четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

GEN Sullivan Honored

GEN Sullivan Honored. The George C. Marshall Foundation of Lexington, Va., has selected GEN Gordon R. Sullivan, U.S. Army retired, to receive its Andrew J. Goodpaster Award at a luncheon at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, D.C., in May. The award, named for longtime trustee and chairman of the Foundation, GEN Andrew J. Goodpaster, is presented to Americans in a variety of fields who "have exhibited great courage, selfless service, patriotism and leadership in their lives and careers."

GEN Sullivan has been AUSA president and chief operating officer since 1998. He concluded his 36-year Army career as the 32nd Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army in …

Bridges, locks reopening as Midwest floods recede

Transportation corridors opened over and along the Mississippi River on Wednesday as floodwaters continued to recede at a rapid pace.

Two bridges _ one at Quincy, Ill., the other at Louisiana, Mo. _ reopened Wednesday because floodwaters no longer covered the bridge approaches. A highway reopened near Hannibal, Mo.

On the waterway itself, the Army Corps of Engineers was preparing to reopen three navigation locks that have been closed for several days.

At many places from Iowa south through St. Louis, the river was dropping at a pace of about a foot a day. Some residents returned home to assess damage in the neighboring towns of Winfield and Foley, …

Witnesses: Cab suspect 'looked intoxicated': One testifies: 'He had to aim the car'

Moments after Michael Jackson ran over Haroon Paryani withParyani's own cab -- accelerating so hard the air smelled of burningrubber -- witnesses saw him fleeing in a manner that seemed"distressed" and "intoxicated," they said Wednesday.

The testimony came in the second day of Jackson's trial for themurder of Paryani in February 2005. Prosecutors allege Jackson, 38,climbed into Paryani's cab after fighting with him over a fare, thenran over the taxi driver three times. Defense lawyers claim Jackson,a former city Department of Public Health employee, feared Paryaniand had no control over the car.

"His eyes looked distressed. They were bloodshot," said witnessJenna …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

PAMELIA KURSTIN; Rollerskating bird-punching thereminist

Led Zeppelin used one on "A Whole Lotta Love." Elvis Costello and the Imposters use one. Even Marilyn Manson may have used one. What is this thing? Imagine, if you will, an instrument that is so unique you don't even have to touch it to make music. The theremin is an instrument that works on high frequency radio waves. The mere movement of your hands around two antennas creates the sounds. And only the most talented can create music. One who is among them, world-renowned thereminist Pamelia Kurstin, will be in town this month to perform her brand of music.

Russian physicist Lev Termin (later changed to Leon Theremin) invented the instrument in 1919. Older models resemble …

McConnell says very close to deal on debt ceiling

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell says negotiators are "very close" to nailing down an agreement that would avert a default of the nation's debt obligations.

McConnell tells CNN's "State of the Union" that lawmakers are looking at a $3 trillion package that would raise the debt ceiling in two stages through the elections next …

Univision starting dancing, 'Survivor'-type shows

The Spanish-speaking Univision TV network will debut its own versions of celebrity dancing and "Survivor"-type competitions in the fall season.

The nation's fifth most popular network said Thursday it will begin more than 20 new series next season on Univision and its related TeleFutura broadcast and Galavision cable networks.

"Mira Quien Baila," which means "Look Who's Dancing," will be a "Dancing With the Stars" competition that pairs celebrity contestants and dancers. "Desafio: La Gran Batalla" (The Challenge: The Big Battle) pits a group of contestants stranded on a tropical island with bare …

Roofing company faces citations over collapse: Agency blames scaffolding fall on failing standards

DAILY MAIL STAFF

A South Charleston roofing company violated several federalconstruction safety standards that contributed to the Sept. 28scaffolding collapse that injured five workers, according to federalsafety inspection records.

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has citedBlake Roofing for 12 serious violations of safety standards and forfailing to promptly report the accident. Blake Roofing faces $8,100in fines over the incident.

A company spokesman couldn't be reached for comment.

The roofers were putting a roof on a new home on Bedford Road on aSaturday afternoon when the scaffolding collapsed, causing some ofthe workers to …

Celebrity birthdays for the week of Oct. 28-Nov. 3

Celebrity birthdays for the week of Oct. 28-Nov. 3

Oct. 28: Actress Joan Plowright is 78. Country musician Charlie Daniels is 71. Actress Jane Alexander is 68. Singer Curtis Lee is 66. Actor Dennis Franz ("NYPD Blue") is 63. Singer Wayne Fontana of Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders is 62. Actress-singer Telma Hopkins (Tony Orlando and Dawn) is 59. Actress Annie Potts is 55. Drummer Stephen Morris of New Order is 50. Actress Daphne Zuniga ("Melrose Place") is 45. Actress Lauren Holly is 44. Actress Jami Gertz is 42. Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 41. Actress Julia Roberts is 40. Fiddler Caitlin Cary (Whiskeytown) is 39. Singer Ben Harper is 38. …

The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet

The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet



The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet was the longest-running situation-comedy show in television (see entry under 1940s— TV and Radio in volume 3) history. From October 3, 1952, until September 3, 1966, in 435 episodes, the sitcom (see entry under 1950s—TV and Radio in volume 3) show depicted the family of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson as they dealt with the minor problems of everyday life in a middle-class American suburb (see entry under 1950s—The Way We Lived in volume 3).

Usually considered the first TV series about a family, Ozzie and Harriet paved the way for similar 1950s series like …

THAT FLEETING FEELING

The Fleet Foxes don't folk around

The Fleet Foxes, a Seattle-based indie-folk fivesome, have found a way to capture the slippery yellowness of an old photograph. Their echoing guitars and lilting harmonies make you nostalgic for memories you've never had, trees you've never climbed and records you probably didn't listen to until college. Though their debut LP, Fleet Foxes gets constant comparisons to Crosby Stills & Nash, the Band, Fleetwood Mac and the Beach Boys, they prefer to credit present experience over past influence with helping form their sound.

"In general, none of us are like, 'God, I can't wait to give everybody a taste of my parents' record collection,'" …

Shark cage diving boat capsizes, drowning 3 and injuring 16 off South Africa

Two Americans and a Norwegian tourist hoping to get close to great white sharks on a cage-diving adventure drowned Sunday when their boat capsized after it was hit by a freak wave, officials said. Sixteen people suffered minor injuries.

The accident happened in Gansbaai, a small town about two hours from Cape Town that calls itself the great white shark capital of the world. The area's clear waters teem with great whites, each year attracting thousands of tourists who go out on shark-spotting boats and enter the water in sturdy metal cages in hopes of encountering the mighty predators.

The boat that capsized Sunday had just anchored and was preparing to …

Nationals 8, Phillies 1

Philadelphia @ Washington @
ab r h bi @ ab r h bi
Rollins ss 4 0 0 0 Morgan cf 3 2 1 0
Polanc 2b 4 0 0 0 AKndy 2b-1b 5 2 4 1
Ibanez lf 3 0 2 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 1 1
Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 A.Dunn 1b 3 1 1 0
Werth cf 4 1 2 1 AlGnzlz 2b 1 0 0 0

Finn turns on festive lights

Wedmore boy Finn Cavanagh turned on the Christmas lights at ThePaper Shop in Wedmore, pictured with owners Sophie and Mark.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Cross country run

All-wheel-drive and an .ultra sophisticated interior steers boomers toward Volvo's sport-ute wanna' be.

Volvo touted its V70 XC station wagon as a rough, tough alternative to a true sport utility. But along came "Ceo Joe" as he was tagged by other auto writers on the press preview. Perhaps Joe, a New York City boy, was seduced by the Swedish automaker's PR imagery and believed too much in the V70's rugged looks and all-wheel-drive. Maybe, it was the sight of the fast flowing Alaskan steam ting ahead of him.

