четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Portsmouth given 7 days to avoid closing down

Portsmouth was granted a seven-day reprieve over its debts by London's High Court on Wednesday to avoid becoming the first Premier League club to go out of business.

A winding-up order was put on hold but Portsmouth was ordered to produce a statement revealing its financial affairs by Feb. 17 after the court expressed concern about the club trading while insolvent with debts set to rise from its current figure of 11.5 million pounds ($18 million).

Portsmouth, a 112-year-old club that has had four separate owners this season, said it had received two serious takeover offers that would clear its debts.

"I am very concerned about the financial …

Sources say LIFFE deal will be announced today Merc planning London alliance

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange today will announce an alliancewith London's futures exchange, a move designed to stretch the reachof electronic trading in the United States and abroad, sources saidWednesday.

A Merc alliance with the exchange, called LIFFE, has been widelydiscussed within the futures industry for weeks. Merc officialswould not comment, saying only they will announce a "strategicagreement" today.

But sources said the deal involves LIFFE and was approved by theexchange's board Wednesday. They also said it falls short of being afull merger.

Both exchanges have a strong presence in the market for short-terminterest rates, and experts said the …

Healthy again, Miami's Spence eager for Clemson

Miami linebacker Sean Spence's first two seasons with the Hurricanes were probably best remembered by two plays.

One of them was throwing then-Florida quarterback Tim Tebow to the ground with ease, a highlight from Spence's freshman season that got replayed around Miami for months.

The other play is one Spence can't forget, no matter how hard he tries.

It came in the Clemson-Miami game a year ago, when — playing with a sprained knee, essentially on one leg — Spence had to try to cover Tigers speedster C.J. Spiller on a pass play.

Spiller ran away from Spence like he was standing still for an easy touchdown, and Clemson went on to dash the Hurricanes' Atlantic Coast …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Official: Cop disciplined in ticket fixing probe

NEW YORK (AP) — A New York City police officer has been disciplined after admitting to administrative misconduct charges, the first major casualty in a lengthy, ongoing probe in the Bronx into fixing tickets, a law enforcement official said Thursday.

Gregory Manning was docked 40 days of vacation, given a five-day suspension and fined $500, according to the official who had direct knowledge of the plea but was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

The officer's lawyer had no comment.

Manning had been the financial secretary of the police union in the Bronx until last month, after losing his re-election bid. His role …

Brutal Pinochet era won't be forgotten

For most Chileans, Gen. Augusto Pinochet, 91, who died Sundayafter complications from a heart attack, was a rapacious dictator, aman who ordered the execution of thousands of his own people,tortured others and sent many into exile -- like the presentpresident of Chile, Michelle Bachelet. For others, he was thebrilliant architect of the modern Chilean economy, a man who broughtfree market reforms to an impoverished country.

Pinochet had a profound impact on U.S. foreign policy: Sodisturbed were Americans by Washington's support of the coup thatbrought Pinochet to power, there was agitation to make human rightsa condition for diplomatic and trade relations with other …

Cleanup Continues After Northeast Storm

NEW YORK - Cleanup crews were out early Saturday to clearing snow and ice from Manhattan streets in preparation for the city's St. Patrick's Day parade, a day after a heavy storm buffeted the East Coast and caused the cancellation of more than 1,000 flights.

Forecasters said the sleet, snow and freezing rain that pelted the East Coast Friday had tailed off, and the National Weather Service canceled a winter storm warning for New York City and the surrounding areas.

"We got the whole gamut there," Nelson Vaz, a meteorologist with the weather service, said early Saturday. He called the weather "a pretty impressive late-winter storm."

The storm dumped up to six …

Polish president: Missile defense should go ahead

Poland's president said Sunday he believes the U.S. will honor its agreement to build a missile defense base in his country, adding that scrapping the project to improve ties with Russia would be an unfriendly gesture toward Poland.

"A deal was signed and I think that regardless of which administration is in power in the United States agreements are going to be implemented," President Lech Kaczynski said on TVN24 television.

President Barack Obama acknowledged Tuesday that he sent a letter to Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev that said curtailing Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons would lessen the need for a U.S. missile defense system in Eastern …

Incubator for writers marks birth at U. of I.

Ascent, the mighty "little" literary magazine of the Universityof Illinois, will celebrate the 50th anniversary of its origins witha symposium Wednesday and Thursday.

The magazine, which has published some of America's finestwriters, actually has had two separate incarnations, published underdifferent but similar names. However, the symposium celebrates thesingle tradition of publishing good writing over half a century, saidGeorge Hendrick, a writer and U. of I. professor who is a symposiumorganizers.

"Down here in the middle of the cornfields and the beanfields,for 50 years the magazine has showcased some of the best writers ofour time," Hendrick said.

GOP Losses Could Spark Partisan Warfare

WASHINGTON - The White House is bracing for guerrilla warfare on the homefront politically if Republicans lose control of the House, the Senate or both - and with it, the president's ability to shape and dominate the national agenda.

Republicans are battling to keep control of Congress. But polls and analysts in both parties increasingly suggest Democrats will capture the House and possibly the Senate on Election Day Nov. 7.

Democrats need a 15-seat pickup to regain the House and a gain of six seats to claim the Senate.

Everything could change overnight for President Bush, who has governed for most of the past six years with a Republican Congress and with little …

Mike Tyson on late daughter: `That's my angel'

Former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson says he doesn't want to know what led to his 4-year-old daughter's death.

During an interview on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" that aired Monday, Tyson called his daughter Exodus "my angel." Exodus died at a Phoenix hospital on May 26, a day after her neck apparently was caught in a treadmill cord.

Tyson told Winfrey that he didn't want to know details of …

New area code for W. suburbs

Chicago's western suburbs will get a new area code Saturday: 630.About 1.5 million lines in DuPage County and parts of Cook, Kane,Kendall and Will counties will switch from 708 to 630.

But callers …

4 Filipino kids drown, 1 missing in swollen river

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Four children drowned and another was missing after they were swept away by a rampaging river as a new storm blew toward the Philippines, which is still recovering from back-to-back typhoons.

Office of Civil Defense Administrator Benito Ramos said the five children were crossing the rain-swollen river as they rushed home from school Monday in Barotac Viejo town in Iloilo province and were swept away by the current.

Villagers recovered the bodies of four of the children, including three siblings, on Tuesday and were still searching for the fifth child, Ramos said.

Iloilo and outlying central provinces have been pounded by heavy rains for two …

City of surprises ; A wintry trip to Budapest reveals a city preparing to celebrate Hungary's most famous son says Sam Smith

The Hungarian kitchen is famous. "We have only good food,"boasted my taxi driver as we drove into Budapest.

Alas, eagerly-anticipated plans to corroborate his boast overlunch were thwarted by a delayed flight.

An empty stomach coupled with a drive through bleak suburbsharking back to a communist era best forgotten, meant firstimpressions of Hungary's capital were far from positive.

But enter into the city and you begin to recognise the wealth ofcultural history and elegance that Budapest possesses.

