Thursday, March 15, 2012

Sudan threatens to block southern oil pipeline

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — Sudan's president threatened to block pipelines in the south if the government there doesn't pay to transit oil or share it with Khartoum, the official news agency reported Wednesday.

Southern Sudan voted overwhelmingly in January to secede from Sudan and become an independent country in July. That vote was part of a 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of war.

The two governments are still negotiating how oil wealth will be shared between the north and the south.

President Omar al-Bashir's comments late Tuesday in the port city of Port Sudan seem to be hardening his side's negotiating position, particularly in the context of borders …

Chang cruises into Malaysian Open quarterfinal

Chang Kai-Chen of Taiwan crushed China's 20th-ranked and third-seeded Zheng Jie 6-2, 6-3 to reach the quarterfinals of the Malaysian Open on Thursday.

The 19-year-old Taiwanese played fearlessly against an opponent ranked 72 places above her and completed a disastrous week for Chinese players after second-seeded Li Na was knocked out by Germany's Tatjana Malek on Monday. Both Zheng and Li Na had reached the semifinals of the Australian Open last month.

Chang took only 75 minutes to set up a quarterfinal date with sixth seed Sybille Bammer of Austria, who earlier trounced Uzbekistan's Akgul Amanmuradova 6-3, 6-0.

Elsewhere, Chanelle Scheepers of …

Patriots blame themselves

The Patriots had no problem with the officiating Sunday when theofficials called the game after New England wide receiver CurtisJackson was flagged for illegal motion with less than 10 seconds leftto play and the Pats on the Bears' 21-yard line, preserving a 24-17Bears win.

They had problems with themselves.

"Absolutely they got it right," coach Bill Belichick said of alittle-known rule that 10 seconds automatically are deducted on anoffensive penalty with less than two minutes to go. "We didn't getour (receiver) set under 10 seconds. The play went off and we got a10-second runoff.

"I'm upset because of all the mistakes we made the entire game-the penalties …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Experts question shooting of Occupy Oakland filmer

OAKLAND, California (AP) — The mayor renewed her appeal to Occupy Oakland representatives to meet with city officials as dueling video evidence was released by Oakland authorities and by a man who experts say appears to be the victim of excessive police force.

In New York, about two dozen Occupy Wall Street protesters began a two-week walk from New York to Washington.

The month-old protest camp in a public plaza downtown has grown to about 180 tents. Mayor Jean Quan on Tuesday echoed concerns of business leaders, saying the tent city is hurting commerce — and, she added, straining an already stretched city budget. Officials say Occupy Oakland-related events through the end of …

Obama says McCain is 'passing the buck' on economy

Republican presidential candidate John McCain on Tuesday blamed Wall Street's financial turmoil on unchecked corporate greed. His Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, dismissed McCain's call for a high-level commission to study the economic crisis as "passing the buck."

The presidential campaigns argued over who would be best able to deal with the kinds of financial meltdowns that roiled the markets Monday and to prevent a similar crisis in the future. McCain proposed a review on the order of the one led by the Sept. 11 commission, the bipartisan panel that studied the events leading to the 2001 terrorist attacks.

"We need a 9/11 commission," …

Views: Do you think six per cent rail fare rise is justified? ; Gazette comment

Jan Sanders, 51, from Priest Lane, Shenfield, said: "I think weaccept that we have to pay more but I don't know if there is anyimprovement and what's frustrating is that there's often not aservice at all."

Bank employee Geoff Wallis, 51, from Hutton, said: "I am shockedby the rise, especially when people are not getting pay rises andusually twice a week you have to stand all the way."

London Cameraman, Glenn Evans, 46, said: "Has there been a sixper cent increase in the quality of service? There does not seem tobe any improvement in the service."

Kevin Dunn, 58, an insurance broker from Billericay, said: "Ithink it is really disgraceful. They treat …

Senators Vow Quick Action on Walter Reed

WASHINGTON - Lawmakers promised a quick response and sought an independent commission as they expressed outrage Sunday over the poor conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center for soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"I'm worried about if it's this bad at the outpatient facilities at Walter Reed, how is it in the rest of the country? Because Walter Reed is our crown jewel," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

In a letter Sunday to Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Sunday, Schumer asked for an independent commission, possibly headed by former Secretary of State Colin Powell, to investigate all post-combat medical facilities and recommend changes.

"To think …

Senate confirms Geithner as treasury secretary

New York Federal Reserve Bank President Timothy Geithner won confirmation Monday as President Barack Obama's treasury secretary despite personal tax lapses that turned more than a third of the Senate against him. Obama immediately put him to work fixing an economy in "dangerous jeopardy."

"We can't waste a day," Obama said, standing beside Geithner as he was sworn into office by Vice President Joe Biden.

The Senate voted 60-34 to put Geithner in charge of the administration's economic team as it races to halt the worst financial slide in generations. The swearing-in followed less than an hour later, the administration seeking to emphasize …

CSO features all-Russian performance

It's possible to find some non-Christmas music and performanceart on Chicago's stages this weekend.

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra will play an all-Russian programwith co-concertmaster Samuel Magad as soloist in the ShostakovichViolin Concerto No. 2. Neeme Jarvi, a native Estonian who emigratedto the United States in 1980, also will conduct the Symphonic Suitefrom Glazounov's "From the Middle Ages," Op. 79, and the ProkofievSymphony No. 4.

Tickets are $12 to $38; call 435-8111.

THE SHIKSA SCHTICK: Sharon Evans is a Chicago performanceartist who can send dialogue spinning off into an intriguing inner orouter space. She isn't onstage in her newest …

'Melrose' and '90210' Coming on DVD

LOS ANGELES - Before "The O.C." and "Laguna Beach," the younger generation satisfied its taste for televised teen drama with "Beverly Hills 90210" and "Melrose Place."

Now both shows are arriving in DVD packages.

"Beverly Hills 90210: The Complete First Season" packs 22 episodes into a …

Newspaper circulation down 10.6 percent

The decline in U.S. newspaper circulation is accelerating as the industry continues to struggle with reader defections to the Internet and tumbling ad revenue.

New figures from the Audit Bureau of Circulations show that average daily circulation dropped 10.6 percent in the April-September period from the same six-month span in 2008.

That's greater than the 7.1 percent …

Pandemic could hurt state's economy, Flu outbreak has the potential to slow W.Va.'s

Reading the federal government's national response plan for thenext pandemic can make your palms sweat. The implications for WestVirginia's economy may cause some state leaders and business ownersto lose sleep.

According to federal health officials, "A pandemic is a globaldisease outbreak. An influenza pandemic occurs when a new influenza Avirus emerges for which there is little or no immunity in the humanpopulation, begins to cause serious illness and then spreads easilyperson-to-person worldwide."

While attention is currently focused on bird flu as the possiblecause of a pandemic, "it is important to note that bird flu is notyet easily transmitted from human to human and no human cases havebeen reported in the United States," noted a prepared statementissued by the governor's office in December.

It's not universally agreed that the next pandemic will be causedby avian flu. But infectious disease experts do pretty much agreethat pandemics are like hurricanes and earthquakes: They happen. Theexperts also agree that the nation needs to be prepared.

Mike Osterholm, an epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota,said the next pandemic will be like a 12- to 18-month globalblizzard. He said the world's just-in-time economy "has set us up fora lot of problems." Osterholm spoke Monday at the 2006 annualconference of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers inMinneapolis.

