четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Jobless claims fall more than expected to 502K

New claims for unemployment insurance fell more than expected last week, evidence the job market is slowly healing as the economy recovers.

Still, many analysts worry the nation could be in for a "jobless recovery" as the unemployment rate rises despite some overall economic growth.

The Labor Department said Thursday that first-time claims for jobless benefits dropped to a seasonally adjusted 502,000 from an upwardly revised 514,000 the previous week. That's the fewest claims since the week ending Jan. 3, and below economists' estimates.

The four-week average, which smooths fluctuations, dropped to 519,750, the lowest in almost a year. It …

Whistleblower Nets $1 Million as Firm Settles Fraud Suit

A Long Grove man reaped a $1 million windfall Thursday forblowing the whistle on his former employer, a Mundelein health careproducts company charged with bilking the Department of VeteransAffairs out of millions of dollars.

Ralph Rybacki, 64, had served as vice president forinternational sales at Medline Industries and brought the caseagainst his former employer under the False Claims Act.

Medline agreed to pay the federal government $6.4 million tosettle the suit, which accused the firm of presenting thousands offalse invoices.The law allows a private citizen to sue for fraud on behalf ofthe United States and receive a portion of any settlement."I am very …

Jets hire Tony Sparano as offensive coordinator

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Jets have hired Tony Sparano as their offensive coordinator to replace Brian Schottenheimer.

The former Miami Dolphins coach takes over an offense that struggled mightily this season.

The team announced the hiring of Sparano on Wednesday, just over 12 hours after announcing that Schottenheimer told the Jets he wouldn't return next season despite having two years left on his contract. …

Wind, waves from hurricane dock oil skimming boats

Most days, a huge fleet of boats would be skimming oil from the Gulf of Mexico and ferrying workers and supplies. But Hurricane Alex churning in the Gulf has turned many people fighting the massive 11-week-old spill into spectators. And they will be for days.

On Tuesday, dozens of small skiffs, huge shrimp boats and even a swamp tour boat were tied to docks, winds whipping their flags and waves rocking them even in the sheltered marina on Grand Isle.

"Yesterday we had redcaps instead of white caps," said Jesse Alling, a marine science technician with the Coast Guard.

Officials scrambled to reposition boom to protect the coast, and had to …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

No hits for Nomar vs. Braves

Fred McGriff homered twice but Nomar Garciaparra didn't get a hitat all as the Atlanta Braves beat the Red Sox 15-2 Saturday inBoston.

Garciaparra's hitting streak ended at 30 - a record for ALrookies and tied for the longest in the majors this year - but shortof Benito Santiago's major-league rookie record of 34.

Atlanta's Kevin Millwood (3-3) got Garciaparra to hit three flyballs, one of them a sacrifice fly, and reliever Mike Cather got himon a line drive to left in his last at-bat, in the eighth.McGriff was 4-for-5 with five RBI to improve his career averageat Fenway Park to .431 (47-for-109).Expos 7, Yankees 2: Pedro Martinez pitched a five-hitter …

Healed Without Scars

Healed Without Scars by David G. Evans Whitaker House. August 2004 $12.99, ISBN 0-883-68542-6

Bishop Evans uses his own personal experience, accounts from persons he has counseled and biblical characters to illustrate ways to heal from various painful and emotionally scarring situations, such as death, divorce and sexual abuse. The experiences vary but the message is the same: let God make you completely whole.

The author reminds us that "the problem comes when the pain of …

Judges reject joint trial for Karadzic

UN war crimes judges have rejected the former Bosnian Serb police chief's request to be tried together with his one-time boss, Radovan Karadzic.

Stojan Zupljanin argued that combining the cases would save the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal time and prevent witnesses from testifying twice.

Zupljanin has pleaded not guilty to 12 charges of murder, torture and …

Gloria Silverman

Gloria Silverman, 58, who was active in charity work, diedTuesdayin Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Mrs. Silverman's husband, Eugene, is vice president of UnitedAmerican Food Processors Inc., 4545 S. Racine, a purveyor of meat tohotels and restaurants. Mrs. Silverman was a member of …

Coke Reports Higher 2Q Earnings

ATLANTA - The Coca-Cola Co., the world's largest beverage maker, posted a 1 percent profit increase for the second-quarter on a solid 19 percent gain in sales.

The results reported Tuesday beat Wall Street expectations when one-time items are excluded. It shares edged up in morning trading.

For the three months ending June 29, the Atlanta-based company said it earned $1.85 billion, or 80 cents a share, compared to a profit of $1.84 billion, or 78 cents a share, for the same period a year ago.

Excluding one-time items, Coca-Cola said it earned $1.98 billion, or 85 cents a share, in the second-quarter. On a comparable basis, analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial …

Chrysler faces more hearings to get Fiat deal OK'd

It may take two more days of testimony for Chrysler to convince a bankruptcy judge that a deal with Italian automaker Fiat is the best way to save itself from liquidation.

The automaker needs U.S. Judge Arthur Gonzalez to approve the sale despite protests from a group of Indiana state pension and construction funds that hold less than 1 percent of Chrysler's secured debt. If Gonzalez OKs the sale, the automaker could emerge from bankruptcy protection within weeks.

Gonzalez heard nine hours of testimony from Chrysler LLC and Fiat Group SpA officials that lasted into Wednesday evening before adjourning the hearing. Testimony is scheduled to resume Thursday …

Tragedy Puzzles Kenosha // 2nd Bystander In McDonald's Shooting Dies In Hospital

KENOSHA, Wis. Sandra Kenaga traveled just two blocks from thebeauty salon she owned for a lunch break at McDonald's. But shenever came back.

One of two bystanders slain in a shooting spree at therestaurant here Tuesday, Kenaga did, however, hold to life longenough for her Kyle, 12, to say goodbye.

He was rushed home from a northern Wisconsin summer camp to seehis mother one last time before she died in a Kenosha hospital of agunshot wound Wednesday.

The other victim, Bruce K. Bojesen, 50, died on the floor of thefast-food restaurant, where Dion M. Terres, clad in jungle fatiguesand sunglasses, walked in just after lunch hour Tuesday and fired …

Ala. board won't change grade for UK star Bledsoe

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — The Birmingham school board decided Friday to let basketball star Eric Bledsoe keep a grade that helped him gain NCAA eligibility to play at Kentucky.

Superintendent Craig Witherspoon said a teacher claims Bledsoe completed makeup work to justify a higher grade in an algebra course during the 2008-2009 school year. The mark was switched from an "C'' to an "A."

Witherspoon said an investigation found no documentation to justify the improvement. But, he says, an investigation didn't prove that it was improper, either.

Questions have been raised about high school grades that allowed Bledsoe to qualify with the NCAA to play at Kentucky. Bledsoe left …

CDC: Drug deaths outpace crashes in more states

Drug-related deaths outnumber those from motor vehicle accidents in a growing number of states, according to new government data that highlight a shift in the top cause of deaths after disease and illness.

Crashes still cost more lives nationwide, but state-by-state calculations show the rate of drug-induced deaths outpaced vehicle accidents in 16 states in 2006, up from about a dozen states the year before and eight in 2003.

Drug overdoses make up the vast majority of the drug-related deaths, and there was a sharp increase in fatalities tied to cocaine and to drugs known as opioid analgesics _ including methadone, fentanyl, sedatives and prescription painkillers like Vicodin and OxyContin.

From 1999 to 2006, death rates for opioid analgesics increased for every age group. Deaths from methadone alone increased sevenfold, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a report released Wednesday.

