counted, withPresident Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva getting 48.7 percent compared to41.6 percent for the center-right Geraldo Alckmin, Sao Paulo state'sformer governor.

It was a stunning setback for Silva, less than a week after pollspredicted he would trounce Alckmin with 59 percent of the vote - farmore than the 50 percent plus one vote needed to win the contest inthe first round.

Iraqi parliament extends

the state of emergency

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The Iraqi parliament voted today to extend thecountry's state of emergency for 30 more days.

The state of emergency has been renewed every month since firstbeing authorized in November 2004.

It grants security forces greater powers and affects the entirecountry apart from the autonomous Kurdish region in the north.

The measure allows for a nighttime curfew and gives the governmentextra powers to make arrests without warrants and carry out policeand military operations.

Hurricane Isaac

speeds toward Canada

MIAMI - The Canadian Meteorological Service upgraded a tropicalstorm watch for a portion of southeastern Newfoundland, Canada, to atropical storm warning early today as Hurricane Isaac sped over thenorth Atlantic.

The warning was issued for the Avalon Peninsula, including thecities of Cape Race and St. Johns.

A tropical storm watch was also issued for the Burin Peninsula andBonavista Peninsula in southeastern Newfoundland.

Dam project will displace

1.4 million in China

BEIJING - The total number of people who will be displaced byChina's massive Three Gorges dam has been raised by 270,000, to 1.4million people, state media said.

The official Xinhua News Agency on Sunday quoted Pu Haiqing, headof the Cabinet-level Three Gorges Project Construction Committee, assaying that total would be reached before the project is completed in2008.

The number of people already relocated has reached 1.2 millionpeople, surpassing the original estimate of 1.13 million, Pu said.

COMPILED FROM WIRE REPORTS

According to the report, Pu said the higher number of dislocatedpeople resulted from consideration for the local ecology. It did notgive additional details.

The $22 billion dam on the Yangtze River was completed thisspring. Its power generation facilities are slated to be finished by2008.

Fans flock to see Tour de France champ Lance Armstrong

NEW YORK - Fans couldn't get enough of Lance Armstrong in the NewYork City Cycling Championship.

A wave of Lance-mania hit lower Manhattan during the inauguralevent as fans cheered and yelled his name each time they saw the four-time Tour de France champion.

More than 100,000 fans, including comedian Jerry Seinfeld, crowdedthe 1.2-mile route and were not disappointed even though Armstrongfinished 28th overall, in 2 hours, 6 minutes, 54 seconds.

He was 16 seconds behind winner Ivan Dominguez, of the Saturnteam, in the 62.5-mile road race.

"Lance is the king of the sport right now," said Gerard Bisceglia,chief executive officer of USA Cycling.

Fans waved signs supporting Armstrong and rang cow bells when theysaw him coming. One person waved a Texas flag in honor of Armstrong'shome state. The 62.5-mile race was Armstrong's first in the UnitedStates since winning the Tour title last week in Paris.

The course snaked through New York's financial district, takingriders past skyscrapers on Water Street.

Though the cyclists raced a few blocks away from the World TradeCenter site, Armstrong said it was hard not to think about whathappened nearly a year ago.

"This race was special in light of what happened a few blocks fromhere. You can't forget that," Armstrong said. "After 9-11, I wantedto come here to do something, a tribute, somehow, some way."

Armstrong had not participated in a race in New York until Sunday.The road race does not suit Armstrong's style since he is a mountainspecialist. He even joked about the condition of the streets.

"I've never seen pot holes like that," Armstrong said. "They're aswide as a car and deep as a swimming pool. Seriously, the surface wasnot that bad."

Joking aside, Armstrong is an inspiration to fans.

Even after the race was over, many people crowded outsiderestaurant windows where Armstrong gave a press conference a fewblocks from the course. They chanted, "Lance, Lance!" and he wavedback.

Even second-place finisher Vassili Davidenko from Russia, noticedthe tremendous turnout.

"It's unbelievable how many people there were today," Davidenkosaid.

Armstrong was one of six members of the U.S. Postal Service teamto race Sunday. Antonio Cruz was the top finisher from that team,finishing seventh.

Up next for Armstrong is a race in Italy on Saturday and one inSwitzerland a week later. His final race of the season is the 110-mile road race in San Francisco on Sept. 15.