Whatever the reason, the Cosmopolitan magazine writer proceeded to plow the wagon into the rocky stream bed, immediately high-centering the V70. He then used all four wheels to dig downward. The wagon began to take on water. Volvo execs on the scene were not pleased. When two other Volvo XCs couldn't drag the stranded wagon out a local's dusty Ford F-350 pick-up popped the sleek Volvo off the rock.

The Cosmo Joe Show proves there's TV off-road and real off-road. Since 90% of sport utilities never leave the highway, Volvo's product planners chose to modify their excellent V70 wagon for light sport-ute duty. The Cross Country is a rugged, all-weather road runner.

The $37,960 Volvo is propelled bv a 2.0L 190 hp in-line 5-cylinder turbo and a 4-speed automatic. Made in Gamuet, Belgium, Volvo expects to sell 10,000 to 15,000 of the gun, ski and bike-hauling XC wagons in the U.S.

The interior is outdoorsy refined, with duck mill canvas inserts and leather bolsters. XC signature colors are dark gray and oak. Light wood trim and a top line SC-900 stereo audio svstem with in-dash 3-CD changer are available. The five-seater has 37.1 cubic feet of cargo space with the seat up, and 67 cubic feet with the seat folded flat.

On a dry road the V70 XC drives like a front-wheel drive. But when conditions head south, the car's AWD system automatically switches to 4-wheel drive - no levers or button pushing - via transfer differential, viscous clutch and an independent rear suspension with locking differential. Normally, 95% of the engine power is targeted for the front wheels. but as wheel spin starts the viscous clutch adjust torque distribution to all wheels as needed. Up to 95% of the power can be transferred to the rear, if necessary Just the thing Cosmo Joe oould use next time out.

Brazilian president backs England's World Cup bid

England's World Cup bid for 2018 or 2022 has been boosted by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva backing the campaign.

England's push to host the tournament for the first time since 1966 has been rocked by weeks of internal infighting. But Silva endorsed the bid in an interview with Britain's Channel Four on Sunday, a day after FIFA vice president Jack Warner also offered his support.

Silva says "now is the time for the UK to host a FIFA cup again."

England's bid chairman, David Triesman, says the Brazilian president's backing is "really important."

The other contenders are Russia, United States, Australia, Japan and joint bids from Netherlands-Belgium and Spain-Portugal.

Homeless Man Convicted in Mall Stabbing

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - A homeless black man who confessed on videotape that he stabbed a woman outside a shopping mall because he wanted to kill a white person was convicted Tuesday of murder as a hate crime.

A Westchester County jury watched the video a second time during its deliberations before finding Phillip Grant guilty of second-degree murder and criminal possession of a weapon.

"As long as she had blond hair and blue eyes, she had to die," Grant said on the video.

Grant, 44, admitted killing Concetta Russo-Carriero, a 56-year-old legal secretary, in the parking garage of the Galleria shopping mall, a block from the courthouse in White Plains.

He had completed a prison term for rape before his arrest in the knifing. His arrest sparked calls for a civil commitment law that could keep violent sex offenders off the streets even after their prison time is served. Civil commitment bills, including one known as Connie's Law, are pending in Albany.

Sentencing is set for Sept. 11. Grant faces a maximum of 25 years to life. The hate crime finding means the minimum sentence would be 20 years to life instead of 15.

Your chance to dance

Organisers of Bath Dance Festival, which begins tomorrow night atthe Bath Pavilion, are offering Chronicle readers the chance to tryone of the taster dance classes on Saturday for free.

Classes, led by experienced local dance teachers, run all day inthe Pavilion between 10am and 4pm.

Normally each class costs pounds3 for a half-hour slot - althoughyou can buy a bargain all-day ticket for pounds5.

But if you take this page along it entitles you to any one of thetaster classes - subject to availability - for free.

Classes on offer include line dancing, Argentina tango, jive,Egyptian belly dancing and ceroc.

There's also lindyhop, street dancing, Scottish dancing,cheerleading and the cha-cha.

A full list of the classes is available on-line atwww.bathdancefest.org.uk.

If you get the taste for dancing, stay around for the evening'sspectacular Latin American opening night featuring three times worldsalsa champions Chris Marques and Jaclyn Spencer (pictured left)with the lively show, and top Latin band K'Chevere.

Tickets for each of the evening performances cost pounds17 fromBath Festivals box office on 01225 463362.

Italian gov't: sacrifices needed to protect nation

The Italian government is asking citizens to make sacrifices to help get public finances in order and protect the country from the sort of market speculation that pushed Greece to the brink of bankruptcy.

The Cabinet meets later Tuesday in Rome to approve euro24 billion ($30 billion) in hotly contested spending cuts in 2011-2012 which reportedly include pay freezes for most public workers _ and cuts for those highest paid _ and may see trims to the nation's revered health system.

Italy's measures are part of a wider wave of austerity cuts under way across Europe as the continent tries to convince markets that it can manage its debt load and avoid another near-default like Greece's.

Italy's cuts would bring the budget deficit to below 3 percent of gross domestic product by 2012, from 5.3 percent in 2009, and soothe markets worried about the debt load of 115 percent of GDP _ the highest of the 16 countries that use the euro.

In Spain, billions in cuts to civil servants' salaries go into effect next month, and the Socialist government has frozen some retirement pensions starting next year, eliminating cost of living increases. France is raising the retirement age and Portugal is hiking taxes from June 1, among other measures.

Germany will decide next month just how to cut at least euro3 billion ($3.75 billion) from the budget, including possible fresh cuts to once-sacred unemployment benefits.

On Monday, Britain, which is not part of the euro zone, unveiled 6 billion pounds ($8.6 billion) in cuts _ mostly to government payrolls and expenses.

Despite the crisis, Italy has had no trouble covering its bond issues, even if its spreads _ the difference between its bond yields and the equivalent German benchmarks _ have risen to 1.2 percentage points from a recent low of 0.2 to 0.3 points.

Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti was meeting with local officials Tuesday to outline the measures and seek their cooperation.

Gianni Letta, one of Premier Silvio Berlusconi's most-trusted aides, on Monday evening stressed the importance of the measures.

"We are forced to make very heavy and difficult sacrifices, I hope in a provisional way, to save our country from the Greek risk," Letta said in L'Aquila, according to the news agency ANSA.

Italian consumer confidence deteriorated in May, and is expected to remain weak in the next few months as households prepare themselves for the painful austerity measures, Raj Badiani of IHS Global Insight said in a note.

From a sovereign debt perspective, Badiani said that Italy is still deemed less risky than Greece, Portugal or Spain, because investors are accustomed to Italy's high debt level and the Italian banking sector appears to be sound with a higher dependence on retail deposits than in other countries.

"Italy appears to be less vulnerable in the near term than other Club Med economies, but its protracted cycle of modest growth and high debt needs to be broken in the medium term," Badiani said.

The impending cuts are catching many Italians off-guard, after having been assured as recently as early April by both Berlusconi and Tremonti that Italy would be able to exit the crisis without drastic measures.

"I am worried because since the euro has come into being my pension has been cut in half and now I am afraid to be penalized also by this crisis," said Giannina Di Matteo, a 68-year-old retiree in Rome's historic center.

Teen convicted of terrorizing other bus riders; Two other

A Northwest Indiana man was convicted Thursday of sexually harassing and terrorizing fellow school bus riders.

The conviction of Ashley Toney, now 18, ends the case against three Portage High school students who were accused of bullying students in 2008-2009.

The other two juveniles, Charles McCloud-Smith, now 17, and Joe Francisco Carnell, now 18, pleaded guilty to reduced charges in February.

All three were charged as adults. Toney, of Portage, will be sentenced Sept. 27 for two felony charges of sexual battery, a felony charge of criminal confinement and misdemeanor charges of public indecency and criminal recklessness.

