четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

OFF THE RECORD

"I have had other offers. But, frankly, Jay, when you refuse to do nude scenes, it really cuts down on the opportunities. ... I just want to clarify. I have no plans to do a nude scene. I have no intention to do a nude scene. I don't expect to do a nude scene. But I haven't made a Shermanesque statement about it."

- Former Vice President Al Gore, after Jay Leno asked him if we was entertaining other film offers after the success of An lnconvenient Truth

"Sometimes when you get in bed with Teddy Kennedy, you get more than just a good night's sleep."

- Rep. Ric Keller (R-FL) told Karl Rove at the Republican Conference meeting on May 17th, 2006.

"We're honored …

In Pakistan, Bhutto leaves behind a mixed legacy for women's rights

To get a sense of what kind of legacy Benazir Bhutto, the Muslim world's first female leader, left behind for the women of Pakistan, look no further than those who were contending for the top spot in the political party she led.

There were her son, her husband, and two of her top deputies _ four people with one thing in common: They're all men. The job eventually went to her 19-year-old son, Bilawal Zardari, with her husband acting as a regent for the time being.

From the day Bhutto came to power nearly two decades ago, many in the West eagerly cast her as an icon for Muslim women, a role she never shied away from playing. And now her slaying in a suicide …

No trouble for Mustangs

Wayne Blackshear didn't have his best outing of the season, but his teammates picked up the slack as No. 8 Morgan Park crushed No. 18 Vocational 60-39 in a Red-South showdown Wednesday.

The star junior finished with 26 points, 11 rebounds and four steals but shot just 8-for-22 from the field and seemed fatigued at times. But like most great scorers, Blackshear drew fouls; he finished 9-for-10 from the free-throw line.

''I was a little winded at times,'' Blackshear said. ''I just tried to let the game come to me and focus on getting to the line when I needed to. If I played a little calmer, I would have knocked down a lot of the shots I missed.''

Appearing in their …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Tax Strategies

Jeffrey A. Sanderson, CPA, Director of Taxation

Baden, Gage & Schroeder LLC

www.badencpa.com

Select the best structure. Choices for the best entity structure for your business include C corporation, S corporation, partnership and sole proprietorship. Limited Liability Companies (LLC) do not have a recognized tax structure. Rather, an LLC may elect to be taxed as a C or S corporation partnership or sole proprietorship. With most of these options, business income will be taxed at the individual owner's tax rate with no double taxation of distributions of business profits to the individual owner. Other variables such as tax rates, self-employment tax, ownership …

Firings Over Milwaukee Inmate's Hanging

MILWAUKEE - Two corrections officers will be fired and four others suspended after the hanging death of an inmate, a corrections department spokesman said.

Another officer will be "departing" from employment, although those conditions have not been finalized, state Department of Corrections spokesman John Dipko said in a statement Friday.

The actions are a result of a department investigation into the death of 41-year-old Russell Lee Murray, who was found hanging by a bedsheet inside a janitor's closet June 1 at the Milwaukee Secure Detention Facility.

A medical examiner's report states the staff waited nine minutes before cutting Murray down and beginning …

Obama: Energy bill is bold step

President Barack Obama is calling House passage of an energy bill "a bold and necessary step.' And he says it holds promise for creating new industries and millions of new jobs.

Obama says that the bill will reduce America's dependence on foreign oil and decrease the release of pollutants that …

PLUS NEWS

RADIATION LEAK: Nineteen of 25 workers tested were found to beslightly contaminated after an accidental radiation release at theIdaho National Engineering Laboratory. Spokesman John Walsh said themost contamination detected in any worker was 2 millirems. Bycomparison, a chest X-ray gives a radiation dose of about 40millirems, and a cross-country airline flight about 5 millirems. Butas a precaution, the Energy Department started evaluating anadditional 34 people who were nearby when the accident occurredMonday during maintenance of the Advanced Test Reactor. STEEL MILL BLAZE: A fire that "spread from floor to ceiling withinminutes" injured at least seven people at a Weirton (W.Va.) …

EU imposes sanctions on Syrian leader Assad

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union imposed sanctions Monday on Syrian President Bashar Assad because of his government's continuing crackdown on anti-government protesters, in which more than 900 people have reportedly been killed.

The 27-nation bloc instituted an assets freeze and a visa ban on Assad and nine other members of his regime.

Earlier this month, the EU sanctioned 13 people with links to the Syrian regime, but Assad was not among them. A European official said at the time that the omission was part of a deliberately gradual approach.

But the killing of anti-government protesters has continued unabated. Syrian security forces opened fire on a funeral …

Whitney Houston postpones more European tour dates

Whitney Houston has again pushed back the European leg of her first tour in years on the advice of doctors who are encouraging her to take time to recover from a respiratory illness, according to a statement issued Wednesday.

Houston had already postponed the European kickoff, originally scheduled for Tuesday in Paris, because of illness. A statement from a representative said doctors advised Houston to reschedule concerts Thursday and Friday in Manchester, England, and a Sunday performance in Glasgow, Scotland.

All dates are being rescheduled, and the 46-year-old singer's tour is now supposed to start next Tuesday in Birmingham, England.

STAT PACK

410

The National League-leading number of pitching changes HoustonAstros manager Larry Dierker made last season. Astros …

Perez, K-Rod pitch scoreless ball, Mets beat Cards

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (AP) — Mets closer Francisco Rodriguez pitched a scoreless inning in his spring debut and New York beat a split squad of St. Louis Cardinals 3-0 Thursday.

Rodriguez gave up one hit and struck out one while working the third inning.

Rodriguez missed the final month and a half of …

How prosecutors say Petters' alleged scheme worked

Prosecutors say Petters Co. Inc. was just a common Ponzi scheme at its core.

Tom Petters and his co-conspirators allegedly fabricated business documents such as bank records and purchase orders from purported vendors. They allegedly used these documents to fool investors _ typically hedge funds and other private investment groups but also individuals and charities _ into thinking he was using their money to buy electronics that he would resell at a profit to big-box retailers such as Costco and Sam's Club.

But the merchandise and the sales never existed, prosecutors allege. Instead, they say, investors would be paid with money Petters and his accomplices …

Regional weather

Hi Lo Otlk

Akron, Ohio 56 42 Rain

Charlotte 82 61 Cldy

Cincinnati 56 44 Rain

Cleveland 53 42 Rain

Columbus,Ohio 56 43 Rain

Dayton 54 42 Rain

Daytona Beach 84 66 Clr

Greensboro,N.C. 79 61 Cldy

Lexington 64 45 Rain

Louisville 59 46 Rain

Norfolk. 77 61 PCldy

Philadelphia 67 55 Cldy

Pittsburgh 65 46 Rain

Raleigh-Durham 81 62 Cldy

Richmond 81 61 Cldy

Washington,D.C. 73 59 Cldy

Youngstown 56 41 Rain

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Military center tracking Santa's sleigh ride

Who says Santa Claus doesn't exist?

The military personnel charged with being the eyes in the sky are certainly acting like he does _ and they've been joined on the Internet by millions of believers.

Even doubters have reason to pause when they hear that the North American Aerospace Defense Command _ or NORAD, which monitors air and space threats against the U.S. and Canada _ is in charge of the annual Christmas mission to keep children informed of Santa's worldwide journey to their homes.