He has his eye on winning a fifth-straight Tour de France nextsummer.

Perhaps his popularity and quest to win another Tour will inspirea new generation of cycling fans.

"I believe that sports revolve around athletes," Armstrong said."Look at what Michael Jordan did for the NBA and what Tiger Woods isdoing for golf. Without athletes, you can't have a kid who wakes upand says I want to be a cyclist."

AP-ES-08-05-02 0242EDT

50 people who make Chicago a better place: Helps parents soothe their fussy babies

#23

LINDA GILKERSON

If your infant won't stop screaming but you've already tried advice from your doctor, family and friends, it's time to call Linda Gilkerson.

Gilkerson, 61, is the director of the Fussy Baby Network, a lifesaver for parents having problems soothing their newborns. The program, which was started by Gilkerson in 2004, offers comfort, support, ideas and evaluations for families with a fussy infant. The program has a "warmline'' to answer questions over the phone, but experts on child development will even come to your home.

The program is run out of the Erikson Institute, where the Hyde Park resident has been a professor since 1986. Gilkerson, who says she is the parent of a one-time fussy baby -- and was a fussy infant herself -- says she has "a real passion about the beginning'' of life, she said. "We want babies and parents to have the best start.''

Since starting the program in 2004, Gilkerson and her colleagues have helped more than 3,000 families.

As the director of Erikson's Irving B. Harris Infant Studies Program, Gilkerson also has designed programs to help teen mothers evaluate the development of their babies and also worked on Project Connect, which seeks to help families reunite after children have been placed in foster care.

COMING TUESDAY

NO. 24

Photo: Linda Gilkerson, director of the Fussy Baby Network, comforts 3-month-old Dylan. ;

AP Interview: Turkish Cypriot leader warns failure could lead to permanent partition

The election of a new president in Cyprus could bring a solution by the end of the year to the island's decades-long partition, but failure now could leave it divided forever, the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state's leader said.

Mehmet Ali Talat said the Turkish Cypriot side was willing to be flexible.

"We are ready to find a solution to this problem. We will be flexible, we will work in good faith and we will be always active," he told The Associated Press Monday. "We believe that a solution is possible ... for the benefit of both the Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots."

Peace talks to reunite the strategically located war-divided island have been stalled for years. But Dimitris Christofias, who won a crucial presidential election runoff Sunday, has pledged to quickly meet with Talat.

"It is very possible to find a solution by the end of the year," Talat said.

Christofias, a 61-year-old Soviet-educated history professor, heads a party that grew out of Cyprus' outlawed communist party in the 1940s. He and Talat, 55, share the same left-wing political ideology, and have enjoyed friendly relations in the past.

No date has been set for a meeting, but "at least he is somebody who is not denying the role of the Turkish Cypriot leader in a solution and he doesn't deny to meet the Turkish Cypriot leader," Talat said in an interview in his office across the Green Line in Nicosia, Europe's last divided capital.

"Whereas his predecessor was ... directly declining to meet. Even to have a coffee."

The outgoing president, Tassos Papadopoulos, was instrumental in the Greek Cypriot rejection of a U.N. reunification plan in 2004. The Turkish Cypriots approved the plan in a separate referendum.

Papadopoulos was ousted in a surprise result to the first round of the presidential election on Feb. 17, and Christofias' election has injected optimism into the moribund peace process.

But Talat warned of dangers ahead.

"I want to be (an) optimist. There are reasons to be (an) optimist," he said. "But of course we will see ... everybody has to be very careful in order to lead the people.

"The leaders have to take responsibility, otherwise after many efforts ... again we may face another referendum failure. And if it happens again, nobody can think of the reunification of the island again."

Talat said he envisaged a solution that would be similar to the U.N. peace plan that 76 percent of Greek Cypriots rejected in 2004.

"The Greek Cypriots changed their leader. I think they are looking for a change of policy also," he said.

But it might not be that simple.

Greek Cypriots may have ousted Papadopoulos in an election result seen largely as a rejection of his handling of reunification efforts, but they will need to be convinced that a new plan would work.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Some Australia flights resume, others nixed by ash

SYDNEY (AP) — Airlines were resuming flights out of some of Australia's largest airports but canceling service to New Zealand and the island state of Tasmania on Wednesday as winds shifted the volcanic ash from Chile that has crippled air travel in the region for several days this month.