The felonies each carry prison sentences of up to three years, and Deputy Prosecutor Tim Haraminac said Judge William Alexa could stack the sentencings, making Toney serve each consecutively.

The jury found him not guilty of one sexual battery felony, and Alexa dismissed a disorderly conduct misdemeanor charge Wednesday for lack of evidence.

Haraminac said in closing arguments that what Toney said to police when arrested showed an attitude that he felt entitled to do what he wanted, including groping girls and throwing flaming paper balls from the bus.

The defense argued that the investigation targeted just the three boys after a parent confronted them in February 2009; otherwise, more students would have been named.

The trial should affect the new school year everywhere, said Cpl. Troy Williams, school resource officer at Portage High School.

Berlusconi amid scandal: 'I love women'

ROME (AP) — Premier Silvio Berlusconi issued an unapologetic defense of his lifestyle Friday amid the latest scandal involving his personal life, admitting that he intervened to secure the release from police custody of a 17-year-old Moroccan girl who had previously been at his villa.

Berlusconi, 74, denied that he had done anything inappropriate in securing the release of the Moroccan runaway nicknamed Ruby, and scoffed at press reports that portrayed their interaction as improper.

The disclosure comes at a difficult time for Berlusconi, who is grappling with street protests in Naples over his failure to stop a trash crisis there, a weakened government coalition and his declining popularity in the polls.

Saying "I love life, I love women," the Italian leader insisted he was proud of his lifestyle, which has come under scrutiny for his purported dalliances with young women and an encounter with a prostitute unveiled last year.

Without citing sources, several newspapers have reported that Ruby told prosecutors she attended dinners at Berlusconi's villa in Arcore, outside Milan, although she has denied having sex with the premier. Berlusconi has dismissed the scandal as "media trash."

"I've got nothing to clarify," Berlusconi said Friday. "I'm a playful person, full of life. I love life, I love women."

"Nobody can make me, at my age, change my lifestyle, of which I am absolutely proud," the 74-year-old told reporters in Brussels.

Il Fatto Quotidiano, a left-leaning newspaper that is frequently critical of Berlusconi, first reported this week that Milan prosecutors were looking into Ruby's story after police discovered her without documents and reported her to social workers. She reportedly admitted she had lied about being over 18.

According to Il Fatto Quotidiano, Ruby's story is full of contradictions and even prosecutors are wary of her claims.

Berlusconi did not deny Friday that the girl was at his home, but declined to provide any more details beyond what Ruby has already said. Berlusconi's close friend and confidante Emilio Fede was quoted as saying by Corriere della Sera on Friday that he has seen the girl at the villa "a couple of times."

Ruby was quoted as saying in another Italian daily, La Stampa, that she has been to Berlusconi's villa once and the premier thought she was 24. When Berlusconi found out she was a minor, he did not want to see her again, Ruby was quoted as saying.

Political analysts said the latest setbacks might take their toll on an already embattled premier. Berlusconi has been facing rebellion from a breakaway ally and his coalition is having a difficult time hammering out legislation to shield the premier from his legal woes.

Professor Franco Pavoncello of John Cabot University in Rome said "it's like chipping away at a stone."

While some in the opposition are raising questions over the lifestyle and decorum that are required from a public figure, a lot of the controversy is centering on whether Berlusconi intervened to get Ruby out of trouble when she had been reportedly picked up by Milan police.

Berlusconi said Friday that he did help her, but denied he misused his office.

"I have not influenced anybody," Berlusconi said. He said the intervention was aimed at informing Milan police that somebody available to act as the girl's guardian was going to the police station where she was being held.

"Since this person (Ruby) had depicted a tragic life situation to me, I have decided to help her," he said.

Last year, a high-end escort Patrizia D'Addario claimed she had spent a night with the premier and had tape recorded their encounter. The conservative Italian leader has said he has never paid anyone for sex. Prosecutors have said Berlusconi was not under investigation.

In Star-Struck L.A., Low-Fat Doesn't Mean Low Flavor

LOS ANGELES - In a town where body worship has been raised to an artform, it figures that restaurants and caterers would find a way tocapitalize on low-fat eating. After you pump and sweat for hours ina gym to buff your body to perfection, it stands to reason that youwouldn't want to undo all that effort with a cheeseburger and fries.

Plus, as every celebrity here knows, the camera adds five to 10pounds to the body, so staying thin is a priority.

Enter the age of the all low-fat; no-fat restaurant. Whatseparates it from its predecessor - the tofu, sprouts and cardboardhealth-food restaurant - is that this approach tries to make low-fatfood taste like the real thing, thereby eliminating that deprivedfeeling that so often goes with a diet. It's a no pain and no gainsituation in which everyone's happy.

Or nearly everyone. Conventional restaurant critics, used tobutter and cream sauces, are horrified. And those who view sugar asa dietary evil are also disappointed in some of the desserts. Whilefat may be all but eliminated, there's sugar aplenty.

But the operative theory here - that it's the fat in food thatmakes you fat - makes sugar a necessary evil. Try taking it all out- the fat and the sugar, and perhaps even the salt and the dairy -and "You might as well just suck on an ice cube," says RichardFreedman, co-owner of a cafe called Gratis, where the food is fat-and preservative-free but may contain sugar or honey.

Planet Earth's chef, Kelly Cline, who worked at the upscaleGolden Door spa in Escondido, Calif., and now caters the new MariluHenner talk show, says that while some lost fat calories in herdishes may be made up with more carbohydrates, over-all caloriecounts are still one-third to one-half lower than comparable dishesfrom a conventional restaurant or bakery.

In a reverse of the usual trend, the dining-out crowd isactually following the lead of the home cook, who already knows thatlow-fat doesn't have to equal low flavor. (Two testimonials to thegrowing cult of good-tasting, low-fat eating are the facts that thecookbook In the Kitchen With Rosie (Alfred A. Knopf, $14.95), byOprah Winfrey's cook, Rosie Daley, still tops best-seller charts, andsupermarkets have been known to ration boxes of savory no-fatSnackWell crackers.)

Most of the cafes catering to the fat-avoidance cult areclustered in the celebrity-studded parts of town - Santa Monica,Beverly Hills, Brentwood and the upscale West Side.

Gratis' nearly guilt-free pizzas, pastas and desserts have madethis Brentwood place popular with celebrities, including SteveMartin, Warren Beatty and Meryl Streep, as well as a sizablecontingent of dieters and bodybuilders. Freedman and his partnersare now negotiating other Sun Belt locations, such as Florida andArizona.

Planet Earth's first full-fledged cafe opened in September onchic Montana Avenue in Santa Monica, but it's coming off a successfultest-run lunch counter smack in the middle of the celebrity-studdedJose Eber hair salon on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. Planet Earth'sowners plan on expanding the restaurant throughout SouthernCalifornia, then moving on to points north.

"The goal is to move across the nation," says co-owner CandaceFarrell, who is also a TV producer (her show, "Medicine Ball," is amid-season replacement on Fox). Planet Earth also makes a line ofsuch low-fat products as muffin and pancake mixes and saladdressings. Nearly everything contains less than 10 percent ofcalories from fat.

In an amusing twist, many of the current low-fat restaurantshave an ethnic bent. While regular Mexican and Chinese restaurantstake a bad rap in the media for their incredibly high levels of fat,the same ethnic spices and techniques used in them are exactly what'smaking many low-fat eateries exciting.

The chain of no-frills La Salsa taquerias has found both acelebrity following (Michael Richards, Brett Butler, Jack Lemmon andTom Selleck) and a good measure of success with just regular folks bytaking most of the fat out of Mexican cooking. They use lard-freeproducts, never fry anything and treat cheese as a garnish.

Planet Earth leans heavily on Asian, Greek and Mexican cuisinesfor flavorful salads and main courses.