"They challenge it, but only to a point," said Senior Master Sgt. Sharon Ryder-Platts, 49, who for five years has been a Santa tracker, taking calls from those wanting to know the location of jolly old St. Nick.

According to NORAD, Santa began his latest flight early Wednesday at the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. Historically, Santa visits the South Pacific first, then New Zealand and Australia. NORAD points out that only Santa knows his route.

Last year, NORAD's Santa tracking center answered 94,000 calls and responded to 10,000 e-mails. About 10.6 million visitors went to the Web site, which can be viewed in English, Spanish, French, Italian, German, Japanese and Chinese.

NORAD's holiday tradition can by traced to 1955, when a Colorado Springs newspaper printed a Sears, Roebuck & Co. ad telling children of a phone number to talk to Santa. The number was one digit off, and the first child to get through reached the Continental Air Defense Command, NORAD's predecessor.

Col. Harry W. Shoup answered.

Shoup's daughter, Terri Van Keuren, said her dad, now 91, was surprised to hear that the little voice on the other end thought he was Santa.

"Dad thought, `What the heck? This must be some kind of code,'" said Van Keuren, 59.

Shoup, described by his daughter as "just a nut about Christmas," didn't want to break the boy's heart, so he sounded a booming "Ho, ho, ho!" and pretended to be Santa Claus.

Enough calls followed that Shoup assigned an officer to answer them while the problem was fixed. But Shoup and the staff he was directing to "locate" Santa on radar ended up embracing the idea. NORAD picked up the tradition when it was formed 50 years ago.

"If we didn't do it, truly I don't know who else would track Santa," Maj. Stacia Reddish said.

The task that began with no computers and only a 60-by-80-foot 60 foot (18-by-24 meter) glass map of North America now includes two big screens on a wall showing the world and information on each country Santa Claus visits. It took off with the Web site's 1997 launch, Reddish said.

Now, curious youngsters can follow Santa's path online with a Google two-dimensional map or in 3D using Google Earth, where he can be seen flying through different landscapes in his sleigh.

NORAD officials are hesitant to list all the potential sites Santa will visit with certainty.

"Historically, Santa has loved the Great Wall of China. He loves the (Space) Needle in Seattle. He of course loves the Eiffel Tower," Reddish said. "But his path is completely unpredictable, so we won't know."

___

On the Net:

http://www.noradsanta.org

Olympiakos beats Giannena 2-0 in Greek league

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Olympiakos stretched its league lead to four points Sunday with a 2-0 victory over Giannena thanks to first-half goals by David Fuster and Rafik Djebbour.

Olympiakos has played two games more than archrival Panathinaikos, which lies second.

Third-place AEK was beaten 1-0 at fourth-place Atromitos, missing a chance to overtake Panathinaikos.

In other games Sunday, PAOK won 2-0 at last-place Drama, while OFI vs. Kerkyra and Aris vs. Panaitolikos ended in scoreless draws.

Olympiakos took the lead in the 9th minute when Fuster beat goalkeeper Karim Fegrouche with a powerful left-foot shot from outside the area. The ball grazed the crossbar before entering the net.

Two minutes before halftime, Djebbour made it 2-0 off a cross by Yiannis Maniatis and a touch by Yiannis Fetfatzidis. It was the 9th goal of the season for Djebbour.

Olympiakos continued to dominate in the second half but its attacks were ineffective and Giannena appeared content to contain the margin of defeat. The visitors could have pulled back a goal in the 66th, when Maniatis passed sloppily back to his goalkeeper, but Ibrahima Bakayoko shot wide.

The league resumes play Jan. 3.

MillerCoors 1Q profit rises on better pricing

Molson Coors Brewing and SABMiller say first-quarter profit for their U.S. joint venture MillerCoors rose 51 percent as sales of Coors Light, Miller Lite and other brands were helped by higher prices and fewer promotions.

MillerCoors says it earned $206 million compared with year-ago pro forma profit of $136.6 million.

Excluding employee relocation and retention costs, net income was $216.4 million.

Revenue for MillerCoors grew about 4 percent to $1.72 billion from $1.65 billion.

The maker of Coors Light and Miller Lite says sales to domestic retailers edged up 0.4 percent on improved sales of Coors Light, Miller Lite, Keystone Light and other brands.

Lincoln Park's cats get den redone

After two years and almost $4 million, the Lincoln Park Zoo'srenovated Lion House will open to the public next Saturday.

Visitors will find breathtaking changes.

The 26 green-tiled and heavily barred cages, where generationsof cats paced relentlessly through the seasons, are gone - replacedby 10 stunning habitats.

Almost invisible piano wire mesh separates the big cats from thepublic in five inside and five outside areas along the south side ofthe building.

The mesh is so unobtrusive that the cats had to be acclimated toit last week when they were introduced to their new homes. Strips ofburlap were hung on it so they wouldn't try to jump right through,said Art Miraldi, new head keeper.

The animals, housed in the primate house or other zoos duringthe two-year construction, were timid about entering their newquarters. But Lisa, the black leopard, got used to it quickly.

She found her own path through stone outcroppings against asimulated Serengeti grassland background.

"She likes it already," said Miraldi. "She plays with the drygrass just like any cat."

Realistic details, such as plugs of real grass, vines hangingfrom Amazon rain forest trees and crevices in the pseudo-Himalayancliffs, are convincing.

"There are no more sterile cages with bars," Miraldi said.

Instead of a single bare shelf to rest on, the cats havenaturalistic ledges and boulders to climb or sprawl on.

Jaguars in the rain forest setting have a pool and waterfall -appropriate for cats who are great swimmers and even catch fish inthe wild, said Miraldi.

Each indoor exhibit includes painted skies that reflect, forexample, the hazy heat of an African afternoon on the savanna for theservals - tawny African cats with tufted ears. The high sky imitatesthe snow leopards' native Nepal, and there are rugged mountains forthe Afghan leopards.

"They're like dioramas in the Field Museum, except they haveliving animals in them," said Miraldi.

The outdoor exhibits for cheetahs, mountain lions and leopardsare tall, spacious and domed with wire mesh, giving the cats plentyof room to climb. Artificial rock ledges and living trees and bushesgive them hiding and sunning spots.

Bond: "Racism alive and well to all non-whites"

Bond: "Racism alive and well to all non-whites"

"To ignore race is to ignore our present and deny our history" and to brush off the existence of racism in America is politically incorrect, NAACP Board Chairman Julian Bond warned Monday saying the disease of racism is still "alive and well." even though Jim Crow laws are dead.

"The phrase `playing the race card' is like the phrase `politically correct' intended to mean one thing, in actual usage each has come to mean something very different," Bond said.

He made his remarks during the 92nd annual NAACP convention held in New Orleans, to more than 20,000 people attending.

He said the phrase politically correct "began as an ironic, self-mocking and self-deprecating comment among liberals. It made fun of those who took special steps not to offend by substituting often clumsy euphemisms for descriptions now regarded as demeaning or offensive.

"Playing the race card gained widest usage in the aftermath of the O.J. Simpson trial," he recalled.

"Simpson's lawyer, Johnnie Cochran, `played the race card,' we are supposed to believe, by improperly appealing to Black jurors' misplaced racial loyalty to his Black client.