Many flights across southern Australia were suspended for two days because of the ash, stranding thousands of passengers before winds pushed the cloud southeast. The ash can damage jet engines.

Australian flagship carrier Qantas and rival Virgin Australia resumed early morning flights from the southern city of Adelaide on Wednesday.

Qantas and its budget subsidiary Jetstar have told customers that flights through Melbourne, Australia's second-largest city, and the national capital, Canberra, will resume by late morning. Virgin was to return to the air by noon.

In Sydney, Australia's largest city, and neighboring Newcastle, Qantas, Jetstar and Virgin planned to resume services Wednesday afternoon.

The three airlines canceled flights to New Zealand and Tasmania, however, because the ash has shifted into those flight paths.

Ash from Chile's Cordon Caulle volcano grounded hundreds of flights and stranded tens of thousands of passengers last week when it hovered over several Australian cities and New Zealand. All flights were running normally by late last week, but now the ash has lapped the globe and is causing more problems.

Greyhound is running extra bus service in Adelaide, Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney and Brisbane to help move a backlog of stranded passengers, while trains between Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne had added rail cars.

Civil Aviation Safety Authority spokesman Peter Gibson said it was possible all flight schedules would return to normal on Thursday.

Chile said Sunday that the Cordon Caulle volcano, which began erupting June 4, was becoming less active.

UNDERWATER NATURE TRAIL ESTABLISHED.

DIVERS will be able to enjoy a new underwater nature trail in Port Erin bay this summer.

The trail ? expected to take 40 minutes to complete ? starts at the seaward jetty off Raglan pier, goes west for 250 metres, then turns north for 150m to a buoy before returning to the jetty.

Ten stations along the route ? marked by plastic boards or concrete blocks, depending on the seabed ? will denote features of special interest, such as sea urchins, starfish, anemones, peacock worms, crabs, lobsters, pipefish and kelp forests.

A display board on land will outline the route to divers, giving information on what they should look out for. Although it was designed for divers, the trail could also be used by snorkelers.

The idea is the brainchild of Dr Sebastian Holmes, of Port Erin Marine Laboratory.

After diving an underwater nature trail in Kimmeridge Bay, Dorset, and given the richness of marine life and interest in diving in Port Erin's bay, he thought they should create one here.

He said: 'I was surprised when I first dived here at how much life there was. It's very, very good. It's safe and not that deep in the middle of the bay ? the maximum high tide is 15 metres.

Port Erin Commissioners have agreed to accept responsibility for the upkeep of the board while local diving clubs will look after the underwater signs.

Dr Holmes said staff from the marine laboratory, which closes in September when funding from Liverpool University comes to an end, will do the labour, bolting down stainless steel markers and sinking the concrete blocks.

The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry has given a [pounds sterling]1,700 Wildlife and Conservation grant for the cost of the display board, underwater signs and any other costs relating to using the laboratory's equipment.

Laminated diagrams of the nature trail will be available at the commissioners' office and possibly from a website yet to be established.

Sadly, the trail is one of the few legacies of the laboratory that will officially close on September 30.

Dr Holmes, 35, who has worked at the laboratory since September 2004, said he regretted the decision to close the laboratory, particularly given its illustrious 114-year history. The future use of the laboratory site future remains undecided.

UNDERWATER NATURE TRAIL ESTABLISHED.

DIVERS will be able to enjoy a new underwater nature trail in Port Erin bay this summer.

The trail ? expected to take 40 minutes to complete ? starts at the seaward jetty off Raglan pier, goes west for 250 metres, then turns north for 150m to a buoy before returning to the jetty.

Ten stations along the route ? marked by plastic boards or concrete blocks, depending on the seabed ? will denote features of special interest, such as sea urchins, starfish, anemones, peacock worms, crabs, lobsters, pipefish and kelp forests.

A display board on land will outline the route to divers, giving information on what they should look out for. Although it was designed for divers, the trail could also be used by snorkelers.

The idea is the brainchild of Dr Sebastian Holmes, of Port Erin Marine Laboratory.

After diving an underwater nature trail in Kimmeridge Bay, Dorset, and given the richness of marine life and interest in diving in Port Erin's bay, he thought they should create one here.

He said: 'I was surprised when I first dived here at how much life there was. It's very, very good. It's safe and not that deep in the middle of the bay ? the maximum high tide is 15 metres.

