Thursday, 15 March 2012

TREASURES IN YOUR ATTIC Rockwell letter encouraged youngster

Q. I am writing in regard to a letter I received from NormanRockwell in 1972. Can you tell me the value of such a letter with hissignature?

A. With letters and photographs received from famous people, greatcare needs to be taken to ensure that the letter or photograph wasactually signed by the famous person in question and not by asecretary, public relations person or some sort of a mechanicaldevice (autopen, rubber stamp and so forth).

Luckily, the signature on the letter in today's question comparesfavorably with known examples of Norman Rockwell's actual signature.We have no reason to doubt that this missive was typed and signed byRockwell himself.

As for …

Bike trip ends service term for couple

Tucson, Ariz.

Colin and Monica Bock's Mennonite Voluntary Service term ended March 31, but they won't get home until September. In mid-April, the couple began the trip from Tucson to Winnipeg on their recumbent tandem bicycle.

It's fitting that the Bocks are taking a bike trip after serving in a unit that operates the Zuni Avenue Bike Club.

Bikes were part of the reason the couple ended up in Tucson. Colin went to work for a community bicycle advocacy and salvage agency while Monica taught music enrichment at an elementary school. Both also worked for Community Home Repair of Arizona. Monica also started a choir for mothers of some of her students.

In …

No. 4 Sooners survive rally to beat K-State 58-35

DeMarco Murray racked up 167 total yards and four touchdowns, and No. 4 Oklahoma sustained a 21-point Kansas State rally in the highest-scoring first half in school history to beat the Wildcats 58-35 on Saturday.

Sam Bradford added three touchdown passes in a wild first half in which the Sooners (7-1, 4-1 Big 12) give up a 28-7 lead before taking control with 27 consecutive points of their own.

The capper was a 68-yard punt return touchdown by redshirt freshman Ryan Broyles that gave the Sooners a 55-28 halftime lead. That total matched the school record for points in a half, set in the second half of Oklahoma's 76-0 shutout of the Wildcats in 1942.

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Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Crashed Chopper Had Dropped Off Troops

KABUL, Afghanistan - Up to 40 U.S. soldiers streamed out of a CH-47 Chinook in an air assault on a Taliban position in southern Afghanistan shortly before the helicopter crashed, officials said Thursday. Five Americans, a Briton and a Canadian were killed.

The Chinook's plunge late Wednesday came on the first day of a new joint NATO-Afghan operation to force Taliban fighters out of the northern part of Helmand province.

NATO said troops who went to the crash site were ambushed by enemy fighters, and the unit called in an airstrike. The U.S. military said "a large number of insurgents" were killed.

Maj. John Thomas, a spokesman for NATO's International Security …

Icahn boosts offer for Clorox to $80 per share

NEW YORK (AP) — Billionaire investor Carl Icahn is staying the course. The hedge fund manager increased his offer for Clorox Co. by almost 5 percent to $10.7 billion on Wednesday, two days after the consumer products maker rejected his initial bid.

In a regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Icahn said he was boosting his offer to $80 per share from $76.50 a share, which valued the company at $10.2 billion.

Clorox confirmed that it received the revised bid and said that its board, which is consulting with financial and legal advisers, would review the offer "in due course."

The company's stock rose $1.77, or 2.4 percent, to close at $74.34 …

Summary Box: Eurozone inflation eases in December

RIGHT DIRECTION: Inflation in the 17 countries that use the euro dropped to 2.8 percent in December from 3 percent the previous month, in line with expectations, according to preliminary data from the EU's statistics office, Eurostat.

STILL TOO HIGH: Inflation remains uncomfortably above the European Central …

Chrysalis Crucible

Chrysalis Crucible

Street evangelism fallout the focus of new Wayne Northey novel

For Wayne Northey, the experience of street evangelism and handing out Christian literature in Germany in the early 1970s left an indelible impression. So when he tried his hand at writing a novel, the subject matter came naturally.