"Today," said Bond, "the phrase has broader application. Now, in some quarters, at least, it covers any mention of race and by the new standard, it is always inappropriate.

"In this formulation, any discussion of race in any context is wrong, but, we believe ignoring race, what Bill Clinton calls `the oldest demon in human society, is always wrong. To ignore race is to ignore our present and deny our history," Bond warned.

Saying the NAACP's numbers and revenues are rising including a record number of youth units across America, Bond said his organization was not "thwarted" by the racism of the past and today "is stronger now than ever.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Coast Guard Adm. Allen in hot seat over oil spill

The oil spoiling the teeming marshes and white-sand beaches of the Gulf Coast is also threatening the pristine image of the burly, take-charge leader who has become the federal government's go-to guy in a disaster.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, one of the few federal officials whose reputation survived Hurricane Katrina intact, is facing growing criticism that he and his agency are overwhelmed by the catastrophe. It's unfamiliar territory for a former Coast Guard Academy football captain who has managed responses to crises that include the earthquake in Haiti, Katrina and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"It's very discombobulated and disorganized," Orange Beach, Ala., Mayor Tony Kennon said of the federal response after tar balls stained the beach and entered Perdido Bay this week, without protection from booms. "They had five weeks to get ready for this, and it still happened."

Back in 2005, most leaders in the Gulf had kinder words for Allen's operations after then-President George W. Bush tapped him to take over the widely panned Hurricane Katrina response initially led by former FEMA Director Michael Brown.

Allen was credited with turning the effort around. And when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded on April 20, the White House was so confident it had the right man to lead the response that it persuaded Allen to delay his planned May retirement.

Allen, 61, who relinquished his role as head of the Coast Guard but is staying on as the spill's national incident commander, has since become the public face of the government's efforts. The Obama administration is increasingly relying on him in White House press briefings and elsewhere to try to assure the public that the government is in charge. Briefing reporters this week, Allen came off cool, calm and confident.

But just as Katrina brought unforeseen challenges, the oil spill has proved unprecedented and unwieldy. Allen is taking his lumps.

Early on, the Coast Guard was widely viewed as giving BP too much control on the scene, effectively looking the other way when the company offered misleadingly rosy assessments. Allen, for example, went along for weeks with BP's insistence that measuring the amount of oil spewing from the well was unimportant, only later pressing for accurate figures after scientists complained that it could help officials plan for containing the mess and account for liability.

There's also the Katrina-like gap between what federal officials say is happening and what local leaders say they are seeing. Since the beginning, Allen has insisted the government and BP deployed more resources than needed. That is consistently disputed by local and state officials who complain of poor coordination, shortages of boom and skimmers, agonizing delays in getting responses to requests and a general reluctance to try new or experimental cleanup strategies.

While BP has taken the brunt of it, much of the criticism also is falling on Allen, the son of a Coast Guard man who rose through the ranks to become the 23rd commandant of the agency in 2006.

"I have spent more time fighting the officials of BP and the Coast Guard than fighting the oil," Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said. "We've got to find someone to put in charge who has the guts and the will to make some decisions."

Nungesser's parish includes the Louisiana marshes first hit by oil a month ago, where recently pelicans were found coated with thick oil.

David Camardelle, mayor of Grand Isle, La., said he meets daily with state and federal officials but that when he brings up a problem or offers a solution he's told "BP or EPA, or the Coast Guard is going to have to approve this before we can do anything."

"How can we accept that when our lives depend on their action?" Camardelle asked, testifying Thursday before a Senate Homeland Security subcommittee.

During briefings with reporters, Allen has noted the frustration of dealing with a spill across the Gulf. He frequently points to the number of fishermen and shrimpers who have been enlisted into the response _ the "vessels of opportunity" as he has dubbed the private armada.

But this strategy too has come under fire.

Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said many of the fishermen in her state "don't think it's working."

And Camardelle complained that shrimpers in his community who sign up for the program "are being sent off on ships where they find no oil (and) ... they want to return and help protect their communities." At other times they were "ready to go but just waited at the docks for the call," he told lawmakers.

Unfailingly polite in public, Allen takes criticism in stride. He said Friday that local officials have a direct line to the government's command center.

Though born in the desert _ in Tucson, Ariz. _ he's been around the water all his life, moving from post to post as a Coast Guard brat and, later, for his own career. He worked on his first oil spill 20 years ago as a lieutenant when a barge ran aground near Atlantic City, N.J. He says responding is like fighting a battle: The trick is moving resources quickly to where they're needed.

Within the Coast Guard _ which itself captures the public's imagination with its rescue swimmers, drug busts on the high seas and missions to save stranded fishermen _ Allen is widely admired. On the Gulf, there's little doubt who's in charge when Allen's around.

He has broad authority from the White House to make decisions and can pick up the phone and call BP CEO Tony Hayward when he needs answers. Like the president, Allen in recent days has shown more impatience with BP, writing Hayward a terse letter this week demanding more information about how the company is settling claims.

Last week, preparing for a potentially contentious meeting with Alabama Gov. Bob Riley, Allen sat at a conference table with Coast Guard officers and picked apart a planned presentation addressing Riley's complaints about protective boom being moved from Alabama to other states.

"Guys, we have to be exact with this," Allen said, gesturing with one hand as he drank coffee with the other. "One misstatement and the meeting goes south. We have to be transparent. Transparency! Clarity!"

When inventory numbers on the amount of boom available in Alabama didn't add up, Allen had had enough. He got up, grabbed an easel and a marker and began writing. The numbers got straightened out to his satisfaction just before Riley walked into the room.

The problem appears to have been resolved, but Riley made clear his lingering frustration with Allen in a statement this week in which he credited the president for fixing it.

"I want to thank the president for his personal intervention with the Coast Guard," the governor said. "Boom that was deployed here in Alabama should never have been taken from us in the first place."

Briefing reporters before meeting with President Barack Obama on Monday, Allen acknowledged that the Coast Guard never anticipated something like the BP gusher.

Even though the agency ran a Gulf Coast response drill in 2002 simulating a blown wellhead _ with Allen playing the role of incident commander _ Allen said the expectation is for a single oil slick contained in a specific area. The Deepwater Horizon spill, he said, is taxing resources because the oil is breaking up and being pushed by winds and currents in all different directions. He acknowledged that the disaster will likely change the way the country plans for spills.

"We're trying to adapt and learn from a spill that's never happened before in this country," he said.

While early reviews have been mixed at best, the final verdict on Allen's performance is still out.

"We've lost some battles (but) we can win this war," Nungesser said. "But it's got to happen quickly."

Allen doesn't have much time to turn the tide. He still plans to retire July 1, although he acknowledges he might not be able to take off the uniform that quickly.

"I didn't anticipate this would happen to end my career, but I'm honored to have been asked to do this," he told reporters. "It's not a very easy job ... It's one of the hardest things I've ever had to deal with."

___

Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in Mobile, Ala., Holbrook Mohr in Venice, La., and Greg Bluestein in Grand Isle, La., contributed to this report.

Frank says Washington gay rights march misses mark

Rep. Barney Frank, an openly gay member of Congress, says he'd rather see gay rights supporters lobbying their elected officials than marching in Washington this weekend, calling the demonstration "a waste of time at best."

Rep. Barney Frank, in an interview with The Associated Press, said he considers such demonstrations to be "an emotional release" that does little to pressure Congress.