Port Erin Commissioners have agreed to accept responsibility for the upkeep of the board while local diving clubs will look after the underwater signs.

Dr Holmes said staff from the marine laboratory, which closes in September when funding from Liverpool University comes to an end, will do the labour, bolting down stainless steel markers and sinking the concrete blocks.

The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry has given a [pounds sterling]1,700 Wildlife and Conservation grant for the cost of the display board, underwater signs and any other costs relating to using the laboratory's equipment.

Laminated diagrams of the nature trail will be available at the commissioners' office and possibly from a website yet to be established.

Sadly, the trail is one of the few legacies of the laboratory that will officially close on September 30.

Dr Holmes, 35, who has worked at the laboratory since September 2004, said he regretted the decision to close the laboratory, particularly given its illustrious 114-year history. The future use of the laboratory site future remains undecided.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Go with the flow

The newest thing to hit Broadmead is the Neat Aqua-Massage, nowopen for business in Debenhams.

We sent Tom Henry to test the water, so to speak Despite theassurances, I expected to emerge from under the canopy dripping wet.There's no way, thought I, that my shirt, trousers, socks and shoescould possibly survive an onslaught from 36 high pressure water jetspummelling my legs and back from every angle.

But when Helen Young finally released me from my 10 minutes in theNeat AquaMassage, now open for business in Debenhams, Broadmead, Iwas as dry as a bone, in spite of the gallons of water that had justwashed over me.

I was also dying for a pee; the night before …

Catalyzed Big-Bang nucleosynthesis.(General Theory: Article)(Report)

Abstract: We point out that the existence of metastable, [tau] > 103 s, negatively charged electroweak-scale particles ([X.sup.-]) alters the predictions for lithium and other primordial elemental abundances for A > 4 via the formation of bound states with nuclei during Big-Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN). In particular, we show that the bound states of [X.sup.-] with helium, formed at temperatures of about T = [10.sup.8] K, lead to the catalytic enhancement of [sup.6]Li production, which is eight orders of magnitude more efficient than the standard channel. In particle physics models, where subsequent decay of [X.sup.-] does not lead to large nonthermal BBN effects, this directly translates to the level of sensitivity to the number density of longlived [X.sup.-] particles ([tau] > [10.sup.5] s) relative to entropy of [n.sub.X]- /s [??] 3 x [10.sup.-17], which is one of the most stringent probes of electroweak scale remnants known to date. It is also argued that unstable charged particles with lifetime of order ~2000 s may naturally lead to the depletion of [sup.7]Li by a factor of two, making it consistent with observationally determined abundances.

PACS No.: 98.80.Ft

Resume : Nous soulignons que l'existence de particules electro-faibles negativement chargees ([X.sup.-]) et metastables ([tau] > 103 s) modifie nos predictions pour la formation originale de lithium et d'autres elements avec A > 4, via la formation d'etats lies pendant la BBN. Nous montrons en particulier que la formation d'etats lies de [X.sup.-] avec de l'helium, formes a une temperature de T = [10.sup.8] K, mene a une augmentation catalytique de la production de [sup.6]Li qui est huit ordres de grandeur plus efficace que le modele standard. Dans les modeles de particules elementaires ou la desintegration subsequente de [X.sup.-] ne mene pas a des effets non thermiques importants de BBN, ceci se traduit directement en niveau de sensibilite sur le nombre de particules [X.sup.-] de longue vie ([tau] > [10.sup.5] s) relativement a l'entropie s, [n.sub.X]- /s [??] 3 x [10.sup.-17], qui est parmi les tests les plus severes connus du vestige de l'echelle electro-faible. Nous pouvons aussi dire que l'existence de particules chargees instables (~2000 s) menerait naturellement a une diminution par un facteur 2 du [sup.7]Li, ce qui correspond precisement a la situation observee.

[Traduit par la Redaction]

1. Introduction

This paper is based on two recentworks, [1, 2]. Standard BigBang nucleosynthesis (SBBN) is a well-established theory that makes predictions for elemental abundances of light elements, H, D, He, and Li, as functions of only one free parameter, the ratio of baryon-number to photon-number densities.Agreement of the observed abundances for D and [sup.4]He with the SBBN predictions that use an additional cosmic microwave background (CMB)-derived [3] input value of [n.sub.b]/s = 0.9 x [10.sup.-10] serves as a sensitive probe of New Physics.