The city is divided into two: Buda on the western side of theriver Danube and Pest to the east with each side offering acontrasting experience. Something of a social rivalry exists betweenthe two districts and locals will often attest to being from Buda orPest, as opposed to Budapest itself.

Yet both sides of the city, indeed the whole country and theinternational community, will unite this year to celebrate thebicentenary of the birth of Hungary's most famous son. No, notFerenc Puskas, one of the greatest footballers of all time, butrenowned classical composer, pianist and teacher Franz Liszt.

Born on October 22, 1811, Liszt's legacy is ubiquitous throughoutBudapest where he established a musical academy in 1875.

Liszt once remarked: "It is my lodestar that one day Hungary willbe able to point to me with pride."

This pride will be on display for all to enjoy as the citycelebrates Liszt Year with a series of concerts from renownedmusicians such as Gergely Boganyi, scholarly conferences andexhibitions to pay tribute to Liszt's musical genius.

The year-long celebrations will culminate with World Liszt Day onOctober 22, when his grand oratorio, Christus, will be performed invenues across the globe.

But there is no better city in which to celebrate his enduringlegacy than in Budapest itself.

Upon arrival in the city, your eye is immediately drawn to BudaCastle and the grand palace dominating the skyline.

Buda Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, encompasses an entiredistrict boasting historical monuments, vibrant cafes andrestaurants, archaic cobbled streets and spectacular views of theDanube and Pest. The Funicular Railway offers salvation to those notwishing to undertake the steep climb.

Music festival With the city gearing up for a festival of musicthis year, a trip to the Hungarian State Opera House in Pest, eitherfor a tour or a show, must be high up on the agenda.

If golden interiors, silk-covered walls and marbled staircasesare not your cup of tea, then Budapest offers two superb modernalternatives in the shape of the Palace of Arts and the NationalTheatre, with the former featuring heavily in the Liszt year.

When it snows in England, the country grinds to a halt and peopleconfine themselves to indoor warmth. In Budapest, people go tooutdoor thermal baths.

Szechenyi Bath and Spa on the Pest side was the city's first.Famous for its medicinal water and its architecture, it offers thewinter visitor the surreal experience of outdoor bathing in arcticconditions.

It is also located close to other sites of interest such as theCity Park, Heroes' Square and the Museum of Fine Arts.

As my taxi driver rightly informed me, Hungary only has goodfood. The city offers an array of restaurants serving up traditionaland nouvelle cuisine. But for the best in traditional fare, a tripto the Great Market Hall in Pest is a must.

The largest of the five major market halls built in 1897, it isthe perfect place to indulge in some Hungarian cuisine and to browseendless stalls of rural art.

Nightfall in the Hungarian capital brings with it more delights.Beyond the trendy bars and clubs, Budapest has some hidden gems inthe form of "ruined-pubs", whereby buildings on the verge ofcollapse are salvaged and transformed into bars offering a vividdrinking experience.

Szimpla Kert in Pest is one such example. Here graffiti on wallsprovides colourful artistry while unchecked wildlife spirals upwardsagainst a backdrop of ambient lighting and smoky haze.

Although inconspicuous from the street, there are a number ofsuch venues in Pest.

Like the city in which they dwell, they are well worth exploring.

Factfile For more information on the Liszt Year which begins onJanuary 22, visit www.liszt-2011.hu The Liszt Year will runalongside the three thousand festivals held in Hungary each year,the most notable of which is the Budapest Spring Festival beginningin March and comprising about 200 events. For more information onfestivals in Budapest visit www.festivalcity.hu Malev HungarianAirlines operates flights to Budapest from London Gatwick. Forflight information visit www.malev.com

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Charges filed in New Zealand 2010 mine explosion

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand's Labour Department filed 25 criminal charges Thursday over safety and health violations at a coal mine where an explosion last year killed 29 miners.

Each of the charges in the Pike River coal mine disaster carries a maximum fine of 250,000 New Zealand dollars ($195,000).

The charges are against three parties, but the agency declined to name them or detail the exact charges, saying that New Zealand's restrictive rules on releasing information in court proceedings could apply to the case.

The Pike River coal mine was rocked by an explosion on Nov. 19, 2010, trapping the 29 men. A second major explosion five days later dashed hopes any of the workers had survived.

An official probe into the disaster is continuing in New Zealand. But the Labour Department needed to file the charges before the probe concluded in order to comply with a one-year statute of limitations rule.

During the probe, mine experts have been critical of the mine's single entrance and its ventilation system, which some said was inadequate to properly rid the mine of volatile gasses like methane.

Others have testified that the Pike River company was facing financial pressures and may have cut corners as a result.

Pike River Coal Ltd. was forced into bankruptcy in the weeks following the disaster and the mine remains up for sale. The New Zealand government has stipulated that any buyer must try to recover the bodies of the 29 miners, which remain trapped in the mine amid fears that the atmosphere inside is still unstable.

Colombia announces gold find that could double production by 2011

Colombian authorities have announced a major gold find that would double the country's production of the metal by 2011 and which they claim could prove to be one of the 10 biggest deposits in the world.

A foreign mining company uncovered the deposit and informed the government, which announced the discovery last week but said details would not be released until February.

But President Alvaro Uribe appeared unable to hide his excitement last week.

"How am I going to keep a secret this big until February?" Uribe asked in a Dec. 20 speech, revealing that Mining and Energy Minister Hernan Martinez had that morning told him of the discovery, which will require an initial US$2 billion (euro1.38 billion) investment and will double the nation's gold output by 2011.

Authorities didn't give the name of the foreign mining company, but Bogota's El Tiempo newspaper reported that the deposit is in the central state of Tolima, and was discovered by Johannesburg-based AngloGold Ashanti Ltd., one of the world's largest gold producers.

Charles Carter, spokesman for the company, on Thursday confirmed that the company has an active exploration program in Colombia, but declined to comment on El Tiempo's report, saying it was "premature to discuss" any of the company's specific findings.

AngloGold Ashanti has projects in 10 countries on four continents, including the U.S., Brazil, Russia and China, its Web site states.

The company has been actively exploring for gold in Colombia since 2000, and has two large drilling projects in the country's center, along with six other "early-stage" projects.

High gold prices, which have nearly tripled in the last ten years, are pushing mining companies to boost exploration efforts, the Bogota-based newspaper said.

But in Colombia, yearly gold production fell by more than half last year to 15.7 tons from 37.7 tons in 2005, El Tiempo reported, citing the nation's mining institute, as attacks and harassment by leftist rebels forced many mines to close.

TIPS ON MAKING THE RIGHT CALL

Prepaid phone cards can offer a great bargain-if you read the fineprint, look for the right deal and use caution. Some tips:

Buy cards that fit your calling patterns. If you plan to make oneor two long calls, a card with a low per-minute rate is probably agood deal, even if the connection fees are steep. If you makefrequent calls averaging less than 10 minutes, use a card without aconnection fee. If your calling pattern varies, consider buying twotypes of cards.