"The only thing they're going to be putting pressure on is the grass," the Democrat said Friday.

Thousands of gay men and women are expected to gather for Sunday's National Equality March.

Many gay rights advocates have criticized President Barack Obama for not moving faster to keep his campaign promises to extend gay rights, and Congress has also drawn flak for not doing more. Obama plans to speak Saturday at a dinner hosted by the Human Rights Campaign, the largest U.S. gay rights group.

Frank's comments underscore divisions in the gay community over the pace of progress on civil rights.

Obama's election, coupled with the Democratic control of the House and Senate, boosted hopes in the gay community for breakthroughs on sweeping measures to end discrimination against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.

March organizers have said they're no longer willing to quietly wait for Democratic office holders to make good on decades-old promises. They contend that lawmakers' actions should catch up to the growing acceptance of gay relationships.

Organizers say the march is only part of a broader effort that includes the kind of lobbying Frank is urging.

"We hear Congressman Frank when he says this is about getting back into your district and doing the work there," said Kip Williams, co-director of the march. But he said the march in Washington "is about building community and building a network who will go back and do that work."

But Frank, who in 1987 became the first member of Congress to voluntarily make his homosexuality public, said the real problem is gathering enough votes in the House and Senate to win passage of anti-discrimination legislation.

Gay rights advocates should borrow from the playbooks of the two most effective interest groups, the National Rifle Association and the AARP senior citizens group, said Frank.

"Call or write your representative or senator, and then have your friends call and write their representative or senator," Frank said. "That's what the NRA does. That's what the AARP does."

Congress is on the verge of making it a federal crime to assault people because of their sexual orientation. The so-called hate crimes legislation was attached to a major defense bill approved by the House.

DuPont subsidiary cultivates seeds business in China

Business Update

PLANTS AND PROJECTS

DuPont Subsidiary Cultivates Seeds Business in China

Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. (Des Moines, IA; www.pioneer.com), a subsidiary of DuPont, Inc. (Wilmington, DE; www.dupont.com), has formed a joint venture with Denghai Seed Group (Lai Zhou, China; www.xixingseeds.com) to produce enhanced corn seed for Chinese farmers. The new entity, Shandong Denghai Pioneer Seeds Co., will develop and distribute high-yielding corn hybrids for the summer corn markets, which represent about one third of China's total corn market. The first commercial products are slated for delivery by 2004.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Bautista homers twice, Pirates halt Nats' win streak, 11-4

Jose Bautista homered twice and drove in four runs and the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated Washington 11-4 Friday night, ending the Nationals' winning streak at a season-high four games.

Ryan Doumit and Chris Gomez had two RBIs apiece for the Pirates, who have won three of five.

The game was delayed 25 minutes in the bottom of the fourth when rows of lights along the left- and right-field lines went dark. Umpires huddled with Nationals Park operations staff before the teams retreated to their dugouts to wait out the power failure.

Damaso Marte (2-0) pitched two hitless innings, and the Pirates bullpen gave up one hit in five innings.

Pittsburgh took a 6-0 lead in the third, sending nine men to the plate and breaking John Lannan's scoreless streak at a Nationals-record 21 innings.

Nate McLouth led off with a double and Jason Bay drew a one-out walk before consecutive run-scoring singles to center by Doumit and Xavier Nady. Doug Mientkiewicz followed with a fielder's choice grounder to short, but second baseman Felipe Lopez mishandled Cristian Guzman's throw and Doumit scored. Bautista then ripped Lannan's 1-2 pitch over the center-field wall for his second homer of the season.

Lannan (2-3) left after allowing six runs _ five earned _ on six hits and two walks in three innings.

Lopez hit an RBI double in the third, but Doumit's run-scoring single in the fourth made it 7-1.

Pirates starter Phil Dumatrait retired the first eight hitters, but struggled after the lighting malfunction, which followed Ryan Zimmerman's leadoff infield single in the fourth. The left-hander allowed a one-out double to Lastings Milledge and walked Austin Kearns to load the bases, then allowed a Wily Mo Pena sacrifice fly and a two-run double by Wil Nieves.

Bautista added a fifth-inning solo shot off Mike O'Connor for his second career two-homer game.

Dumatrait went four innings, giving up four runs on six hits, walking one and striking out four.

Gomez added a two-run single in the seventh, making it 10-4. Bay had an RBI double in the eighth.

Crop prices rise on bargain buying

NEW YORK (AP) — Crop futures closed higher Tuesday as livestock and ethanol producers take advantage of a recent decline in prices.

Corn for December delivery rose 12 cents, or nearly 2 percent, to settle at $6.455 per bushel Tuesday. December soybeans gained 22 cents, or nearly 2 percent, to $12.0025 a bushel. December wheat rose 17 cents, or nearly 3 percent, to finish at $6.3275 per bushel.

Crop prices fell sharply last week after the USDA predicted that corn surpluses in 2012 would not fall as sharply as expected. Turmoil in Europe and financial markets also pulled down prices on fears that the global economy would slow and reduce demand for food and crop-based fuels.

Livestock and ethanol producers rushed to get cheap supplies because expensive grain prices hurt their profit margins this summer. On September 2, corn cost $7.60 a bushel, close to the record high price of $7.99 it reached in June.

Corn was still trading as high as $6.61 a bushel in early November. But prices fell sharply after the USDA released its prediction. By Monday afternoon, corn had fallen 15 percent from early September.

When corn closed at $6.34 a bushel Monday, traders saw an opportunity, said Jason Ward, an analyst with Northstar Commodity in Minneapolis. Corn was so cheap that many livestock producers and ethanol makers could buy big quantities and use it more profitably.

"They're thinking that the prices are the cheapest they have been in five weeks: They'd better buy some," Ward said.

In other trading, metals were mostly higher. Gold for December delivery rose $3.80, or less than 1 percent, to settle at $1,782.20 per ounce. December silver gained 43.2 cents to close at $34.456 an ounce.

Copper for December delivery rose 1.35 cents, or less than 1 percent, to close at $3.5015 per pound. December palladium gained $2.75 to close at $667.05 an ounce. January platinum fell $1.40 to $1,642.70 an ounce.

In energy trading, Oil prices climbed to near $100 per barrel after a positive report about the U.S. economy stoked hopes that energy demand would rise. Retail sales rose in October for the fifth straight month, according the U.S. government.

Benchmark crude oil rose $1.23 to end at $99.37 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Heating oil gained 0.91 cents to finish at $3.1713 per gallon, gasoline futures rose 5.04 cents to close at $2.5857 per gallon and natural gas fell 5.8 cents to close at $3.542 per 1,000 cubic feet.

___

Find Christopher Leonard on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cleonardnews

Workers shouldn't retire and move in the same breath

If you plan to move to a different house when you retire, waitawhile.

"One thing that experts agree on is that if you decide to make achange, don't do it the day after you draw your last paycheck," saidRobert Russo, a vice president of the Hoffman Group, one of the areaslargest home building companies.

"They (experts) caution that retirement is a period ofadjustment accompanied by a lot of stress and strain. So you can doa lot of thinking and planning, but it's advised that you postponeany decisions to move until you've had some experience withretirement," Russo said.

He said studies show 75 percent of retirees choose to stay putwhen they retire, unless financial or health circumstances dictate achange.