West Virginia's economy may be particularly vulnerable to apandemic caused by avian flu. Consider:

* Travelers spent $3.4 billion in West Virginia in 2004, accordinga study released last year by the state Division of Tourism. Much ofthat revenue could be at risk if a pandemic caused people to decideto stay home.

* Last year, state government's share of gambling profits amountedto about $370 million. That money could be at risk if a pandemiccaused people to avoid crowded places like the state's four racetrackcasinos.

* Poultry is West Virginia's leading agriculture industry,accounting for $219 million - 51.8 percent - of West Virginia'sagricultural cash receipts in 2004. Flocks could be in danger ifthere's an avian flu outbreak, and the industry would be in troubleif people quit eating poultry products.

Tiffany Wu, Reuters' Taipei bureau chief from 2002 until February,said that when Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, hit Asiain 2003, the news service split its Taiwan bureau into two officesand "we bought face masks, goggles, special suits, and handsanitizers. They refused to let you in an elevator without a facemask."

The fear of SARS in Taiwan was overblown. "Tuberculosis kills16,000 in Taiwan annually," Wu said. "SARS killed 40."

Although the fear was overblown, "the economic impact was veryreal," she said.

A 6th human foot found on Canada's Pacific coast

Another human foot was found Wednesday on a British Columbia shoreline, the second this week and the sixth within a year in a bizarre mystery that has confounded police.

Like most of the others, it was a right foot encased in a running shoe, said Sgt. Mike Tresoor of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. He said a citizen spotted it on a beach and no other remains were found.

The feet all were recovered within a few miles of each other along island shorelines in the Strait of Georgia, which lies to the south and west of the city of Vancouver.

Authorities say they haven't reached any conclusions about the origin of the feet but are working to determine if there are any links to any other partial remains recovered in the province.

"Too my knowledge, we have not encountered anything like this," RCMP spokeswoman Annie Linteau told The Associated Press Wednesday evening. She declined to speculate if foul play was involved.

She did suggest that the latest find could be from the body of a missing fishermen or a plane crash victim, but she didn't provide any specifics.

"In the first four cases, we did not find any evidence the feet were severed," she said. "It's too early to say if this foot was severed."

She said the fifth case was being handled by local police and was not under RCMP jurisdiction.

Terry Smith, the chief coroner of British Columbia, said this week that DNA profiles from the first three feet have not helped to determine identities because they have not matched any existing samples.

Smith and others have suggested that the feet didn't sink but floated to shore because they were encased in buoyant running shoes.

The first three feet washed ashore about 40 miles southwest of Vancouver on islands in the Strait of Georgia. The first foot was discovered last summer by beachcombers. Days later, a foot was found inside a man's Reebok sneaker. The remains of a third right foot were found Feb 8.

The fourth foot was found May 22 on Kirkland Island in the Fraser River, about 15 miles south of Vancouver. About a mile away, the fifth foot _ and only left foot, was discovered Monday morning floating in water off Westham Island.

Local speculation has been rife with some reports claiming they belonged to victims of violent crimes or a plane crash.

Tresoor said major crime investigators from the Campbell River detachment, along with staff from the coroner's office, were investigating at the scene.

"The object will ultimately be examined by a forensic pathologist in attempts to determine the source of the foot and if it is related to other feet recently found," Tresoor said in a statement.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling of British Columbia in lede)

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Ex-defense chief wins Colombia runoff in rout

A former defense minister from a powerful political clan who oversaw a major weakening of leftist rebels won Colombia's presidency Sunday, routing an eccentric outsider in a runoff.

The victory for Juan Manuel Santos, a 58-year-old economist and three-time government minister, was a ringing endorsement of outgoing conservative President Alvaro Uribe, whose U.S.-backed security policies he helped craft and promised to continue.

In his victory speech before a crowd of 10,000 in a Bogota coliseum preceded by a traditional music and dance troupe, Santos lionized Uribe.

"If we have come so far it's because we have been standing on the shoulders of giants," he said, calling Uribe "an exceptional person who transformed our country."

With nearly all polling stations reporting, Santos had 69 percent of the vote against 28 percent for former two-time Bogota Mayor Antanas Mockus. It was largest margin of victory in a presidential vote in modern Colombian history, said Carlos Ariel Sanchez, director of the national electoral council.

More than 3 percent of voters tendered protest ballots, indicating dissatisfaction with both candidates.

Mockus ran an anti-corruption campaign atop a fledgling Green Party that many Colombians considered naive if well-intentioned. But after catapulting into early contention he stumbled with a series of gaffes that had Colombians questioning his ability to run a country still mired in a half-century-old conflict.

Violence marred Sunday's vote as seven police officers and three soldiers were killed in separate attacks blamed on leftist rebels.

The police were killed when a roadside bomb ripped apart their truck on a routine patrol in Colombia's northeast, authorities said, while the soldiers died in an ambush of an army patrol carrying election material to a town in the eastern plains. Officials blamed the ambush on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the country's largest rebel band. The bombing was blamed on a smaller insurgency.

Santos, a former naval cadet, paid tribute to those losses in his victory speech, promising to work with Colombia's armed forces to "consolidate control over every inch of our territory."

"Time is up for the FARC," he said. There will be no dialogue with the rebels as long as they continue to engage in kidnapping and drug trafficking, he said.

As defense minister in 2006-09, Santos helped knock the wind out of the FARC. Two members of its seven-man ruling secretariat were killed during his tenure and FARC desertions soared. He also oversaw the bloodless 2008 ruse that rescued former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, three U.S. military contractors and 11 others from long captivity with the rebels.

In the May 30 first round, Santos fell just shy of the simple majority needed for victory. His margin of victory Sunday was superior to the 62 percent garnered by Uribe in his 2006 re-election. Mockus won in just one state, Putumayo, on Colombia's southern border.

The persistence of the rebel threat was a central issue in the campaign.

"Security. Security," said Bogota clothing factory owner Humberto Botero, 52, explaining his vote for Santos. "He's a statesman. He's someone who knows the country, who knows how to surround himself with talent."

Santos won the endorsement of most of the country's political establishment after the first round.

He promised to help the poor in a nation notorious for income inequality where more than two in five of its 44 million people live on less than $2 a day.

"Creating jobs will be the great obsession of this government," Santos said in his victory speech, while promising a government of national unity and inviting Mockus to help him close whatever wounds might have been opened in the campaign.

In his concession speech, Mockus said the election marked the consolidation in Colombia of "a new, independent political force, the Green Party," which he promised would "support the good and oppose the bad" in Santos' government.

"Today we begin to change Colombia," he said to the shouted acclaim of supporters at a campaign headquarters festooned with sunflowers and green. The Greens won their first seats in Congress in March legislative elections. They will have five members in the 102-seat Senate that takes office July 20 and will be dominated by Santos' allies. Santos takes office Aug. 7.

Mockus' clean-government campaign resonated strongly in the aftermath of a series of scandals that tainted Uribe's legacy, including the presidency's use of the DAS intelligence agency to spy on judges, journalists and human rights workers and, separately, more than 1,000 extra-judicial killings that prompted Santos to fire 27 officers in late 2008.

Those who voted for Mockus, a former university rector and son of Lithuanian immigrants, praised his refreshing integrity and promise to rid Colombia of endemic corruption.

But Mockus led many to question his ability to manage the military and foreign relations. At one point, he suggested Colombia dissolve its military, then backtracked. He also suggested he would have no choice but to extradite Uribe if an Ecuadorean court convicted him in a 2008 cross-border raid on a FARC base. In fact, Colombia's presidents can deny extradition requests.

