четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Dr.: Conn. man said he raped woman post-strangling

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — A man convicted of killing a woman and her two daughters in a 2007 home invasion told a psychiatrist he strangled and then raped the woman in a rage triggered after his co-defendant told him he had killed the girls.

But the psychiatrist, who was called by the defense, acknowledged Steven Hayes' account was at odds with what he told police immediately after the crime.

Hayes' attorneys are trying to persuade a jury to spare him the death penalty by arguing Hayes was a follower and Joshua Komisarjevky, who awaits trial, was the mastermind who escalated the violence. The psychiatrist, Dr. Eric Goldsmith, concluded Hayes was in an extreme emotional state at …

Denmark: Bendnter back in training, coach out sick

On a day its coach skipped practice with a fever, Denmark's injury situation improved.

Striker Nicklas Bendtner and defender Simon Kjaer were back in training Tuesday, but the team received another setback when coach Morten Olsen called in sick.

Olsen, 60, contracted a virus that has circulated through the squad for two weeks and temporarily left assistant coach Peter Bonde in charge of World Cup preparations, team spokesman Lars Berendt said.

None of the players was reported ill. All 23 took part in the team's training session at Denmark's base camp in Knysna.

Bendtner …

Compost use is advocated as Israeli landfills close

A group called the Forum for Integrated Solid Waste Management is trying the shift government policy away from incineration and wholesale landfilling towards source separation and composting of the waste stream, which is about 50 percent organics. In June, 1993, the Israeli government announced a plan to close about 400 landfills and establish three or four large regional state of the art landfills. So far about 135 landfills have closed, but many new unapproved sites have opened up or expanded on existing sites. Now that community opposition has prevented the opening of two of the main sites, at Dudaim in the south and Talya …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Prosecutor in Vick Case Re-Elected

A prosecutor who was criticized for his handling of the Michael Vick dogfighting investigation defeated a write-in challenger to keep his job, an election official said Wednesday.

Surry County Commonwealth's Attorney Gerald G. Poindexter got 1,657 votes to challenger Ed Vaughn's 1,173 in Tuesday's election, county registrar Lucille Epps said.

Poindexter has held the job since 1995.

Vaughn, who has been a prosecutor for 24 years but is now in private practice, said Wednesday the Vick case did not motivate his challenge of Poindexter.

"It probably had more to do with narcotics enforcement _ or a lack of narcotics enforcement _ …

NASA hopes to land space shuttle on Sunday

NASA managers have cleared space shuttle Endeavour to return to Earth on Sunday; now all they need is for the weather to cooperate.

Endeavour's seven astronauts hoped to end their space station delivery and repair mission at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where their families were waiting. But Sunday morning, Mission Control informed the crew that dangerously high wind and possible thunderstorms were expected, not to mention moderate turbulence.

Good weather was predicted for the backup landing site in Southern California, Edwards Air Force Base. "It looks real nice out there," Mission Control radioed.

Alley takes a Long look

Actress Kirstie Alley is off to a flying start on NBC-TV's"Cheers" after showing up for her first rehearsal as a Shelley Longlook-alike.

"I wanted to break the ice and get off to a fresh start," saidAlley, who broke up the cast with laughter as she paraded in a blondwig and a conservative dress …

Reba McEntire's `Duets' Debuts at No. 1

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Reba McEntire's "Reba Duets" has debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's 200 Top Albums, her best first-week showing on the chart.

"I am beyond thrilled to have my biggest sales week ever with my 31st album," the 52-year-old country singer said in a statement Wednesday. "To get to share it with all my friends on this duets project is icing on the cake."

The album's guests include Kenny Chesney, Kelly Clarkson, Ronnie Dunn (of Brooks & Dunn), Vince Gill, Don Henley, Faith Hill, Carole King, Rascal Flatts, LeAnn Rimes, Justin Timberlake and Trisha Yearwood.

Released Sept. …

Pentagon to add 20,000 jobs to revamp contracting

Under pressure to overhaul its troubled weapons-buying process, the U.S. Defense Department is planning to add 20,000 new federal jobs over five years to reinforce its ability to handle contracts, cost estimates and oversight, the deputy defense secretary said Wednesday.

William Lynn told the Senate Armed Services Committee that as the department increases personnel, it also will move toward more fixed-price contracts, scrutinize programs more closely and link incentive payments to contractors' performance.

The changes are part of a broad effort to bring under control an acquisition process that has been plagued with huge cost overruns, lengthy delays and a …

Study hints at genetic link in homosexuality

Genetic factors appear to play a major role in determiningwhether men are homosexual, a study of twins by a NorthwesternUniversity researcher indicates.

"The identical twins - with their identical genes - had thehighest percentage of homosexual siblings," even though all thesubjects were raised at home with their twin, said Dr. J. MichaelBailey, an NU psychologist.

Bailey and co-researcher Dr. Richard Pillard of BostonUniversity School of Medicine recruited men through ads placed inhomosexual publications in Chicago, other Midwestern cities andSouthwestern cities. They were looking for homosexual or bisexualmen who had an identical twin, fraternal twin, or …

Phony veteran pleads guilty to money scam in Ind.

FRANKLIN, Ind. (AP) — A man has pleaded guilty to charges that he posed as a down-on-his-luck soldier to scam hundreds of dollars from seven good Samaritans in central Indiana.

The prosecutor's office says 43-year-old James Schuder (SHOO'-der) pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of deception and panhandling.

A judge on Thursday sentenced him to 180 days in jail, but …

Lorient holds Marseille to a 1-1 draw in France

Marseille dropped two valuable points in the French title race on Sunday when it was held to a 1-1 draw by Lorient.

Following an impressive 3-0 win at Paris Saint-Germain last week, Marseille's draw meant it remained fourth with 49 points from 26 games.

League leader Bordeaux was playing second-place Montpellier in a much anticipated showdown later Sunday. Both teams have 51 points and defending champion Bordeaux, which has two games in hand, tops the league thanks to a better goal difference.

Marseille had a first chance in the 15th minute when playmaker Lucho Gonzalez picked out Mamadou Niang, only to see the Senegal striker missing the target …

US man bails on 7th solo try to round Cape Horn

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SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — An 84-year-old American who put out an emergency distress signal while making his seventh attempt to sail alone around the tip of South America was picked up by a Japanese merchant ship and awaiting evacuation by the Chilean navy on Thursday.

Thomas Louis Corogin was in good health after being plucked from his 32-foot sailboat on Wednesday more than 520 miles south of Easter Island, the navy said.

A lawyer who runs a small marina in Port Clinton, Ohio, Corogin set sail from Easter Island on Dec. 27. He activated his emergency beacon on Tuesday morning, prompting the navy to send out an Orion search and rescue plane, which searched a vast expanse of ocean.

The plane had to return to Easter Island and refuel before going out again and spotting the tiny boat, Captain Jorge Bastias, the navy's top spokesman, told The Associated Press.

It was stranded in relatively stable weather, but with ocean swells of about 15 feet.

The Navy then arranged for a Japanese merchant ship, the White Kingdom, to rescue the sailor Wednesday night. A Navy helicopter with a medical team is expected to land on the ship and pick him up Saturday morning, the navy said.

Corogin had multiple mishaps during this adventure. He had also sent an email saying he was briefly hospitalized in Ecuador with a cut to his leg, said a friend and fellow sailor, Jack Majszak.