Of those who do move, a majority remain in the same geographicarea, usually within five miles of their present residence.

Russo said the following questions can guide you on whether andwhere to move: Is the house too big? Some people like lots of room; some need theextra space for frequent guests. Is it arranged the way you like? If it has too many bedrooms whileyou are squeezed for living and entertaining space, you may be ableto knock out some walls. Or you may be better off moving to a housegeared more to adult living than rearing a family. Is your home as near to family, and close friends, as you'd like itto be? Is the house still comfortable, or are the stairs becoming anuisance? If the home requires maintenance and upkeep, includingyard work, do you still enjoy the chores? Before you answer, keep inmind that chores that may be a burden while you still are pursuingyour career or running a business may be welcome activities when youretire. Do you feel secure in your present home and neighborhood? What kind of impact will income taxes and property taxes have onyour retirement budget? Are gas and electric utility costs becoming exorbitant? Before youdecide to scram for the Sun Belt, don't forget cooling a house can becostly, too. A more practical solution might be to make your homemore energy-efficient with added insulation, etc.

Review: Nike device improves, but oversimplified

NEW YORK (AP) — Since 2003, I've tried several fitness accessories that use the GPS system to tell you how far and how fast you're running. I've generally liked them, except for the fact that they don't work well in big cities.

Many runners I know have one of these devices — usually a watch that gets signals from GPS satellites in the sky to calculate distance and speed. These don't offer street maps, the way GPS devices in cars do, but some models have rudimentary navigation features to help get you back to your starting point. Some also try to coach you — they'll beep when you're going faster or slower than your specified target.

Nike's $200 SportWatch GPS doesn't offer that. What you get instead is a simplified device that works exceptionally well in big cities, including my hometown New York.

The problem with big cities is that tall buildings block some of the GPS signals. It might take 10 or 15 minutes for a device to find the signals, rather than just a minute or so elsewhere. As the weather gets colder, I'd prefer starting my run sooner and spending less time standing around outside waiting for the watch to activate.

The SportWatch addresses these shortcomings in two important ways.

As long as you plug the watch in to a computer regularly, using a standard USB port, it retrieves data that can help locate signals faster.

It also has a backup system when no signal is available at all. The SportWatch comes with a small sensor that attaches to your shoe and measures the amount of time between footsteps and the time your foot is on the ground. The SportWatch picks up that information wirelessly and uses it to calculate pace and distance.

With this backup, you can start your run before the SportWatch finds the GPS signals. The device works even when you're running through a tunnel or on the lower level of a bridge — places GPS can't always reach. The SportWatch automatically goes back to using the more accurate GPS system once it gets signals again.

Unfortunately, the backup sensor system is designed specifically for Nike shoes, which have slots built into them to hold the sensors. Runners can be quite particular about their shoes, and wrong ones can lead to injuries, as I've learned the hard way.

The good news is that many running stores sell Velcro attachments for other shoes, though you won't find out about them in Nike's manuals. I've found in years of testing that these third-party attachments don't work as well as Nike shoes, but a new auto-calibration feature should reduce the errors in calculating distance and pace.

The SportWatch, which incorporates a GPS receiver made by TomTom, has clear improvements over earlier models from Nike and others, though I stop short of giving it a ringing endorsement.

I find that it tries to simplify too much and allows for little customization.

Many of the settings can't be changed directly from the watch. You have to create an online account and download free software from Nike to make such adjustments from a computer.

You also have to go online for details about runs you've just completed. Lots of data get recorded during your runs, but the device only presents a sliver. You get distance, average pace, the time it took and estimated calories burned (as long as you went into the computer settings and entered your weight). You also get how long it took for each split — a point you manually record by tapping the watch's screen, be it the completion of a lap around a track or the hitting of a mile marker in a race.

But the SportWatch doesn't give you pace, distance and calorie information for each split, as many other devices do. Nor does it give you elevation and other metrics on the watch, as some competing devices do.

And once you've connected your device to a particular online account, you can't change that without completely resetting the watch and erasing all your data. Competing devices from Garmin and Timex let you change accounts. You might need to, for instance, if you loan your watch to a friend or family member with a separate account and want details of those runs placed there instead.

The watch also goes into power-save mode too quickly. If I don't start my run soon after the device finds the signals, it turns off and has to search for signals again. I can see the reasoning behind this, but it would be nice to be able to change how much time you have or to temporarily turn that off.

An upcoming software update will offer some improvements. Nike says you'll be able to set the time and date directly from the watch, without needing a computer. There's also promise of a stopwatch feature, so you can use the device when you have no GPS signal or foot sensor around. Those are two features that should have been there from the start.

This device is designed more for form than function. It's not for hard-core runners used to lots of customization and data. It's simplified for beginners and others content with just the basics. That mentality is underscored with inspirational messages such as "Way to go" and "Job well done" after each run — a bit insulting to hard-core runners after finishing a particularly bad run.

Perhaps one day, I'll get a device that has the full functionality of a Garmin or Timex watch but works as well as the Nike SportWatch in big cities. It doesn't matter which one does it first. I'm just glad there's healthy competition to get there.

CLIMATE RECORD EXTENDED BY 300,000 YEARS

A new ice core taken from a glacier in Vostok, Antarctica, has extended our view of climate back to 740,000 years ago, 320,000 years further than the longest previous ice core. The additional time reveals new and intriguing information about temperature shifts between glacial and interglacial periods, according to members of the European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA).

"In the last 400,000 years, you've got very cold, cold periods and very warm, warm periods," notes EPICA scientist Eric Wolff of the British Antarctic Survey. But in the time span between 400,000 and 720,000 years ago, the interglacial periods never were significantly warm, according to Wolff. Yet, in that same span, a higher proportion of time was spent in interglacial periods. Wolff said that further study would be necessary to determine what caused these variations. The information was published in the 10 June issue of Nature.

The EPICA scientists are next planning to examine the carbon dioxide (CO2) record, which they hope will provide clues to the relationship between CO2 and climate-specifically, whether or not CO2 levels are influenced by temperature changes. The researchers also hope that this core may eventually reveal data even farther back, to around 800,000 years ago. At the time of the Nature article, about 120 m of ice in the core remained to be drilled, and the scientists expect to continue their research on the core for another 2 to 3 years.

[Sidebar]

ECHOES

"I suspect this isn't a record, but it's certainly up there."

-JAMES FRANKLIN, meteorologist with the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida, referring to the amount of time it took for Hurricane Charley to go from a category 3 to a category 4 rating. Charley, which hit the west coast of Florida, was a category 2 at 11:00 A.M. on 13 August. By 4:00 P.M. that day, it was a category 4. It went from category 3 to category 4 in approximately 1 h. Over the course of the day, its wind speed increased from 110 to 145 mph. A rapid hurricane intensification, also known as "bombing out," can lead to the kind of extraordinary destruction that Charley wrought, with 27 deaths and damages in the billions of dollars. Hurricane Andrew, the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history, had a similarly rapid growth, going from category 1 to category 5 in 30 h.

Spain says deficit down by half through July

Spain says its public deficit is down sharply through the end of July thanks to a combination of tax hikes and other austerity measures.

That's good news for a government fighting to shake off recession and ward off fears it might need a massive international bailout like the one that saved Greece from bankruptcy in May.