Based on death certificate data, CDC researchers counted more than 45,000 U.S. deaths from motor-vehicle crashes in 2006, and about 39,000 from drug-induced causes. The CDC does not have finalized data for 2007 or subsequent years.

About 90 percent of those drug fatalities are sudden deaths from overdoses, but the count includes people who died from organ damage from long-term drug use or abuse.

The 2006 death counts and death rates were higher for drugs than for vehicle accidents in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

It's not clear why certain states have seen such a shift. There are probably a variety of reasons, and the explanation may vary a bit from state to state, said Bob Anderson, chief of the mortality statistics branch at the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.

Part of the story is that traffic death rates are going down. The death rate for people killed in motor vehicle crashes decreased by about 6.5 percent from 1999 through 2006 _ from 15.3 per 100,000 to 14.3 per 100,000, according to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data.

Declines in motor vehicle fatalities "are considered one of the great public health triumphs" of the last few decades, said Margaret Warner, an epidemiologist who co-authored the new CDC report.

"But (drug) poisonings are definitely going up," she added.

___

On the Net:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/NCHS/

Investors run to T-bills, banks get stingier

The credit markets showed no signs of easing Monday as the government's financial bailout plan headed to a House vote _ investors again rushed for the safety of Treasury bills, while banks charged more to lend to one another.

The yield on the 3-month Treasury bill sank to 0.37 percent from 0.87 percent on Friday, showing that investors were prepared to get virtually nothing in return for their investment besides security.

And the LIBOR, or London Interbank Offered Rate, for 3-month dollar loans rose to 3.88 percent from 3.76 percent, suggesting that banks are growing increasingly unwilling to lend to each other. LIBOR for 3-month euro loans soared to 5.22 percent, the highest rate ever.

These two measures of the credit markets, where corporate borrowers go to find loans, indicated that the fear that has been gripping the world's financial system is far from alleviated.

On Monday morning, the government's $700 billion bank bailout plan cleared a key procedural hurdle on the House floor _ the plan will like be voted on by Monday afternoon, and then go to the Senate later this week.

But the reworking of the U.S. financial landscape continued, with Citigroup Inc.'s government-brokered acquisition of Wachovia Corp. and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group's $9 billion investment in Morgan Stanley.

Those two developments follow Washington Mutual Inc. becoming the largest bank to fail in U.S. history; Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. becoming the largest company to file for bankruptcy; the government takeover of American International Group Inc., the world's largest insurer; and Bank of America Corp's shotgun buyout of Merrill Lynch & Co.

The mortgage crisis is rippling through Europe as well. The British government is nationalizing the troubled mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley, while Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg agreed buying a 49 percent stake in Fortis NV for $16.4 billion.

And in a sign that the U.S. economy is still weakening, the Commerce Department said consumer spending was flat in August. That was the worst reading since February, when spending was also unchanged from the previous month.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

EL RUKN `GENERALS'

The six "generals" of the El Rukn gang who testified for thegovernment: EARL HAWKINS, 37: On being a hit man: "You don't think about it atall. As a man, if you think about it, you won't do it at all."

Joined gang at 14; now on Death Row. A top Rukn hit man; admitsparticipating in five murders, three murder conspiracies in whichpeople died, two attempted murders. Agreed to 60-year sentence onfederal charges. If death penalty is reversed based on allegationsof a judicial payoff plot gone awry, state prosecutors can seek deathon retrial. HARRY "Bop" EVANS, 37: On his life: "All I knew was to be acriminal."

Joined gang at 11. Says he shot more people than he can countbut never fired a fatal bullet. Admits participating in fourmurders, 12 murder conspiracies, four attempted murders. Faces 30 to50 years in prison. Can seek reduction if his kidney-failureproblems intensity EUGENE HUNTER, 39: On his phony identity of Maurice Wright: "We weregoingt to take Maurice Wright and turn him into a wealthymillionaire."

Handpicked by Fort to legitimize part of the gang and become thefirst Rukn millionaire. Involved in plans to put a Rukn in the CityCouncil. Testified in suspenders and a tie. Admits participating inone murder; faces up to life with chance of parole. HENRY "TOOMBA" HARRIS, 33: On his relationship with Jeff Fort:"Every king has his pet."

Once married to Fort's sister, Translated coded Ruknconversations for prosecutors and jurors. Helped run Fort's drugoperation. His post-arrest writings, labeled the "ToombaChronicles," include: "Here I sit both night and day, wondering whereI went astray." Admits participating in one murder, seven murderconspiracies, one attempted murder. Faces 20 years to life withparole chance. JACKIE CLAY, 39: On his cooperation, during cross examination: "If Iwas one of the indivudals that helped build this haunted house, thenI feel like it's only my duty this time to help tear this hauntedhouse down, OK?"

Joined gang at 13; allegedly a bodyguard for Noah Robinson.Admits participating in three murders, eight murder conspiracies,five attempted murders. Faces 80 years to life with a chance ofparole. DERRICK KEES, 35: On a 1983 shooting of two innocent women, one ofwhom died: "I told Jeff (Fort), `We shot the wrong people.' He said,`Sometimes in war, we have casualties.' "

A top El Rukn hit man. Joined gang at 11; left in 1986 becausehe was "disgusted" that Fort wouldn't let him kill cooperatingwitness Anthony Sumner. Admits participating in five murders, eightconspiracies, seven attempted murders. Agreed to 99 years in prison.

Prom hairdos are the icing on the cake

NEW YORK - Consider a special hairstyle the icing on the cake for a girl's prom outfit. This year's favorite look seems to be an updo, reports Kate Wood, associate editor at Promspot.com.

"Across any year, we'll find that most girls consider their looks finished when they have an updo, in the same way they don't consider themselves dressed up unless in a long gown. An updo is like a crown," she says.

Updos are part of a larger trend of more formal hair, a contrast from last year when Gwyneth Paltrow-style, long, wavy hair was in, Wood says.

Formal doesn't mean stiff and shellacked, though. Hair should always be a little soft and touchable. "You don't want to end up with French-twist helmet head," Wood says.

Do formal hairstyles also mean they'll be more formal dresses on the dance floor? Not necessarily, according to Wood. It's fairly common for a girl to find a hairstyle she likes in a magazine and rip it out to show her stylist, and she'll tear a different page from a different magazine when she goes shopping. "Girls don't think about putting it together as a whole, but it works for them. If you do end up with modern, hairstyle and a more romantic or lacy dress, it's OK. It's the way girls mix and match fashion. They'll probably think it's cooler anyway," Wood says.

She adds: "Ashlee Simpson, Kelly Osbourne, Hilary Duff. Girls see these people who take all different things and pull it together in their own way. They're striving for an eclectic look."

Celebrities certainly are influencing teen hair trends. Wearing medium or long hair pulled back with a lot of volume on top is a style that's been spotted on just about every starlet.

But promgoers need to remember that celebrities often wear time-consuming and costly extensions, so it might not be that easy to replicate their styles.

Most girls don't do their own hair on prom night, Wood says, although there's no reason that without practice - or mom's help - they couldn't do it. But to most girls, going to the salon with their friends to be pampered is an important part of the prom experience.

No more prom penguins: Teen boys have more fashion choices

NEW YORK - Girls, be warned. There's a chance that your prom date will show up at your door on the big night not in a classic tuxedo but in a velvet suit. Or even jeans.

Who's to blame for the breaking of a generations-old tradition? All the young fashion fans who mimic what they see on the red carpet.