The mathematician and philosopher alienated voters by promising a tax increase. And rather than courting the left-wing vote, he said he didn't want it.

"Mockus simply isn't of the stature to be president and manage a country as complex as Colombia," said Diego Munoz, a 36-year-old street vendor who voted for Santos.

Cynthia Arnson, director of Latin American studies at the Woodrow Wilson center in Washington, said Mockus "made some honest statements that constituted political suicide."

Santos, a University of Kansas graduate, was making his first run for elected office may have benefited politically from a government welfare payment program called Accion Social that grew under Uribe from 320,000 recipient families to 2.2 million. He said Sunday night that he would continue and expand on such programs

Santos is a great-nephew of Colombia's Liberal party president in 1938-42, Eduardo Santos, whose family long ran the country's leading newspaper, El Tiempo.

As defense minister, Santos clashed often with leftist Presidents Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Rafael Correa of Ecuador.

Last month, a judge in Ecuador ordered his arrest for authorizing the 2008 cross-border raid on a FARC base inside Colombia's southern neighbor that killed the rebel group's No. 2 commander, Raul Reyes.

Santos called the arrest warrant absurd because the Colombian state _ not he individually _ carried out the raid.

He told The Associated Press in a pre-election interview that it wouldn't prevent him from visiting Ecuador if invited. Further, Santos said he would invite Chavez and the Venezuelan leader's leftist allies to his inauguration.

"I want good relations with all our neighbors," Santos said.

___

Associated Press writers Cesar Garcia, Carlos Gonzalez, Vivian Sequera and Nancy Lopez contributed to this report.

'Raw' wrestling to go back to USA in fall

STAMFORD, Conn. -- World Wrestling Entertainment has reached athree-year agreement that will return its "WWE Raw" cable program toUSA Network in October, company officials said Monday.

The deal with NBC Universal resolves a major issue for theStamford-based producer of televised wrestling matches. "Raw,"regularly among the most popular cable programs, needed to find a newhome after Spike TV decided not to extend its contract with WWE thatends in September.

But WWE will lose about $13 million in net income, or $37 millionin revenue, as a result of lost advertising under the new deal, thecompany said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

WWE said USA will sell and retain all advertising in theprogramming. Under the existing agreement with Spike TV, WWE sellsthe majority of ads in its cable programs. But WWE said the new dealoffers benefits by being on a larger, more established network.

USA will air a one-hour "Raw" program on weekends. AP

Investigators finish Politkovskaya probe

Russian investigators say they have concluded a probe into the 2006 killing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

The Investigative Committee, which probes such crimes, said Wednesday it formally charged three Chechen men with involvement in the murder and made related abuse of office charges against an officer of the Federal Security Service, or FSB.

Officials said earlier that FSB Lt. Col. Pavel Ryaguzov was suspected of giving Politkovskaya's killers her address. Ryaguzov and other suspects have been in custody since their arrest in August.

The committee doesn't say what was the motive. It says it has dropped charges against several other suspects in the case.

How Fed policymakers affect the economy

The Federal Reserve's chief policymaking group, the Federal Open Market Committee, has vast power over the economy through its ability to set monetary policy.

Here is a look at how the FOMC operates.

Q: What is the FOMC's primary role?

A: Its mission is to keep the economy, inflation and employment on a healthy track. When the economy weakens, Fed policymakers cut interest rates or keep them low. The lower interest rates are aimed at promoting increased borrowing and spending by consumers and businesses to spur economic growth.

When the economy grows so fast that inflation becomes a threat, Fed policymakers raise rates or keep them high. That makes it costlier for people to get loans and means less borrowing and spending. Economic activity slows and inflation pressures ease.

Q: How does the FOMC move interest rates?

A: Its policymakers decide whether to buy securities from banks. The banks sell those securities to the Fed and receive money from the Fed which they can use to make more loans. That acts to lower the interest that banks charge for those loans. Conversely, if the Fed wants to raise interest rates, it sells Treasury securities to the banks, pulling money out of the financial system and raising the cost for loans. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is responsible for conducting these operations.

Q: Who's on the FOMC?

A: It's composed of:

— The Fed's Board of Governors in Washington, which now totals five members but at full strength has seven members. (Two seats are vacant.)

— The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

— Four of the remaining 11 presidents of the Fed's regional banks. They serve one-year terms on a rotating basis.

The current roster of voting members: Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, Vice Chairwoman Janet Yellen, and Fed Governors Elizabeth Duke, Daniel Tarullo and Sarah Bloom Raskin, all based in Washington; William Dudley, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Charles Evans, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago; Charles Plosser, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia; Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; and Narayana Kocherlakota, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.

Q: How often does the FOMC meet?

A: It regularly meets eight times a year in person at the Fed's headquarters in Washington. During the financial crisis, the FOMC also held emergency meetings, mostly by video conference. This year and last year, half the meetings were two-day sessions, the rest one-day.

Q: Why are most of the FOMC's rate decisions issued around 2:15 p.m.?

A: Having a consistent time helps investors digest and react to the Fed's policy decisions. Issuing decisions when the markets are open gives Fed policymakers instant feedback from investors.

Q: Why are some of the FOMC's rate decisions issued around 12:30 p.m.?

A: For the first time in the Fed's history, the chairman has begun conducting a series of regularly scheduled news conferences to discuss the Fed's economic forecast. The schedule calls for Bernanke to hold four news conferences a year, following the meetings where the Fed updates its forecast. (There was no news conference Wednesday.) On days when Bernanke holds a news conference, the Fed's rate decision is announced at 12:30 p.m. instead of 2:15 p.m.

The Fed is hoping the news conferences will improve its communications with Wall Street investors and the American public.

Q: How are the FOMC's rate decisions approved?

A: By a majority of the voting members, who now total 10. (At full strength, there would be 12.) Unlike the Supreme Court, close votes on the FOMC are rare. It would be bad for financial markets if investors felt that the Fed chairman was unable to command widespread support for his policies.

At the last meeting, on Aug. 9, three FOMC members dissented. It was the most number of dissenters in nearly 20 years.

Q: How are Fed officials selected?

A: The president nominates the Fed chairman and his colleagues on the board of governors in Washington. They must be confirmed by the Senate. The presidents of the 12 regional Fed banks are appointed by each bank's board of directors, with approval from the Fed's board.

The Dodd-Frank law revamping the nation's financial system bars bankers who sit on the regional boards from voting for the regional bank president. Other local business people serving on the boards still retain their vote. This change was made to address concerns about potential conflicts of interest between the Fed and banks which are regulated by the Fed.

Q: How and why was the Fed created?

A: Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act in 1913. The legislation was signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on Dec. 23, 1913. The Fed began operating in 1914. It was created in response to a series of bank panics that plagued the United States during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Those panics led to bank failures and business bankruptcies that roiled the economy.

Cisco Systems 1Q Profit Jumps 28 Percent

SAN FRANCISCO - Cisco Systems Inc., the world's largest networking equipment maker, said Wednesday its first-quarter earnings surged 28 percent over last year as customers spent gingerly to upgrade their networks to accommodate faster Internet traffic.

Cisco also profited from its recent $6.9 billion acquisition of Scientific-Atlanta Inc., the world's second-largest cable television box seller, which added $584 million to Cisco's sales during the quarter. The deal closed in February.

Cisco's net income for the quarter ending Oct. 28 was $1.61 billion, or 26 cents per share, compared with $1.26 billion, or 20 cents per share, in the same period last year.