More time-intensive cooking techniques also give dishes verve.Cline has lots of tricks up her white chef's smock sleeves, includingsimmering foods longer to bring out more flavor.

"You need to marinate poultry to keep moisture," she adds. "Youneed to sear vegetables to bring out flavor." Textures are improved,she says, with nonfat dairy products, arrowroot powder or bananas.

Cline's taste-testing audience was a tough one - her husband."Men are the worst critics," she says. "They want the flavor.They're the biggest skeptics of low-fat food. When I come acrosssomething a man will eat, I know I've succeeded."

Carrie Wiatt, owner of Diet Designs, believes that the secret oftasty low-fat cooking "is the combination of art and science." Herforte is using condiments.

"I use sauces in so many different foods," she says. "Pesto,soy, marinades, fruit sauces, garlic. It's the right mix ofcondiments and seasonings, and knowing how to marry them correctly."

She, too, likes ethnic touches, and sometimes combine severaldiverse traditions - a no-oil stir-fry concoction wrapped in alow-fat tortilla, for example - to get something that is not onlyinteresting, but also meets her guidelines of a moderate 15 to 20percent fat content.

Wiatt's cooking, unfortunately, isn't available in a cafe,though she can boast an enormous celebrity following. Hers is acatering operation that brings the food to one's doorstep.

Actor Dennis Quaid healthfully dropped 43 pounds for his role inthe movie "Wyatt Earp" with her help. (She also monitored his gainback to normal after the film wrapped.) Regular clients with moremoderate tales to tell include Sela Ward, Teri Garr and Kate Capshaw.

There's no cafe in her future, but Wiatt is working on acookbook about her low-fat program and recipes. It will be publishedby Pocketbooks next July. PLANET EARTH'S SOUTHWEST TORTILLA ROLLS WITH PASILLA CHILE SAUCE

1 pound spinach, washed and stemmed

1 cup chopped red onions

1 cup low-fat cream cheese

4 (12-inch) low-fat whole-wheat tortillas (see note)

2 roasted yellow or red bell peppers, cut into julienne strips(see note)

Dipping sauce (recipe follows)

In a hot nonstick skillet, cook spinach in a splash of water,stirring constantly, until it turns dark green, about 1 minute.Remove and drain.

Place onions in the skillet and cook until softened, 2 to 3minutes.

To assemble, spoon a line of cream cheese along the edge of onetortilla, then fold tortilla over cheese. Add a row of spinach andfold again. Add a row of red onions; fold again. Add a row ofpeppers and fold again. Seal seam with a little cream cheese.Repeat process with remaining ingredients until you reach the end ofthe tortilla.

Cut tortilla rolls into 1-inch pieces and stand on their cut endon a serving platter, like sushi.

Serve with dipping sauce.

Makes 4 main-luncheon servings (230 calories and 2.5 grams offat per serving) or 8 to 12 appetizer servings.

Note: Check the package for the fat content of tortillas, as itcan range from 1 gram to 5 grams of fat each. Low-fat flourtortillas can be substituted.

To roast chiles (used in the recipe below) and peppers, holdthem directly over the flame of a gas range or set them under thebroiler until the skins are blackened. Place peppers in a paper bagand seal until the steam created loosens the skins, about 10 minutes.Remove peppers and peel off charred skins. Discard skins, stems andseeds. Dipping sauce

4 cloves garlic, chopped

3 tablespoons chopped shallots

Water

1 cup roasted and peeled pasilla chiles (4 or 5 chiles; seenotes above and below)

6 Roma tomatoes, chopped

1 teaspoon ground cumin

2 teaspoons chili powder

1/4 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

Sear garlic and shallots along with 1 tablespoon water in anonstick skillet. Add chiles and 1 cup of water. Add tomatoes,cumin, chili powder, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil. Reduce heatand simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes.

Puree mixture in a blender or food processor. Makes about 1 1/2cups.

Note: If pasilla chiles are not available, use equal amounts ofAnaheim chiles and increase the chili powder to taste. If only driedancho pasilla chiles are available, follow package directions andallow several days of soaking time. If all else fails, use roastedred peppers and add cayenne pepper and paprika for bite. DIET DESIGNS' MU SHU CHICKEN ROLL-UPS

1 1/2 pounds chicken breast, skinned and boned

4 tablespoons chicken stock, divided

4 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce, divided

1 teaspoon minced fresh gingerroot

3 teaspoons minced garlic, divided

1 cup diagonally sliced celery

4 carrots, cut into julienne strips

10 cups shredded napa cabbage

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

8 large low-fat whole-wheat tortillas (if unavailable, flourtortillas with 2 grams of fat or less can be substituted)

Plum sauce or mock plum sauce (recipes follow)

Place chicken in a 9-by-13-inch baking dish along with 2tablespoons of chicken stock and 2 tablespoons of soy sauce, thegingerroot and 1 teaspoon minced garlic.

Bake, uncovered, in a preheated 350-degree oven until done, 20to 30 minutes depending on thickness of chicken.

Remove from oven and let cool in pan. Discard any juices frompan because they will contain fat cooked off from chicken. Shredchicken and set aside.

Saute celery, carrots and cabbage in remaining 2 tablespoonschicken stock, 2 tablespoons soy sauce, 2 teaspoons minced garlic andthe pepper just until soft, about 10 minutes.

Add chicken and toss to combine. Remove from heat.

To serve, spread tortillas with plum sauce and fill with chickenmixture, al lowing 1 heaping cup per tortilla. Roll up and serve immediately.

Makes 8 generous servings (350 calories and 5.4 grams of fat perserving). Plum sauce

1 (10-ounce) bottle plum jam

2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce

Stir together plum jam and soy sauce until well-mixed.

Makes 1 1/2 cups.

Note: Plum jams vary. One brand that works well is Knott'sBerry Farm California Plum Pure Jam. If unavailable, mock plum saucecan be used. Mock plum sauce

8 ounces pitted prunes

1 cup defatted chicken stock

1/2 teaspoon minced fresh gingerroot

2 tablespoons lemon juice

2 tablespoons soy sauce

Place prunes in a bowl and cover with chicken stock. Let standto rehydrate, about 15 minutes.

Puree mixture in a blender or food processor. Add gingerroot,lemon juice and soy sauce; process until smooth.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Greylord trial of ex-judge opens

With seven women and five men empaneled as jurors and adefendant back from his retirement home in the Southwest, the curtainrises again today in U.S. District Court for the trial of a formerjudge charged in the Operation Greylord investigation.

Former Cook County Criminal Court Judge John F. Reynolds, 55, isthe seventh judge to be prosecuted as a result of the governmentinvestigation.

Now retired and living in Irving, Texas, Reynolds was in thecourtroom of U.S. District Judge William Hart yesterday for juryselection in his trial.

His attorneys, Harvey Silets and Susan Brenner, and prosecutorscarefully questioned prospective panel members for more than fivehours before selecting the men and women who will determine Reynolds'guilt or innocence.

Last December, Reynolds, 55, was charged with racketeering, mailfraud and income-tax violations in allegedly taking bribes to fixcases and to allow lawyers to hustle clients.

Reynolds is accused of accepting payoffs from James R. LeFevour,a former Chicago police officer and admitted bribe collector, whileboth were assigned to Traffic Court from 1969 to 1976.

LeFevour, first cousin to Richard F. LeFevour, the convictedformer Municipal Court chief judge, pleaded guilty and has beencooperating with the government.

Reynolds also is charged with accepting kickbacks from attorneysEdward Nydam, Arthur Cirignani and Thomas Del Beccaro for clientreferrals and favorable rulings in cases.