Teenage boys are taking cues for prom fashion from their favorite singers and ' bands who take certain liberties with formal dress codes, says "American Idol" stylist Miles Siggins.

Siggins put together an online fashion show for AOL Red, a teen-targeted service, offering prom outfits in three categories: edgy, glam and classic.

"The normal prom look is a traditional tux in white or black, a wing-collar or regular shirt, bow tie, cummerbund and rental shoes which are a horrible plastic," Siggins says. "Up until recently, it was the only choice they had. For a while, guys thought it was too feminine to be into fashion but now they've realized it's the best way to get the girls."

Siggins points to the male stars who really pay attention to their wardrobes, particularly Jamie Foxx. He wore dark jeans with a green velvet blazer, striped buttondown shirt and a pocketsquare to the Grammy after-parties earlier this year.

"Denim is such a big part of people's lives," says Siggins. "They can be dressed up, especially if they're darker, slimmer. A great pair of simple denim jeans, with shirt, jacket and good pair of shoes looks good ... but the girls might not like it."

Susan Schulz, editor in chief of CosmoGirl, says a better expression of personal style might be a cool vintage T-shirt under a tuxedo. "It shows a little flair but is still pretty polished."

She'd also applaud a teen in tails - it's ideal for someone who wants to be both traditional and individual - but only if he's tall enough. "Otherwise, you'll look like a penguin," she says.

It's considerate for boys planning to go an untraditional route to consult their date first. Remember, these girls probably have been planning their outfits for months. "If she's going funkier, she'll be more open to him having his own ideas," says Schulz.

Most guys appreciate some style guidance from girls, Schulz says, as long as they aren't bossy. "At this point, girls might know their dress, so just do parameters. Say, Tm wearing peach, so red might not look great with that.' I'd encourage the girl to show him the dress. He won't remember it that well but this way he'll understand the difference between peach and red."

Singer Carrie Underwood told CosmoGirl Prom magazine that her junior prom date showed up in white sneakers. "I was so mad at him!" she says. "I made him take his dress shoes along in a bag for the picture."

To some girls, the prom picture is just as important as the prom. "For those girls who want to be picture-perfect, they're going to want the guys to look more traditional or at least really polished," Schulz says.

Instead of copying Foxx's look, actors Orlando Bloom or Jake Gyllenhaal might be better role models. They're the ones really making girls swoon right now, Schulz reports.

Boys emulate musicians and their look,.while girls are more likely to be fans of movie-star fashion, says Siggins.

Either way, guys have more male fashion imaging available to them, which might encourage a little more creativity in their wardrobe, he says, pointing to Target, Zara and H&M as fashion-forward yet affordable resources.

But if a boy is going to go with a rented tux, Siggins has a few ideas to make it a bit more stylish: Try a jacket with one button or a peak lapel, or wear a skinny tie. Some of the best ties come from vintage stores and have either a 1960s' sculpted, shorter shape or an '80s' straight look. And a nice watch adds a mature touch.

But the single most important thing is the fit of the suit, according to Siggins. "I always think slimmer is better but not too tight. Don't go for big, baggy homeboy suit; it's out of style and not flattering."

Most guys appreciate some style guidance from girls, as long as they aren't bossy.

Judge halts projects in Yosemite Valley

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - A federal district court judge has ordered ahalt to a broad slate of renovation projects in Yosemite Valley,stepping anew into a battle over the human imprint on one ofAmerica's most heavily visited cathedrals of nature.

In a 25-page written ruling, Judge Anthony Ishii in Fresno ordereda halt to nine construction projects - including roadwork, hotelrenovations and new RV sites - that are part of a long-planned $423million upgrade of long-neglected visitor facilities.

Park officials say the projects are being held hostage bylitigation brought by "fringe" environmental groups.

"These are projects the public has told us they want," said ScottGediman, a park spokesman.

Greg Adair of Friends of Yosemite Valley said the legal fight isnecessary to turn back the clock on environmental degradation whilethwarting a shift to upscale hotel rooms, reduction of family campingand prices that could push average Americans away.

Ishii's decision, issued Friday, marked the second time in recentyears that environmental groups have won court victories to halt thepark's ambitious construction schedule.

Soviets shun missile task

TEL AVIV The Soviet military advisers who set up and mannedLibya's SAM-5 and other surface-to-air missile batteries were orderedto let Libyan personnel replace them shortly before the U.S. airstrikes, military sources here said yesterday.

These sources estimate that several thousand Soviets are basedin Libya. However, they doubt the Russians would urge Libyan leaderMoammar Khadafy to escalate his belligerence toward the UnitedStates.

On the contrary, the sources said, the Soviet role in Libya hasbeen "to moderate" the policies and tactics of Khadafy.

The sources expect Khadafy to refrain from sponsoring terroristattacks on U.S. targets in favor of Jewish or Israeli ones in WesternEurope.

Uncommon cold chills Cubs' bats

Ill winds have been blowing around Wrigley Field for the Cubs, whohaven't adjusted to the inclement conditions.

In eight home games, Cubs pitchers have a 2.50 ERA (20 earned runsin 72 innings) and 70 strikeouts while allowing 53 hits. But Cubshitters are batting .202 (52-for-258) with only 17 runs and 15 extra-base hits, five of them home runs.

Meanwhile, opponents have hit only four homers at Wrigley but havescored 27 runs.

It's easier said than done," Corey Patterson said of adjustingswings to avoid fly balls against the wind. Maybe the top of theorder could try to bunt more to have guys on base for Sammy [Sosa]and Fred [McGriff], who [the wind] doesn't matter to. Maybe it'ssomething we'll have to address."

Manager Don Baylor has said the absence of Moises Alou, a career.306 hitter, has hurt.

But we still have a great groups of guys here," said Patterson,who is hitting .290. We definitely miss Moises, but we can't makeexcuses. We have to go with the guys we have."

ONE OF THE BEST: Sosa never has been shy about his ability. Sowhen a television interview show asked him who is the best player inthe game, Sosa paused only a moment before saying, Me."

They asked me to pick somebody," he said, smiling. Any doubt aboutthat?"

But Sosa is serious when it comes to his approach to the game.

It's not because I hit home runs," he said. If I was a fan and Icame here to watch somebody, it's because they play hard. I'm hereevery day and I play hard. It's the little things. That's whatseparates the men from the boys."

Which players would Sosa pay to watch?

Barry Bonds," he said. And Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson,definitely. Schilling never gives up, and Johnson is unbelievable. Ilike facing those guys."

Sosa is 12-for-49 (.245) with four homers, nine RBI and 23strikeouts against Johnson. He's 14-for-43 (.326) with four homers,eight RBI and 17 strikeouts against Schilling.

CATCH-22: The Cubs thought carrying three catchers was a luxuryuntil Joe Girardi hurt his ankle Friday by stepping on a ball duringbatting practice. They had only Robert Machado for Saturday andSunday, with Todd Hundley unable to catch because of a bruised leftthumb.

It's about being patient," Machado said of his limited playingtime. We have three catchers, but look what's happened. I try to staymentally prepared, and I do things every day to stay loose.

I'll go to the bullpen in the fifth or sixth inning to catch[relievers] to be ready, or I'll catch the starters when they'rewarming up. You have to do more work fundamentally to try to staysharp."

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President Barack Obama is considering more than six contenders for the Supreme Court, a list dominated by women and Hispanics, including judges and leaders from own his administration who have never donned a judicial robe.