Quarterly sales for the San Jose-based company, which makes the routers, switches and other devices used to link networks and direct traffic on the Internet, were $8.18 billion, compared with $6.55 billion last year. Cisco also produces digital subscriber line and cable broadband equipment, Voice over Internet Protocol telephone service products and network management software.

Excluding one-time charges, Cisco would have earned $1.9 billion, or 31 cents per share.

The company was expected to earn, on average, 29 cents per share on $7.9 billion in revenue, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial.

John Chambers, Cisco's chief executive officer, said in a conference call that Cisco is succeeding in convincing customers to think of the network as the central platform for communications and IT needs.

"The balance was amazingly good everywhere," Chambers said. "All elements of our vision have evolved as we thought."

Sales increased across the company's core line of products. Growth was particularly strong in emerging markets such as Eastern Europe, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East, where orders were up over 40 percent, and the commercial and service provider markets, said Dennis Powell, Cisco's chief financial officer.

"It wasn't just one area that drove this," Powell said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We were hitting on all cylinders. Every product and every geography was performing extremely well for us."

Cisco expects the momentum to help drive 24 to 25 percent year-over-year revenue growth in the fiscal second quarter, which would translate to about $8.2 billion or $8.3 billion in quarterly revenue, Powell said.

Analysts said Cisco's broad-based growth reflected a general strengthening in the networking industry, as customers scramble to upgrade outdated gear and accommodate growing bandwidth demands.

"It's not quite the perfect storm, but a lot of things aligned nicely for them to be able to put these numbers up," said Zeus Kerravala, an analyst with the Yankee Group. "There was strength all over the place."

The results were announced after the market closed. The company's stock price gained as much as 9 percent in after-hours trading, rising $2.26 to $27.36. Cisco's stock closed up 26 cents, or about 1 percent, to $25.10 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

BioCycle serendipity at National Conference

WE'VE spoken (and experienced the impact of) the word serendipity for decades, but only today looked up its meaning in our trusty Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. What we've learned was what we would have guessed -- using our serendipitous intuition: "An aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident." The latest example is illustrated by the agenda for the 28th Annual BioCycle National Conference which will be held in Kansas City, Missouri May 4 - 6, 1998. (The full program appears on pages 15-17 of this issue.)

The first speaker in the opening plenary session, "Organics Recycling Comes of Age," is a director of the National Resource Conservation Service. This USDA agency is directly concerned with both soil and water quality, and is increasingly focusing on organics utilization. About 10 years ago, the infamous Garbage Barge became a symbol for the need to divert municipal solid waste from landfills by recycling, reduction and reuse. Today, animal wastes have achieved similar notoriety because of contaminated waterways and problems like Pfiesteria. Throughout the Conference, many of the experts in organics recycling will discuss feedstocks, processing methods, microbial dynamics and value-added strategies to improve markets. The final day will offer a training workshop on Compost Process And Quality Control. Now for the serendipity.

While the Bio Cycle National Conference focuses on coast-to-coast concerns, it also has the special "flavor" of the region where it is held. This time the region is America's "show me" state, and Missouri is in the midst of placing a new emphasis on diverting food residuals from landfills. Just at this issue was going to press, we received the results of a two year study done by the Midwest Assistance Program (MAP) on municipal solid waste composition in Missouri.

A notable change from findings in a waste composition study done in 1987 is in the increase in food residuals. In 1987, only 8.3 percent of the waste stream was food residuals. By 1996, the total had increased to 18.7 percent. The most significant change since 1987 is the reduction in "other organics." This category consists of carbon-based materials that did not fall into any of the other organic categories. In 1987, more than 21 percent of the MSW stream fell into this category. In 1997, that percentage dropped to 3.2 percent. This reduction is mostly due to the yard trimmings ban enacted by Senate Bill 530 in 1990. "If all other materials in this category have remained relatively constant, the yard trimmings ban has reduced waste almost 18 percent," concludes the MAP staff.

The results of waste characterization for organics as well as wood will be presented at a Conference session on Organic Residuals Inventory; researchers from Kansas State University will provide data on the volume of food industry residuals and other organics in the Midwest as well as the feasibility of wood to gasification and composting facilities.

Composting is a well-defined process for the organic component of the solid waste stream that - in the words of senior editor Clarence Golueke -- provides for biological decomposition under controlled conditions for utilization on land without adversely affecting the environment. The process itself has its own set of limitations, but the process of linking generators, site managers, facility owners, regulators and end product users has always had a quality of serendipity about it. Join us in Kansas City for the BioCycle National Conference to see how organics recycling is preparing for the year 2000 and beyond. -J.G.

Sevilla's Kanoute signs new contract

Frederic Kanoute has signed a two-year extension at Seville through to 2012.

The 31-year-old striker, born in France but a Mali international, said he may end his career when his new contract runs out.

"Let's see if then I have energy to play after 2012. You don't know but at the moment I'm thinking that I might be retiring here," said Kanoute, who joined Sevilla from Tottenham in 2005.

"I wanted to stay here. The club too. It showed its interest in me staying here. So the two parties are very happy."

Kanoute, who has also played for West Ham and Lyon, has enjoyed his greatest success with Sevilla, helping the team win the UEFA Cup and the European Super Cup in 2006, and the UEFA Cup, Copa del Rey and Spanish Super Cup the following year.

Earlier this year, Kanoute, a practicing Muslim, was fined by the Spanish football federation for revealing a T-shirt expressing support for Palestine during a match.

The striker is currently in a rich vein of form, having scored nine goals in the past seven league matches. With 10 games of the season remaining, Sevilla is third with 54 points, 15 behind leader Barcelona.

___

On the Net:

Sevilla: http://www.sevillafc.es

Monday, March 12, 2012

Feared Security Chief to Govern Chechnya

GROZNY, Russia - President Vladimir Putin nominated a widely feared security chief as the new president of Chechnya on Thursday, while Europe's human rights chief denounced torture and other rampant abuses in the war-battered region. Ramzan Kadyrov, who previously had served as Chechnya's prime minister, has run a security force that is accused of abducting and abusing suspected rebels and civilians believed to be connected to them.

Speaking at a rights conference in Chechnya on Thursday, Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe's Commissioner for Human Rights, said he had found widespread evidence of torture and other rights abuses on his trip to the region, RIA Novosti news agency reported.

Kadyrov had been widely expected to seek the presidency after turning 30 in October - the minimum age for presidents under local law. His nomination follows Putin's dismissal of regional President Alu Alkhanov earlier this month and needs to be approved by the local legislature - a mere formality given Kadyrov's clout.

Kadyrov is the son of the late Akhmad Kadyrov, who became Chechen president in 2003 in a Kremlin-conducted election aimed at undermining the separatist rebel movement. He was assassinated seven months later.

More than a decade of separatist fighting has left much of Chechnya, particularly the capital Grozny, a moonscape of ruins, but Kadyrov has led a largely federally funded campaign to rebuild.

During a meeting with Kadyrov on Thursday, Putin hailed the reconstruction efforts, saying Chechnya has seen "significant positive developments," according to televised remarks. He expressed hope that Kadyrov would continue efforts to improve social and economic conditions in the region, so that "people Chechnya feel a greater security."

International rights groups have accused Kadyrov's security force of abuses against civilians, including abductions, torture and killing. Some have speculated that the October killing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who had reported critically on Chechnya, may have been connected with her investigation of Kadyrov's administration.

Kadyrov denied any involvement, saying, "I don't kill women."

Chechnya has been plagued by fighting with separatist rebels for most the past dozen years. A 20-month war ended in 1996 with the withdrawal of Russian troops after rebels fought them to a standstill, giving the province de-facto independence.