Perhaps the most exciting prospect of studying the primordial abundances is the possibility of testing the combination of Standard Model and general relativity, which we call SBBN, or standard BBN. To this end, it is important to understand how the nonstandard physics can affect the outcome of nuclear reactions (see, for example, ref. 4 for a review). Schematically, the BBN equations can be represented as

d[Y.sub.i]/[d.sub.t] = -H(T) Td[Y.sub.i]/[d.sub.T] = [SIGMA]([[TAU].sub.ij][Y.sub.j] + [[TAU].sub.ikl][Y.sub.k][Y.sub.l] + ...)

Energy of reactants ~ T [??] MeV

H(T) = const x [N.sub.*.sup.1/2] [T.sup.2]/[M.sub.Pl]

where [N.sub.*] = [N.sub.boson] + 7/8 [N.sub.fermion] (1)

In this formula, Yi are the abundances of light elements, [[TAU].sub.ij] ... are the generalized (positive or negative) rates for creation or destruction of element i with participation of j, k ..., H(T) is the Hubble expansion rate, [M.sub.Pl] is the Planck constant, and [N.sub.*] is the number of effective degrees of freedom comprisng fermionic and bosonic fields. …

LONE RANGER RIDES AGAIN.(AT HOME)

Byline: ANITA GOLD Knight-Ridder

DEAR ANITA: Where can I find information on and examples of Lone Ranger items? -- Jeffrey Baker, Tucson, Ariz. DEAR JEFFREY: Many Lone Ranger and Tonto collectibles will be offered at Ted Hake's Mail and Phone Bid Auction Feb. 3-4. Catalogs are available for $7.50 postpaid from Hake's Americana & Collectibles, P.O. Box 1444, Dept. L, York, PA 17405-1444, or phone (717) 848-1333 for information. Or send $30 for a five-catalog yearly subscription, or $20 to receive the next three catalogs.

Padres beat Giants to extend lead

Barry Zito's career-best start for San Francisco ended as the San Diego Padres beat the Giants 3-2 in the National League on Tuesday.

Zito (5-1) allowed three runs in five innings, conceding David Eckstein's two-run single and walking a season-worst seven batters.

Ryan Webb (1-1) went 1 1-3 innings to earn the win for the Padres, who extended their lead over the Giants in the NL West to 1 1-2 games.

Yorvit Torrealba also drove in a run for San Diego, which is without two key pitchers for unforeseen circumstances: starter Kevin Correia following the death of his brother in a hiking accident, and Tim Stauffer, who had an emergency appendectomy …

Influence of foliar and soil applications of iron and manganese on soybean dry matter yield and iron-manganese relationship in a Calcareous soil

Abstract

Iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) are essential nutrients for plants. Application of high levels of either Fe or Mn is often accompanied by relatively low levels of uptake for the other nutrient. The antagonistic relationship of these nutrient elements may occur either during absorption by roots or during translocation from roots to shoot. A greenhouse study was carried out to study the effect of soil and foliar applications of Fe and Mn on yield and Fe-Mn status of soybean plant. Results showed that soil or foliar application of Fe or Mn did not influence soybean root or shoot dry matter yield (SDMY). Both soil and foliar applications of Fe significantly increased shoot Fe …

Structural retrofit buys support for new retail mall; dry ice, a metal detector and an oxygen thermal lance were unlikely but valuable tools in garage reinforcement. (Nashville's Church Street Centre Mall )

Structural retrofit buys support for new retail mall

Dry ice, a metal detector and an oxygen thermal lance were unlikely but valuable tools in garage reinforcement Building a three-level shopping mall on top of an existing four-story parking garage in Nashville's revitalized downtown retail district necessitated extensive reinforcement of the structure.

The $17 million, 300,000-sq.-ft. Church Street Centre Mall required encasing the garage's existing concrete columns with additional concrete, cutting away post-tensioned concrete slabs to accomodate escalators and resupporting these cut-away sections with steel beams before any work on the retail mall addition could begin.

Designed by Stanley D. Lindsey and Associates, Nashville, the structural reinforcement incorporated both standard and novel construction techniques to ensure adequate support. The project architect was Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart and Stewart, Atlanta.