"Tom is the most unique person I've ever met," said Majszak, who invited Corogin to lecture to his Modern Sailing School and Club in Sausalito, Calif., last year after meeting with him in the Panama Canal.

Majszak described Corogin as an experienced sailor and storyteller who felt comfortable on his Westsail32, a boat known for its stability more than its speed. Corogin had written a spy novel, "Agape."

Rex Damschroder, a sailor and state lawmaker from Ohio who considers Corogin a sailing mentor as well as a friend, said it had always been Corogin's dream to sail around Cape Horn.

He never gave up on the idea despite past failed attempts, Damschroder said.

"Each time he's had different issues, whether mechanical or physical," Damschroder said. "He might be 84, but he's got the body and stamina of someone much younger."

Damschroder, who's from Fremont, Ohio, said he and his friend sailed across the Atlantic Ocean together in 2005, making their way to Ireland.

"I've sailed and spent a lot of time with Tom, he knows what he's doing," said Damschroder, who added that some of his equipment is on Corogin's boat, including an anchor and life raft. "It's risky for anyone of any age. I'd take him over any 20-year-old sailing."

___

Associated Press writers Michael Warren contributed to this story from Buenos Aires, Argentina, and John Seewer from Toledo, Ohio. Warren can be reached at www.twitter.com/mwarrenap

Hammel throws 8 sharp innings, scores only run

Jason Hammel pitched eight sharp innings and scored the only run as the Colorado Rockies beat the Toronto Blue Jays 1-0 Saturday night in a rare low-scoring game at Coors Field.

It was only the ninth 1-0 game at Denver since the ballpark opened in 1995. The previous one came last July 6 when the Rockies beat Washington.

Hammel (4-3) was masterful all night. He allowed just three hits, struck out six and walked three in his longest outing of the season.

Hammel provided the lone run he and the Rockies needed in the sixth. He led off with a walk, went to third on Todd Helton's one-out single and scored on a sacrifice fly by Carlos Gonzalez.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

REGIONAL

Hi Lo Otlk

Akron 51 51 Rain

Charlotte 64 59 Rain

Cincinnati 44 46 Rain

Cleveland 52 49 Rain

Columbus,Ohio 47 49 Rain

Dayton 42 44 Cldy

Daytona Beach 80 59 PCldy

Greensboro,N.C. 62 53 Cldy

Lexington 48 48 Snow

Louisville 48 48 Snow

Norfolk. 70 55 Cldy

Philadelphia 63 50 Rain

Pittsburgh 56 52 Rain

Raleigh-Durham 66 54 Cldy

Richmond 65 50 Rain

Washington,D.C. 59 51 Rain

Youngstown 51 51 Rain

Hundreds march against government in Jordan

AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — Hundreds of Jordanians inspired by Egypt's uprising on Friday staged a protest against Jordan's prime minister, installed just days earlier in response to anti-government marches.

However, Jordan's main Muslim opposition group said it wants to give the new leader a chance to carry out promised political reforms, and Friday's turnout was much smaller than in previous protests against rising prices.

The scenes of mass protests in Egypt have riveted the Arab world, and unrest has spread to other countries, most recently Yemen where tens of thousands on Thursday called on their long-time president to step down.

However, expectations of large-scale protests in Arab countries after Friday's noon prayers, the highlight of the Muslim religious week, did not materialize.

In Syria, where authoritarian President Bashar Assad has resisted calls for political freedoms, an online campaign calling for protests in the capital, Damascus, fizzled. Plainclothes police deployed in key areas of Damascus on Friday, and no protesters showed up.

In Iraq, residents seizing on the Egypt protests staged two small demonstrations to protest corruption in their own security forces, rampant unemployment and scant electricity and water supply.

About 100 Iraqis gathered in central Baghdad's famous Mutanabi book market to complain about limited civil liberties and a lack of services. "No to the restriction of freedoms," read one of their banners.

Iraqi clerics warned leaders to heed public frustrations, or potentially face an uprising like those in Egypt and, a month earlier, in Tunisia.

Later Friday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki appeared to address those concerns, at least symbolically, saying he planned to cut in half his annual salary. He is believed to make at least $360,000 a year.

The march in the Jordanian capital of Amman on Friday was far smaller than previous anti-government protests. Jordan's King Abdullah II has tried to pre-empt further unrest by sacking his Cabinet earlier this week and installing a new prime minister, Marouf al-Bakhit, amid promises of political reform.

The Islamic Action Front, the political arm of Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood, said it is confident about change after meeting with the king and al-Bakhit, said a leader of the group, Nimer al-Assaf.

"We are very optimistic that change will happen," al-Assaf said after Friday prayers at a mosque near the prime minister's office where the activists gathered.

He said the opposition would give the new government a chance and that he did not expect further protests.

Friday's protesters in Amman included Islamists and supporters of other opposition groups.

Small protests took place in three other towns in Jordan.

"We want jobs and an end to corruption, which is making government officials rich on the expense of poor people like me," said unemployed Mahmoud Abu-Seif, 29, who joined some 150 marchers in the city of Karak.

Across the Muslim world, worshippers and leading clerics expressed support for the uprising in Egypt, where huge crowds of protesters have been pressing for President Hosni Mubarak's ouster.

In Malaysia's biggest city, Kuala Lumpur, hundreds marched outside the U.S. Embassy, calling on the U.S. to pressure Mubarak to resign immediately. Protesters, including many from Malaysia's Islamic opposition party, shouted "Down, down, Mubarak."

Police used water canons to break up the crowd and arrested several demonstrators. Police in Malaysia, a country with a Muslim majority, regularly break up protests deemed illegal.

Several thousand worshippers rallied outside a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, in solidarity with the Egyptian protesters. "No to dictatorship," read a huge banner hanging from a wall of the Beyazit mosque.

In the Turkish capital, Ankara, dozens of protesters marched toward Egypt's embassy. One of the speakers, Mehmet Pamak, head of the pro-Islamic Scientific and Cultural Research Foundation, branded Mubarak a puppet of Israel.

Egypt was the first Arab country to sign a peace treaty with Israel.

In Iran, top leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told worshippers that Mubarak betrayed his people because of his close alliance with Israel and the U.S.

"America's control over Egypt's leaders has ... turned Egypt into the biggest enemy of Palestine and turned it into the greatest refuge for Zionists," Khamenei said.

"This explosion we see among the people of Egypt is the appropriate response to this great betrayal that the traitor dictator committed against his people," Khamenei said, without mentioning Mubarak by name.

Iran has portrayed the unrest in Egypt as a replay of the 1979 Iranian Revolution that toppled the pro-U.S. Shah and brought Islamic militants to power.

While Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood is perhaps most organized of the opposition factions, the protests have been driven by a loose alliance of diverse groups, including young, secular Egyptians.

The Brotherhood, which is officially banned, calls for rule by Islamic law in Egypt. But it has also cast itself in an uneasy partnership with pro-democracy advocate Mohamed ElBaradei and other opposition groups.

In Madrid, members of the Spanish branch of the human rights group Amnesty International handed the Egyptian Embassy what they said was a petition with 86,000 signatures supporting the Egyptian protesters.

Amnesty International members gathered outside the embassy and held up a banner that read "A New Egypt With Human Rights."