Russian forces swept back into the region in September 1999 following an incursion by Chechnya-based fighters into neighboring Dagestan and fatal apartment bombings in other parts of Russia which officials blamed on the separatists.

Major fighting in the latter campaign died down by 2001, but skirmishes still break out between rebels and Russian soldiers in the region.

Israel Preparing Lebanon Ground Offensive

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Pitched battles raged between Israeli forces and Hezbollah fighters on the border Thursday, and Israel warned hundreds of thousands of people to flee southern Lebanon "immediately," preparing for a likely ground offensive to set up a buffer zone.

U.N. chief Kofi Annan warned of a humanitarian crisis in Lebanon and called for an immediate cease-fire, even as he admitted "serious obstacles" stand in the way of even easing the violence. Annan denounced Israel for "excessive use of force" and Hezbollah for holding "an entire nation hostage" with its rocket attacks and snatching of two Israeli soldiers last week.

As the death toll rose to 330 in Lebanon, as well as at least 32 Israelis, Lebanese streamed north into the capital and other regions, crowding into schools, relatives' homes or hotels. Taxi drivers in the south were charging up to $400 per person for rides to Beirut - more than 40 times the usual price. In remote villages of the south, cut off by strikes, residents made their way out over the mountains by foot.

The price of food, medical supplies and gasoline rose by as much as 500 percent in parts of Lebanon on Thursday as Israel's relentless bombardment destroyed roads, bridges and other supply routes. The World Food Program said estimates of basic food supplies ranged from one to three months.

On a day that saw U.S. Marines return to Lebanon for the first time in 22 years, the war looked ready to expand dramatically. Neither side showed any sign of backing down. Hezbollah refused to release its two Israeli soldiers without a prisoner exchange, Israel was aiming to create a new buffer zone in a region that saw 18 years of Israeli presence ending in 2000.

Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah shrugged off concerns of a stepped-up Israeli onslaught, vowing never to release two Israeli soldiers captured by his guerrillas even "if the whole universe comes (against us)." He said they would be freed only as part of a prisoner exchange brokered through indirect negotiations.

He spoke in an interview with the Al-Jazeera news network taped Thursday to show he had survived a heavy airstrike in south Beirut that Israel said targeted a Hezbollah underground leadership bunker. The guerrillas said the strike only hit a mosque under construction and no one was hurt.

The United States - which has resisted calls to press its ally Israel to halt the fighting - was sending Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to the region, arriving in Israel on Tuesday or Wednesday after stopping over in Arab nations, Israeli officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the schedule was not yet confirmed.

The mission would be the first U.S. diplomatic effort on the ground since the Israeli onslaught against Lebanon began nine days ago.

Israel has decided air power alone will not be enough to drive Hezbollah back from the Israeli-Lebanon border and that a ground force will be needed to establish a zone that is at least 20 miles deep, senior military officials said Thursday. That would force Hezbollah behind the Litani River.

Israel wants to send a strong message to all its enemies, especially Iran, that the consequences of attacking the Jewish state will be unbearable.

But mounting civilian casualties and the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Lebanese could limit the amount of time Israel has to achieve its goals, as international tolerance for the bloodshed and destruction runs out.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora put the death toll at more than 330 - at least 11 of them killed Thursday - with 1,100 wounded. At least 32 Israelis have been killed, including 17 service members - three of them killed in military operations Thursday and early Friday.

Saniora said more than 55 bridges across the country had been destroyed, and that Israeli forces had targeted ambulances and medical convoys.

"This attack is no longer against Hezbollah, it is an attack against the Lebanese and Lebanon," Saniora told CNN.

The U.N. estimated that about a half-million people have been displaced in Lebanon, with 130,000 fleeing to Syria and about 45,000 believed to be in need of assistance.

More than 600 relatives of U.N. peacekeepers and other foreigners were evacuated by ship from the southern port city of Tyre, a region south of the Litani that has seen a ferocious pounding by Israeli warplanes and gunboats for days. Many of the women and children had spent the night on the beach waiting for the ship that arrived Thursday morning and took them to Cyprus.

The exodus of Americans and other foreign nationals stepped up dramatically, with ships lining up off Beirut to take thousands of families waiting at the port out of the war zone.

A group of around 40 U.S. Marines hit the ground in Beirut, helping in the evacuation of hundreds of Americans to a Navy transport vessel, the USS Nashville, offshore - the first U.S. military deployment in Lebanon in 22 years. More than 2,200 Americans were pulled out Thursday, twice the number a day before.

Israeli forces resumed attacks on Beirut at daybreak on Friday, witnesses said. One loud explosion was heard in the Lebanese capital. Al-Arabyia TV said the strike had targeted Beirut's southern suburbs, Hezbollah's stronghold. Israeli strikes Thursday pounded southern Beirut and villages and towns in the Shiite heartland of the south and the eastern Bekaa Valley.

Hezbollah, in turn, fired more than 40 rockets into northern Israel.

The clashes about a mile inside the Lebanese side of the border Thursday evening came when an Israeli patrol sweeping for Hezbollah bunkers was ambushed by guerillas, taking casualties. The fight rapidly expanded, with Israeli helicopters firing missiles at targets on the ground and rescue forces storming in.

The Israeli military said two Israeli soldiers died in the fighting and several guerrillas were killed. Hezbollah's Al-Manar television said three Israeli soldiers were killed but did not mention guerrilla casualties.

Two Apache attack helicopters collided in an accident northern Israel near the Lebanon border early Friday, killing one air force officer and injuring three others, two seriously, Israeli officials said. Al-Jazeera reported that four soldiers were killed in the crash, but did not give a source.

The commander of Israel's air force appointed an inquiry team to determine the cause.

Israel has stepped up its small-scale forays over the border in recent days, seeking Hezbollah positions, rocket stores and bunkers. Each time it has faced tough resistance from the guerrillas.

In preparation for a more powerful punch deeper into Lebanon, an Israeli military radio station that broadcasts into the south issued what it called "a strict warning" that Israeli forces would "act immediately" to halt Hezbollah rocket fire.

"It will act in word and deed inside the villages of the south against these aggressive terrorist acts. Therefore all residents of south Lebanon south of the Litani must leave their areas immediately for their own safety," the message in Arabic on the Al-Mashriq station said.

More than 300,000 people are believed to live south of the Litani - which twice has been the border line for Israeli buffer zones. In 1978, Israel invaded up to the Litani to drive back Palestinian guerrillas, withdrawing from most of the south months later.

Israel invaded Lebanon again in a much bigger operation in June 1982 when its forces seized parts of Beirut. It eventually carved out a buffer zone that stopped at the Litani. That zone was reduced gradually but the Israeli presence lasted for 18 years until 2000, when it withdrew its troops completely from the country.

---

Associated Press reporter Maria Sanminiatelli in Larnaca, Cyprus, contributed to this report.

UK prosecutors order retrial in airliner plot case

British prosecutors have ordered the retrial of seven men accused of plotting to down trans-Atlantic airliners bound for the U.S. and Canada.

Britain's Crown Prosecution Service said Wednesday it would ask the courts for a second trial after a London jury was unable to agree verdicts on charges related to an alleged plan to bomb jetliners.

Jurors after a five-month trial convicted three men on separate conspiracy to murder charges but were unable to reach a verdict on four. An eighth man was acquitted.

ND's Rudolph built to thrive under Kelly; Rugged tight end

Kyle Rudolph was the kind of blue-chip prospect Brian Kelly couldn't get at Cincinnati.