The new Democratic president is making his first appointment to the court but whomever he chooses, the ideological balance of the highest U.S. judicial body is unlikely to change.

Obama's nominee would replace Justice David Souter, who is part of the court's liberal wing. The court took on a conservative bent as a result of former President George W. Bush's appointments.

Among those under consideration are Solicitor General Elena Kagan, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and U.S. Appeals Court judges Sonia Sotomayor and Diane Pamela Wood. California Supreme Court Justice Carlos Moreno is also under review by Obama.

Sources familiar with Obama's deliberations confirmed the names to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because no candidates have been revealed by the White House. The confirmation amounts to the first time any name has been directly tied to Obama.

One official cautioned that Obama is considering other people who have not been publicly mentioned. And more names may be added to the list.

The disclosure came as the president met privately at the White House on Wednesday with four leading senators likely to play a key role in confirmation proceedings. Separately, top aides invited the leaders of several liberal-leaning outside groups to a meeting.

Most of the people confirmed as under consideration have been mentioned frequently as potential candidates. Moreno _ the sole man on the known group of top candidates _ is the newest name to emerge.

The president is widely expected to choose a woman for a Supreme Court that has nine members but only one female justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg. He is also under pressure from some Latino officials to name the nation's first Hispanic justice. Moreno and Sotomayor are Hispanic.

Obama is likely before month's end to name a nominee to replace Souter, who is retiring when the court term ends this summer.

"I don't envy him the decision, but I think he's going to make it soon," Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Democrat, said after the private White House session.

Obama met with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat; Sen. Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee; Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican; and Leahy. Vice President Joe Biden, a former Judiciary Committee chairman and veteran of confirmation hearings, also attended.

The senators did not give any indication of how long the process might take, but noted that it typically takes 60 days for confirmation once a nominee has been announced.

Obama wants his nominee confirmed before the Senate recess in August, which means he would need to name one soon.

"I think he's still in the initial evaluation process," Sessions told reporters later in the day. "That's pretty clear, I think. He's not settled on one name."

The senators who met with Obama said he did not discuss specific names with them.

___

Associated Press writers David Espo, Philip Elliott, Paul Elias, Ben Evans, Chuck Babington and Lolita Baldor contributed to this report.

Woods overcomes fan-induced knee injury

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. - The limp that had threatened to sidelinehim was barely noticeable today when Tiger Woods arrived for thefirst round of the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Woods, bidding forhis third straight tournament victory at Pebble, hyperextended hisleft knee and sprained a ligament Wednesday when an overzealousautograph seeker tripped him at the end of a practice round.

"Just snapped my leg back," Woods said.

When he arrived an hour before his tee time at Spyglass Hilltoday, however, Woods was hardly limping at all. He worked on theputting green, flexing his knee once, then went to the drivingrange, and all seemed OK.

"I should be able to break 90 today," he said.

It was a big change from the previous evening, when Woods saidthe odds were "up there" that he would not be able to play, althoughhe said he would give it a try.

It was a bizarre return to the course that Woods can claim as asecond home, especially after his two thrilling victories at PebbleBeach.

In the AT&T National Pro-Am, Woods was seven strokes behind withseven holes to play when he finished eagle-birdie-par-birdie and wonby two, giving him his sixth straight PGA Tour victory and the moststunning comeback in his spectacular career.

Four months later under vastly different conditions, he was evenbetter. Woods demolished par that the U.S. Golf Association tries sovainly to protect at the U.S. Open, and he did the same thing to thefield.

He finished at 12-under 272, unheard of for a U.S. Open, and wonby 15 strokes, the largest margin in the 140-year history of themajors.

A victory this week would make him the first player since JackNicklaus in 1972-73 to win three straight events on the same courseover a 12-month span. Nicklaus also sandwiched a pair of Crosbysaround a U.S. Open.

"I've always enjoyed playing here, seeing the beauty of it,"Woods said.

Woods was swarmed by autograph seekers as he left the 18th greenWednesday, walking briskly and trying to sign whatever programs andhats where thrust in front of him.

One man, hounding him for autographs during his practice round,tried to position himself in front of the pack, and Woods'inadvertently stepped on his ankle, hyperextending his knee.

"A lot of fans just kind of came down on top of me," Woods said."One guy ran in front. I stepped on his ankle, and my weight goingforward and his weight coming back ... I hyperextended my knee."

Woods winced immediately, glowered at the man and grabbed theback of his leg as he hobbled up a hill. He tried to hit balls afterlunch, but couldn't.

"No way," Woods said. "That's not going to happen."

This is the second time Woods has been injured since turning pro.He had what turned out to be a stinger in his left hand at the TourChampionship in Houston in 1999 when he tried to hit through abaseball-sized rock to get to his ball.

As an amateur, Woods had to withdraw from the '95 U.S. Open atShinnecock Hills when he injured his wrist trying to hack out of thedeep rough. He also had a cyst removed from behind his left kneewhile at Stanford.

Woods, the No. 1 player in the world coming off a record-breaking season that included three straight major championshipsamong his nine PGA Tour victories, is often swamped by fans afterrounds.

A security detail was with him, but some fans went under theropes and tried to get close.

"People get aggressive. That's the way it is," Woods said."That's one reason we have security. Some of you say, 'Why do youhave so much security?' It's for instances like this, so they don'thappen. Unfortunately, it happened today."

The rest of his day was a time for good vibes, which are not hardto find when Woods sets foot on the famous course where land meetssea.

But the U.S. Open was far from his mind, especially when he gotto the 446-yard 10th hole. In the dry summer of a U.S. Open, Woodsreached that green with a 3-wood and a wedge. In the cool, softconditions of February, he hit driver and a 3-iron.

"I had a great time," he said. "It was weird, because looking atthe golf course, it looks different than it did in the Open.Obviously, the rough was up, most of the fairways were so much morenarrow than they are now."

This is a different tournament, a different year, even adifferent Tiger.

A year ago, he came into the Pro-Am having won five straight tourevents. Now, he has gone five tour events without winning.

"I'm not that far off," Woods said. "I'm hitting good, solidshots. I'm hitting good putts. They're just a little off. Prettysoon, hopefully, they'll start diving in."

He might get a chance to find out as long as his knee is strongenough for him to play.

Fan causes knee injury to Woods

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

CBS/Legacy Records release Duke Ellington Forever

Several seasons ago, Daniel Barenboim, one of the world's great concert pianists and the musical director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, released an album of Duke Ellington's work that is one of the most definitive concepts of his music that was accompanied by jazz musicians.

Through the years, his works have been heard by thousands of musicians including, Symphony Orchestras, Jazz Orchestras, ensembles, various instrumentalists and vocalists, but never has this columnist heard his songs performed with such profound musicianship and compelling artistry as did pianist Barenboim. Usually, entertainers and others who have performed Ellington's compositions do so with their own individual style and a lot of improvisations. It was not so with Pianist Barenboim.

The pianist performed Duke in the same manner as he would Bach, Beethoven, Chopin or any other classical composer. He gave to the interpretation of Ellington brilliance and grace with amazing technique and virtuosity. There dominated in his interpretation a strong and genuine involvement that was more than entertainment. There was always a presence of warm vibrant sound, excellent control and fine shading of color. This undisputed master of his instrument provided diversity in the various idiom of Duke that was enchanting with excitement and true artistry.

Just recently Columbia Records released three albums of Duke in commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the masterful jazz composer's death in 1974. He has been heard often on the Oh label of Columbia, the Legacy label when the 33 1/3 rpm was released Duke Wellington and his Orchestra were heard with greater velocity, but the new digital release provides a brilliancy that is really dynamic and the colorful textures are magnificent.