Always read the fine print. Beware of vague phrases such as:"Additional charges may apply." If you can't figure out how much aparticular call would cost, don't buy the card.

Until you know which card best meets your needs, buy in smalldenominations-$5 or $10.

If you plan to call from a pay phone, check out the surcharge.Many cards charge 50 cents for each call from a pay phone, but somecharge more. Calls to cellular phones sometimes cost more, too.

Write down the card's customer service number. Keep it somewheresafe.

Check out the expiration date so you don't get left with unusedminutes.

If you think you've been ripped off, you can call the Illinoisattorney general's office at (800) 386-5438 or the Better BusinessBureau at (312) 832-0500.

Pakistan's state airline says second flight receives bomb threat, grounded at Kuala Lumpur

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistan's state airline says second flight receives bomb threat, grounded at Kuala Lumpur.

A380 era is upon us

By Chloe Rigby Business editor, in Toulousec.rigby@bepp.co.uk THEplane that Airbus says will be the world's most recognisable jet isjust weeks away from taking to the skies.

The A380, the first double decker passenger jet, is scheduled fortake-off on its maiden flight in the first three months of next year.

The first commercial flight of the landmark plane, which iscapable of carrying up to 555 passengers, will be in the secondquarter of 2006.

The Evening Post has been given an early glimpse of the plane, nowin its final assembly stage in Toulouse.

Iain Gray, managing director of Airbus UK at Filton, says thelaunch will be important for two reasons.

He said: "Firstly, from an Airbus point of view, last year was ahuge milestone in that for the first time ever we delivered moreaircraft than Boeing. From a wider point of view that established usas number one. The A380 reflects that position.

"Secondly, we are entering the era of the A380. It is the world'sgreatest engineering challenge going on today.

"It is a plane that people around the world will come to know andrecognise."

The A380's maiden flight will not only be a milestone for Airbusbut for aerospace workers across Bristol and the South West.

Some 1,000 people are working on the plane's wings, landing gearand fuel systems at Airbus in Filton but many thousands more areemployed at smaller suppliers across the region.

Mr Gray said: "It is a showpiece project for aerospace and forengineering. It is the world's biggest aerospace developmentprogramme today."

The plane has been under development since the mid-1990s and waslaunched in 2000.

Now there are 139 orders and commitments for the A380 and itsfreighter version from 13 airlines.

The first plane to fly commercially will do so under SingaporeAirlines colours, but customers also include Air France, Qantas andEmirates.

The planemaker believes they are drawn to a combination of largercapacity, greater environmental features and higher cost efficiency,resulting in lower ticket prices. Those factors give it the edge overthe Boeing 747. The new plane is expected to fly to 60 airports by2010. Since the A380 went on the market, it has outsold the B747 bythree to one.

Pakistan army cancels US trip amid search dispute

Pakistan's military canceled a trip by officers to an annual meeting at U.S. Central Command after they were taken off a plane and subjected to "unwarranted security checks" at Dulles International Airport in Washington, a spokesman said Wednesday.

The dispute appeared to be a sign of the mistrust between the U.S. and Pakistani militaries, which are nominally allies in the fight against Taliban and al-Qaida but have long had an uneasy relationship.

The nine-member delegation was headed by a two-star Navy rear admiral. Its members were awaiting take off on a United Airlines flight to Tampa, Fla. _ where Central Command is based _ when the incident took place Monday, said army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas.

The delegation was taken off the plane and subjected to "unwarranted security checks" that resulted in their missing their flight. They called military authorities in Pakistan who instructed them to return home, Abbas said.

United Airlines officials were not immediately available for comment.

Dawn newspaper reported that the delegation was taken of the plane after a passenger voiced concerns they may have posed a security threat. It quoted an unnamed security official as saying the officers "were treated like terrorists" and were not allowed to talk to anyone for two hours.

Increased checks at U.S. airports in response to the threat from Islamist militants after the Sept. 11 attacks are a sensitive issue for many Pakistanis, who frequently complain they are being unfairly singled out.

A group of Pakistani lawmakers on a State Department-sponsored visit to the United States in March returned home early after complaining of excessive security checks and were hailed as heroes by sections of the media on their return.

The United States has given the Pakistani army billions of dollars over the last 10 years to help it better fight militancy, but the country is very unpopular among many ordinary Pakistanis.

Many home-office expenses still deductible

Second of two articles on the tax advantages of home ownership.

There are tighter rules for deducting home-office expenses undertax reform, but many writeoffs still are available.

"Running a business from your home - full time or part time -still can generate thousands of dollars in tax breaks," saidaccountant Frank Pipal, of Pipal-Webber Ltd., 3338 N. Southport.

"Employees can deduct expenses on taxes if they exclusively andregularly used their home office as the principal place of business,or to meet with clients for business reasons."

Such deductible expenses include part of the homeowners'mortgage interest payments, real estate taxes, depreciation,utilities, insurance, repairs and maintenance.

However, you have to calculate the business percentage of homeuse. For example, let's assume you use a 10-by-12-foot room (120square feet) in your home for business, and your house contains atotal of 1,200 square feet. You are using one-tenth of your home'sarea for business, so you would be allowed to deduct 10 percent ofyour home-operating expenses.

Tax experts warn that the home office must be set up for theconvenience of the employer, not the employee.

Let's say an insurance salesman employed by a New Jersey companyis required to work out of an office in Chicago.

If he decides to use his house as an office, he can write off asmiscellaneous deductions expenses that exceed 2 percent of thetaxpayer's adjusted gross income, Pipal said. (For those who havebecome intimately familiar with their 1040 form this week, that'sline 30.)

"AGI is income before exemptions and itemized deductions. Anyhome-office expenses plus miscellaneous expenses that are in excessof 2 percent of AGI are deductible."

These expenses would be reported on Form 2106 - EmployeeBusiness Expenses.

However, for a self-employed person, the expenses are reportedon Sechedule C - Profit (or Loss) From Business or Profession - andare not subject to the 2 percent AGI rule.

Another limitation under tax reform is that the deductionscannot exceed the net income generated by the home-office activitythat year. But any deductions not used because of this limitationcan be carried forward and deducted against future home-earnedincome.

People who operate a sole proprietorship business or a privatecorporation out of the home also are eligible for writeoffs.

For these home-office users, the expenses are listed as businessdeductions, as opposed to miscellaneous itemized deductions taken byemployees, Pipal said. Again, deductions can't exceed the income ofthe business, but in a sole proprietorship, they can be carriedforward.

Tax experts give the following suggestions for handling thehome-office writeoffs: Home hobby tax breaks. An expensive hobby, such as photography, canbe a profitable home-based business. Expenses of operating the photobusiness would be fully deductible against the business's income.

"Your at-home business need not generate a major source of yourincome," said tax-law specialist Paul N. Strassels.

"The courts have consistently held that taxpayers can beinvolved in many different trades and businesses at the same time,each separate and distinct from the others," said Strassels, authorof Money Matters, (Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass., $16.95). Depreciation writeoffs. You can depreciate that portion of yourhome that serves as an office. To determine the percentage ofbusiness use, divide the number of square feet in the office by thetotal square footage of the house.