___

Associated Press writers Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Zeina Karam in Damascus, Lara Jakes in Baghdad and Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to this report.

Midwest exports and the declining dollar--some myths die hard

During the last decade and a half, a restructuring in the Midwest's manufacturing sector has contributed to a resurgence in the region's economic strength. Important to this renewed economic vitality has been the rapid growth in the volume of international trade and the increased ability of Midwest manufacturing industries to compete more effectively in export markets.

The coincidence of this economic recovery with the growth in export markets contributed to a widely held view that the resurgence in manufacturing in the Midwest and elsewhere was importantly attributable to the sharp depreciation of the dollar during the 1985-87 period and the continued gradual depreciation of the dollar since then. In short, the dollar's depreciation is viewed as materially contributing to Midwest manufacturing industries' ability to compete in export markets.1

Without question, export markets have become more important to the U.S. economy during the past two decades. Moreover, the dollar value of manufactured goods exported from the Midwest increased more than fivefold between 1969 and 1991.2 However, it is not clear that the strength of Midwest export growth since 1988, and in turn the resurgence of Midwest manufacturing, is largely due to the depreciation of the dollar. Indeed, taken as a whole, we find that Midwest manufacturing export industries currently face a real aggregate foreign exchange value for the dollar that is higher than was the case in 1970, the last full year prior to the 1971 dollar devaluation and the subsequent floating of the dollar in foreign exchange markets. This Chicago Fed Letter explores this unconventional view. We refer only to manufacturing industries and their exports to foreign markets. Application of these results to international markets-that is, sales to domestic markets as well as foreign markets-is not appropriate.

Numerous interrelated factors affect the ability of an industry/country to compete in export markets. They include: the relative openness of the economies; the extent and quality of infrastructure; productivity levels; unit labor costs; the variety and quality of products available; the relative rates of inflation; and values of exchange for the relevant currencies. If one accepts the proposition that such factors affect the relative competitiveness of countries in export markets, it seems reasonable to expect that they might also differentially influence the relative competitiveness of different regions within a country. In this article, we define a new measurement of one of those factors; we examine whether different U.S. regions face different exchange rates.

At any given time, there is only one exchange rate for the U.S. dollar relative to any other currency. However, we contend that different regions of the U.S., because of differences in industrial makeup and the different foreign markets to which their industries export, face different composite exchange rates. Thus, a general observation that "the dollar is depreciating" in foreign currency markets may have different implications for different regions. We examine this issue by constructing a set of real export-weighted, aggregate dollar exchange rate indexes identified by region and by industry.

Why aggregate dollar indexes?

Since the abandonment of the Bretton Woods fixed dollar-exchange standard in 1973, the foreign exchange markets have been primarily defined by a floating exchange rate regime. Against some currencies, the dollar has depreciated, against others it has appreciated, and against still others it has remained fixed. The primary rationale for an aggregate dollar index is that exchange rate movements across time and countries are neither uniform in magnitude nor in direction of change. Overall, has the U.S. dollar lost or gained in value in foreign exchange markets? Since August 1971, when the first (post World War II) de facto dollar devaluation occurred, the common perception has been that the foreign exchange value of the dollar has trended downward (except for a dramatic appreciation followed by an equally dramatic depreciation during the first half of the 1980s). Is this perception accurate?

One approach to answering this question has been to construct aggregate trade-weighted currency indexes to obtain a representative average measure of a currency's exchange rate. Using various methodologies, these aggregate indexes measure what has happened to the overall foreign exchange value of the index currency. Characteristic of all such indexes is the incorporation of a weighting scheme to identify and measure the relative importance of various trading partners in a country's overall international trade.

Some aggregate indexes also incorporate a real adjustment for relative changes in inflation, production costs, or unit labor costs. This adjustment is done to more accurately isolate changes in competitiveness that are associated with changes in exchange rate values, apart from differences in inflation or productivity across countries.

Why regions?

The premise underlying a regional dollar index is that there are differences in the foreign markets served by different regions of the U.S., which influence their terms of trade. In large part, these differences derive from variations across regions in industrial mix and the regions' proximity to foreign markets. To the extent that exchange rate changes vary across countries, one might expect a region's goods exports (and associated economic activity) to be differentially affected by exchange rate movements.

A comparison of export shares of major export market destinations among the U.S. regions and the nation reflects the kind of diversity one might expect in regional aggregate exchange rates. The Midwest ships nearly 56% of its manufactured goods exports to Canada and Mexico, and a little over 18% to Japan and major Western European markets. The U.S. in total ships only 33% of its manufactured exports to Canada and Mexico, while it ships about 27% to major European markets and Japan. In short, Midwest exporters of manufactured goods depend more heavily on those foreign markets where the dollar has appreciated (Canada and Mexico) relative to U.S. exporters overall.

The regional index

We have constructed indexes for eight geographic regions, and the U.S. total.3 The indexes incorporate currencies of 44 countries plus the U.S. dollar, which is the target currency.4 Trade weights applied to the individual currencies are based on the average of 1993/1994 manufactured goods exports by state to the 44 countries by industry.5 Industry classifications are based on twodigit manufacturing standard industrial classifications. Separate indexes are constructed for durable goods, nondurable goods, and total manufactured goods sectors. The real adjustment is based on rates of inflation (producer prices) in the U.S. relative to the other countries included in the indexes.6 In total, 27 indexes are constructed in the study-three industry classifications for each of the nine geographical classifications. Only three geographical regions are referred to in this article: U.S. total, Midwest, and Far West.7

What do the aggregate indexes show?

The perception that the foreign exchange value of the dollar followed a secular downward trend (with the exception of the major aberration during 1980-87) during the past 25 years has been influenced by developments in the yen/dollar and deutsche mark/ dollar relationship during that period (figure 1 ) . At the same time, however, the U.S. dollar recorded a secular appreciation against the currencies of several other major U.S. trading partners, including Canada, the United Kingdom (figure 1), and Mexico-important destinations for Midwest exports.

Some have argued that international competition was a major factor in forcing the restructuring of U.S. manufactured goods industries during the 1980s, especially those in the Midwest.

Important to this argument is the dramatic appreciation of the dollar that occurred during the first half of the 1980s (figure 1). In the span of five years, the deterioration in U.S. manufacturing's competitive position left the sector with two hard choices: Restructure to become a viable competitor in world markets or close up shop. Because of the importance and composition of manufacturing in the Midwest, this development was critical to the region's economy.8 Proponents of this view suggest that the subsequent depreciation of the dollar during 1985-88 and into the mid-1990s importantly contributed to the rejuvenation of Midwest industry. It is further argued that expanding export markets, encouraged by a cheaper dollar, were critical to that rejuvenation.

Was a depreciating dollar a meaningful contributor to the increased competitiveness of the Midwest in export markets? Contrary to the common perception, with regard to manufactured goods exports from the Midwest, the results of our work suggest that the real dollar did not continue a depreciating trend following the large gyrations recorded during 1980-87. In fact, the aggregate Midwest exportweighted real dollar index for manufactured goods shows an appreciating trend, not only for the 1988-96 period, but from 1970 to 1996 (figure 2). This appreciation is due primarily to the fact that Midwest manufactured goods exports to Canada and Mexico dominate goods exports from the region. On the other hand, these two markets have a smaller impact on the U.S. total; about one-third of U.S. manufactured goods exports go to Canada and Mexico. The aggregate export-weighted index for the U.S. shows a modest appreciating trend during 1970-96 but is virtually flat during the 1988-96 period. Regional differences also show up in the aggregate indexes. The durable goods index, for example, shows a substantial contrast between the Midwest and Far West regions (figure 3). The Far West's regional dollar has depreciated, as one might expect, given that the area relies relatively heavily on the Japanese market.