Not that he didn't try.

When Kelly left Central Michigan to take the Cincinnati job after the 2006 regular season, Rudolph was a junior tight end at Cincinnati's Elder High School -- and one of the top 25 prospects in the Class of 2008. Good enough to get scholarship offers from Ohio State, Notre Dame and Michigan. Good enough that Charlie Weis recruited him personally.

Rudolph committed to Notre Dame. But Kelly took his best shot, and Rudolph said it was an impressive one.

''Coach Kelly really preached to me about getting a hometown kid to stay in Cincinnati,'' Rudolph said. ''He definitely threw that hard at me, trying to get one of the bigger guys to stay home.

''And I really liked Cincinnati and everything they had to offer. I really liked the school and the coaches. But I had already made up my mind that I wanted to go away for school and go on my own and experience that.''

After three seasons at Cincinnati, Kelly finally caught up with Rudolph when he was named the Irish head coach last December.

''I definitely miss Coach Weis. He was one of our guys,'' Rudolph said. ''But at the same time ... I was excited when he [Kelly] was named the head coach. Everybody bought into the new system. Coach Kelly is great. All his assistants are great. And we're definitely excited for this fall.''

Two weeks into practice, though, Kelly said he still doesn't feel like he's coached Rudolph. The 6-6, 265-pound junior has been limited since suffering a hamstring injury during the team's first practice. But if Kelly is concerned, he's hiding it well. He joked about Rudolph being ''Wally Pipp'' when asked last week if sophomore tight end Tyler Eifert was taking advantage of extra reps in practice. And he promoted Rudolph as a likely ''Wildcat'' quarterback, should the Irish use that formation.

Rudolph is the most prominent player among the ''banged-up'' Irish.

''Nothing that concerns me going into Purdue,'' Kelly said. ''We've decided to shut [Rudolph] down through the weekend, because we're going to have Saturday off and come back full-go on Monday. We just think that's the prudent thing. We should have all hands on deck Tuesday or Wednesday.''

Kelly has seen enough of Rudolph over the last four years to know what's he's got -- a versatile, physical tight end who could flourish in the spread offense. Rudolph had 33 receptions for 364 yards and three touchdowns in nine games last year before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury against Navy. He was a semifinalist for the John Mackey Award honoring the nation's top collegiate tight end.

Most teams don't use tight ends in the Wildcat, but Kelly has done it with success at Cincinnati. And Rudolph is an intriguing candidate.

''Did you ever try to tackle Kyle Rudolph?'' Notre Dame offensive coordinator Charley Molnar said when asked about the possibility of using Rudolph there. ''He's 6-6, 260, and he's very fast and strong and doesn't seem to have much fear. I think that would be an advantage in itself. If we can thin out the defense and create one-on-one ... nobody's going to arm tackle him. Nobody.''

Rudolph seemed surprised when asked about it this week. And excited.

''Yeah, I heard that,'' he said. ''I'm definitely excited. Anytime I get my hands on the ball and a chance to make plays, I'm excited. I've got a pretty strong arm.''

Rudolph is one of several ''Weis guys'' at Notre Dame who still keeps in touch with his old coach.

''I communicate with him and [tight ends coach Bernie] Parmalee and all our old coaches that I had good relationships with,'' he said. ''He's just checking up on me, making sure I'm working hard. He was always tough on me and expected a lot. He just wants to make sure I'm headed on the right track and working hard every day.''

He doesn't spend much time ruing why things didn't work out.

''You have to win football gams here,'' he said.

And like his teammates, he's embracing the change at Notre Dame and the infusion of excitement that Kelly and his staff have brought.

''If you look at his past success, he's won everywhere he's been,'' Rudolph said. ''He doesn't accept anything less than winning. He expects that out of us every day.''

NOTES: Legendary Irish coach Ara Parseghian, 87, who won national championships in 1966 (9-0-1) and 1973 (11-0) during his 11 years as head coach, attended practice on Thursday and spoke to the team.

Many of the players had never heard Parseghian talk, said coach Brian Kelly, who was 12 when Parseghian won his second title.

''It was really cool to be on the field and have him come out and take control of the huddle,'' Kelly said. ''This is not a guy who doesn't have an aura about him. He walked out there, took over the huddle and talked about toughness -- mental toughness and physical toughness. What it takes to win. It was a great message.''

- Center Dan Wenger (concussion), inside linebacker Anthony McDonald (hyperextended knee) and nose guard Ian Williams (infected toe) were the other injured starters.

Comment at suntimes.com.

NOTRE DAME SCHEDULE

Sept. 4 Purdue 2:30 p.m.

Sept. 11 Michigan 2:30 p.m.

Sept. 18 at Michigan State 7 p.m.

Sept. 25 Stanford 2:30 p.m.

Oct. 2 at Boston College TBA

Oct. 9 Pittsburgh 2:30 p.m.

Oct. 16 W. Michigan 1:30 p.m.

Oct. 23 vs. Navy* 11 a.m.

Oct. 30 Tulsa 1:30 p.m.

Nov. 13 Utah 1:30 p.m.

Nov. 20 vs. Army** 6 p.m.

Nov. 27 at USC 7 p.m.

*--At East Rutherford, N.J.;

**--At Yankee Stadium, NYC

2010 COACHES POLL

1. Alabama

2. Ohio State

3. Florida

4. Texas

5. Boise State

6. Virginia Tech

7. Texas Christian

8. Oklahoma

9. Nebraska

10. Iowa

11. Oregon

12. Wisconsin

13. Miami

14. Penn State

15. Pittsburgh

16. LSU

17. Georgia Tech

18. North Carolina

19. Arkansas

20. Florida State

21. Georgia

22. Oregon State

23. Auburn

24. Utah

25. West Virginia

Photo: Darron Cummings, AP / Kyle Rudolph had 33 receptions for 364 yards and three touchdowns last season, including this one at Purdue.

Edwards to be Honored for Contributions to Arts and Sciences

David A. Edwards, a writer and professor of biomedical engineering at Harvard Univ., has been elected to the Order of Arts and Literature of France. He will receive the knighthood desigation Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, recognizing his contributions to the arts and literature and their propagation.

As an author, Edwards has been involved in the translation of ideas from the university through novel medical technology, performing and visual arts. His work gained recognition in France through his creation of Le Laboratoire (www.lelaboratoire.org), which he describes as "the first experiment-driven art and science incubator." The center aims to give scientists a venue for creative thinking outside the constraints of specialization and grant applications.

Edwards's scientific research concerns the mathematical design of novel physical parameters that allow nanostructured materials to efficiently deliver drugs and vaccines to the lungs and other human organs, with a special focus on infectious diseases in developing nations.

Aside from his research, he has written several fiction and nonfiction books, most recently "ArtScience: Creativity in the Post-Google Generation" (Harvard Univ. Press, 2007), which examines the intersection of the arts and sciences in culture, education, industry and society.

Edwards is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, and received AIChE's Professional Progress Award in 2002.

The Ordre des Arts et des Lettres was established by France's Minister of Culture and confirmed as part of l'Ordre National du Merite by President Charles de Gaullein 1963.

Edwards's investiture will take place in Paris on Sept. 24, 2008.

North Carolina Back at No. 1

North Carolina was back at No. 1 again Monday, thanks to a memorable few days in the state of Tennessee.

Tennessee started last week at No. 1 in The Associated Press' college basketball poll after defeating previously top-ranked Memphis. But the Vols then lost to Vanderbilt on Tuesday.