The Finance Ministry said in a report issued Tuesday that through the end of July, the central government's deficit totaled 2.4 percent of GDP, half of what it was for the same period of 2009.

The figures do not include spending by regional governments, however, which will be key to helping the government meet its stated goal of cutting the deficit from 11.2 percent of GDP last year to 3 percent in 2013.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Rivers to Toss Emmy Barbs From Internet

NEW YORK - Joan Rivers will be missing from the red carpet scene at the Emmy Awards on Sunday night, but she'll still be cracking wise about it - on the Web.

Rivers, 74, and her daughter, Melissa, 39, will blog about the telecast's most memorable moments and fashion hits and misses on emmyswithjoan.com, a special section of the Web site VH1Eyecandy.com, VH1 announced Monday.

Their commentary will be seen in an online video and heard in two video podcasts wrapping up the red-carpet and awards-show portions of the night, VH1 said.

Rivers and her daughter launched TV Guide Network's red-carpet programming in January 2005. They had previously appeared as red-carpet …

Israel On Iran's Bomb.

Zeev Schiff, defence editor of Israel's Haaretz daily, wrote on Jan. 16 that Israel cannot live with Iran having an atomic bomb. But he said Israel could not stop it. Expert in strategic defence matters, Schiff noted: "Israel was perhaps the only country that detected what was happening in Iran at an early stage, and it had repeatedly claimed that Iran was deceiving the IAEA. We can recall that regarding Iraq, too, it was Israel that argued in the late 1970s and early 1980s that Saddam Hussein was trying to acquire nuclear weaponry. Washington initially rejected the reports, and ultimately Israel was obliged to invoke a military solution and bomb the Iraqi reactor in [June] 1981 - but only after Iran tried first, and failed".

Israel appears to possess extensive intelligence information on Iranian nuclear activities. While those activities have suffered a variety of delays, Schiff said "there can be no doubt that military nuclear development is the objective" of the Tehran regime. Israel views this as a serious threat, frequently defining it as existential in nature.

Schiff wrote: "Iran's diplomatic maneuvers - one step back, two steps forward - are intended to play for time until it achieves the status of regional nuclear power... The Iranian nuclearization issue should be understood as being not restricted to Iran alone. The problem is far more comprehensive and dangerous because it is obvious that after Iran, additional Middle East states will seek to develop their own nuclear weapons. Why, for example, shouldn't Egypt try? Why shouldn't Saudi Arabia attempt to acquire nuclear weaponry or know-how from Pakistan? Why won't Sunni Arab states fear an extremist Shiite Iran that has acquired nuclear weapons?"

Israeli concern over Iran is particularly great because of the "nature and behavior of its regime". Schiff said: "The negative ramifications are doubled when the finger on the nuclear trigger is that of an extremist Shiite ayatollah. Iran finances organizations like the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah and supports the use of violence against Israel and Israelis. Washington had good reason to define Iran as a member of the 'axis of evil'".

The commentator said "Israel was doubly worried" when Ahmadi-Nejad called for its destruction and claimed the Holocaust never took place. He added: "This combination of a nuclear weapons program, calls for the annihilation of Israel and funding for terrorism requires an aggressive response against Iran. Obviously, Israel has good reason to prepare itself for every contingency, and this it is doing. It refrains from threatening Iran while preparing for the worst.

"Israel understands that Iran is not like Iraq. It is bigger and its rulers have drawn lessons from the fate of Saddam Hussein. Israel's basic approach holds that the problem of a nuclear Iran is not its problem alone, but that of the broader international community. Iran projects a threat to the entire Middle East and to global stability. The surface-to-surface missiles it is developing reach far beyond Israel. Already they cover Saudi Arabia as well as Turkey, a member of NATO; the next generation of Iranian missiles will cover most of the European subcontinent".

Is there a military option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project? Schiff gave this answer: "If the question refers only to Israel, the answer is no. If Israel senses a direct threat from the extremist regime in Tehran and feels the need to do so, it can severely punish Iran and cause a significant delay in its military nuclear development project. But I do not believe it can put a complete stop to the project by military means. Undoubtedly, the US has a far greater military capability.

"Experts argue that it is not necessary to destroy all nuclear targets in Iran in order to achieve this outcome. But for Washington the issue is not only military; it is political as well, particularly in view of the war in Iraq. In other words, any American response would have to be a military and political option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project.

"At a broader level the international community, if it shows the determination, possesses a military option for stopping the Iranian nuclear scheme. This could be the outcome if Iran, under the leadership of extremist ayatollahs, violates its international commitments and threatens its neighbors. Yet it is important to note that diplomatic and political maneuvers on this issue have not been exhausted. The Russian proposal that Iran exercise its 'right' to enrich uranium on Russian territory is a good opening for an agreement - on condition that Tehran honor it in all respects".

Israel On Iran's Bomb.

Zeev Schiff, defence editor of Israel's Haaretz daily, wrote on Jan. 16 that Israel cannot live with Iran having an atomic bomb. But he said Israel could not stop it. Expert in strategic defence matters, Schiff noted: "Israel was perhaps the only country that detected what was happening in Iran at an early stage, and it had repeatedly claimed that Iran was deceiving the IAEA. We can recall that regarding Iraq, too, it was Israel that argued in the late 1970s and early 1980s that Saddam Hussein was trying to acquire nuclear weaponry. Washington initially rejected the reports, and ultimately Israel was obliged to invoke a military solution and bomb the Iraqi reactor in [June] 1981 - but only after Iran tried first, and failed".

Israel appears to possess extensive intelligence information on Iranian nuclear activities. While those activities have suffered a variety of delays, Schiff said "there can be no doubt that military nuclear development is the objective" of the Tehran regime. Israel views this as a serious threat, frequently defining it as existential in nature.

Schiff wrote: "Iran's diplomatic maneuvers - one step back, two steps forward - are intended to play for time until it achieves the status of regional nuclear power... The Iranian nuclearization issue should be understood as being not restricted to Iran alone. The problem is far more comprehensive and dangerous because it is obvious that after Iran, additional Middle East states will seek to develop their own nuclear weapons. Why, for example, shouldn't Egypt try? Why shouldn't Saudi Arabia attempt to acquire nuclear weaponry or know-how from Pakistan? Why won't Sunni Arab states fear an extremist Shiite Iran that has acquired nuclear weapons?"

Israeli concern over Iran is particularly great because of the "nature and behavior of its regime". Schiff said: "The negative ramifications are doubled when the finger on the nuclear trigger is that of an extremist Shiite ayatollah. Iran finances organizations like the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah and supports the use of violence against Israel and Israelis. Washington had good reason to define Iran as a member of the 'axis of evil'".

The commentator said "Israel was doubly worried" when Ahmadi-Nejad called for its destruction and claimed the Holocaust never took place. He added: "This combination of a nuclear weapons program, calls for the annihilation of Israel and funding for terrorism requires an aggressive response against Iran. Obviously, Israel has good reason to prepare itself for every contingency, and this it is doing. It refrains from threatening Iran while preparing for the worst.