Remember, the depreciation system you use depends on when youbought your home - not when you started using it for business.

"If you bought it in 1982, but didn't start your business until1987, you would use the 15-year accelerated depreciation that was ineffect in 1982," Pipal said.

"If you bought it in 1987, you'd have to use straight-linedepreciation over 27.5 years," he said. Selling a home. Beware of complications if you sell a house whileoperating a business out of it.

If you use part of your home for business, and later decide tosell the home, you must adjust the tax basis of the house for anydepreciation taken in connection with the business use.

"You won't be able to defer tax on the gain on that portion ofthe house that was being used for business purposes," Strassels said.

"In the year you sell, make certain you don't qualify for ahome-office deduction by purposely using it for personal purposes.By violating the exclusively-for-business-use requirement, you'll beable to defer taxes on all your house-sale profits," Strasselsadvised. Transportation expenses. If you're an employee who keeps an officein your home, you can convert nondeductible personal commutingexpenses into tax-deductible local business transportation expenses.

Under this deduction, the first trip of the day from home tooffice is nondeductible, as is the last trip of the day from officeto home. All business-related driving in between is tax deductible,either at your costs or at the IRS standard mileage rate of 22.5cents per mile.

"The trick is to make your first and last business stops of theday in your at-home office. It doesn't matter if the officequalifies for tax-deduction purposes or not," Strassels said. Phone calls. Even if you have a separate business telephone anddon't use your home office on an exclusive basis, phone expenses aretax deductible as an unreimbursed employee business expense. If youdon't have a separate phone line, any long-distance charges you incurfor business are deductible.

Lawmakers chide Mukasey on press freedom

Lawmakers chided Attorney General Michael Mukasey on Wednesday for claiming national security concerns in opposing legislation that would allow reporters to protect the identities of confidential sources.

"Ten angels swearing on Bibles that that bill is harmless would not change the provisions that are in it," Mukasey told the House Judiciary Committee.

A few minutes later, Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., defended the bill he said was carefully written to discourage leaks of classified or other sensitive information that could risk security. Without it, he said, long-standing press freedoms would be threatened.

"If 10 angels swearing on Bibles wouldn't change your view of this bill, would 40 American journalists subpoenaed, questioned or held in contempt do it?" Pence asked.

He added: "This is a constitutional statutory response to a rising erosion of our First Amendment freedom of the press."

Mukasey, who once successfully represented the New York Daily News in a libel case, said he was open to considering compromises. But he said current laws limiting the government's ability to force reporters to reveal their sources are adequate.

"I'm not willing to take steps that will essentially do more to protect the leakers than it does to protect journalists," he said.

Mukasey testified for 4 1/2 hours, facing questions on everything from terror detainees and executive authority to immigration laws and upcoming Justice Department policies that critics fear will lead to racial and ethnic profiling. On the last issue, he denied that they would.

Several Democrats on the panel raised concerns about the Justice Department's efforts to ensure fair elections this year amid an expected higher voter turnout than usual.

Committee chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., said the department hasn't agreed to cooperate with Congress on voting rights issues, and what work has been done is largely ineffective.

"As we sit here today, probably 100 days before the election, we don't know specifically how our government will respond to the problems that made the elections of 2000 and 2004 so problematic and so controversial," Conyers told Mukasey at the start of the hearing.

He said it's unclear whether voting machines will be fairly allocated and how federal election monitors will be deployed across the country.

Responding, Mukasey called making sure the Nov. 4 elections run smoothly one of his top priorities. The department will work with civil rights groups and state and local officials to solve any problems that might arise, and plans to dispatch hundreds of election observers to the polls, he said.

"We anticipate much higher turnout this year, and we're doing what we can," Mukasey told Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C.

The Justice Department has briefed lawmakers on voting rights issues twice this year and plans to again before the election. It recently held a training session for lawyers and agents who will be working on ballot access and other voting matters throughout the election season.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

`Talking Heads' Monologues Showcase English Playwright

No, David Byrne and his group, Talking Heads, are not gettingback together again for a Chicago gig.

But "Talking Heads," a series of monologues by the marvelousEnglish playwright, Alan Bennett, will be playing at the SteppenwolfTheatre this summer. And John Mahoney, Steppenwolf veteran andubiquitous movie and television star (Martin Crane in the new hit NBCsitcom, "Frasier"), will be making his directing debut with thisAmerican premiere.

Bennett is the actor-writer who began his career as part of thesatirical revue, "Beyond the Fringe," along with Dudley Moore,Jonathan Miller and Peter Cook. In more recent years, his work hasbecome a staple at London's National Theatre (including acontroversial adaptation of "The Wind in the Willows"), as well as inthe West End ("Single Spies").

Many of his works have lacked U.S. productions, in part becausethey are so quintessentially English. PBS watchers may have caught"An American Abroad," the first half of the double bill of "SingleSpies" that starred Alan Bates as the communist spy Guy Burgess. Andthey also may have seen "Love Among the Lentils," one of six episodesin "Talking Heads" - a work originally written for television butlater adapted for the stage.

Steppenwolf will stage three of the six "Talking Heads"monologues - tragicomic studies in loneliness and alienation thatalso reflect the changing nature of contemporary England. Castingwill be announced soon.

The show will open July 17. Tickets: (312) 335-1650. MEXICAN DARING: "Community-based arts" and "multiculturism" werethe most frequently heard buzzwords during the three-day conferenceof the National Endowment for the Arts held in Chicago last week.

But while the conference participants were theorizing, theMexican Fine Arts Center Museum was acting, moving into the secondweek of its two-month performing arts festival, "Del Corazon" ("Fromthe Heart").

In conjunction with the Latino Chicago Theatre Company, themuseum presented the U.S. premiere of Malu Huacuja's "Cielo de Abajo"("Sky Below"), a mesmerizing performance piece showcasing the work oftwo of Mexico City's most daring actresses, Jesusa Rodriguez (whoalso directed) and her Argentinian-born companion, Liliana Felipe.

Rodriguez is renowned for creating an avant-garde theater andcabaret out of a chapel and garage in the Coyoacan neighborhood ofMexico City (the place where painter Frida Kahlo lived). And thispiece, with its decidedly feminist spin on a macho culture, shows whyshe has attracted so much attention.

Taking the form of an all-female version of Orpheus andEurydice, "Cielo de Abajo" depicts a young woman's search for herdead lover in the various layers of the underworld that are part ofMexican mythology. Populated with skeletons and ritual, andexploding with fireworks, the piece is awash in startling images andthick incense, as the two actresses variously transform themselvesinto pre-Columbian clay pots, Aztec human sacrifices and one of thoseclassic, unshakeably earthbound sculptures of an ancient Indian godthat is hilariously demystified when it turns into a talkingsoft-sculpture.

The production audaciously explores the way indigenous Indianand Spanish Catholic concepts of death have become intertwined. Andthough it was performed in Spanish, the show's mix of ancient,contemporary and surreal images made language almost unnecessary.The elaborate braiding of hair, the whimsical musings of a humancactus plant, the reedy sound of a clay pipe, all helped to bring thecomplex culture and psyche of Mexico to life.