Summary

Aggregate exchange rate indexes have the potential to give a more balanced overall view of the dollar's exchange rate changes relative to other major currencies. While it is true that U.S. industries engaged in export trade face a common external border and a common set of national exchange rates, from a regional perspective the specific set of exchange rates faced may be quite different.

Our research suggests that in the aggregate, Midwest manufactured goods exporters by the nature of their foreign markets and their heavy concentration in durable goods industries have, in fact, faced an appreciating dollar since the late 1980s. Indeed, except for the 1980-87 blip in the dollar, Midwest exporters have faced an appreciating-trend dollar since early 1974. As of mid-1996, the real dollar exchange rate faced by the aggregate of durable goods manufacturing exporters located in the Midwest stood 17% higher than in 1974 and 4% higher than in 1970. Furthermore, since 1988, the Midwest export-weighted dollar has generally strengthened. In June 1996, the index stood nearly 7% above its 1988 level. In sum, given its foreign export markets, it appears that not only has the Midwest increased its export competitiveness without the help of a depreciating dollar, it has done so in the face of an appreciating real dollar.

[Reference]

Chicago Fed Letter is available without charge from the Public Information Center, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, P.O. Box 834, Chicago, Illinois 60690-0834, tel. 312-322-5111 or fax 312-322-5515. Chicago Fed Letter is also available on the World Wide Web at http:// www.frbchi.org. ISSN 0895-0164

[Author Affiliation]

-Jack L. Hervey Senior economist William A. Strauss Senior economist

[Author Affiliation]

Michael H. Moskow, President William C. Hunter, Senior Vice President and Director of Research; Douglas Evanoff, Assistant Vice President, financial studies; Charles Evans, Assistant Vice President, macroeconomic policy research; Daniel Sullivan, Assistant Vice President, microeconomic policy research William Testa, Assistant Vice President, regional programs; Anne Weaver, Manager, administration; Helen O'D. Koshy, Editor.

Chicago Fed Letter is published monthly by the Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. The views expressed are the authors' and are not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago or the Federal Reserve System. Articles may be reprinted if the source is credited and the Research Department is provided with copies of the reprints.

Pope rests in Alps

Caption only.

Egyptian border guards kill African migrant

An Egyptian medical official says border guards have killed an African migrant trying to cross illegally into Israel.

Imad Kharboush, head of the emergency unit at El-Arish Hospital, says border guards shot the 27-year-old migrant Friday, injuring him in the knee. The shooting occurred about six miles (10 kilometers) south of the Rafah crossing with the Gaza Strip. Kharboush says the man bled to death.

Many African migrants have tried to cross into Israel to seek political asylum and jobs. They are often helped by Bedouin human traffickers.

Help for inventors on the Internet

Most people, it's often said, have at least one book in them. And it's probably also true that many people think that if they put their minds to it, they could come up with at least one good invention, as well-a real money maker. Who hasn't marveled at some simple, popular device and thought, "I should have thought of that, it's so obvious." But, if profitable ideas were so easily realized, well, we'd all be Bill Gates.

Truth is, inventing may come easy to some, but commercializing those ideas is an arduous, usually unsuccessful venture. Each week, the U.S. Patent Office issues about 18,000 new patents. But only three to five percent of patents granted become commercial successes. That's because many inventors don't understand business and haven't a clue as to how to sell their brainstorms. That also makes them susceptible to rip-off artists- dubious brokers who charge stiff upfront fees and promise to successfully market ideas.

Now the Internet has come to the rescue. A number of Web sites are available to give inventors-from serious professionals to part-time, garage-shop tinkerers-good, sound advice and information. Topping the list is PatentCafe.com, the brainchild of Andy Gibbs, a successful inventor/entrepreneur He first went online with free information in 1996 as GibbsGroup Inventors' Resources, which was based on his own personal library of data. The site morphed into the commercial PatentCafe in February 1999. Gibbs' revenue streams are advertising and sales of PatentCafe Magazine and other products. It still offers, however, reams of free information. Gibbs brags that, "There is no other site out there with as much breadth and depth, not even the Patent Office's Entrepreneur Magazine, which called it the 'category killer."' The site ineludes patent, trademark, copyright, and intellectual property directories, as well as other information, advice, and community networking.

The Inventors Assistance League, www.inventions.org, is the online extension of a group that's been in business as a nonprofit organization since 1963. The IAL considers itself primarily a teaching organization, and sells a home-study course, but it makes available some online resources for free. And it soon plans to offer cyber courses for budding inventors. Yet another site is InventNet.com, which is also a nonprofit organization that charges an annual membership fee.

Inventors, however, should remember that scam artists also operate online, and they should stay away from brokers who want their fee upfront. As Gibbs says, success in inventing requires learning how business works. "It takes a lot of reading, a lot of research and a lot of hard work."

Lievremont wants one last hangover as France coach

AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) — Marc Lievremont has only one wish left heading into final against New Zealand — to wake up with a hangover on Monday as the first French coach to win the Rugby World Cup.

Lievremont berated his players as "spoilt brats" last week for defying his orders and going out celebrating after the narrow 9-8 semifinal win over Wales.

He certainly won't stand in the way of any celebrations if the French beat New Zealand in what would be a huge upset.

France lost two pool matches, one to New Zealand and the other to Tonga, and squeaked past 14-man Wales in the semis, while the All Blacks have won every game convincingly and head into Eden Park as overwhelming favorites.

Lievremont played down the pressure on his team to defy the odds, and on the fact this is his last game in charge of France — he will step down after the tournament, whatever the result.

"There are worse things in life, I am feeling good, I am relaxed, I'm focused and I'm trying to appreciate these last moments," Lievremont said, adding that he would like "to wake up with a hangover" on Monday as world champion.

"We had our last training session yesterday, our last video session this morning," Lievremont added. "Now I'm handing it over to the captain and the players and really it is all down to them now."

Lievremont's World Cup has been almost like a separate event in itself.

His frank talking and sometimes brutal chiding of his players, the constant talk of rifts with them, and his sometimes sarcastic barbs toward the media, have provided many headlines.

On Saturday, he seemed to have few regrets about calling an end to his coaching career.

"To be honest, I would like it all to be over now, at this point, but for it to end well," he said. "All the moments this week have been last moments with me. Last moments with staff ... and this is the last press conference, it's going to be heartbreaking to drag myself away from you!"

Few critics have given France much chance of winning in the build-up to Sunday's match, while some local press took to speculating that France would resort to foul play if things start going against them at Eden Park.

Lievremont afforded himself a dismissive, wry smile when asked what he thought of the allegations of eye gouging made by former All Blacks forward Wayne Shelford regarding the 1999 semifinal against France.

When that question was followed with apparent claims that the French players would deliberately try and target flanker Richie McCaw's nagging foot injury, Lievremont responded with bristling sarcasm.