The garage columns were deemed inadequate to support the extra load of the mall. However, …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Father hopes some good will come of son's rugby death.(News)

BYLINE: KAREN BREYTENBACH

WHILE the pain of losing their son to violence on the rugby field will remain, Rawsonville flyhalf Riaan Loots's father is determined to see good come of his son's inspiring life, tragic death and the lessons learnt from it.

Willie Loots is penning a book about the tragedy, the impact it had on sport and how their family survived the aftermath.

"My son will not become a statistic. Something good can come of this," Loots said, a day after Ceres rugby player Ben Zimri was sentenced to five years in prison for his son's assault on the field three years ago. Loots wants to tell the world of his son's passion for sport, his …

Bono's new focus is on promoting a line of socially conscious fashions.(Preview)

Byline: Associated Press

Bono has a new gig: U2's lead singer is charged with raising awareness and interest in the new fashion brand Edun.

However, his mission is larger than selling T-shirts, shrunken blazers and slim-cut denim pants with metallic stitching.

The goal is to build a brand that produces desirable and wearable clothing while providing sustainable employment and stable commercial relationships in developing areas of the world. Each pair of jeans is inscribed: "We carry the story of the people who make our clothes around with us." "This is the fashion equivalent of mothers looking at the back of a can to see what exactly she's going to …

JACK COOPER, 36.(CAPITAL REGION)(Correction notice)

WATERFORD Jack Cooper, 36, of Fonda Road died Tuesday at Leonard Hospital, Troy.

Mr. Cooper was born in Kingston and educated in Mount Upton, Chenango County. He lived in the Kingston-Catskill area for most of his adult life and in Waterford for more than two years.

He owned and operated Jack Cooper's Seal Coating Co. for 15 years, until the onset of his illness seven years ago.

He was a member of the Waterford United Methodist Church.

Survivors include his wife, Shirley ``Amey'' Ciufo Cooper; his mother, Frances Cutting Cooper of Cairo; …

Doll artists. (Children's art diary).(art project)

We all have interesting sculptural histories we fondly recall from childhood. Mine had to do with the plaster Soviet general and his troops, for which I designed parade formations. I selected each soldier with care, looking carefully at faces, inspecting uniforms, and adding to the kindly general my own painted decorations. My fragile soldiers stood in still Egyptian-like poses. Action had to be provided by a choreographer's imagination.

Sculptures were very important to me as a child. When I had to decide what to take with me for our frightening border escape from Hungary, the toy soldiers in my pocket protected me against the Soviet border guards. Now that I think of it, it is not surprising that my senior sculpture exhibit at Cooper Union was a display of plaster figurative works.

DOLLS AND STUFFED ANIMALS Among the most amazing dolls that children have, there will always be a special love for the ones they make themselves. Very often a child's doll is their first major independent sculpture project. Children dress and feed their dolls. They tell them stories and take them for walks. Playing with and caring for a favorite doll becomes a memorable relationship …

Miner Rio Tinto's six-month profit jumps 30 percent to $7.6 billion

SYDNEY (AP) — Miner Rio Tinto's six-month …

Cubs still searching for solution at 3rd base

DENVER--The slump is back. Mark Bellhorn had a brief spell duringwhich he hit .300 with nine RBI in a 12-game stretch.

But the rebound was far too short in a game that demandsconsistency. The Cubs' starting third baseman now has just one hit inhis last 17 at-bats after going 0-for-3 in Saturday's loss toColorado, and his batting average is down to .188.

Bellhorn should realize that his time as a starter is running out.No one on the Cubs is ready to say that, hoping that he finds hisstroke somewhere, but general manager Jim Hendry has to be laying thegroundwork soon if he plans to pull off a June trade.

Hendry would just as soon not wait for the July 31 trade …

Greater Southern to close; Betson will open Southeast facility.(VENDING MARKET WATCH)

Greater Southern Distributing Co., Inc., a Smryna, Ga.-based equipment distributor that has served the coin operated industry in the Southeast for many years, has decided to close, according to Rubin Piha, co-owner. "Given the current economic conditions, we've decided to remove ourselves from this industry," he said. The Vending Center, based in Midfield, Ala., acquired Greater Southern's full-line vending business. Piha said most of the gaming and …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

BIG HORSE FOR THE BIG RACE.(SPORTS)

Byline: TIM WILKIN Staff writer

SARATOGA SPRINGS -- Trainer Bob Baffert made a promise, and Monday morning he kept it. Point Given, the best 3-year-old thoroughbred in the country, will be running Saturday in the $1 million Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course.