"Israel understands that Iran is not like Iraq. It is bigger and its rulers have drawn lessons from the fate of Saddam Hussein. Israel's basic approach holds that the problem of a nuclear Iran is not its problem alone, but that of the broader international community. Iran projects a threat to the entire Middle East and to global stability. The surface-to-surface missiles it is developing reach far beyond Israel. Already they cover Saudi Arabia as well as Turkey, a member of NATO; the next generation of Iranian missiles will cover most of the European subcontinent".

Is there a military option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project? Schiff gave this answer: "If the question refers only to Israel, the answer is no. If Israel senses a direct threat from the extremist regime in Tehran and feels the need to do so, it can severely punish Iran and cause a significant delay in its military nuclear development project. But I do not believe it can put a complete stop to the project by military means. Undoubtedly, the US has a far greater military capability.

"Experts argue that it is not necessary to destroy all nuclear targets in Iran in order to achieve this outcome. But for Washington the issue is not only military; it is political as well, particularly in view of the war in Iraq. In other words, any American response would have to be a military and political option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project.

"At a broader level the international community, if it shows the determination, possesses a military option for stopping the Iranian nuclear scheme. This could be the outcome if Iran, under the leadership of extremist ayatollahs, violates its international commitments and threatens its neighbors. Yet it is important to note that diplomatic and political maneuvers on this issue have not been exhausted. The Russian proposal that Iran exercise its 'right' to enrich uranium on Russian territory is a good opening for an agreement - on condition that Tehran honor it in all respects".

Israel On Iran's Bomb.

Zeev Schiff, defence editor of Israel's Haaretz daily, wrote on Jan. 16 that Israel cannot live with Iran having an atomic bomb. But he said Israel could not stop it. Expert in strategic defence matters, Schiff noted: "Israel was perhaps the only country that detected what was happening in Iran at an early stage, and it had repeatedly claimed that Iran was deceiving the IAEA. We can recall that regarding Iraq, too, it was Israel that argued in the late 1970s and early 1980s that Saddam Hussein was trying to acquire nuclear weaponry. Washington initially rejected the reports, and ultimately Israel was obliged to invoke a military solution and bomb the Iraqi reactor in [June] 1981 - but only after Iran tried first, and failed".

Israel appears to possess extensive intelligence information on Iranian nuclear activities. While those activities have suffered a variety of delays, Schiff said "there can be no doubt that military nuclear development is the objective" of the Tehran regime. Israel views this as a serious threat, frequently defining it as existential in nature.

Schiff wrote: "Iran's diplomatic maneuvers - one step back, two steps forward - are intended to play for time until it achieves the status of regional nuclear power... The Iranian nuclearization issue should be understood as being not restricted to Iran alone. The problem is far more comprehensive and dangerous because it is obvious that after Iran, additional Middle East states will seek to develop their own nuclear weapons. Why, for example, shouldn't Egypt try? Why shouldn't Saudi Arabia attempt to acquire nuclear weaponry or know-how from Pakistan? Why won't Sunni Arab states fear an extremist Shiite Iran that has acquired nuclear weapons?"

Israeli concern over Iran is particularly great because of the "nature and behavior of its regime". Schiff said: "The negative ramifications are doubled when the finger on the nuclear trigger is that of an extremist Shiite ayatollah. Iran finances organizations like the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah and supports the use of violence against Israel and Israelis. Washington had good reason to define Iran as a member of the 'axis of evil'".

The commentator said "Israel was doubly worried" when Ahmadi-Nejad called for its destruction and claimed the Holocaust never took place. He added: "This combination of a nuclear weapons program, calls for the annihilation of Israel and funding for terrorism requires an aggressive response against Iran. Obviously, Israel has good reason to prepare itself for every contingency, and this it is doing. It refrains from threatening Iran while preparing for the worst.

"Israel understands that Iran is not like Iraq. It is bigger and its rulers have drawn lessons from the fate of Saddam Hussein. Israel's basic approach holds that the problem of a nuclear Iran is not its problem alone, but that of the broader international community. Iran projects a threat to the entire Middle East and to global stability. The surface-to-surface missiles it is developing reach far beyond Israel. Already they cover Saudi Arabia as well as Turkey, a member of NATO; the next generation of Iranian missiles will cover most of the European subcontinent".

Is there a military option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project? Schiff gave this answer: "If the question refers only to Israel, the answer is no. If Israel senses a direct threat from the extremist regime in Tehran and feels the need to do so, it can severely punish Iran and cause a significant delay in its military nuclear development project. But I do not believe it can put a complete stop to the project by military means. Undoubtedly, the US has a far greater military capability.

"Experts argue that it is not necessary to destroy all nuclear targets in Iran in order to achieve this outcome. But for Washington the issue is not only military; it is political as well, particularly in view of the war in Iraq. In other words, any American response would have to be a military and political option for stopping Iran's military nuclear project.

"At a broader level the international community, if it shows the determination, possesses a military option for stopping the Iranian nuclear scheme. This could be the outcome if Iran, under the leadership of extremist ayatollahs, violates its international commitments and threatens its neighbors. Yet it is important to note that diplomatic and political maneuvers on this issue have not been exhausted. The Russian proposal that Iran exercise its 'right' to enrich uranium on Russian territory is a good opening for an agreement - on condition that Tehran honor it in all respects".

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Software Uses In-Road Detectors to Alleviate Traffic Jams; System Helps Road Crews Discover Tie-Ups Three Times Faster.

Byline: Ohio State University

COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 25 (AScribe Newswire) -- The same in-road detectors that control traffic lights and monitor traffic could soon respond quicker to traffic jams, thanks to software developed by an Ohio State University engineer.

In tests, the software helped California road crews discover traffic jams three times faster than before, allowing them to clear accidents and restore traffic flow before many other drivers would be delayed.

This technology could also provide drivers with the information they need to plan efficient routes, and even improve future road design, said Benjamin Coifman, assistant professor of electrical engineering and civil and environmental engineering at Ohio State.

Many drivers have probably noticed the buried …

Joyous Boyd earns British Open start.

MIDDLETON Cheney's Gary Boyd has booked a place in next week's British Open after a nail-biting play-off victory in a qualifying competition.

Boyd went into a three-way play-off at Southport & Ainsdale Golf Club on Tuesday evening desperate to earn one of the last two remaining qualifying places for next week's Open at Royal Birkdale.

And he had to hang on until the sixth play-off hole to claim victory - his par five being enough to start the celebrations after rival Jonathan Lupton of Middlesbrough hit a bogey six.

Four qualifying places were available at Southport & Ainsdale following 36 holes of intense competition over two days.

Amateur …

POLICE PLUCK AMERICAN OFF TOP OF BANGKOK TEMPLE.(MAIN)

Byline: -- Associated Press

BANGKOK, Thailand -- A 27-year-old American created a stir when he climbed one of Bangkok's most famous temples and refused to come down.

Police finally grabbed the man, identified as Brandon K. Sincock, when it looked like he was considering jumping. He had spent five hours Tuesday on scaffolding around the Wat Arun temple, which is undergoing renovation.

Sincock had …

Attorney: Woods' wife asked neighbors to call 911

An attorney for the neighbors who dialed 911 after Tiger Woods' car crash last week says they saw no indication the golfer was beaten or driving under the influence.

Attorney Bill Sharpe said Tuesday that Linda Adams and her adult sons Jarius and Jerome Adams went outside their Orlando-area home after hearing the crash.