CONFERENCE FOOTNOTES: Last week's National Endowment for the Artsconference, which attracted more than 1,000 people from all areas ofarts administration and education, was, above all, a spirit-raisingevent - a celebration of the rebirth of the federal agency after morethan a decade of official disdain.

Will the conference result in the creation of any great works ofart? Definitely not. Will it create a groundswell in Congress forincreased arts funding? Not a prayer.

What it might do, however, is lead to new thinking about howbudgets for the arts can be built into other parts of government.

One subtle but unmistakable message of the conference wasthat the NEA is not so much interested in the individual achievementsof artists as it is in the general integration of the arts into dailylife. Jane Alexander, the NEA's much-admired chairman, is clearlyrefocusing her agency, making it a force for social good rather thana funding source for social rebellion.

Following President Clinton's lead, she is building consensusrather than subsidizing ruckus-makers. In short, she's playing safewith art.

SAP says profit down 2 pct in '08, axes 3,000 jobs

Software maker SAP AG said Wednesday it would cut 3,000 jobs worldwide to cut costs as its 2008 net profit fell 2 percent, weighed by a difficult year-end when the financial crisis deepened.

The Walldorf-based company, the world's largest producer of business-software applications, said net profit fell to euro1.89 billion ($2.49 billion) from euro1.92 billion a year ago. Total revenues increased 13 percent for the year to euro11.6 billion from euro10.2 billion in 2007.

The company said it would cut 3,000 jobs worldwide, which will result in yearly savings of between euro300 to euro350 million starting in 2010. The company would also continue its cost savings programs.

The company employs about 51,500 people at locations in more than 50 countries. It did not specify where the cuts would come.

SAP said it would not provide an outlook for the current year because of the uncertainty surrounding the economic and business environment.

"2008 can be described as a year having two completely opposite halves, where a strong first-half performance was greatly disrupted late in the third quarter by the beginning of the worst economic and financial crisis the world has witnessed in decades," Henning Kagermann, the chief executive of SAP, said in a statement.

"Nevertheless, in total we had a good year amid a very tough economic climate, posting full-year double-digit growth in software and software-related service revenues."

SAP said those revenues grew 14 percent to euro8.5 billion from euro7.4 billion in 2007.

Operating income increased 4 percent to euro2.8 billion in 2008 from euro2.7 billion in 2007, while operating cash flow rose 10 percent to euro2.2 billion from euro2 billion. Free cash flow increased 13 percent to euro1.8 billion from euro1.6 billion.

SAP said it had group liquidity of euro1.7 billion at the end of December, which included cash, cash equivalents and other investments. That is about 40 percent less group liquidity than the euro2.8 billion the company had at the end of 2007.

The report sent shares of SAP 6.2 percent higher to euro27.84 in Frankfurt morning trading.

UniCredit Analyst Knut Woller said the planned head count reduction of around 7 percent to about 48,500 employees in 2009 from 51,536 in 2008 should positively affect the company's margins after restructuring charges.

He said he was maintaining his "buy" rating on the stock and a target price of euro33.

"SAP expects that market conditions will remain difficult in 2009 and does not provide any specific revenue guidance for the full year," he said in a research note. "On the other hand, the company announced restructuring measures."

___

On the Net:

http://www.sap.com

Survivors of Kent State shooting reunite

Survivors of Kent State shooting reunite

KENT, Ohio--Students wounded 30 years ago during a Vietnam War protest at Kent State University gathered today for solemn remembrance and said they are still searching for the reason the Ohio National Guard opened fire.

"We don't know why this happened to us. We don't know who said `Shoot.'

We don't know when they said it or why," said Joseph Lewis, 48. Four students were killed and nine wounded in the May 4, 1970, shootings that stunned the nation and galvanized the anti-war movement.

Seven of the nine wounded appeared at a news conference today that was part of ceremonies marking the 30th anniversary of the shootings.

The two other survivors also were on campus for the anniversary, marking the first time all nine were reunited.

The remembrance also included the tolling of a bell at the exact minute the shots rang out: 12:24 p.m. Thousands of people gathered on the grassy hill overlooking the Victory Bell as it rang out 15 times, for each of the 13 students killed or wounded at Kent State and for the two students killed at Jackson State University in Mississippi 10 days later.

The shootings occurred following days of student protests and the burning of the campus Army ROTC building. The National Guard was sent in to quell the protest.

"They're my blood brothers," Alan Canfora, another of the students, said earlier. "We all shed the blood here and lived to tell the story."

The former students also planned to meet with the mothers of three of the four students who were killed that day.

"It'll be very emotional this year, particularly around the mothers," said Kent State sociology professor Jerry M. Lewis, who was 20 yards from one of the students killed by gunfire.

Wednesday night, hundreds of students marched around the campus before gathering at a parking lot for the start of an annual overnight candlelight vigil.

Senior Mary Sima said the vigil was "a chance to look inside myself and think about peace for everybody."

At least one shooting survivor, Robby Stamps, said he was unhappy about plans to play a taped speech by Mumia Abu-Jamal during this afternoon's commemoration.

Abu-Jamal is on death row in Pennsylvania for killing a police officer in 1981 but maintains his innocence. Stamps, who was shot in the lower back, said he is afraid that the 3�-minute speech will shift the focus of the commemoration away from events at Kent State.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Angel leads New York past DC United

Juan Pablo Angel scored twice to lead the New York Red Bulls over D.C. United 4-1 in Major League Soccer on Sunday.

Sinisa Ubiparipovic added his first career MLS goal and Mike Magee also scored for the Red Bulls.

Jaime Moreno gave D.C. United the early lead in the 16th minute but Angel tied the game on a free kick in the 27th and New York went ahead for good just before halftime when Magee scored his second goal of the season.

Angel got his second goal when he lobbed a long shot over goalkeeper Zach Wells in the 50th and Ubiparipovic concluded the scoring in the 87th when he converted a pass from Jorge Rojas.

Hollis Sigler, 53, painter and teacher

Hollis Sigler never gave up on her artistic work.

Even in the painful last three years of her life, she foundstrength to publish a book and continue to teach and paint.

Ms. Sigler was widely known for painting about breast cancer in afaux-naif, or simple, childlike style, and for being a foundingmember of Artemisia, one of the first women's cooperative galleriesin the country.

She died of breast cancer Thursday at her home in Prairie View.She was 53.

"I think that from the time she was a little girl, art was alwaysher salvation, a way of playing and always a way of being. She was anartist from the start," said Patricia Locke, her companion of 21years.

Born in Gary, Ind., in 1948, Ms. Sigler was reared in Cranbury,N.J., where she graduated from Heights Town High School in 1966.

Ms. Sigler earned a bachelor's degree in fine arts from MooreCollege of Art in Philadelphia in 1970 and a master's degree in finearts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1973.