Baffert was adamant that he would forestall his decision until Point Given worked out Monday morning at Del Mar near San Diego. His star ran five furlongs in :59 1/5 seconds and emerged strong, which is what Baffert was waiting for.

``Right now, we're coming,'' Baffert said. ``The work was great and he looks great. We couldn't be doing any better. Everything is beautiful.''

Point …

On the road.(Syndication Watch)(Ambush Makeover)

Taking the show on the road is giving Twentieth's Ambush Makeover a lift. At the end of August, Twentieth put the Ambush Makeover team in a colorful bus that's crisscrossing the country, giving makeovers to anyone who volunteers. Affiliate stations are running contests and giving free makeovers to winners during their early-morning newscasts.

The effort has paid off in several cities. In Washington, Cleveland and Detroit, Ambush Makeover enjoyed an immediate bump from the bus tour. For example, in D.C., the show jumped from 0.8 rating/3 share to 1.3/4. In Cleveland, ratings rose from 1.7/7 in week one to 1.9/7 the week of the tour.

Last week, the "Whole New …

Geithner to have surgery for kidney stones

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has been admitted to a hospital where he will undergo minor surgery to deal with a kidney stone.

Treasury press spokesman Steve Adamske said Geithner began experiencing …

St Ivel.

St Ivel Shape Summer Collection

low-fat yoghurts

St Ivel has replaced its Shape Winter Collection of low-fat yoghurts with its summer offering, initially introduced last July. Shape Summer Collection …

MOE'S SOUTHWEST GRILL 1704 WESTERN AVE. TOWN CENTER PLAZA Guilderland.(Preview)

Always the skeptic, when I saw on Moe's Southwest Grill's Web site that they didn't have a freezer, I didn't believe it. My editor - and our resident food and restaurant connoisseur - wasn't convinced either. The claim of freezerlessness sparked a department-wide conversation.

"No freezer, no way," said a co-worker.

"Not possible," said another.

Oh, but it is possible, and very true.

I learned this after Greg Yamin, one of the owners of Moe's in Guilderland, gave me - a customer, not a journalist - a kitchen tour. After I questioned the lack of an icebox, Yamin showed off the tidy walk-in fridge.

No freezer. No microwave. …

Bangkok Post, Thailand, Company Reports Column.

Jul. 16--KARAT SANITARYWARE said that its board on July 12 approved voluntary delisting of 47.2m shares from the SET. After the SET approves the delisting, Kohler Co will offer to buy shares from other shareholders. A presentation for investors on delisting will be held on Aug 13 from 3 pm at the Hilton International Bangkok Hotel. In line with the company's debt restructuring plan, the board also approved a loan agreement with a new creditor, aimed at repaying existing debts. Also as part of debt restructuring, the board approved the sale of land plots with a total area of 1,152 rai in various provinces to RPLM (Thailand) Co for 472.7m bt, and subsequently leasing the land …

Treesy as 1, 2, 3 for school pupils as eco contest proves a winner

YOUNGSTERS from across south and west Wales took part in an eco-friendly Christmas tree decorating competition at the NationalBotanic Garden of Wales.

More than 450 pupils from 24 schools -- from as far afield asNewcastle Emlyn and Pontarddulais -- took part in the challenge todecorate a tree using remade, reused or recycled materials.

The competition was jointly organised by the Garden and CareersWales West and sponsored by Carmarthenshire Council, CwmEnvironmental and Welsh Water. Environmental workshops were heldthroughout the day by various community groups and there were prizesfor the best dressed trees.

Judges Council sustainability officers …

STONY CREEK MAN SLIGHTLY HURT WHEN TRUCK OVERTURNS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Linda Trischitta

HADLEY A Stony Creek man escaped serious injury Thursday after he lost control of his pickup truck on rain-slicked County Highway 1 and the vehicle overturned, State Police said.

Joseph Liebl, 40, of 21 Tannery Lane, had just finished his grocery shopping and was driving home about 10:45 a.m. when his 1985 Ford Ranger went off the road, hit a tree and rolled over, according to State Trooper James R. Barber.

Liebl, who was wearing a seat …