"That's something I forgot to mention to my players, thanks for bringing it up," he said. "More seriously, I think the French team is one of the most, if not most, disciplined team in the competition. At no point on or off the pitch have we been guilty of anything like this, the players have been more than respectful."

Whether or not France wins on Sunday, Lievremont will certainly have made his mark as one of the most charismatic and outspoken coaches to have graced a World Cup.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Affordable housing call as plan refused

Plans for four new homes on a controversial site off Ham Street,Baltonsborough, have been turned down by Mendip's Planning Board.

Members of the board, along with Baltonsborough Parish Counciland residents condemned the latest scheme put forward by Flower andHayes Developments for its lack of provision for much neededaffordable housing in the village and loss of employment land.

Permission granted six years ago on appeal for four homes on theformer employment site has now lapsed.

And the new application from the developers for the site wasvirtually identical to that lapsed scheme, councillors heard.

The site off Ham Street is bounded by a laboratory and nurseriesto the south and homes in Archbishop Close to the west.

Baltonsborough Parish Council argued that the new application forfour homes coupled with existing previous permissions for 11 homeswould bring the total to 15 which would trigger a requirement for on-site affordable housing.

The site had, said planning officer Dan Foster, a very longplanning history.

However, he said that bearing in mind the background history itwould be difficult to insist affordable housing should be part ofthe new application.

He recommended approval of the scheme.

But planning board chairman Nigel Woollcombe-Adams argued thecouncil's attitude towards developers fulfilling their obligationsand providing affordable housing has hardened.

Affordable housing was now a top priority for the council andFlowers and Hayes had made no provision towards it with their latestscheme, he said.

He also urged the council's environmental health officer toinvestigate residents' complaints of noise nuisance at the site.

Councillor Nigel Taylor agreed - he said developers were"blatantly walking away from" their duties of providing affordablehousing.

Mrr Nigel Hewitt-Cooper said the controversy over what is builtat the site had been going on long enough.

He too supported the need for affordable homes.

"Where are our kids going to live?" he said.

The board unanimously refused the applications on the grounds oflack of provision of affordable housing in the scheme.

They also authorised the council's enforcement officer toinvestigate complaints of noise nuisance at the site.

Daley's son displays heartwarming valor The architects of this war have failed to support our troops.

Even when you don't know someone, it's easy sometimes to feel asthough you do.

So it was Tuesday morning as I unwrapped my Sun-Times and saw thesmiling picture of Patrick Daley and read Michael Sneed's scoop.Mayor Daley's 29-year-old son, she wrote, had enlisted in the Armyand was ready to go off to war in Iraq.

I've never met Patrick Daley, but from a reporter's distance havewatched him grow up. Just about every four years across many electionnights, Patrick Daley has stood beside his sisters, Nora andElizabeth, and their mother Maggie as Rich Daley addressed a crowd ofsupporters. Through that limited lens, like other Chicagoans, I'vewatched him go from a little kid to a gawky teenager to a handsomeyoung man whose features favor his mother.

Maybe because I too am a mother of a military-age son, my firstthought was of Maggie. What did she say and how did she react whenPatrick first told her his news?

Mayor Daley, who guards against questions about his family withthe vigilance of a pit bull, was of course asked that at a pressconference Tuesday. "Like anything else, that's her son," he said, "Imean you read the paper today and, you know, you think about all thesons and daughters in the military today."

I'm guessing that means she's pretty worried. And who wouldn't be?

As I write this, today's story from the Associated Press is whatgives any soldier's family sleepless nights and knotted stomachs. Itsays, "The U.S. military death toll for November equalled the highestfor any month of the war, according to casualty reports availableTuesday." That is to say, 135 of our soldiers died last month,raising the death toll to 1,254 Americans. American wounded? 9,326.

Reporters asked if the mayor tried to discourage his son fromsigning up. Or tried to advise him on what to do. On this, the mayorwas adamant. Absolutely not. "I'm proud of the decision he made. . .. Duty, honor, country, that's what he wants to do."

Patrick, who just graduated with honors from the University ofChicago with an MBA, is a prime candidate for a big job in thefinancial district. But the mayor, before his press conference began,said, "He's not interested in owning three or four Mercedes. That'snot him."

That's impressive. As are all the men and women currently servingin Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere in the world.

When I see those yellow magnetic ribbons on cars that read, "Isupport our troops," I find myself mentally crying out, "Whodoesn't?"

I support our troops with all my heart.

It's this war I don't believe in.

And there is a difference.

To send our soldiers to fight means we were honor-bound to tellthem the truth about why they're there.

We didn't.

You know the litany by now so I'll keep it short: no weapons ofmass destruction, no links to al-Qaida, and a less imminent threat tothe safety and security of the United States than is posed this veryminute by Iran or North Korea.

Beyond that, if we are going to send our sons and daughters intoharm's way, we damn well better send them with adequate body armor,fully fortified Humvees and in great enough numbers to limit as bestwe can the carnage of this war.

And one more thing. When some of them die or are permanentlywounded, we need to be sure that there is sufficient medical andfinancial support for them or their surviving families in recognitionof their enormous sacrifice.

On every one of those counts, the architects of this war, GeorgeBush, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld, have materially failed tosupport our troops.

Maybe that's why, when I saw Patrick Daley's picture in the paper,I immediately thought of his mother. I know she's worried sick. Weall should be.

Rookie Favors leads Nets in exhibition opener

NEWARK, New Jersey (AP) — Rookie Derrick Favors had 14 points and nine rebounds to lead the New Jersey Nets to a 108-70 exhibition victory over Israel's Maccabi Haifa on Sunday.

Favors, the No. 3 pick in the draft, energized the Nets with three dunks in the opening period. He scored 12 points in the first half as the Nets took a 56-43 lead.

Newcomer Anthony Morrow also scored 14 points. Devin Harris had 12, Brook Lopez and Travis Outlaw each added 11, and Johan Petro 10.

Morrow made four 3-pointers. He hit two straight 3-pointers in the opening stages of the third quarter, giving New Jersey a 64-45 lead with 10:06 remaining in the period.

Sylven Landesburg scored 24 points for Maccabi Haifa, which was playing in the United States for the first time.

Kevin Costner takes Oscars to the hills

Kevin Costner - whose "Dances With Wolves" won seven AcademyAwards last month - his wife, Cindy, and their three children aresettling into their newly built home in the foothills near Glendale,Calif.

The 6,500-square-foot house has five bedrooms, four fireplaces,a viewing room with a hidden screen and movie projector, and anoffice for the Oscar winner.

The Costners' home has a swimming pool and about 75 pine andeucalyptus trees, which can be viewed from verandas and curved wallsof glass.

"We didn't want to cut down any of the trees, so we didn't,"said John McInnes, the architect-builder. "One tree is 100 yearsold, and many are 30 to 40 feet tall."

McInnes has known the Costners since the late 1970s when theactor was a framer on a house McInnes designed. Until they movedinto their new home, the Costners lived in the small Pasadena housewhere they were living when McInnes met them.

"Kevin said then that two things were going to happen: first,that he was going to make it big in the entertainment industry, andsecond, that he'd have me design a house for them," McInnes recalled.

He remembers spending years helping the Costners find a site,which they bought about four years ago.

"Cindy wanted an Old World, European-style residence, and Kevinwanted a rustic, natural environment where blue jeans, cowboy bootsand a T-shirt wouldn't look out of place," McInnes said.