These wonderful masterpieces by Duke Ellington that were recorded again around 1951 are fabulous. Masterpieces By Ellington are in full concert arrangements. Mood Indigo lasts approximately 15 Minutes and 26 seconds, Sophisticated Lady is just a little more than 11 minutes; also Ellington & Billy Strayhorn's Smada and Rock Skippin' At the Blue Note appear on that recording.

The next of Duke's tunes consist of those between 1951 and 1952 on the album entitled Ellington Uptown. In this particular album we hear the rhythm of Louis Bells in Skin Deep. His Liberian Suite is also featured, and the signature tune Take The A Train on this occasion is indeed fascinating as well as A Tone Parallel To Harlem from his Harlem Suite. In fact, as we were presenting the recordings on the program, The Artist Circle that airs evenings on WGCR web-satellite radio, the hour passed quickly.

The Festival Session, also a reissue that was produced by Michael Brooks and Michael Cuscuna, was a kind of dazzling instrumental splendor and is fabulous.

Article copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photograph (Duke Ellington)

Summary Box: Campbell Soup 4th-qtr results

SALES DOWN, PROFIT UP: The Campbell Soup Co. said Friday that its adjusted fourth-quarter profit was up 7 percent, even though its sales were down 1 percent.

LOWER SALES OUTLOOK: The company said its sales growth for fiscal 2011 is expected to be in the 2 percent to 3 percent range, down slightly from its long term outlook. But it still expects profit growth of 5 percent to 7 percent per share.

PICKY CONSUMERS: The company says that as the nation's economic slump continues, consumers are looking for bargains. As a result, the company expects to increase sales in coming months by selling more of its products, not by raising prices.

Teenage ace Rory on a roll

Rory McIlroy will seek his third straight top-five finish at thisweek's Portugal Masters after another impressive display in theMadrid Open.

McIlroy carded a final-round 70 at Club de Campo to finish fiveshots behind Denmark's Mads Vibe-Hastrup, who fired a closing 67 tofinish 16 under par and claim the pounds103,000 first prize.

The Northern Ireland teenager failed to become the youngestwinner in European Tour history at 18 years and 163 days, but proved his third place in the Dunhill Links last week was no flashin the pan.

"There was a lot to contend with so coming here and finishing inthe top five is pretty good,'' said McIlroy.

"That's two good weeks in a row - I just hope to follow it onnext week.''

Frequent Flier Edgar at Parley In Puerto Rico

SPRINGFIELD Gov. Edgar and his wife, Brenda, arrived Friday at aconference in Puerto Rico, capping two months of travels to Europe,Florida and New Hampshire.

The Edgars are attending a five-day Council of State Governmentsconference in San Juan. Their expenses are being paid by a mix ofstate and Edgar campaign funds, aides said.

Since early October, Edgar's travels have included a two-weekEuropean trade mission, a Republican governors conference in NewHampshire and a brief stop in Florida to campaign on behalf of GOPpresidential hopeful Bob Dole. Edgar is Dole's Illinois campaignchairman.

"There has been a confluence of events and missions that havehad him out," Edgar spokesman Mike Lawrence said. "It may seem likehe's traveled a lot, but he's been in Illinois a lot, too."

On the latest trip, Puerto Rican business leaders from Illinoisaccompanied Edgar. One aim of the trip is to "strengthen businessties" between Illinois and Puerto Rico, Lawrence said.

Edgar, a former council president, will accept an award for aPublic Aid program and deliver a keynote speech on how improvedworldwide communications affect state government, Lawrence said.

"It's really hard to get governors to come to these meetings,"council spokeswoman Elaine Stuart said. "But Gov. Edgar has beenactive in our group ever since he was secretary of state."

Four Democratic and three Republican lawmakers from Illinoisalso are at the conference, she said.

In Edgar's other travels since October, campaign funds andbusiness groups have paid his expenses.

The Florida trip was paid for by Dole campaign funds. The NewHampshire leg of that trip was paid for by Edgar's campaign funds.And the Edgars' excursion to Europe in early October was paid for bycampaign funds and the Executive Club, a consortium of leadingChicago business officials.

Lady A's Hillary Scott marries Chris Tyrrell

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Lady Antebellum singer Hillary Scott has gotten married.

She and new husband Chris Tyrrell announced the news in a 20-second video message on Lady Antebellum's official website. The couple tied the knot on Jan. 7 in upstate New York.

They appear wearing matching T-shirts. Tyrrell hugs his new bride and introduces her as "Miss Hillary Scott Tyrrell."

Scott flashes her wedding ring and explains how they wanted fans to hear it from them first, adding, "We're so excited to be starting our life together."

Video clips of the wedding day show Scott wearing a strapless Vera Wang mermaid dress and a mantilla veil with lace applique. Tyrrell sports a gray Ermenegildo Zegna suit.

Lady Antebellum's hits include the Grammy-winning song "Need You Now." The group resumes its "Own The Night" tour Jan. 27 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Jambos' lithuanian ace backs Scots for the finals

Hearts' Lithuanian star Audrius Ksanavicius has backed Scotland toqualify for the Euro 2008 finals.

The Tynecastle winger is in line to face Alex McLeish's men atHampden tomorrow, and is full of praise for his adopted new homeland.

Ksanavicius is convinced the Scots can pull of a shock and splitFrance and Italy at the top of Group B.

"The most dangerous thing about Scotland is not so much theirindividuals but the way their team plays as a unit," he said.

"I think they have a good chance of qualifying from the group andit's up to them to capitalise on their encouraging start."

Ksanavicius watched from the stands as his country slumped to a 2-1 defeat to the Scots in Kaunas with Christian Dailly and KennyMiller both on target.

But the 30-year-old wide player is back in Lithuania'sinternational plans and is eager to impress at Hampden.

He added: "I'm very happy to be called up again although it wasmainly down to injury that I missed out for so long.

"I am looking forward to the game and believe we're capable ofgetting a draw although it's going to be difficult.

"We always seem to play well against Scotland but never get theresults we possibly deserve and we were unlucky the last time wemet."

Lithuania have six Hearts players in their squad with Ksanavicius,Saulius Mikoliunas, Deividas Cesnauskis, Andrius Velicka, RicardasBeniusis and Kestutis Ivaskevicius all hoping to feature at Hampden.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Forecasts

After a one day break in the heat, we start to warm back up todayand this weekend with higher humidity. Josh Fitzpatrick

Iran test-fires a longer-range missile

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran test-fired dozens of missiles, including theShahab-3 that can reach Israel, in military maneuvers Thursday thatit said were aimed at putting a stop to the role of world powers inthe Persian Gulf region.

The show of strength came three days after U.S.-led warshipsfinished naval exercises in the Gulf that Iran branded as"adventurist." Iran remains locked in dispute with the West over itsnuclear program, which Washington says is geared to producing atomicweapons but Tehran says is only for generating electricity.

Asked about Thursday's maneuvers, Secretary of State CondoleezzaRice said she thought the Iranians "are trying to demonstrate thatthey are tough."

"The Iranians also I think are not unaware that the securityenvironment is one in which if they actually were to do somethingIran would suffer greatly and so I think they probably understandthat," Rice said on the Bill Cunningham radio show on WLWCincinnati.

"They are trying to say to the world you are not going to keep usfrom getting a nuclear weapon," she said. "The world has to say tothem, yes, we will."