Cirignani, who has immunity from prosecution, and Nydam and DelBeccaro, who have pleaded guilty, are also on the roster of expectedgovernment witnesses.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Daniel Reidy and James Schweitzer alsoare expected to show evidence that Reynolds received bribes inpopular downtown restaurants for rulings on two traffic cases.

Reynolds is the sixth judge to stand trial in the corruptioninvestigation. Juries have convicted five judges and acquitted one.Another judge, Wayne Olson, pleaded guilty. Three other current orformer judges await trial.

Troops capture top Iraqis: Official could shed light on weapons development plans

BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S-led forces captured three top leaders ofSaddam Hussein's regime, including a vice president and a director ofweapons development, U.S. officials said today. American soldiersalso staged a raid in Saddam's hometown, killing one Iraqi anddetaining about 20.

The captured officials - all on the U.S. most-wanted list of 55regime leaders - were identified as Abdel Tawab Mullah Huweish,director of the Military Industrialization Organization; Taha Muhie-eldin Marouf, a vice president and member of the RevolutionaryCommand Council, and Mizban Khadr Hadi, another Revolutionary CommandCouncil member who had been an adviser to Saddam since the early1980s.

The Military Industrialization Organization oversaw development ofIraq's most lethal weapons and Huweish's detention could add toinvestigators' knowledge of any programs aimed at producing chemical,biological or nuclear weapons.

Huweish was listed as No. 16 on the most-wanted list, Hadi was No.41 and Marouf was No. 42. Eighteen of the 55 officials on the listare now in custody, and another is believed to have been killed in anair strike.

Even with President Bush declaring an end to "major combatoperations," the raid on regime loyalists in Saddam's hometown ofTikrit was the latest of many signs that daunting challenges remainfor American forces in Iraq.

Almost daily, U.S. troops exchange gunfire with Iraqis, sometimesas a result of anti-American protests. Lawlessness is rampant, in aland abounding with well-armed citizens and divided loyalties.

Tikrit, the stronghold of Saddam's al-Tikriti clan, has been acenter of pro-regime sentiment even as the former governmentcollapsed. U.S. officers say members of Saddam's Baath Party aretrying to reorganize to stage attacks on American troops, and one ofthe men detained today was described as a party official.

During the raid, troops found several weapons and about $3,000hidden in various houses, and one Iraqi was killed when he tried towrest a rifle from an American soldier, U.S. officers said.

The raid, the second in Tikrit in as many days, began shortlyafter midnight when six Bradley Fighting Vehicles sealed off aresidential district. Soldiers broke down gates and doors, forcedtheir way inside and emerged with about 20 men, blindfolded and handstied behind their backs.

Boeing 4Q profit up on strong plane deliveries; trims '08 revenue forecast due to 787 delays

Boeing Co. said Wednesday its fourth-quarter profit rose 4 percent on higher commercial airplane deliveries and strong growth in defense earnings, beating Wall Street's expectations despite ongoing concerns over delays in its 787 Dreamliner program.

The world's second-largest commercial airplane maker said it continues to address problems in assembling the first 787s and slightly reduced its estimate for both 2008 revenue and deliveries because of the previously announced glitches. It said it remains on the revised schedule announced earlier this month.

Boeing shares, which have fallen this year over 787-related concerns, rose 21 cents to $81.17 in morning trading after trading as low as $79.69 earlier in the session.

Net income for the last three months of 2007 was $1.03 billion (euro0.7 billion), or $1.36 (euro.92) per share, up from $989 million (euro667.79 million), or $1.29 (euro.87) per share, in the fourth quarter of 2006. That was 4 cents per share better than the consensus estimate of analysts polled by Thomson Financial.

Revenue was $17.5 billion (euro11.82 billion), flat with a year earlier but slightly above analysts' forecast of $17.3 billion (euro11.68 billion).

The company increased its guidance for 2008 earnings per share to between $5.70 (euro3.85) and $5.85 (euro3.95) from an earlier range of $5.55 (euro3.75) to $5.75 (euro3.88), still short of the Wall Street consensus estimate of $5.95 (euro4.02). It also lowered its estimate of 2008 revenue by $500 million (euro337.61 million), to a range of $67 billion (euro45.24 billion) to $68 billion (euro45.91 billion), due to the 787 delay.

Boeing's continued resurgence in the quarter was led by its Seattle-based commercial airplane manufacturing business, where operating earnings increased 46 percent to $973 million (euro656.99 million) and revenue jumped 17 percent to $8.9 billion (euro6.01 billion). Deliveries rose 9 percent to 112 and the record backlog grew 46 percent to $255 billion (euro172.18 billion), reflecting strong demand for the 787 and other planes.

The Chicago-based company closed the gap on Airbus in aircraft deliveries but still ended the year trailing its European rival for a fifth straight year, 453 to 441, while outpacing it in orders. It scaled back its estimate of 2008 deliveries to between 475 and 480, down from 480 to 490, to reflect the rescheduling of initial 787 deliveries into 2009.

The unit's continued success depends on how quickly Boeing can untangle snags in the 787 program. Boeing said Jan. 16 it would push back the 787's inaugural flight until the end of the second quarter due to supply chain problems and slow progress on the assembly line, with the first delivery not expected until early 2009.

Chief Executive Jim McNerney alluded to the unresolved 787 issues but did not elaborate in the company's earnings statement. "Despite some development program challenges, we are a strong company growing stronger and we expect continued improvement in our financial results in 2008 and beyond," he said.

The company's St. Louis-based military contracting business saw earnings from operations decline 5 percent to $978 million (euro660.36 million) and revenue fall 14 percent to $8.6 billion (euro5.81 billion). The revenue drop was largely because results from a year earlier included two months of revenue from its Delta IV family of rockets, which are now part of United Launch Alliance, a joint venture with Lockheed Martin Corp.

Boeing had full-year earnings of $4.1 billion (euro2.77 billion), or $5.28 (euro3.57) per share, up 84 percent from $2.2 billion (euro1.49 billion), or $2.85 (euro1.92) per share, in 2006. Revenue climbed 8 percent to $66.4 billion (euro44.83 billion) from $61.5 billion (euro41.53 billion).

___

On the Net:

http://www.boeing.com

Capcom head opens premium winery in Napa

After years of overseeing the company that gave the world "Resident Evil," "Street Fighter" and other gore-fest games, Kenzo Tsujimoto is trying his hand in the equally competitive, if less bloody, world of Napa Valley winemaking.

Anybody hoping to see some "Street Fighter" sauvignon blanc, however, can prepare to be disappointed. The new winery from Tsujimoto, chairman of Japan's Capcom Group, is selling wines named for the character of the grapes, not characters in his games. Even his own name will not be particularly prominent, with the words "Kenzo Estate," limited to discreet type on the bottle neck.

Kenzo Estate makes a variety of wines at different prices but its flagship wine is Rindo, a red blend named for the Japanese word for gentians, a violet-like flower. The win will be sold at $75 a bottle.

He can sell games. But can he sell $75-a-bottle wine in the teeth of a recession?

Yes, says Tsujimoto, if the $75 wine can compete, as he believes, with wines costing hundreds more per bottle.

"Wine has a very wide price range," he says. "What we're looking for is ... that very high quality wine but at the price point of $75 so that the consumers will get great value. That's what we're aiming to do."

To make that happen, Tsujimoto has hired some big names from the California wine business. The vines are being grown under the supervision of renowned viticulturist David Abreu, and the wine is being overseen by consulting winemaker Heidi Barrett. When guests visit the winery, which opened its tasting room in May with visits by appointment only, they will have the option of ordering a tasting menu put together by chef Thomas Keller.

Whether the business will be successful is hard to say, but wine industry analyst Jon Fredrikson thinks Tsujimoto is "smart to come in with something that's not over $100 in this market. He's got the very best people advising him, so he has taken out insurance on the likelihood of becoming successful.