Up stepped North Carolina, which ran its record to 27-2 with a win over Boston College and returned to the top spot it held for the first 10 weeks of the season.

Memphis (28-1), which held the top spot for five weeks, stayed at No. 2. UCLA (26-3) moved up one spot to third while Tennessee (26-3) three spots dropped to No. 4.

North Carolina, which rallied from 18 points down to beat BC 90-80 in its only game last week, received 38 first-place votes and 1,745 points from the 72-member national media panel.

Memphis, which bounced back from its only loss with wins over Tulsa and Southern Mississippi last week, had 21 first-place votes and 1,706 points.

UCLA, which swept Arizona and Arizona State on the road last week, was No. 1 on 12 ballots while Tennessee, which beat Kentucky 63-60 on Sunday, had one first-place vote.

Davidson (23-6) was 25th in the poll, the Wildcats' first appearance since the final poll of the 1969-70 season.

Many teams return to No. 1 in the same season but North Carolina did it for the most part without starting point guard Ty Lawson. The sophomore sprained his left ankle early in a win over Florida State on Feb. 3. He missed six games _ including the loss to Duke _ and returned against Boston College on Saturday, playing 21 minutes.

"We have gotten better defensively and have had to withstand some adversity," Tar Heels coach Roy Williams said Monday. "We had a player who went through four years of adversity step up at the point in Quentin Thomas. We've had a nice little run here with defense and toughness. What I'm most proud of is they always did the best they could for 40 minutes, 50 in one case.

"If we can get Ty back completely healthy, our team is stronger because guys who were forced in because of the injuries have stepped up. I'm proud of the toughness of our team."

Thomas, a senior who has battled injuries his whole career, took over many of Lawson's minutes, but it was junior forward Tyler Hansbrough, who leads the Atlantic Coast Conference in scoring and rebounding, who remained the key to the Tar Heels returning to No. 1.

"I like it better later in the year," Williams said of the top ranking, "because it shows you have accomplished something."

Kansas, Duke and Xavier all moved up one spot to sixth through eighth. Texas, which had an eight-game winning snapped at Texas Tech on Saturday, dropped four places to ninth. Wisconsin remained No. 10.

Georgetown started a three-team run by the Big East at No. 11 and was followed by Louisville, Connecticut, Butler, Purdue, Vanderbilt, Michigan State, Indiana, Notre Dame and Drake.

The last five ranked teams were Marquette, Gonzaga, Washington State and newcomers Clemson and Davidson.

Clemson (21-7) returned after being out of the poll for six weeks. The Tigers, who have won six of eight including Sunday's last-second win at Maryland, were ranked for nine weeks earlier in the season, reaching as high as 15th.

Davidson (23-6) entered the rankings on a 19-game winning streak and having gone 20-0 in the Southern Conference. The Wildcats' losses included ones to North Carolina, Duke and UCLA, none worse than 12 points and all competitive games.

"People are aware of the challenging early schedule but we also have a sense that we dropped off the face of the Earth and people did not pay too much heed to us as they did in November and December," Davidson coach Bob McKillop said. "But 20-0 in a conference schedule is an extraordinary accomplishment that gets people's attention."

Davidson was last ranked in the final poll in 1969-70, ending a run of two straight season in the Top 25. In those 30 polls, the Wildcats, who were coached by Lefty Driesell and featured forward Mike Maloy, were in the top ten 23 times and the top five 13 times.

Red Sox 6, White Sox 1

Boston Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Scutaro 2b 5 3 3 0 Pierre lf 4 0 0 0
DMcDn rf 3 0 1 0 Vizquel 2b 4 0 1 0
VMrtnz c 4 2 3 2 Rios cf 3 0 0 0
Cash c 0 0 0 0 De Aza ph-cf 1 0 0 0
ABeltre 3b 5 1 4 2 Konerk 1b 4 0 0 0
D.Ortiz dh 5 0 2 2 MnRmr dh 4 0 2 0
Lowell 1b 4 0 1 0 Przyns c 4 1 1 0
LAndrs 1b 1 0 0 0 Quentin rf 2 0 1 0
Lowrie ss 3 0 1 0 AlRmrz ss 3 0 1 0
Hall lf 3 0 0 0 Morel 3b 2 0 0 1
EPtrsn pr-lf 0 0 0 0
Kalish cf 4 0 1 0
Totals 37 6 16 6 Totals 31 1 6 1

Boston 201 010 101—6
Chicago 000 010 000—1

DP_Boston 1, Chicago 1. LOB_Boston 9, Chicago 6. 2B_Scutaro 2 (36), A.Beltre 2 (48), D.Ortiz (36). SB_E.Patterson (10). S_D.McDonald 2. SF_V.Martinez, Morel.

IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
C.Buchholz W,17-7 8 5 1 1 1 5
Atchison 1 1 0 0 0 0
Chicago
Buehrle L,12-13 6 11 4 4 1 3
Linebrink 1 3 1 1 0 2
Harrell 2 2 1 1 1 2

HBP_by C.Buchholz (Quentin). WP_C.Buchholz.

Umpires_Home, Jim Wolf; First, Jim Joyce; Second, Marvin Hudson; Third, Derryl Cousins.

T_2:42. A_19,750 (40,615).

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Anna Nicole Smith Had Pain in Her Side

NASSAU, Bahamas - Anna Nicole Smith was suffering from pain in her side when she checked into the hospital where doctors diagnosed a case of pneumonia, her attorney said Wednesday.

The 38-year-old former Playboy Playmate arrived Monday at Doctors Hospital, the same medical center where she gave birth to a daughter, Dannielynn Hope Marshall Stern, on Sept. 7. Her 20-year-old son died three days later while visiting his mother and sister.

"The impression I got is they took her in because her ribs were hurting, and then they discovered she had pneumonia," attorney Wayne Munroe told The Associated Press.

Smith's companion, Howard K. Stern, said in a statement to the TV show "Entertainment Tonight" that Smith underwent a procedure Tuesday to drain fluid from a lung that had partially collapsed.

"A CT scan at the hospital revealed that she has pneumonia, with a significant amount of fluid in the lower lobe of her right lung," Stern said. "We are hoping for a quick recovery, but as of now, Anna Nicole is still experiencing a significant amount of discomfort."

Smith's son, Daniel, died Sept. 10 in her room at Doctors Hospital, the only private medical center in Nassau, the capital of the island chain. A private medical examiner has said the cause of death was a lethal combination of methadone and antidepressants.

The results of official toxicology tests and a police investigation have not been released.

Stern said Smith has no plans to leave the Bahamas and is not concerned about a dispute over the ownership of her waterfront residence, which was the basis of her application for permanent residency. Local immigration authorities opened an inquiry following a claim by a South Carolina developer, G. Ben Thompson, that he owns the house.

"Anna Nicole is not concerned at all about her permanent residency status being revoked," he told "Entertainment Tonight."

---

On the Net:

"Entertainment Tonight: http://www.etonline.com/

Anna Nicole Smith Had Pain in Her Side

NASSAU, Bahamas - Anna Nicole Smith was suffering from pain in her side when she checked into the hospital where doctors diagnosed a case of pneumonia, her attorney said Wednesday.

The 38-year-old former Playboy Playmate arrived Monday at Doctors Hospital, the same medical center where she gave birth to a daughter, Dannielynn Hope Marshall Stern, on Sept. 7. Her 20-year-old son died three days later while visiting his mother and sister.

"The impression I got is they took her in because her ribs were hurting, and then they discovered she had pneumonia," attorney Wayne Munroe told The Associated Press.