The end result is an Italian Mediterranean villa, which cost abit less than $1 million to build and landscape. "It's not glitzy,"McInnes said. "It's a country retreat."

Iraqi Police Say Car Bomb Kills 22

HILLAH, Iraq - A suicide bomb hidden in a minivan exploded in this southern Iraqi city near a crowd of men waiting to be hired as day laborers on Sunday, killing 22 and wounding 44, many of them seriously, police said.

The minivan approached the crowd of men in central Hillah, a mostly Shiite city 60 miles south of Baghdad, and exploded as they gathered around it, said police Capt. Muthanna Khalid Ali.

Unemployment is high across Iraq, and men often struggle to feed their families by working jobs such as the construction work the Hillah residents were seeking.

"The sudden explosion shook the whole area and shattered the windows of a store I was standing outside of nearby," said Muhsin Hadi Alwan, 33, one of the wounded day laborers. "The ground was covered with the remains of people and blood, and survivors ran in all directions."

"How will I feed the six members of my family when I return home without work and without money?" Alwan said.

Another survivor, Mohammed Abbas Kadhim, 30, said: "I was thrown a few meters by the blast and I couldn't see or hear for a few minutes as I was laying on the ground. "People were racing everywhere looking for their missing sons, brothers, friends - all of them shouting 'God is great.'"

As they spoke, firefighters raced to the scene to put out the burning vehicle. Soldiers also gathered there, in part to guard heavily damaged shops and stalls from scavengers.

Hillah has been the site of many deadly bomb attacks.

In August, an explosives-rigged bicycle blew up near an army recruiting center in the city, killing at least 12 people. The attacker, who was posing as an army applicant, left the bike at the center as volunteers gathered outside.

In May, a car packed with explosives blew up at a dealership in Hillah, killing at least 12 people and wounding 32.

Hillah also was the site of one of the worst bomb attacks to occur in Iraq since the war started, when a suicide car bomber killed 125 national guard and police recruits in February 2005.

Man's size will test the Dons

There have been few state championship games featuring teams withnicknames as tied - perhaps negatively - to the geography of theirschools like the Class A football title game scheduled for Saturdaynight in Wheeling.

Blue Dons? Hillbillies?

Politically correctness can be chucked out the window, the tiltbetween No. 1 seed Madonna (13-0) and No. 2 seed Man (12-1) shapesup as a potentially classic finale to the Super Six.

Madonna suddenly finds itself as an insider on Wheeling Island,having played in two title games this decade but coming up on theshort end of losses to Wheeling Central (2004) and Williamstown(2008). Man, a former power in Class AA, has not played in the SuperSix since 1984, when the event was at Laidley Field.

"I tell you, it's kind of a hectic place here at school," ManCoach Harvey Arms said. "We've got the secretary tied up andeverything else. This is a new experience for me."

The teams played in the first round of the playoffs in 2004, withMadonna claiming a 47-0 win in Weirton. Arms said he sees plenty ofsimilarities between that Madonna team and this year's model.

"They don't look to be of great size, but they look really quickand aggressive on defense," Arms said. "I'm sure they're a realdisciplined team, and that they'll read their keys and get to theball. We played them in the first round in 2004, and found that tobe the case."

Madonna's speed will be pitted against the Hillbillies' size, ofwhich George Washington High Coach Steve Edwards Jr. said was equalor greater than that of many schools in the Mountain State AthleticConference.

Man scrimmaged GW in the preseason.

"I think size played a big part for us because our game is theground game, and we've been able to move people around in every gamewe've played so far in order to move the ball," Arms said.

"For us to be able to scrimmage someone like GW. It gave us achance to see what level we could compete on. That's been a goodthing for us the last couple of years."

The Hillibillies' offensive line, consisting of senior centerManny Gibson (5-foot-10, 244 pounds), senior guard Tyler Dunigon (6-0, 247), junior guard Zack Underwood (6-2, 222), junior tackle ChrisToler (6-1, 290) and junior tackle Zack Asbury (5-11, 264) pave theway for a four-pronged running attack. Running backs Michael Lomax(5-11, 206, sr.), his brother Derek Lomax (5-11, 182, jr.) splittime with seniors Brandon Plymale (5-11, 170) and Andrew Hale (5-8,170). The system of rotation has paid off in spades, Arms said.

Senior quarterback Ryan Crum (6-0, 165) has also figured heavilyinto the Hillbillies' running attack.

Plymale led the Hillbillies with 796 yards rushing in the regularseason.

Crum followed with 403 yards. Michael Lomax had 402 yards andDerek Lomax 398.

"That's been great for us. We've had a couple games where we'vehad players have to sit our because of being banged up, and itreally hasn't held us back any," Arms said. "The level that we'vebeen able to put on the field has been as good as what we hadinjured."

Arms added that the 48 players Man has on its roster is anabnormally large amount.

"There were a lot of times when we were double-A that we didn'thave 48 players," he said.

CRAIG CUNNINGHAM/DAILY MAIL Man senior center Manny Gibson (74)has helped pave the way for the Hillbillies running backs, includingAndrew Hale (18). Man is 12-1 entering the Class A statechampionship game Saturday at Wheeling Island Stadium againstMadonna (13-0).

Reunion likely a boost for economy

About half of the 2,000 or so South Charleston High School alumniand friends expected to take part in the SCHS Grand Reunion July 22-25 are expected to come from out of town, generating a nearly $1million economic impact in the Kanawha Valley, according to eventorganizers.

The all-class reunion will be the fourth Grand Reunion. They'vebeen occurring at three- or four-year intervals since 1999. Aschedule of next month's event is posted online atwww.schsalumni.org.

* n n

Representatives of the Polymer Alliance Zone will pitch the stateat a trade show in New York City next week.

The representatives will market the state as an ideal locationfor plastic and polymer companies during the Plastec East TradeShow, which is expected to draw more than 20,000 visitors.

Zone President Karen Facemyer said in a prepared statement, "Ourmission at this event is to establish new or reignite existingrelationships with plastic industry companies, vendors and suppliersto let them know the benefits of establishing operations in WestVirginia. At the same time, we'll be collecting information on thelatest products and tools for the industry to bring back for thebenefit of our members."

The zone was established in 1996 by Gov. Gaston Caperton topromote the plastics industry in Jackson, Mason and Wood counties.

The state Development Office, the development authorities of Woodand Jackson counties, and the I-79 Development Council are alsoexpected to participate in the show.

* n n

Intrawest, the owner of Snowshoe Mountain Resort in PocahontasCounty, has sold another property.

The sale of Mountain Creek Resort in New Jersey to CrystalSprings Resort was finalized on May 27, said Intrawest spokesman IanGalbraith. Terms were not revealed.

Intrawest had acquired Mountain Creek in 1998. It is 47 milesfrom New York City.

"Today, the resort simply does not fit into Intrawest's long-term strategy to focus on a core set of resort properties andbusinesses," Galbraith said.

Intrawest announced in April that it had successfully completedthe refinancing of its corporate debt. The company sold its interestin Copper Mountain in Colorado in November; sold Panorama MountainVillage in British Columbia in January; and sold the Sandestin Golfand Beach Resort in Florida in February.

* n n

Select Energy Services, a Texas-based oilfield service and supplycompany, announced it has acquired Arvilla Oilfield Services andBuck Stone, oilfield service companies based in St. Marys.