Iranian state television reported that several kinds of missileswere tested, and broadcast footage of them being fired from mobilelaunchers.

"We want to show our deterrent and defensive power to trans-regional enemies, and we hope they will understand the message,"said the head of the Revolutionary Guards, Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi,said in a clear reference to the United States, Britain and France,who were among the six nations that took part in the Gulf maneuversthis week.

Iranian state radio said: "The maneuver is aimed at providingsecurity in the region without the intervention of trans-regionalpowers, which are trying to justify their presence by portraying theregion as convulsive."

In Israel, Infrastructure Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer said hewas not surprised by the missile tests, and warned that to leaveIran unchecked would pose a risk to the world.

"Iran is following a direct line after North Korea. Thereforethis problem is not Israel's but that of the entire world," Ben-Eliezer said, referring to North Korea's recent nuclear test and itsfrequent launches of long-range missiles.

Iran's Shahab-3 missile, which can carrying a nuclear warhead andis believed to have a range of more than 1,240 miles, is believed tobe based on North Korea's Nodong missile. Iran is said to havefunded the Nodong's development.

Iran, which denies obtaining missile technology from North Korea,has been testing the Shahab-3, which means "shooting star" in Farsi,since the late 1990s and publicly paraded the rocket for the firsttime in 2003.

The Iranian missile tests "should bother not only Israel. Itshould bother the Arab countries, Islamic countries, the Gulfregion, North Africa and Europe. We are always warning the worldabout this phenomenon called Iran," Ben-Eliezer said.

Iran already has held three large-scale military exercises thisyear. It often uses maneuvers to test weapons developed by its armsindustry.

Safavi, whose elite Revolutionary Guards conducted the missiletests, said the maneuvers that began Thursday, named "GreatProphet," would take place in the Gulf, the Sea of Oman and severalprovinces of Iran. He did not say how many troops were involved.

State radio quoted the air force chief of the RevolutionaryGuards, Gen. Hossein Salami, as saying: "A large number of advancedmissiles, different in range, warhead and kind, were successfullytest fired at the same time."

State TV reported that among the rockets fired was the Shahab-2,which has a warhead that can distribute 1,400 bomblets at the sametime. It also said the troops launched solid-fuel Zalzal missiles,guided missiles as well as Scud-B, Zolfaghar-73 and Z-3 rockets.

Iran has already held three large-scale military exercises thisyear. In its April exercises, Iran tested what it called an "ultra-horizon" missile, which is fired from helicopters and jet fighters,and the Fajr-3 missile, which can reportedly evade radar and usemultiple warheads to hit several targets simultaneously.

While U.S. officials have suggested that Iran is exaggerating thecapabilities of its newly developed weapons, Washington and itsallies have been watching the country's progress in missiletechnology with concern. Last December, Israel successfully testedits Arrow missile defense system against a rocket similar to Iran'sShahab-3. The Arrow was developed jointly with the United States.

The U.S.-led maneuvers that finished Monday focused onsurveillance, with warships tracking a ship suspected of carryingcomponents of illegal weapons. The nations that took part wereAustralia, Bahrain, Britain, France, Italy and the United States.

The U.N. Security Council is considered imposing sanctions onIran, which has ignored demands that it cease uranium enrichment, aprocess that can produce the fuel for nuclear reactors or materialfor bombs.

Iran test-fires a longer-range missile

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran test-fired dozens of missiles, including theShahab-3 that can reach Israel, in military maneuvers Thursday thatit said were aimed at putting a stop to the role of world powers inthe Persian Gulf region.

The show of strength came three days after U.S.-led warshipsfinished naval exercises in the Gulf that Iran branded as"adventurist." Iran remains locked in dispute with the West over itsnuclear program, which Washington says is geared to producing atomicweapons but Tehran says is only for generating electricity.

Asked about Thursday's maneuvers, Secretary of State CondoleezzaRice said she thought the Iranians "are trying to demonstrate thatthey are tough."

"The Iranians also I think are not unaware that the securityenvironment is one in which if they actually were to do somethingIran would suffer greatly and so I think they probably understandthat," Rice said on the Bill Cunningham radio show on WLWCincinnati.

"They are trying to say to the world you are not going to keep usfrom getting a nuclear weapon," she said. "The world has to say tothem, yes, we will."

Iranian state television reported that several kinds of missileswere tested, and broadcast footage of them being fired from mobilelaunchers.

"We want to show our deterrent and defensive power to trans-regional enemies, and we hope they will understand the message,"said the head of the Revolutionary Guards, Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi,said in a clear reference to the United States, Britain and France,who were among the six nations that took part in the Gulf maneuversthis week.

Iranian state radio said: "The maneuver is aimed at providingsecurity in the region without the intervention of trans-regionalpowers, which are trying to justify their presence by portraying theregion as convulsive."

In Israel, Infrastructure Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer said hewas not surprised by the missile tests, and warned that to leaveIran unchecked would pose a risk to the world.

"Iran is following a direct line after North Korea. Thereforethis problem is not Israel's but that of the entire world," Ben-Eliezer said, referring to North Korea's recent nuclear test and itsfrequent launches of long-range missiles.

Iran's Shahab-3 missile, which can carrying a nuclear warhead andis believed to have a range of more than 1,240 miles, is believed tobe based on North Korea's Nodong missile. Iran is said to havefunded the Nodong's development.

Iran, which denies obtaining missile technology from North Korea,has been testing the Shahab-3, which means "shooting star" in Farsi,since the late 1990s and publicly paraded the rocket for the firsttime in 2003.

The Iranian missile tests "should bother not only Israel. Itshould bother the Arab countries, Islamic countries, the Gulfregion, North Africa and Europe. We are always warning the worldabout this phenomenon called Iran," Ben-Eliezer said.

Iran already has held three large-scale military exercises thisyear. It often uses maneuvers to test weapons developed by its armsindustry.

Safavi, whose elite Revolutionary Guards conducted the missiletests, said the maneuvers that began Thursday, named "GreatProphet," would take place in the Gulf, the Sea of Oman and severalprovinces of Iran. He did not say how many troops were involved.

State radio quoted the air force chief of the RevolutionaryGuards, Gen. Hossein Salami, as saying: "A large number of advancedmissiles, different in range, warhead and kind, were successfullytest fired at the same time."

State TV reported that among the rockets fired was the Shahab-2,which has a warhead that can distribute 1,400 bomblets at the sametime. It also said the troops launched solid-fuel Zalzal missiles,guided missiles as well as Scud-B, Zolfaghar-73 and Z-3 rockets.

Iran has already held three large-scale military exercises thisyear. In its April exercises, Iran tested what it called an "ultra-horizon" missile, which is fired from helicopters and jet fighters,and the Fajr-3 missile, which can reportedly evade radar and usemultiple warheads to hit several targets simultaneously.

While U.S. officials have suggested that Iran is exaggerating thecapabilities of its newly developed weapons, Washington and itsallies have been watching the country's progress in missiletechnology with concern. Last December, Israel successfully testedits Arrow missile defense system against a rocket similar to Iran'sShahab-3. The Arrow was developed jointly with the United States.

The U.S.-led maneuvers that finished Monday focused onsurveillance, with warships tracking a ship suspected of carryingcomponents of illegal weapons. The nations that took part wereAustralia, Bahrain, Britain, France, Italy and the United States.

The U.N. Security Council is considered imposing sanctions onIran, which has ignored demands that it cease uranium enrichment, aprocess that can produce the fuel for nuclear reactors or materialfor bombs.