She created psychologically complex narrative paintings anddrawings grounded in women's experiences-from love and family todisease, loss and death. Her style spoke of her identity as a lesbianand a 15-year breast cancer survivor.

"Hollis chose to paint and draw in a naive way, like a child,because she felt it to be a more direct way to express her emotions,"said Joe Howard, her personal assistant and friend of 17 years. "Shealso identified the traditional way of drawing to the male-dominatedart world."

When Ms. Sigler found out she had breast cancer in 1985, she kepther familiar domestic interiors and naive style but began to fill thespaces with text and items such as cages, hanging tables, mendedtrees and damaged Greek goddesses, symbolizing cancer and theprecariousness of life.

In 1993, the National Museum of Women in the Arts exhibited herseries "Breast Cancer Journal: Walking With the Ghosts of OurGrandmothers," which explored her family legacy of the disease. Bothher mother and grandmother died of breast cancer.

The painting "To Kiss the Spirits: Now This Is What It Is ReallyLike" is considered the masterpiece of Ms. Sigler's breast cancerseries.

"Hollis always used her artwork in a metaphorical manner that notonly caused people to look at her work as a pleasant visualexperience, but as a message that would be gripping and reaching deepinside," said gallery owner Carl Hammer.

In 1999, she published her essay collection Hollis Sigler's BreastCancer Journals.

Ms. Sigler, also a professor at Columbia College since 1978,received the Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement fromthe College Art Association in February. She had received an honorarydoctorate from Moore College of Art in 1994.

Survivors include her father, Philip, and brother, Andrew.

A memorial service will take place at 2 p.m. April 21 at the GetzTheater of Columbia College, 72 E. 11th St. Funeral services were setfor Saturday in Highland Park.

Army Acquisition Corps task forces embedded in Iraqi theater

'Justice and McCoy' was a refrain heard often during the Acquisition Senior Leaders' Conference, Aug. 12-14. If you wanted to hear how the Army Acquisition Corps (AAC) went to war and helped warfighters succeed in Operation Iraqi Freedom, you needed to hear what Justice and McCoy had to say.

Both colonels commanded forward-deployed task forces with embedded combat acquisition soldiers in the tactical units. COL Nickolas G. Justice commanded the Information Management Task Force (TF). He is Project Manager for Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below (FBCB2), Program Executive Office, Command, Control and Communications (Tactical). COL Curtis L. McCoy, Project Manager, Bradley Fighting Vehicle Systems, Program Executive Office, Ground Combat Systems, commanded the Combat ASAALT - Southwest Asia TF Operations Center, or CAT Force for short.

When they first deployed, impressions of the AAC were less than optimal: "When I got over to theater we didn't have a good rap," McCoy said. "The first time I met MG Thurman he said to me, 'You're one of those drive-by fielding type of PMs'."

Justice further explained that to MG Thurman "drive-by fielding" means that you leave him with the equipment. It doesn't mean that you failed to complete your new equipment training (NET) or that you failed to bring all your equipment to the field. "What we as Project Managers consider a proper fielding doesn't cut it with him," Justice said. "He told me 'It's your equipment, you need to stay here and make it work.' What he was telling me is a story about building confidence in the Army that what we in acquisition do is great."

The acquisition personnel in theater quickly changed this perception by learning to think like soldiers - what Justice referred to as "getting in the same foxhole as the warfighter." We built command centers, we brought Blue Force Tracking to the theater and we partnered with the Army Materiel Command (AMC), said Justice. They also provided NET, maintenance and operational support, and gave battle damage assessments to combatant commanders in the fight.

Acquisition's value-add to warfighters was its engineering expertise. "We brought engineering skills to the table no one else had," Justice said. "AMC is supply. When they look at us, it's as engineering talent."

Besides its agility in engineering, the CAT Force excelled in accelerated fielding, bringing the PATRIOT Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) missile system, the Bradley M2A2 ODS (Operation Desert Storm), the FBCB2 Blue Force Tracking, the Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS) M270A1, the command and control vehicle and Battle Control Vehicle weapon systems to the Iraqi theater.

"Abrams, Bradley, Black Hawk, Apache and MLRS form an army of excellent platforms," said McCoy. "Where did those platforms come from? They came from us! It offends me when I hear Abrams and Bradley referred to as 'Legacy Force.' Abrams and Bradley are the future force."

McCoy also took issue with the press's coverage of PATRIOT missiles. "The PATRIOT is king to me," he said. In tag team format, Justice finished his story. "We were in the Command Center when the air defense system alarm went off," said Justice. "We are standing here and so are our young soldiers because the PATRIOT worked." The PATRIOT recorded a 100-percent probability of kill during combat.

Justice praised the young soldiers majors and noncommissioned officers - who comprised the two TFs. "We're underutilizing our officers," he said. "Take advantage of these kids and give them more work to do than Powerpoint(TM) slides. I also used young master sergeants. I'd go anywhere with them."

MAJ Jonas Vogelhut was an officer embedded with the 3rd Infantry Division. His mission was to install FBCB2 on 180 2nd Brigade tanks. His first challenge was to field a piece of equipment that soldiers didn't think they needed.

"Their initial response was, we don't need it - we've got map boards and we know how to use stickies," Vogelhut said.

Vogelhut installed systems and trained soldiers to use them. When soldiers had missions, acquisition team members were there to answer questions. Vogelhut rode on the battlefield and saw firsthand the results of soldiers using the equipment he had installed.

"When the division started the process of the speed move to Baghdad, the division could move faster in the breach lanes because they knew where everyone was," said Vogelhut.

Justice and McCoy reeled off a list of equipment that performed well during the war including the new Joint Service Lightweight Integrated Suit Technology, the Javelin (which operated at a 96-percent operational rate during combat), the Long Range Advanced Scout Surveillance System (LRAS3) (which helped distinguish between children playing and enemy targets) and Interceptor Body Armor. They praised the Mobile MOUT (Military Operations in Urbanized Terrain) facility, which was fielded within 38 days of receiving funding. Additionally, the Army's mountain training solutions were so good that Navy Special Operations Forces were trying to get access to use these training solutions.

The two colonels suggested that AMC and ASAALT partner during future contingencies to ensure mission success and to better support soldiers. They also suggested that this organizational relationship be refined and formalized in support of future Joint Task Force missions.

Near the end of their presentation, McCoy turned sideways to the audience and pointed to his Army Acquisition Corps patch. "We issued this patch to all task force members over there and I'm proud to wear this patch," he said.

[Author Affiliation]

MEG WILLIAMS is a Senior Editor/ Writer and provides contract support to the Acquisition Support Center through BRTRC's Technology Marketing Group. She has a B.A. from the University of Michigan and an M.S. in marketing communications from Johns Hopkins University.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Drugs and self-destruction portrayed in 'On the Outs'

On the Outs ****

Fader Films: Routine dramas about drug trading on the mean streets may not rattle anyone's emotional cage in terms of the familiar harshness that comes with this disturbing territory. Nevertheless, this doesn't excuse one from gaining a newfound numbness and despair pertaining to such degradation. In co-directors Lori Silverbush and Michael Skolnik's hostile urban cautionary tale "On the Outs," we witness yet another stark example of the deterioration of the fragile human spirit.