Select said Arvilla and Buck Stone collectively add about $25million of revenue and 170 employees to its organization and give ita platform to expand its presence into the Marcellus Shale region.Select said it will provide additional capital to expand Arvilla andBuck Stone operations and introduce additional services.

Contact business editor George Hohmann at business@daily mail.comor 304-348-4836.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Where yen goes, so goes U.S. - and here's why

Tracking the course of the yen is becoming a favorite game thesedays among economists and other types who follow the currencymarkets.

Never mind the dollar's almost 30 percent drop against themark, the franc, the lira and a host of other currencies since lastSeptember.

It's the level of the yen - and all that means for the health ofthe economy of the United States' major competitor - that countsamong avid watchers.

Here, then, pronouncements on that subject by two people who canreasonably claim to have a top-notch handle on the yen's future:Hiroshi Takeuch, chief economist of the Long-Term Credit Bank ofJapan Ltd., and C. Fred Bergsten, director of …

Hurst, Kim lead LPGA Tour event in South Korea

INCHEON, South Korea (AP) — American Vicky Hurst and South Korea's Song-Hee Kim shot 4-under 68s in chilly conditions Friday to share the first-round lead in the LPGA Hana Bank Championship.

"It was really cold this morning," said Hurst. "I thought that it was going to be warmer today, but standing on the putting green, I was really cold. I just tried to keep warm starting out and stay steady because balls aren't going to be flying as far."

Hurst and Kim, both winless on the LPGA Tour, each had five birdies and a bogey on Sky 72 Golf Club's Ocean Course in the second of three straight events in Asia.

"I'm still young and will have a lot of chances to win," Kim said. "I …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

There are plenty of non-climbing things to do at Joshua Tree

NO DESIRE to batter your body climbing granite? Joshua TreeNational Park isn't just a rock climbers and boulderer's paradise.It offers thousands of acres to explore inside and outside of thepark.

Park highlights

During most winter days, a park ranger leads a tour around theold Desert Queen Ranch for $5 per adult and $2.50 for children 12and younger.

On one sunny December morning, Park Ranger Dar Spearing led the90-minute tour, holding pictures of the William Keys family in hishands.

William Keys and his wife spent 60 years on the Mojave ranch,raising five kids and starting up a number of businesses, includinga small store, lodging, junkyard and …

There are plenty of non-climbing things to do at Joshua Tree

NO DESIRE to batter your body climbing granite? Joshua TreeNational Park isn't just a rock climbers and boulderer's paradise.It offers thousands of acres to explore inside and outside of thepark.

Park highlights

During most winter days, a park ranger leads a tour around theold Desert Queen Ranch for $5 per adult and $2.50 for children 12and younger.

On one sunny December morning, Park Ranger Dar Spearing led the90-minute tour, holding pictures of the William Keys family in hishands.

William Keys and his wife spent 60 years on the Mojave ranch,raising five kids and starting up a number of businesses, includinga small store, lodging, junkyard and …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Nominate a Peer for ICABC Fellowship

Call for Nominations - Election of Fellows of Chartered Accountants

Each year, members are asked to identify peers who have demonstrated outstanding leadership and rendered distinguished service to the profession, and to nominate them for election to the Institute's Fellowship. The "FCA" recognizes a CA's leadership and outstanding performance in at least two of five areas, as detailed in number three of the official procedures.

FCA Nomination forms are available on the Institute's website at www.ica.bc.ca under Member Centre/Forms and Dues/Member Recognition/Nomination Forms. Alternatively, you can access the form directly at www.ica.bc.ca/pdf/fca_nomination.pdfor by …

Eco-friendly infant care gains momentum in U.S. market.(Brief article)

NEW YORK -- With consumers concerned about the environment and the possibility of toxic chemicals in the items used by babies, suppliers and retailers are paying more attention to so-called eco-friendly products.

A trend that started several years ago in Europe, eco-friendly baby care is quickly catching on in the United States and Canada. While confined mostly to specialty stores and a handful of mass market retailers, including Costco Wholesale Corp. and Whole Foods Market Inc., the trend is starting to catch on as drug chains across the country begin to add alternative diapers, toys and a host of other baby needs to their mix.

Among the suppliers that are helping …

Four men add tropical spice to city's gardens.(Life - Family)

Byline: DENNIS GAFFNEY Special to the Times Union

As the early morning sun peeks over Albany's downtown, two city vans and a pick-up truck roll into Washington Park, and four men - Pedro Maria, Jose Macarrulla, Bernie Fana and his son, Robert Fana - step out near the Moses statue. They unload flats of impatiens, and in no time, the unofficial crew boss, Bernie Fana, who is 65-years old, is guiding a small Rototiller through the black-soiled bed shaped like a circle. When that's done, he jabs holes with a hand trowel to make room for the packed roots. The other men follow suit, but know they're no match for Fana, who leads not with commands, but by example.

"We call him `The Machine,' says Macarrulla, 38, "because he never stops working."

All four gardeners are from the Dominican Republic, and they serve as the right-hand men to Judy Stacey, the city gardener. When she took her post six years ago, she …

Navistar Seeks Flexibility.(Navistar International Corp.)(Credit Suisse Group)(Brief article)

Navistar International Corp. announced last Wednesday that it is seeking an amendment to its previously announced $1.5 billion, three-year senior unsecured term loan, arranged by Credit Suisse with Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan.

The amendment to the facility, currently guaranteed by parent company International Truck and Engine Corp., would provide Navistar with additional flexibility, in part allowing it to borrow its remaining loan balance by August 9, 2006, and then place those funds in escrow to repay, discharge or cure existing defaults under its outstanding 2.5% senior convertible notes by December 21, 2006, according to a company release.

EU foreign policy chief: No agreement between Iran and 6 powers, no plans for new talks

ISTANBUL (AP) — EU foreign policy chief: No …

Pesto gives glow to sunset days of summer

Basil is the herb synonymous with summer. It signals the heightof summer the way asparagus does spring. Its fresh, grassy aroma anddelicate flavor complement seasonal produce, poultry and fish.

I use as much basil in the summer as I can, knowing that theseason is short and that hot-house winter basil is expensive andsomehow seems not as robust.

During August and September when my backyard tomatoes are attheir peak, I often make a meal of tomato, anchovy and mozzarellaslices with minced basil, oil and lemon juice. My food processor isin constant use to make pesto, the fragrant blend of basil, oil,garlic and pine nuts that I serve over spaghetti.

Now I …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Optimer's C. diff drug lures regional Astellas partnership.(Tuesday, Feb. 8)(Optimer Pharmaceuticals Inc.)(Astellas Pharma Europe Ltd.)(Brief article)

Worries that generic vancomycin could cut into the market potential for Optimer Pharmaceuticals Inc.'s Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) drug fidaxomicin have been eased somewhat, with Astellas Pharma Europe Ltd. jumping on board in a potential $224 million regional deal. Under the terms, San Diego-based Optimer will bank about $68 million up front, a much-needed cash infusion given that the late-stage firm had only about $59 million on its balance sheet as of Sept. 30. In exchange, Astellas gains rights to the next-generation macrolide antibiotic in Europe, where Optimer already has a marketing authorization application pending, and for certain areas in the Middle East and Africa …

Odds Danes will travel for NCAAs; Volleyball team could go to St. John's, Penn State.(Sports)

Byline: MARK SINGELAIS - Staff Writer

ALBANY - University at Albany senior Ashley Crenshaw was asked if she'd like to play at home again in the NCAA volleyball tournament.