Smith's companion, Howard K. Stern, said in a statement to the TV show "Entertainment Tonight" that Smith underwent a procedure Tuesday to drain fluid from a lung that had partially collapsed.

"A CT scan at the hospital revealed that she has pneumonia, with a significant amount of fluid in the lower lobe of her right lung," Stern said. "We are hoping for a quick recovery, but as of now, Anna Nicole is still experiencing a significant amount of discomfort."

Smith's son, Daniel, died Sept. 10 in her room at Doctors Hospital, the only private medical center in Nassau, the capital of the island chain. A private medical examiner has said the cause of death was a lethal combination of methadone and antidepressants.

The results of official toxicology tests and a police investigation have not been released.

Stern said Smith has no plans to leave the Bahamas and is not concerned about a dispute over the ownership of her waterfront residence, which was the basis of her application for permanent residency. Local immigration authorities opened an inquiry following a claim by a South Carolina developer, G. Ben Thompson, that he owns the house.

"Anna Nicole is not concerned at all about her permanent residency status being revoked," he told "Entertainment Tonight."

---

On the Net:

"Entertainment Tonight: http://www.etonline.com/

Flat races return

FFOS Las stages a Flat meeting on Monday afternoon.

Hopes are high of a good crowd …

DuPont completes tender for Danisco

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — DuPont has successfully completed its takeover bid for Danish food additives maker Danisco after more than 92 percent of shareholders approved the tender, the companies said Monday.

DuPont offered 700 Danish kroner ($139.12) per share for Danisco in a bid that values it at more than $6 billion and that expired May 13. That was up from a previous offer of 665 Danish kroner in January.

The companies said Danisco shareholders had tendered 92.2 percent of …

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Our wildlife landscapes must be saved.(News)

Byline: By Sally Williams Western Mail

Beautiful Welsh landscapes - including this one pictured in the heart of Thomas Jones Country in Powys - are under threat unless the Government pumps more money into wildlife-friendly farming.

That was the feeling shared at a farm walk around land at Tyn Coed, near Newbridge on Wye, the inspiration for a number of classic paintings by the Welsh artist Thomas Jones (1742-1803), who lived at Pencerrig and is buried at a chapel in Llandrindod Wells.

But as walkers viewed the stunning, rolling green hills and well-established trees with leaves turning gold as the autumn mists lifted, they wondered whether the days of such perfect landscapes across Wales were numbered. …

Our wildlife landscapes must be saved.(News)

Byline: By Sally Williams Western Mail

Beautiful Welsh landscapes - including this one pictured in the heart of Thomas Jones Country in Powys - are under threat unless the Government pumps more money into wildlife-friendly farming.

That was the feeling shared at a farm walk around land at Tyn Coed, near Newbridge on Wye, the inspiration for a number of classic paintings by the Welsh artist Thomas Jones (1742-1803), who lived at Pencerrig and is buried at a chapel in Llandrindod Wells.

But as walkers viewed the stunning, rolling green hills and well-established trees with leaves turning gold as the autumn mists lifted, they wondered whether the days of such perfect landscapes across Wales were numbered. …

Monday, March 5, 2012

Sharjah Biennial 8

SHARJAH, UAE

April 4-June 4

Curated by Mohammed Kazem, Jack Persekian. Eva Scharrer, and Jonathan Watkins

Although Jack Persekian has managed to keep an experimental art space afloat in F.ast Jerusalem for years, his street smarts face a formidable new challenge in his role as artistic director for the Sharjah Biennial 8, titled "Still Life: Art, Ecology, and the Politics of Change." He will have to …

Lara Dutta and Mahesh Bhupathi tie the knot in Goa.

India, Feb. 20 -- Tennis star Mahesh Bhupathi and Bollywood actress Lara Dutta tied the knot in Goa on Saturday. The couple got engaged in 2010 and had got married in Mumbai on Feb 16.

The couple exchanged their wedding vows at the sunset point of the beautiful Portuguese fort of Aguada near Panaji.

Lara wore a white Christian gown while Mahesh was looking smart in a black suit.

The wedding was a grand affair according to reports. The media was kept out.

From the movie industry actors Raveena Tandon, Ritesh Deshmukh , …

Doctor's orders.(Main)(Editorial)

Just five days into Howard Dean's tenure as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, it's the Republicans who are so gleeful about the direction the rival party has taken. It's some Democrats who seem so jittery.

Don't expect Mr. Dean to repay the Republicans with a similar extension of flattery, though. The man who not so long ago was running for his party's presidential nomination by representing, as he put it, "the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party," isn't about to accommodate the Republicans by trying to imitate their politics.

Taking over a party that just lost not only the presidential election but additional seats in Congress as well means …

KeySpan warns of natural gas shortages if approval is withheld.

Byline: David Schoetz

May 22--SOUTH YARMOUTH -- More than 13 miles of steel pipe stretching through five Cape towns 5 feet underground -- this is what's needed to meet a growing demand for natural gas on Cape Cod, according to KeySpan Energy Delivery New England.

And if the first phase of an expected eight-year project is not done by next winter's heating season, KeySpan warns, Cape residents -- particularly east of Barnstable -- may face problems receiving their natural gas supply.

"The pipeline is necessary to ensure the reliability of the KeySpan distribution system," company officials wrote in their application to the Cape Cod Commission.

Before digging starts, KeySpan, the parent of Colonial Gas Co. and …

A look at the key match ups in WCup final

MUMBAI, India (AP) — A look the key match ups …

Audi's latest triumph

Audi's A3 and the R8 sports car have triumphed at opposite endsof the scale in annual awards voted for by fleet drivers The A3scooped Lower Medium Car of the Year for the fourth time since 2007while the R8 made it three-in-a-row in the Sporting Car category.

Both cars demonstrated the German marque's appeal across thespectrum of fleet drivers at the annual BusinessCar Awards.

The awards are voted for by readers of BusinessCar magazine andits website www.businesscar.co.uk. Editor …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

ISX index closes at 105.7 points.

BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: The Iraqi Stock Exchange (ISX) index on Wednesday went up by 2.5% to close at 105.7 points as shares of 28 firms out of total 52 increased.

Traded shares today hit more than 8 billion shares worth more than 10 billion dinars through 702 deals.

Shares of 52 companies were traded in today's session, of which 28 shares jumped, 8 slumped, and 16 others maintained their previous levels.

The industrial sector grabbed the lion's share of today's trading with 88% through 378 deals worth 9 billion dinars over 18 firms, followed by the banking sector with 4% through 162 deals worth 524 million dinars over 12 firms, the hotel sector …

Deputy president warns of economic imbalances.(News)

BYLINE: Slindile Khanyile

Durban: Deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka has warned that South Africa's economic growth will not be sustainable if it continues to be driven mainly by the exports of raw materials and an emerging black middle class that consumes mostly imported goods.

Speaking at the SA Trade and Investment Conference and Exhibition yesterday, Mlambo-Ngcuka called for a balance and diversification of the country's economic growth.

"... last year all our provinces grew by an average 3% of gross domestic products per annum and indicators are that we can grow faster and move robustly," said Mlambo-Ngcuka.

"But we need a …

VA ADMITS CONSIDERING FURTHER JOB REDUCTIONS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: -- Gannett News Service

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Veterans Affairs, which just last week revealed that 326 of the total of 1,106 staff reductions under way nationally at veterans hospitals will come from New York facilities, now says it is considering more job cuts, in the state and elsewhere.

``There could be,'' VA spokeswoman Laurie Tranter confirmed Monday when asked if more reductions were being considered. She declined to …