They found Woods' wife, Elin Nordegren, upset about her husband's …

NEW PUBLICATIONS

GREAT NEW ENGLAND STORMS OF THE 20TH CENTURY The Staff of the Boston Globe, 2007, 157 pp., $27.95, hardbound, The Boston Globe, ISBN 978-0-9790137-2-0

This title chronicles an era that encompasses many of the most famous weather events on record, including devastating floods in 1936, a severe hurricane in 1938, an FS tornado in 1953, the Infamous Blizzard of'78, the so-called "Perfect Storm" of 1991, and ice storms of the century in 1998. The book doesn't just outline the historical facts, but also illustrates the faces and stories behind each disaster. Additionally, dozens of meteorologists from around the region share their personal reflections on these memorable weather …

Displayless technique selects proteins in 'outer space'.(Brief Article)

A technique for the rapid screening of ligands that bind proteins expressed in the 'outer space' of bacterial cells has been developed by researchers at the University of Texas.

The technique, known as periplasmic expression with cytometric screening (PECS), exploits the ability of bacteria to express proteins in the space between their cell wall and membrane -- or periplasm. PEGS should expand the range and accelerate the discovery of novel proteins, as well as screening for the drug molecules that bind to them.

Gang Chen, researcher at the Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Texas in Austin, and co-workers have used PEGS to express a …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Scientists at Abant Izzet Baysal University discuss research in soil and plant science.

"The study aimed at quantifying the rates of soil CO2 efflux under the influence of common tillage systems of moldboard plow (PT), chisel plow (CT), rotary tiller (RT), heavy disc harrow (DT), and no-tillage (NT) for 46 days in October and November in a field left fallow after wheat harvest located in southern Turkey. The NT and DT plots produced the lowest soil CO2 effluxes of 0.3 and 0.7 g m(-2) h(-1), respectively, relative to the other plots (P < 0.001)," scientists in Bolu, Turkey report.

"Following the highest rainfall amount of 87 mm on the tenth day after the tillage, soil CO2 efflux rates of all the plots peaked on the 12th day, with less influence on soil …

Alito defended domestic wiretaps; Supreme Court nominee wrote memo while working for Reagan.(Main)

Byline: DONNA CASSATA Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito defended the right of government officials to order domestic wiretaps for national security when he worked at the Reagan Justice Department, an echo of President Bush's rationale for spying on U.S. residents in the war on terror.

Then an assistant to the solicitor general, Alito wrote a 1984 memo that provided insights on his views of government powers and legal recourse - seen now through the prism of Bush's actions - and clues to the judge's understanding of how the Supreme Court operates.

The National Archives released the memo and scores of other documents …

DOUGLASS BARTOW, 79.(CAPITAL REGION)

Douglass L. Bartow, 79, of Sunset Lane, Speigletown, died Wednesday in the Albany Medical Center Hospital after a brief illness.

He was born in Miller Place, Suffolk County, and lived in Troy since 1937.

Mr. Bartow retired in 1979 as a research engineer at the Manning Division of the Hammermill Paper Co. in Troy. He worked for the company for 42 years. He had also been a general mill superintendent at the Mt. Ida Mill of the Manning Paper Co. in Troy.

He was a member of the Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry, former member of the Paper Industry Management Association and a local representative of the High School Career Guidance …

Home expectations too much for stressed Stosur

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Coming into the Australian Open as a Grand Slam winner ought to have lifted the pressure from Sam Stosur. Instead, it seemed to double it.

The reigning U.S. Open champion crashed out in the first round, beaten 7-6 (2), 6-3 by Sorana Cirstea in front of her home crowd at Rod Laver Arena on Tuesday. Her bid to end a 34-year drought for Australian women at the Australian Open was in tatters on just the second day of the tournament.

As she spoke to the media afterward, her eyes appeared red and slightly swollen.

"I'm probably very close to crying, having a really awful night," Stosur said. "It's hard to suppress those emotions when it means so …

Ducks-Sabres Sums

Anaheim 0 1 0—1
Buffalo 2 2 0—4

First Period_1, Buffalo, Vanek 1 (Adam, Pominville), 4:02 (pp). 2, Buffalo, Leino 1 (Sekera, Boyes), 8:30. Penalties_Gaustad, Buf (interference), 1:08; Koivu, Ana (hooking), 2:21; Perry, Ana (tripping), 10:36; Regehr, Buf (interference), 13:18; Parros, Ana (roughing), 18:37; Regehr, Buf (boarding), 18:37.

Second Period_3, Anaheim, Guenin 1 (Macenauer), 4:32. 4, Buffalo, Pominville 1 (Vanek, Adam), 5:45. 5, Buffalo, Vanek 2 (Ehrhoff, Pominville), …

An err freshener for Sox

There's a reason the White Sox lead the American League in errors: Their defense has been pretty lousy this season.

Especially lately. The infielders take turns booting grounders and throwing balls away, and seemingly routine fly balls routinely become extra-base hits when misjudged by the outfielders.

But no need to get too excited about the state of the Sox' defense. At least not according to general manager Ken Williams, who thinks the lapses are to be expected.

''Listen, I got a guy at shortstop [Alexei Ramirez] that is playing shortstop for the first time in a number of years,'' Williams said Saturday. ''He's made some amazing plays over there, and he's only …

Glycerol-to-methanol.(Chementator)(Isis Innovation)(Brief article)

Isis Innovation, the technology transfer company for Oxford University (U.K.; www.isis-innovation.com), has patented a catalyst technology, developed by chemistry professor Edman Tsang, …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

SAINTS ADD RADFORD TO HOME SCHEDULE.(SPORTS)

LOUDONVILLE -- Siena's men's basketball team will play a full slate of home games this season after all.

The school announced on Thursday that it has contracted to play Radford of the Big South Conference at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 21, at Pepsi Arena.

It will be the home opener for Siena, which tried for months to fill the final home date on its schedule to no avail. The Saints will play 15 times at Pepsi Arena this season, including two exhibitions, nine home Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference contests, and four games against non-conference foes. Fordham, Rice and Cleveland State are the other out-of-conference home games for the Saints this season.

Harvard School of Public Health Trust Initiative Director to Address National Institutes of Health Meeting of Health Care Research Leaders on Establishing Trust.

Byline: Harvard School of Public Health

BOSTON, April 22 (AScribe Newswire) -- David A. Shore, founding director of the Trust Initiative at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and Associate Dean and Executive Director of the Center for Continuing and Professional Education at HSPH, will deliver a key address at the National Institutes of Health's Director's Council of Public Representatives (COPR) Meeting, Thursday April 29, 2004 at 9:30 am, on the NIH campus, Building 31, 6th floor conference room, Bethesda, Md.

At this meeting, the members of COPR are working toward the development of a framework for describing and identifying "trustworthiness …

Rates on 30-Year Mortgages Sink

WASHINGTON - Rates on 30-year mortgages sank this week to a one-month low, while rates on most other mortgages also fell, good news to prospective home buyers.

Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Thursday that 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.63 percent. That was down from last week's 6.67 percent rate and was the lowest since early June, when rates stood at 6.53 percent.

The moderation is welcome for people in the market to buy a home. In mid-June, rates on 30-year mortgages climbed to 6.74 percent, an 11-month high.

Rates on many mortgages have ebbed in recent weeks as investors' fears about an inflation have eased.

"Long-term mortgage …