"Certainly, it's a tough market, but it's not like the whole market has dried up," says Fredrikson. "We've lopped off that portion of the market that was driven by credit cards and home equity and that's not going to come back, but there are still plenty of wealthy people around."

For Tsujimoto, an interest in wine, specifically fine Napa wines, began several years ago when he tried some at a restaurant in Hawaii.

He already has made one vintage of Kenzo Estate, selling most of it to Japan. The wines are available at the tasting room, but other than that are primarily allocated to the Japanese market and to select U.S. restaurants.

It is a move other winemakers might try to replicate. Asia is emerging as a new market for U.S. wine. Last year, Japan was the third largest market, following the European Union and Canada. True, Japan's total of about $78 million was much smaller than the more than $380 million shipped to the European Union. But it was an increase of 28 percent in value, going against a trend that saw exports of U.S. wine slip, a reflection of the global economic crisis.

For Tsujimoto, the estate opening caps a 20-year journey that began when he bought what had been an equestrian center in Napa.

After years in the video game business, "I was looking for something outdoors," he said with a smile. "It just so happened that this is a great place to produce wine."

___

Kenzo Estate: http://www.kenzoestate.com

Wine Institute: http://www.wineinstitute.org

Minister is heart and 'Soles' for Bulls

A man of the cloth giving pre-game advice to an NBA player before a game?

It's not so unusual. "A preacher invented the game of basketball," says the Rev. Henry Soles, the Bulls' team chaplain since 1979, referring to Dr. James Naismith. "So, I have every right to be here."

For the past 25 years, Rev. Soles has been as much a part of the Bulls organization as mascot Benny the Bull or the Luv-A-Bulls dance team. A highly recognized, ordained minister who is an associate pastor at the Du Page AME Church in Lisle, Soles, along with his assistant, the Rev. Scott Bradley, attempts to keep the Bulls winning in their spiritual lives.

An hour or so before every Bulls game at the United Center, Soles or Bradley, or both, conduct a chapel service. For about 15 minutes they read passages from the Bible and talk with the players about the importance of having God at the head of their lives.

Not only are players from both teams welcome at the chapel services, members of the media and employees of the Bulls and United Center are also invited to attend. Chapel services are considered private and reporters looking for a good story are advised to keep the services that way.

Although most players are going through their pre game rituals, many still find the time to stop by for the chapel service.

Over the years such high profile players as Grant Hill, David Robinson, Reggie Theus, Julius Erving and Michael Jordan have been regulars at chapel services. "Just because these players make millions of dollars and are highly recognized, doesn't mean they don't have problems," Soles says. "Take away the ball, uniform and glamour and they are just like the rest of us."

In addition, Soles lets players realize that they have a responsibility to the community.

"The Lord taught us to share our blessings," Soles told the Defender. "I tell the players they should share what has been given to them, particularly in the Black community."

Every NBA team conducts a chapel service during home games. Indiana Pacer broadcaster and former player Clark Kellogg is a regular contributor to the chapel service at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

"Chapel service is a way to expose players to the Word of God," Kellogg says. "They travel so much during the season it's not easy for them to attend regular church services sometimes."

Soles is among the senior team chaplains in the NBA. A native of Anniston, Alabama who grew up in Paterson, New Jersey, Soles also has held chapel services for the Cubs, Bears and White Sox.

Soles says he attempts to let players know that their athletic ability is a blessing and that it won't last forever.

"The pressure on these players can be enormous," says Soles. "With all their money and fame, temptation is sure to follow them."

Bradley joined Soles as assistant chaplain of the Bulls in 1984. With his bright smile and friendly manner, it's hard to imagine that he is a former Marine.

Soles and Bradley not only talk to players and others during the pre-game chapel services, but they give out their home phone numbers so they can seek counsel whenever they need it.

In 1979, Soles offered to conduct chapel services for the Bulls. With the help of former Bull Dwight Jones, Soles received the go-ahead to perform the services at the chapel.

Things have changed at chapel services. At the old Chicago Stadium it was held in a cramped dressing room that also served as the dressing room for Benny the Bull, who also was a regular at chapel services.

One of Soles' memories of players is of Jordan. It was Soles who counseled Jordan when his father was tragically murdered in 1993.

It was also Jordan, who wore a black armband during a game to mourn the death of Soles' mother in 1997.

"Michael was the greatest player ever, but because of his strong family background, he still found time to give thanks to the Lord," Soles says.

The Reverend recalled the time one player asked for a prayer to let his team win a game. Instead, Soles said a prayer for both teams and that no player would be seriously injured during the game.

"God is not a fan for any certain team over another," Soles said with a smile. "He loves all of his children no matter what team they are playing for."

Article copyright REAL TIMES Inc.

Photograph (Kenny Thomas, Tyson Chandler)

Jerry Lewis: Saving lives through MDA was honor

For a while there, it appeared Jerry Lewis would be back on the "Love Network."

Las Vegas columnist Norm Clarke reported Sunday that the comedian "made peace" with the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Citing a source close to Lewis, Clarke said he had been reinstated to the group's annual telethon.

But later in the day Clarke tweeted that his source had meant "reconciled," not reinstated, and a Lewis spokeswoman told Reuters, "Him being reinstated as the host of the MDA telethon is not accurate."

MDA officials announced earlier this month that Lewis, 85, would no longer be the public face of the cause. Neither MDA nor Lewis has explained the change.

Jerry Lewis has hosted the Labor Day Telethon since 1966.Frederick M. Brown

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Chavez Calls Bush 'The Devil' at U.N.

UNITED NATIONS - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez took his verbal battle with the United States to the floor of the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday, calling President Bush "the devil."

The impassioned speech by the leftist leader came a day after Bush and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sparred over Tehran's disputed nuclear program but managed to avoid a personal encounter.

"The devil came here yesterday," Chavez said, referring to Bush's address on Tuesday and making the sign of the cross. "He came here talking as if he were the owner of the world."

Standing at the podium, Chavez quipped that a day after Bush's appearance: "In this very spot it smells …

Choice vs. integration.(Editorials)(Schools can't achieve perfect balance)(Editorial)

Byline: The Register-Guard

The Eugene School District's reviews of its alternative schools are coasting to a close. The second batch of reviews has drawn less interest than the first; none of the schools placed under the lens in this round faces a threat of closure, or even a call for fundamental change. The entire review process has run up against its limit: Choice and uniformity are at odds in ways that can be mitigated, but not erased.

The Eugene district's system of alternative elementary schools empowers those who are best equipped and motivated to take advantage of the choices it offers. Despite abundant exceptions, these tend to be families with money, time and a commitment to education.

The result is that children from affluent and involved families are over-represented in some alternative schools, while some neighborhood schools are left to cope with the consequences of what amounts to upper-middle-class flight. These consequences range from reduced fundraising horsepower to higher percentages of students who qualify for free or reduced-price lunches.

School district officials have long been aware that its array of choices has brought about a troubling degree of self-segregation, with both racial and economic dimensions. The most recent response has been an exhaustive series of reviews. The review team evaluated each alternative school - four last school year, and four this year - in terms of its curriculum, enrollment and diversity. The team also studied the effects of locating an alternative and a neighborhood school in the same building, as occurs in most cases.

On Wednesday the Eugene School Board will consider Superintendent George Russell's recommendations based on the reviews. The second round proved far less contentious than the first. Three of the schools in the second cohort - the French, Japanese and Spanish language immersion schools - have curricula of self-evident distinctiveness, and all four have healthy enrollments. That wasn't the case with some of the schools evaluated in the first set of reviews. And only one of the schools in the second group shares a building with a neighborhood school, whereas all of the schools in the first round were co-located with others.