Olmert: Israel will take "strong action" to ensure quiet from Gaza

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert vowed on Sunday to take "strong action" to stop Gaza militants from attacking Israel, clouding an upcoming visit by an Egyptian mediator laboring to wring a truce from the warring sides.

Olmert spoke just hours before the funeral of a 48-year-old father of four killed Friday when a mortar fired from Gaza struck his home in southern Israel. The prime minister held Gaza's Islamic militant Hamas rulers responsible for the man's death and said the situation in Gaza "must change."

"Either there will be quiet or Israel will take strong action that eventually will bring quiet," he said at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting.

Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman is due to arrive in Israel on Monday, an Israeli government official confirmed Sunday. For months, Suleiman has been trying to broker a truce between Israel and Hamas.

Israel has never openly acknowledged it is involved in truce efforts, saying the lull would give gunmen committed to Israel's destruction time to rearm and train for renewed hostilities. However, Olmert also has said Israel would halt its fire if militants stop their attacks.

"Omar Suleiman will come and we will listen to him, we'll talk and we'll see what he is recommending," Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai told Army Radio on Sunday. "Until this moment there is nothing on the table open for discussion."

Israeli military officials have said privately that Suleiman would not bother coming to Israel unless he was trying to put the final touches on a cease-fire deal.

Palestinian militants frequently shoot crude rockets and mortars into southern Israel from Gaza, and on Sunday, rockets exploded at a local college, a high tech factory and a schoolbus, causing damage but no injuries, the Israeli army said. Earlier in the day, a Hamas militant died in an explosion near Gaza's border fence with Israel, apparently when explosives went off prematurely.

The militant attacks, which have killed 14 Israelis since late 2001, often provoke harsh Israeli airstrikes and ground incursions. Recent hostilities have ebbed since more than 120 Palestinians died in a a broad Israeli military offensive two months ago.

As a condition of a cease-fire, Hamas wants Israel to end its blockade of Gaza, which is meant to pressure the group to stop Palestinian militants from firing their salvos into Israel. Israel has not signaled readiness to do that.

The blockade has included a sharp cutback in the fuel that Israel provides to Gaza, which relies 100 percent on Israeli fuel supplies. Citing a lack of fuel, a major Gaza energy supplier turned off its turbines on Saturday, cutting off electricity to hundreds of thousands of Gazans.

Gaza City residents awoke Sunday to shuttered bakeries, shaky phone lines and stilled elevators. Some relief came from Israel's electricity grid, which provided about six hours of power to the area affected by the blackout.

It was not immediately clear if the power station had actually run out of fuel. The Israeli government accused Hamas of orchestrating an artificial crisis.

Suleiman arrives in Israel just two days before U.S. President George W. Bush lands to join in Israel's 60th Independence Day celebrations. Olmert said cryptically in his remarks to Cabinet that the discussion of "substantive, strategic issues" would "certainly be an inseparable part of his visit here."

Troubled peacemaking with moderate Palestinians in the West Bank is sure to top the agenda, along with Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has been more vocal lately in his criticism of continued Israeli construction on lands the Palestinians claim for a future state. He has also denounced Israel's refusal to significantly scale back its network of roadblocks in the West Bank, which have hobbled efforts to revive the devastated Palestinian economy. Israel says the roadblocks are necessary security measures.

Israel says the Palestinians haven't done enough to curb West Bank militants and has insisted repeatedly that no peace deal can be implemented as long as the violently anti-Israel Hamas rules Gaza _ a situation that shows no sign of changing. Abbas says things have to improve for Palestinians in the West Bank to motivate Gazans to champion moderation..

The White House said over the weekend that the latest police investigation into Olmert's financial dealings would not affect the Bush visit because the probe was an internal matter. Police suspect Olmert broke campaign funding laws by accepting envelopes stuffed with hundreds of thousands in dollars in cash from a Jewish American businessman before he became prime minister in 2006.

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Birmingham asks for share trading suspension after arrests

Birmingham City Football Club asked for trading in its shares to be suspended Thursday, a day after two of its executives were arrested in a corruption probe.

City of London Police said they questioned a 59-year-old man and a 39-year-old woman on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud and false accounting.

Birmingham City identified the pair as managing director Karren Brady and co-owner David Sullivan, who said in a statement from the club that they were invited to "cooperate" with the investigation "and have happily done so."

Brady and Sullivan were released on bail.

Birmingham's ground was searched by City of London police last month regarding an investigation into soccer corruption.

A further seven people, including Portsmouth manager Harry Redknapp, remain free on bail in connection with the inquiry after being arrested in November. Others arrested then include former Portsmouth chairman Milan Mandaric, who is now at Leicester; former Portsmouth player Amdy Faye and his agent, Willie McKay; and former Portsmouth chief executive Peter Storrie.

The probe is believed to be centered on Faye's transfers from Auxerre to Portsmouth in August 2003 and from Portsmouth to Newcastle in January 2005.

Faye joined Charlton in August 2006. This season, he played only two games for the Addicks before he was loaned out in August last year to Scottish club Rangers, where he has only played five games. He has never played for Birmingham.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Deng's Image Gets Lift At an Opportune Time

BEIJING China's paramount leader, Deng Xiaoping, is getting animage boost before a crucial Communist Party congress this year.

The People's Daily newspaper reported Sunday the publication ofa book that apparently elevates Deng, in his role as revolutionarythinker, to the level of former Chairman Mao Zedong.

The paper said Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping on the ChineseCondition contains 88 articles, 64 of them by Deng and only 24 byMao.

It is published by the Communist Party Central Training Schooland was released Saturday.

Party policy bans the kind of personality cult built up aroundMao in the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, when he acquired …

Ukio Bankas - Overview of Baltic Stock Markets - Jan 25, 2010.

OVERVIEW OF BALTIC STOCK MARKETS

18 January 2010 - 22 January 2010

(To view the original document, please click on the …

BUSH THREATENS VETO OVER UNION RULES WAIVER.(MAIN)

TRENTON, N.J. -- A day before senators headed into a showdown over President Bush's proposal to create a new homeland security department, Bush on Monday said a dispute over labor rights threatened to leave America unprepared to ``take the enemy on.''

Democrats, who control the Senate by a one-vote margin, largely oppose Bush's demands to be allowed for reasons of national security to implement a new personnel system in the agency and waive union job rules for the proposed department's 170,000 employees. Bush again threatened, in forceful terms, to veto any bill that does not include those powers.

He was seeking to persuade a few key wavering senators to back …

The "527" fuss explained.(Opinion)(tax, finance implications for political organizations )

For much of this election cycle, controversy has swirled around the rise of a new class of organizations that now operate in the political world, the so-called 527 groups. Some politicos condemn them; others defend them. Many consultants and operatives want to form them, see them formed, or think they do.

But what exactly are 527s, what is the controversy about and what is the state of play? What follows is a brief primer. (Disclosure: our law firm represents Democratic party committees and 527 groups.)

What is a section 527 group anyway?

Section 527 is actually the section of the Internal Revenue code that allows all partisan political organizations to take contributions without paying taxes on them, to the extent the money is used on political purposes. Technically, every political committee at any level--from the Republican National Committee (RNC) or Kerry for President or Jones for dogcatcher--is a section 527 organization.

In the current vernacular, it is used to refer to groups that are political organizations for federal tax purposes but not under campaign finance laws, particularly federal campaign finance laws. And if such an organization is not a political committee for purposes of federal campaign finance laws, there is basically no legal …

Broadway Ticket Availability

NEW YORK - Greek tragedy performed by Greeks.