"On the Outs" candidly examines a trio of seriously conflicted New York City-based young women whose down-trotting existences are ruthlessly shaped by the culture of omnipresent …

Feyenoord ends winless run with win over Roda JC

Georginio Wijnaldum scored one and created two more goals Sunday as Feyenoord routed Roda JC 4-0 for its second league victory of the season.

Wijnaldum put Feyenoord in front with a goal in the 53rd minute before setting up Leroy Fer in the 57th. He was also the provider for Roy Makaay's 67th minute goal.

Makaay then squared for Diego Biseswar for the fourth in the 70th.

Ricky van Wolfswinkel, Santi Kolk and Niklas Tarvajarvi each scored in Vitesse Arnhem's 3-1 win over ADO The Hague. Lex Immers netted ADO's only goal in the 19th.

Wins on Saturday for Ajax and NAC Breda helped both join AZ Alkmaar at the top of the league with 19 …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Scouts sending warm thoughts - and blankets - to troops in Iraq

Pack 316 Cub Scout James Franken, 6, helps his mom, Julie, make a blanket for troops in Iraq Monday at St. Luke's Lutheran School in Boulder Hill.

Local Scouts are pitching in to help American soldiers keep warm on chilly nights in Iraq.Cub Scouts and their families from Pack 316 of St. Luke's Lutheran School in Boulder Hill spent Monday evening knotting the fringe on polar fleece blankets the Scouts are sending out in time for the holidays.Tying the fringe was a bit perplexing for some of the approximately 30 pint-sized Scouts."Remembering if it is left-over-right or right-over-left," said 9-year-old Matthew Zinzer, is the hardest thing about doing the blankets.

"It's …

Scouts sending warm thoughts - and blankets - to troops in Iraq

Pack 316 Cub Scout James Franken, 6, helps his mom, Julie, make a blanket for troops in Iraq Monday at St. Luke's Lutheran School in Boulder Hill.

Local Scouts are pitching in to help American soldiers keep warm on chilly nights in Iraq.Cub Scouts and their families from Pack 316 of St. Luke's Lutheran School in Boulder Hill spent Monday evening knotting the fringe on polar fleece blankets the Scouts are sending out in time for the holidays.Tying the fringe was a bit perplexing for some of the approximately 30 pint-sized Scouts."Remembering if it is left-over-right or right-over-left," said 9-year-old Matthew Zinzer, is the hardest thing about doing the blankets.

"It's …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

"Ecstasy: In and About Altered States"

THERE IS A MOMENT in Talo/The House, 2002, a video installation by the Finnish artist Eija-Liisa Ahtila currently on display at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, where the furtive glimpse of a dog triggers an altogether different kind of vision: "Outside a new order arose, one that is present everywhere. Everything is now simultaneous, here, being." The monologue is derived from the artist's interviews with schizophrenics and other people suffering from mental disorders, but we have all known moments like this, when we harbor intimations of a deeper design, of a dream logic beneath the surface of things, of an incandescence in the mind. These intensities-perhaps nothing more …

Bill's costs outweigh benefit.(Brief Article)

THE FIRST RULE in health care reform is simple: Do no harm.

A new survey conducted for the managed care trade group, the American Assn. of Health Plans, underscores the importance of that rule.

As we report in this week's issue, roughly 80% of employee benefit and human resource executives who were surveyed for the AAHP said they likely would pass cost increases onto employees, while 15% of employers likely would terminate health care coverage if a House-passed patient protection measure, known as the Norwood-Dingell bill, becomes law.

That bill, now before a congressional conference committee, would allow health plan enrollees with coverage disputes …

Castroneves takes pole.(Sports)

Byline: MIKE HARRIS - Associated Press

WEST ALLIS, Wis. - If the races were as easy as qualifying has been this season for Helio Castroneves, he'd be running away in the IndyCar Series points.

The Brazilian, coming off a third-place finish last Sunday in the Indianapolis 500, won his fourth pole in six tries this season and the 20th of his career Saturday in time trials for the ABC Sup ply/A.J. Foyt 225 at the Milwaukee Mile.

"I love going fast, man," the grinning Castroneves said when asked about his qualifying prowess.

He turned a fast lap of 171.071 mph, considerably faster than runner-up …

CHEMICAL WAR FEAR FADES.(Main)

Byline: Lee Bowman Scripps Howard

Allied fears that Iraq will launch massive attacks using chemical or biological agents against U.S. troops are increasingly fading.

Senior Pentagon officials said that even though Iraq may have stockpiled thousands of tons of chemical weapons in and around Kuwait, its ability to deliver and resupply those stocks has been dramatically cut by the bombing campaign.

Ever since the first Iraqi Scud missile was fired two days into the war, the fear of a poison gas attack has haunted the populations of Israel and much of Saudi Arabia.

But after more than 60 Scud launches, it appears unlikely that chemicals either …

Brazil oil workers, Petrobras in talks

Negotiations between striking Brazilian oil workers and state oil company Petrobras ended late Wednesday with no immediate end of the walkout in sight.

The oil workers launched a five-day strike on Monday to demand an extra day off for every two-week shift they work on the platforms, noting it takes a full day off to get to the platform and another to get back.

Petrobras said in a statement it presented a proposal that met the union's demands.

Sindipetro-NF, which represents oil workers in the Campos Basin, said on its Web site the proposal was not good enough but that it would discuss it with the workers on Thursday.

Negotiations …

A `Hart to Hart' with Stefanie Powers about love, loss

PASADENA, Calif. When she was a little girl, actress Stefanie Powersused to stare at the mountains, daydreaming.

"I remember thinking, `If I could just get on my horse and pointit in one direction, where would I wind up?' I used to make lists ofthings - my mother still has the lists - of what I would take on mytrip."

Powers has never gotten over her fascination for the exotic.And whether she's in the bush in Kenya, the jungles of Indonesia orthe polo grounds of England, she's still wondering where she'll windup.

Powers indulges her wanderlust in her latest foray as theglamorous Jennifer Hart in "Hart to Hart: Till Death Do Us Part,"premiering Sunday on the …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Seminar on non-agricultural products kicks off in Baku.

Baku, February 13, 2012 (AzerTAc) -- A seminar called World Trade Organization negotiations on non-agricultural products has today started in Azerbaijan`s capital. The seminar was co-organized by the Ministry of Economic Development of Azerbaijan and the Islamic …

C2 TU.COM.(Sports)

UNKNOWN_UFCODE: Ntucom,17p3 On timesunion.com

Mark McGuire has strong feelings about personal seat licenses at the Giants' new stadium. …

CRITICISM OF SEC CHIEF GROWS.(BUSINESS)

Byline: MARILYN GEEWAX Cox News Service

WASHINGTON -- Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Harvey Pitt, already the target of withering criticism from Democratic lawmakers, is coming under increasing pressure from business leaders.