Housing an alternative and a neighborhood school in the same building has been found to cause problems ranging from mild to toxic. Teachers, parents and students at the neighborhood school feel, sometimes intensely, that their school is regarded as second-best. It doesn't matter whether such attitudes are real or perceived, or whether they are communicated deliberately or unconsciously. Friction appears to be an unavoidable result of co-location. The only solution is to move toward eventually providing schools with their own buildings, as Russell recommends.

At least some of the friction occurs because close quarters make the social and economic differences between neighborhood and alternative impossible to ignore. Moving the schools to separate buildings won't make the differences go away. Further effort will be needed.

In the case of the Fox Hollow French immersion school, the review team found such a lack of student diversity that Russell recommends a special planning effort followed by another review. In all cases, Russell accepts the reviewers' calls for abolishing caps on class sizes at the alternative schools and working to attract greater numbers of minority, low-income and special-needs children.

Even if all of the recommendations are energetically implemented, some social and economic imbalances between alternative and neighborhood schools will persist. The imbalances are rooted in the very nature of a school system that allows choices among different schools. The only way to ensure a perfect distribution of students would be to eliminate choice, require that all students attend their neighborhood schools, and gerrymander attendance boundaries to ensure the proper demographic mix.

The Eugene School District is not about to take that step. That is no excuse for complacency - persistent imbalances impair the educations of students on both sides of the divide. The district must do all it can to ensure that choices among schools are not just open to everyone, but that practical opportunities to take advantage of the choices are available. The reviews may be ending, but the work must continue - indeed, as long as choice remains a feature of the Eugene school system, it will never be done.

Choice vs. integration.(Editorials)(Schools can't achieve perfect balance)(Editorial)

Byline: The Register-Guard

The Eugene School District's reviews of its alternative schools are coasting to a close. The second batch of reviews has drawn less interest than the first; none of the schools placed under the lens in this round faces a threat of closure, or even a call for fundamental change. The entire review process has run up against its limit: Choice and uniformity are at odds in ways that can be mitigated, but not erased.

The Eugene district's system of alternative elementary schools empowers those who are best equipped and motivated to take advantage of the choices it offers. Despite abundant exceptions, these tend to be families with money, time and a commitment to education.

The result is that children from affluent and involved families are over-represented in some alternative schools, while some neighborhood schools are left to cope with the consequences of what amounts to upper-middle-class flight. These consequences range from reduced fundraising horsepower to higher percentages of students who qualify for free or reduced-price lunches.

School district officials have long been aware that its array of choices has brought about a troubling degree of self-segregation, with both racial and economic dimensions. The most recent response has been an exhaustive series of reviews. The review team evaluated each alternative school - four last school year, and four this year - in terms of its curriculum, enrollment and diversity. The team also studied the effects of locating an alternative and a neighborhood school in the same building, as occurs in most cases.

On Wednesday the Eugene School Board will consider Superintendent George Russell's recommendations based on the reviews. The second round proved far less contentious than the first. Three of the schools in the second cohort - the French, Japanese and Spanish language immersion schools - have curricula of self-evident distinctiveness, and all four have healthy enrollments. That wasn't the case with some of the schools evaluated in the first set of reviews. And only one of the schools in the second group shares a building with a neighborhood school, whereas all of the schools in the first round were co-located with others.

Housing an alternative and a neighborhood school in the same building has been found to cause problems ranging from mild to toxic. Teachers, parents and students at the neighborhood school feel, sometimes intensely, that their school is regarded as second-best. It doesn't matter whether such attitudes are real or perceived, or whether they are communicated deliberately or unconsciously. Friction appears to be an unavoidable result of co-location. The only solution is to move toward eventually providing schools with their own buildings, as Russell recommends.

At least some of the friction occurs because close quarters make the social and economic differences between neighborhood and alternative impossible to ignore. Moving the schools to separate buildings won't make the differences go away. Further effort will be needed.

In the case of the Fox Hollow French immersion school, the review team found such a lack of student diversity that Russell recommends a special planning effort followed by another review. In all cases, Russell accepts the reviewers' calls for abolishing caps on class sizes at the alternative schools and working to attract greater numbers of minority, low-income and special-needs children.

Even if all of the recommendations are energetically implemented, some social and economic imbalances between alternative and neighborhood schools will persist. The imbalances are rooted in the very nature of a school system that allows choices among different schools. The only way to ensure a perfect distribution of students would be to eliminate choice, require that all students attend their neighborhood schools, and gerrymander attendance boundaries to ensure the proper demographic mix.

The Eugene School District is not about to take that step. That is no excuse for complacency - persistent imbalances impair the educations of students on both sides of the divide. The district must do all it can to ensure that choices among schools are not just open to everyone, but that practical opportunities to take advantage of the choices are available. The reviews may be ending, but the work must continue - indeed, as long as choice remains a feature of the Eugene school system, it will never be done.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

South suburban mayors tackle home vacancy rate

A group of mayors in Chicago's south suburbs says the region has among the highest home vacancy rates in the state.

So the South Suburban Mayors and Managers Association says it wants to tackle the problem head-on.

For one, several communities have adopted tougher laws, like vacant-building registration which requires homeowners to provide contact information and pay fees.

And many are joining the South Suburban Housing Collaborative which was formed last year to address vacancies.

That means …

Cyril's shorts.

Cricket nets

FLAMBOROUGH CC begin winter net sessions at Bridlington School Sports College on Tuesday February 7 starting at 6pm.

Leeds USC

UNITED returned to winning ways with a 3-0 victory over Sheffield Wednesday in Saturday's big derby game-Bridlington's Richard Cresswell getting two of the goals. This weekend is a free one after which Leeds face QPR on February 4, Crystal Palace (February 7) and Watford (February 14), tickets and travel are available for all these games. For more details contact Ray tel 07951735016 or visit www.eastyorkshiresupportersclub.com

Angling meeting

BRIDLINGTON Field Sports Angling Club will hold an …

SYSTEM OF ADMITTING NEW U.S. CITIZENS TO UNDERGO CHANGES.(MAIN)

Byline: HOLLY YEAGER Times Union Washington bureau

WASHINGTON -- Responding to Republican criticism of a controversial Clinton administration naturalization program, the Justice Department announced Thursday it has hired a major accounting firm to overhaul the system through which legal immigrants become citizens.

Attorney General Janet Reno said the firm, Coopers & Lybrand, will review the entire process ``in order to enhance the integrity of the naturalization program, streamline the process, reduce the paperwork, and improve customer service.''

Carole Florman, a department spokeswoman, said the review had been planned for several years but that …

Leading F1 teams confirm status as title favorites

McLaren, Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes GP confirmed their positions as front-runners for Formula One's championship as preseason testing wrapped on Sunday.

Lewis Hamilton set a fastest time of 1 minute, 20.472 seconds for McLaren to edge Red Bull's Mark Webber by just over two-hundreths of a second.

Felipe Massa of Ferrari was third ahead of Force India's Adrian Sutil, …

Rudy The Magic Cat Comix+Fun

Rudy The Magic Cat Comix+Fun

Mini Comic, Summer 2010, Mark Connery, 113 Spadina Rd., Toronto ON, M5R 2T1, $2-Trades & Art Exchanges Welcome

I was first introduced to the absurd world of Mark Connery's Rudy via mini comics published in the early '90s. I couldn't help but love its playful weird ne ss and outsider artist style of cartooning then, and I still love it when I see it now. It's been ages since I've come across any Rudy stories, so I'm unsure if Connery's been quiet or not, but at any rate it's great to see a new, albeit slim, Rudy mini.

For the uninitiated, Rudy features the titular cat …

DRAWING DOWN.(North Carolina banks)(Illustration)(Statistical Data Included)

For more than a decade, the mergers that begat megabanks spurred creation of little ones. That era is coming to an end.