"I probably want to go somewhere else," Crenshaw said Monday. "That (staying home) was fun, but everybody wants to travel, you know?"

She'll probably get her wish, according to UAlbany coach Kelly Sheffield, whose team won its second consecutive America East title by beating Stony Brook on Sunday.

Sheffield said it's unlikely UAlbany will be chosen again to serve as a first- and second-round site for the NCAAs, which begin on Nov. 29. The 64-team NCAA field will be …

CONFIDENCE IN GRAND JURY'S FINDINGS IN SHOOTING DEATH.(MAIN)

Byline: ROBERT M. CARNEY District Attorney Schenectady County

Fred LeBrun's recent critique of the grand jury investigation into the shooting death of 10-year-old Roarke Wooding by 15-year-old Scott O'Malley, in which he laments the ``hideous route'' to justice taken by ``overzealous prosecution,'' betrays a fundamental and cavalier ignorance of the facts and the process.

Mr. LeBrun suggests that the grand jury investigation was unnecessary or excessive because it was ``obvious'' after ``a couple of weeks of investigation'' that there was no ``criminal intent.'' Mr. LeBrun does not say what investigation he conducted or was privy to, or what facts made the …

Golf, tennis events to raise Spencer foundation funds.(RIMS 2006)

Byline: Joe Walker

Golf and tennis are on the agenda for sports enthusiasts at this year's Risk & Insurance Management Society Inc. conference, but skaters and runners will be left out, because the hockey tournament and the five-kilometer run/walk won't be making the trip to Hawaii.

According to organizers, the Spencer Cup hockey tournament will not be held because an informal survey of the tournament's regular players found that not enough of them were attending the Hawaii conference. The walk/run lacks a sponsor this year.

For the 15th consecutive year, Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. will sponsor the largest Spencer Educational Foundation fund-raiser, …

Bush to host Palestinian leader for farewell visit

President George W. Bush is hosting Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at the White House on Friday, another farewell visit for the U.S. president as his government tries to keep its Mideast peace initiative alive for his successor, Barack Obama.

White House press secretary Dana Perino said Tuesday that Bush wants to discuss shared efforts with Abbas, "including progress in building capable Palestinian institutions, fostering economic development, and training and deploying Palestinian security forces in the West Bank."

A year of …

Taking Jesus' peace to the 'frontier'

Hyo Sook Yun is hoping to learn all she can about Canadian Mennonites during her year in Canada. The South Korean arrived in Winnipeg in August and began an internship with the Mennonite Church Canada communications department.

Yun, 27, was placed with MC Canada through the Mennonite Central Committee International Volunteer Exchange Program (IVEP), a vocational and cultural exchange program for international young adults between the ages of 18 and 30.

This is Yun's first time in North America. "There are so many differences," she said. "I was living in Seoul, which is a very big and complicated city. But here [Winnipeg] it is so calm and peaceful. There are many trees. …

Flybe to launch services between Tampere and Tallinn.

AIRLINE INDUSTRY INFORMATION-(C)1997-2011 M2 COMMUNICATIONS

Regional European carrier Flybe on Friday announced plans to launch a new service between Tampere and Tallinn in its winter schedule.

From 30 October 2011 the carrier will fly twice a day between Tampere and Tallinn with one-way fares available from EUR39 including taxes and charges.

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

MORE TIME SOUGHT FOR SCHOOL HIRE.(Local)

Byline: Vincent Jackson Staff writer

The superintendent of city schools will recommend this month that the school board extend the deadline for applications for assistant superintendent of business and administration.

The board abolished the position of business manager this year after it fired Bruce Breton in December over charges of misconduct and incompetence. The job's responsibilities include the supervision of business functions and development of a standard of excellence for site-based management and budget.

Assistant Superintendent Lorenzo Licopoli said Friday that advertisements have not reached the professional organizations. The school …

Thursday's College Basketball

EAST

Bridgewater, Mass. 64, Mass. College 46

Cabrini 81, Baptist Bible 64

Cent. Connecticut St. 72, Wagner 64

Curry 69, Anna Maria 66

Delaware Valley 85, Alvernia 72

Dominican, N.Y. 77, Caldwell 73, OT

Elms 108, Mitchell 65

Felician 72, Chestnut Hill 63

Gordon 87, New England Coll. 58

Immaculata 81, Phila. Biblical 47

Kean 59, College of N.J. 54

Long Island U. 91, Fairleigh Dickinson 88, 2OT

Manhattanville 60, DeSales 55

Mansfield 80, East Stroudsburg 75

Molloy 75, St. Thomas Aquinas 64

Mount St. Mary's, …

Builders push for tax incentives to boost housing

WASHINGTON The Bush administration's proposal to restore the capitalgains tax unfairly excludes housing and should not be passed in itspresent form, say the nation's home builders.

If housing is not included in the capital gains provisions, thepresent tax law should be retained, said Martin Perlman, first vicepresident of the National Association of Home Builders, in testimonybefore the House Ways and Means Committee.

Before 1986, gains on investments held longer than one year weretaxed at a lower rate than ordinary income. Since then, however, allincome is treated the same.

"One of the goals of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 was to create alevel playing field …

Security deal to pass 5 stages before approval.

Byline: SH (S)/SR

(Category:Politics )

BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: A leading figure of the Iraqi Accord Front (IAF) Omar Abdul Sattar said on Monday that the security agreement will pass five stages before approval, calling to submit the agreement to a national referendum.

"The agreement should pass several stages before approving it as the lawmakers should determine which approach will be followed in the voting process; the two third or 50 percent+1 and reading the agreement at the parliament (The first and second reading), approving it in the Parliament before ratifying it at the cabinet," Abdul Sattar told Aswat al-Iraq.

Iraq's council of …

LEO J. FAIRBANKS, 80.(CAPITAL REGION)

Leo J. Fairbanks, 80, of Fairbanks Road died Saturday in the Southwestern Vermont Medical Center in Bennington after being stricken at home.

He was born in Jackson, Washington County, and attended Cambridge schools.

Mr. Fairbanks established Fairbanks Express Trucking Co. in 1939, and later moved the business to North Hoosick Road. He retired in 1983 as president of the company.

He was a past exalted ruler and district deputy and a member of the Northern District Elks Lodge in Hoosick Falls. He was a lifetime member and past president of the Hoosick Falls Kiwanis Club, and was a member of the American Trucking Association and the Berkshire …

Abraham knocks out Ayala to retain IBF middleweight belt, wants Pavlik

Arthur Abraham knocked out American Elvin Ayala with a 12th-round uppercut on Saturday and successfully defended his IBF middleweight title for the seventh time.

The victory paved the way for the unbeaten German to keep a scheduled bout in New York on June 7 against an undetermined boxer. He is ranked second to Kelly Pavlik among the world's middleweights by the IBO.

Abraham knocked down Ayala (18-3, with one draw and eight knockouts) in the fifth _ the first time the American had been off his feet in his career _ and followed with a barrage of punches in the subsequent three rounds.

Apparently unable to land the knockout blow, Abraham seemed to …