The National Theatre of Greece is returning to New York for its annual visit, this time presenting Sophocles' "Electra," directed by Peter Stein, the acclaimed German theater and opera director.

The production, starring Stefania Goulioti in the title role, runs Oct. 10-14 at City Center. The National Theatre of Greece is under the artistic direction of Yannis Houvardas.

For tickets call CityTix, 212-581-1212, go online at http://www.nycitycenter.org or visit the City Center box office on West 55th Street.

---

Broadway ticket availability and capsule reviews …

Blaze battle to resume

Firefighters were due to return to a city nature reserve todayafter a blaze ripped through grassland.

Crews were called to the Gramps in the south of Aberdeen to tacklea fire just after 9pm yesterday.

They brought the flames under control by 10pm but left the scenewhen it got dark and they could …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Teaming up again.

While Matt Damon may not have won an Oscar, at least he got a night off from his typically break-neck schedule.

The 39-year-old is more in demand than ever having just finished filming with Clint Eastwood for a second time, in London, and due to start working with the Coen Brothers on their remake of the classic Western film, True Grit.

"I want to direct someday and I can't really pass up the chance to work with the people I'm getting to work with," he says, in a quick interview at London's Dorchester Hotel, before flying back to Los Angeles.

"I've worked with Paul Greengrass three times now, and Clint twice, and Steven Soderbergh five or six times, …

Jason Rhoades. (Rosamund Felsen Gallery, Los Angeles, California)

ROSAMUND FELSEN GALLERY

Not satisfied with the visionary and the genius, the '70s art world began marketing a new line of action hero, a kind of AWOL G.I. Joe who staged reckles experiments using improper materials (polyurethane, loaded guns, raw meat) and whose antics were greeted by much horror and excitement. Critics outfitted this basement scientist with a beret and some structuralist vocabulary and announced the discovery of the bricoleur. Today, with a bookish art scene eager to prove it's still crazy after all these years (or perhaps imports from France have gon beyond theory to love of Jerry Lewis?), that now age-softened, avuncular quack-of-all-trades has …

IN SEARCH OF DARBY DUCK, IRELAND FILLS THE BILL.(ARTS)

Byline: WILLIAM M. DOWD Associate Editor

It was the early '50s in the tiny kitchen of a third-floor walk-up in Darby, a Philadelphia suburb then dominated by second-generation and recently arrived Irish.

The young visitor from New York is balking at the chicken dinner being put on the table in front of him.

``I don't like chicken,'' the young ingrate mutters to his gray-haired granny.

`` 'Tisn't chicken, darlin' boy,'' she says in her light brogue, a hint of a smile playing around the creases of her work-worn face. `` 'Tis Darby Duck, and there's no finer dish you can have in Ireland or here in my kitchen.''

Quickly convinced, as kids often are by their elders, he dug into the dish with enthusiasm. ``Darby Duck'' had won a lifelong convert.

One fine night about 45 years later, the ex-kid was sitting in a venerable old pub in Kinsale, a picturesque seaport town on the south coast of Ireland's County Cork, pondering what to have for dinner.

The most recommended dish was a roast chicken.

Blame Treasury for the plunge in bank lending.

U.S. banks have few incentives to make business loans, because Treasury Department policies have changed the economics of lending.

These changes have made it more desirable to buy Treasury, government agency, or similar securities than to lend.

The Treasury has killed lending incentives in part by:

* Advocating dramatic reductions in short-term rates while letting the dollar fall - a combination that creates a steep yield curve.

* Supporting the Basel accords on risk-adjusted capital.

* Supporting the creation of a reserving system that in effect allocates credit.

* Breaking down the trust between banks and the U.S. government.

* Discouraging actions the attractiveness of Treasury securities.

* Advocating a system of raising funds for expansion in the private market instead of tapping government-guaranteed deposits.

Dramatic Effect

These policies effectively stifle bank lending to the private sector, instead favoring the provision of monies to the federal government.

The result has been that U.S. banks have reduced their overall loans by $10 billion in the past 12 months while increasing their holdings of Treasury securities by more than 20%, or $101 billion.

A high-level Treasury official told me that my reasoning is flawed. The Treasury's most vital interests are entwined with a healthy and growing domestic economy, he said, and the propositions above fail to reflect this.

The Treasury's view is that banks are not lending because the economy is at the end of a credit cycle and demand for funds is abnormally low. Further, this view holds, bankers …

Apple inks iPhone deal with America Movil, Latin America's top mobile phone operator

In another step in the worldwide march of Apple Inc.'s iPhone, the top mobile phone operator in Latin America said Wednesday that it has inked a deal to bring the multimedia gadget to more than a dozen countries starting later this year.

America Movil SAB, controlled by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, said it plans to bring the iPhone to all of its Latin American operations but didn't offer more details about the arrangement, including whether it would be the exclusive iPhone provider in the targeted countries.

Apple has so far struck exclusive deals for the iPhone with AT&T Inc. in the United States, O2 in Britain, T-Mobile in Germany and France …

Kevorkian Case Judge Upholds Suicide Right

A Detroit judge ruled Monday that there is a constitutional rightof "rational" suicide, adding to the confusion surrounding thejailing of Jack Kevorkian on charges of violating Michigan'sassisted-suicide law.

Monday's ruling by Wayne County Circuit Judge Richard C. Kaufmanraises the possibility that at least one of three charges againstKevorkian, now in his 15th day of a hunger strike, may be dismissed.

Kaufman declared that a person whose "quality of life issignificantly impaired by a medical condition" has the right underthe 14th Amendment to kill himself if his health is unlikely toimprove and his decision is made freely. Therefore, Kaufman wrote,Michigan's …

ALL THE results.(Sports)

Cricket

WEST INDIES

Third and final Test

West Indies v South Africa

Bridgetown, Barbados

WEST INDIES-first innings231

SOUTH AFRICA-first innings

G Smith c Richards b Benn70

A Petersen c Chanderpaul b Roach1

H Amla c Nash b Benn5

P Harris c Gayle b Bess11

J Kallis b Benn43

AB deVilliers c Ramdin b Benn73

A Prince not out78

M Boucher8224 run out17

J Botha lbw b Benn9

D Steyn b Roach4

M Morkel c Bravo b Benn9

Extras26

---

Total346

Falls: 1-17, 2-41, 3-60, 4-122, 5-145, 6-279, 7-312, 8-326, 9-333.

Bowling: Roach 25-6-59-2, Bess 9-0-65-1, Shillingford 25-2-85-0, Benn 46.4-13-81-6, Bravo 27-12-43-0, Gayle 2-1-2-0.

WEST INDIES-second innings

C Gayle c 8224Boucher b Steyn10

D Richards c Petersen b Steyn17

N Deonarine c …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

`Simpler' grows into book series.(Life - Food)

Byline: KAREN CATHEY Special to the Times Union

Today, home cooking tends to be quick and easy, but that doesn't mean it can't be healthful and delicious, too. Leslie Revsin showed us the way last year with "The Simpler the Better: Sensational Home Cooking in Three Easy Steps."

Sadly, Revsin died recently, but fortunately for us she completed two more books to assemble a series - "The Simpler the Better: Sensational Italian Meals" and "The Simpler the Better: Sensational One-Dish Meals."

The premise here is to cook recipes with fewer ingredients and a maximum of three steps in preparation. Many include simple tips, hints on technique, and …