In the '90s, Winston-Salem saw the upside of bank-industry consolidation. Already home to Wachovia, the state's third-largest bank, the city began to gain ground on Charlotte as a banking hub. In 1992, Southern National Corp., then sixth-largest, moved its headquarters there from Lumberton. Three years later, Wilson-based BB&T, the state's fourth-largest bank, merged with Southern National, and the new bank chose Winston as its headquarters city.

Since then, BB&T has increased its assets sixfold, partly by buying United Carolina Bank, then eighth-largest, in 1997. Ten years ago, BB&T was one-fourth Wachovia's size. At the end of last year, it was four-fifths as large -- and gaining.

BB&T remains fourth on BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA'S annual ranking of independent Tar Heel banks and thrifts -- once ranked by assets, now by revenues. But the wannabe banking hub is no more. The city lost Wachovia in September when it was bought by Charlotte-based First Union. Wachovia's unusual name -- it comes from the Wachovia tract, settled by the Moravians -- will survive because First Union agreed to take it. But Wachovia's headquarters -- in Winston-Salem since 1879 -- will move to Charlotte.

So the Big Four have become the Big Three. But really, to include any other North Carolina bank in the same tier as Bank of America is an act of charity. In 2000, it had 52% more assets than all other Tar Heel banks and thrifts combined.

History says a wedding like Wachovia and First Union's will beget community banks, led by bankers convincec they can be more neighborly, more rooted in small towns than the big boys. These bankers will try to snatch customers from the giants by painting them as too big to care about local folks. That's what MountainBank in Hendersonville and American Community Bank in Monroe are aiming to do. They moved the most places in the annual bank ranking from last year to this year. MountainBank went from No. 64 to No. 36, American Community from No. 76 to No. 52. (See story on page 44.)

But those two may be among the last of a breed. Little banks aren't selling for the big premiums they used to, robbing them of their allure to investors. That kil's an incentive to form them. And as big banks provide more products, it's tougher for little banks to compete. They lack the big banks' economies of scale.

That's one reason the state is eeing a waning number of bank start-ups. Of the 110 companies on this year's ranking, nine began in 2000. Three were started in 2001, and it's unlikely there will be another. Banks need two to six months to launch, and by mid-September, the state Banking Commission had no applications.

 RANKING TAR HEEL BANKS    Rank                                     City '01   '00    1    1   Bank of America               Charlotte   2    2   First Union [1]               Charlotte   3    3   Wachovia [2]                  Winston-Salem   4    4   BB&T [3]                      Winston-Salem   5    5   First Citizens BancShares     Raleigh   6    7   First Charter                 Charlotte   7    8   Bank of Granite               Granite Falls   8   10   Fidelity Bancshares           Fuquay-Varina   9   11   First Bancorp [4]             Troy  10    9   LSB Bancshares [5]            Lexington  11   12   Southern Bancshares           Mount Olive  12   17   Peoples Bancorp of N.C. [6]   Newton  13   15   FNB Financial Services [7]    Reidsville  14   19   FNB [8]                       Asheboro  15   21   First South Bancorp [9]       Washington  16   16   High Point Bank               High Point  17   13   Clyde Savings Bank [10]       Clyde  18   18   First National Bank           Shelby  19   14   Piedmont Federal S&L          Winston-Salem  20   20   Yadkin Valley Bank and Trust  Elkin  21   22   Macon Bancorp                 Franklin  22   24   F&M Financial [11]            Granite Quarry  23   23   Asheville Savings Bank        Asheville  24   26   1st State Bancorp [12]        Burlington  25   34   Southern Community Bank            & Trust                       Winston-Salem  26   25   Cooperative Bankshares        Wilmington                                                 2000 Rank                                        revenue [*] '01   '00                                (in millions)    1    1   Bank of America                 $32,956.0   2    2   First Union [1]                  14,368.0   3    3   Wachovia [2]                      4,447.0   4    4   BB&T [3]                          2,794.7   5    5   First Citizens BancShares           567.5   6    7   First Charter                       138.5   7    8   Bank of Granite                      44.7   8   10   Fidelity Bancshares                  43.7   9   11   First Bancorp [4]                    43.4  10    9   LSB Bancshares [5]                   39.8  11   12   Southern Bancshares                  30.6  12   17   Peoples Bancorp of N.C. [6] … 

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

AROUND TECH VALLEY.(Business)

CHAMBER NEWS

The Rensselaer County Regional Chamber of Commerce announced the fourth graduating class of its Leadership Institute professional development program. Graduates include: Maggie Alix, village of Green Island; Nicole Barron, New Horizons of Albany/Tech Valley; Caroline Boardman, Enlarged City School District of Troy; Stacey Bridge, Capital Repertory Theatre; Meghan Cassidy, CDPHP; Michael DiAcetis, National Grid; Julia Donnaruma, HANYS Solutions; Donna Hakala, ValueOptions; Dorothy Hanna, Seton Health; Susan Kambrich, Woodland Hill Montessori School; Brigitte Koziol, Parsons Child and Family Center; George LaMarche, E. Stewart Jones PLLC; Sula Landi, …

Set your course for antique boat show.(Capital Region)

LAKE GEORGE - The Adirondack Chapter of The Antique and Classic Boat Society will host a gathering of antique boats beginning at 10 a.m. Saturday. The event, which is held at the Village Docks on Beach …

PAROLEE BACK IN JAIL ON ASSAULT CHARGE.(CAPITAL REGION)

SCHENECTADY -- A 22-year-old man on parole for just a month is back in jail after injuring a parole officer while trying to escape arrest, parole officials said.

Roberto Cabezas, who was living at 571 Summit Ave., was arraigned Tuesday in City Court before Judge Louise Smith on a felony assault charge and a count of resisting arrest. He was given an adjournment until Friday and ordered held in Schenectady County Jail without bail.

According to David Ernst, a spokesman for the state Division of Parole, Cabezas was released on parole on March 19 after serving part of a …

NHL Standings

All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Philadelphia 44 19 9 97 232 195
Pittsburgh 42 23 8 92 213 181
N.Y. Rangers 40 30 4 84 216 179
New Jersey 34 35 4

Whitman had rough time in previous turnaround try

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Former eBay chief executive Meg Whitman says California needs a turnaround specialist with business experience to lift the nation's most populous state out of its economic despair and streamline its bloated bureaucracy.

Yet in perhaps her most high-profile turnaround attempt, Whitman says she fell short and conceded defeat well before her contract was up. Her experience at FTD, the iconic floral company, provides a parallel from the business world with what Whitman acknowledges she will inherit if voters elect her governor Nov. 2 — a troubled state beset with outdated and ineffective systems.

Whitman, the Republican nominee, has spoken often about her …

A fun day out for all ages

Avon Valley Country Park is proving to be one of the most popularpaying visitor attractions in the South West, and so far this year ithas counted a record number of visitors.

This is no doubt helped by the opening of their Mammoth Maze lastmonth - one of the largest in the South West. However, the CountryPark's expansion is not ending there: from next month they will beembarking on a three-year-long development programme which will seethe park grow from 32 acres to 50.

For the moment families can enjoy the Country Park's large outdooradventure playground, quad bikes, train and tractor rides, river boattrips, rowing boat lake and daily falconry displays.

There …

Researchers at University of Porto have published new data on agricultural and food chemistry.

According to recent research from Oporto, Portugal, "This work aims to study the phase II metabolization of anthocyanins that is likely to occur in vivo. Anthocyanins (delphinidin, cyanidin, and malvidin-3-glucosides) were incubated with phase II enzymes in the presence of activated cofactors in order to obtain glutathionyl conjugates, methylated and glucuronydated compounds."

"Overall, the three anthocyanins tested were metabolized in vitro. Two compounds were detected by HPLC after incubation of human liver cytosolic fraction with cyanidin-3-glucoside and one compound with delphinidin-3-glucoside. These compounds were identified as monomethylated products. LC-MS …