``The last thing investors, business leaders and regulators need is the ongoing turmoil that we have seen at the SEC,'' Bruce Josten, executive vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said.

The business community is tired of ``distractions and controversies'' at the agency charged with cleaning up the accounting profession and restoring investor confidence in financial markets, Josten said.

``The …

JOHNSON APOLOGIZES TO LANDRY, THEN TAKES COWBOYS' REINS.(Sports)

Byline: Denne H. Freeman Associated Press

Jimmy Johnson began his career as coach of the Dallas Cowboys and successor to Tom Landry with an apology on Tuesday.

"I'm sorry if I hurt anyone," he said.

"It hurts me to say I did something out of disrespect for Tom Landry," he said at a news conference. "I don't expect to replace someone like him. But just let me do my thing and judge me by what happens later."

Johnson also apologized for being in Dallas the day before Landry was fired. He said it "apparently offended some people."

"I was in Dallas to talk face to face with Jerry Jones," Johnson said. "I'd like to sit down and visit …

Rio puts President Lula at heart of Olympic bid

Rio de Janeiro's bid to host the 2016 Olympics has put Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva at the center of its campaign.

Sidestepping questions Tuesday about the effect President Barack Obama's presence could have on Chicago's bid, Rio's team said Silva had 80 percent approval ratings in Brazil.

Bid leader Carlos Nuzman said the president _ …

COLD DISH

Sushi used to be an exotic dish. After discovering that the delicacy had reached American shores, I didn't know if it could be experienced outside of a fancy New York or San Francisco restaurant. After discovering it had made it inland to restaurants in the Gem State, it didn't seem such a stretch to find it in the deli section of my local grocery store. Somewhat expensive and sometimes questionable, I hadn't found a supermarket version worth writing about until my recent discovery of the Okami Sushi Samplers at WinCo. Holy Sashimi, Batman! This stuff is delicious. For $2.98, you can enjoy six large pieces of some of the best cooked fish, seaweed and rice to be found in a grocery store. …

Fill up on gasoline savings.(Brief Article)

Drive down your spending on fuel

There's good news for drivers. [According to a forecast by the Washington, D.C.-based Energy Information Administration (EIA), gasoline prices should be declining this year. "We're expecting additional crude oil to hit world market and that will push crude prices down, as well as the [price of] products refined from crude oil, including gasoline," states John Cogan, EIA energy information specialist.

As per an EIA report (October 6, 2000), average national gas prices were expected to be $1.48 per gallon during 2000 and $1.40 per gallon during 2001. That's a savings of more than 5%. Says Cogan, "The supply and demand for crude …

Boeing Awaits Decision On AMF JTRS.

Boeing [BA] officials soon expect to receive the request for the final proposal revision in its competition with Lockheed Martin [LMT] for the military's next generation Airborne Maritime and Fixed Station Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS AMF).

The Defense Department FY '09 budget requests $834.6 million in research, development, test and evaluation for JTRS-Navy. The JTRS program is a DoD-wide program led by the Navy through the Program Executive Office-JTRS, located at Naval Sea Systems Command, San Diego. The FY '09 program is to design, develop and manufacture JTRS engineering development hardware and software models.

"The next step is to receive the request for final …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

A WIN TODAY WOULD BE ONE GIANT STEP.(SPORTS)

Byline: BILL PENNINGTON New York Times

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- When the Giants and the Washington Redskins met three weeks ago, the game took one minute less than four hours to play, ended in a 7-7 tie and left each side emotionally and physically drained. Not surprisingly, neither team played well the following week -- the Giants losing decisively to Tampa Bay, the Redskins squandering a pivotal opportunity at home with a loss to lowly St. Louis.

``We had fought, struggled and scratched for five quarters,'' Giants linebacker Corey Widmer said this week. ``And in a sense, nothing was resolved. The frustration was noticeable everywhere you looked.''

This afternoon, the Giants and the Redskins will stage a rematch at Giants Stadium. A division championship is waiting for the Giants if they win or tie. The Redskins (7-6-1) will try to …

NCAA: It's Samhan vs. the Villanova team

Omar Samhan is putting together one of the truly impressive individual performances of this year's NCAA tournament, with 32 points _ one shy of his career high.

Villanova is countering with balance, especially as Scottie Reynolds struggles to find his shot. Nova has only turned the ball over five times in the game, but a key mistake with 4 1/2 minutes left led to a 3-pointer by Matthew Dellavedova and a 64-61 Gaels lead.

Maalik Wayns came back to score on a nifty drive for Villanova, and the lead is one.

___

BYU star Jimmer Fredette had the highest-scoring game of the first round, with 37 points. But he did it on 13 of 26 shooting. Compare …

Bright ideas

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SUPPLIER TECHNOLOGY

New lighting technologies from Hella offer styling freedom for automakers and improved performance for consumers.

The trend toward dramatic styling in the front-ends of passenger cars has pushed the evolution of lighting as fast as technology and innovation will allow. Halogen lights, once considered the industry workhorse for years to come, have bumped up against the laws of physics as reflectors and optics shrink to accommodate sleeker front ends. Now the trend is toward high intensity discharge (HID) lighting, which is becoming more popular in Europe and moving downscale in vehicles across the globe.

"We have a huge position in …

ST. ROSE MEN WIN IN OT.(Sports)

Jermaine Clark knocked down a 3-pointer with 17 seconds left in overtime to lift the College of Saint Rose men's basketball team to an 80-77 win over Saint Michael's Wednesday evening at Daniel P. Nolan Gymnasium.

The Golden Knights trailed 77-76 before Clark, who finished with 11 points, hit the game-winner from the left wing to put his team in front for good.

Saint Rose has won seven of its last nine and improved to 7-1 at home on the season.

The Golden Knights (8-5, 5-3) jumped ahead 54-43 with 15:28 left to play in regulation, but Saint Michael's (5-7, 1-7) crawled back and took a 70-68 lead with 59 seconds left. Rob Gutierrez scored with 37 …

ABORTION RIGHTS BACKERS BLAST BUDGET COMPROMISE.(MAIN)

Byline: Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- The Clinton administration claimed victory Monday in a seven-year struggle to persuade Congress to release nearly $1 billion in back payments to the United Nations, but abortion rights advocates said the White House abandoned them to get the deal.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said the White House was ``putting the women of the world at risk in order to placate the right-wing Republicans who control Congress.''

Under the agreement reached Sunday night, the White House would accept restrictions on money going to …

Sharapova back at French; Nadal wins 29th straight

Those unmistakable shrieks punctuating point after point on Court 1 at the French Open on Monday trumpeted Maria Sharapova's return to the Grand Slam stage.

There were other ways Sharapova made her presence felt _ the big groundstrokes off both wings; the tough-as-nails turnaround after a slow start; the prematch accessories of buttoned-up blue jacket and oversized white purse; the postmatch victory waves and blown kisses.

Sharapova's tennis is not yet back to her lofty standards, as one might expect after shoulder surgery in October and four singles matches in the past 10 months. The 64th-ranked Anastasiya Yakimova of Belarus is not the sort of opponent who …