Chrysalis Crucible, just published by Fresh Wind Press, tells the fictional story of Andy Norton, an idealistic young Canadian fresh out of university who goes to Europe to evangelize during the height of the Vietnam War. But the experience will change him, becoming a crucible that forces him to re-evaluate virtually everything he believes.

The …

Analysis: Super Tuesday is the start of a nomination marathon for Clinton, Obama

Hillary Rodham Clinton captured needed states Tuesday night even as Barack Obama ate into her traditional base of support on a topsy-turvy night where ballot victories were not the only measure of success.

The grand spectacle of Super Tuesday's coast-to-coast nominating contests marked a turning point in the Democratic presidential contest from euphoric election night victories to painstaking delegate counting. Consider it the beginning of a long hard slog.

The two candidates seesawed their way across the landscape, trading triumph and loss in state after state. Clinton won in the delegate-rich states of New Jersey, Massachusetts and New York, her home …

Do You Store Your Cds In A Special Way?

Music fans from Bristol are on the same wavelength as Nick Hornbywith more than half of them filing records and CDs in order, asurvey reveals.

Nearly a quarter store their collection alphabetically while some,usually men, keep them in the order they were bought.

The findings, which cover cities across the UK, come in a study of10,000 people by digital TV channel Music Choice. …

Editorial

It's hard to believe that summer is over and fall is here. This issue of the Journal contains the manuscripts of several authors who have been hard at work despite the lazy days of summer. Ross Arena and colleagues share some interesting data regarding the efficacy and safety of pulmonary rehabilitation in a cohort of women 70 years and older. As a group, this population is generally not well-studied, so his results have appealing clinical implications. Christine Wilson wrote a review article summarizing the literature regarding the efficacy of endurance exercise to decrease dyspnea in patients with COPD. The Research Corner was written by Gary Brooks on the topic of confidence intervals. …

Lee's slam helps lift Moehler, Astros past Reds

Carlos Lee hit his 12th career grand slam and Brian Moehler came within one out of a complete game in the Houston Astros' 6-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday night.

Moehler (6-4) allowed seven hits and struck out three in 8 2-3 innings, his longest outing of the season. Jeff Keppinger doubled and scored in the ninth for Cincinnati and after Moehler gave up a single to Jay Bruce and a walk to Javier Valentin, Houston manager Cecil Cooper brought in Wesley Wright to relieve.

Wright struck out Joey Votto for the final out and his first save.

Miguel Tejada added a solo homer and Hunter Pence added an RBI triple for the Astros, who've won their …

US sharply condemns Armenian government crackdown on opposition

A senior U.S. official who recently returned from Armenia sharply condemned a government crackdown on protests following last month's presidential election.

U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza also raised concern about the recent arrests of government opponents close to former president Levon Ter-Petrosian.

The government declared a 20-day state of emergency on March 1 after clashes between protesters and police left eight people dead and dozens injured.

"The violence really was deplorable," Bryza told The Associated Press Monday. "It seems clear that the reaction by the government was harsh and brutal."

Following the Feb. 19 vote, election officials declared Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian the winner over Ter-Petrosian, who appealed, claiming fraud, and organized protests. On Saturday, the Constitutional Court rejected the appeal. Ter-Petrosian has vowed further protest after the state of emergency is lifted.

On Friday Bryza met with Sarkisian and Ter-Petrosian, as well as current President Robert Kocharian. He said he urged the government leaders to lift the state of emergency and take steps to speed democratic reforms. He said he also urged both sides to open a discussion of how to end the crisis.

The United States is frustrated by the arrests of opponents since his meetings in Armenia, Bryza said.

"It is not only frustrating that the government has imposed restrictions on independent media and left in place a state of emergency, but also that it has stepped up arrests of opposition leaders," he said. "It is crucial that the arrest of opposition figures stops."

He added that he sees some efforts by the government to diffuse the situation, pointing to Sarkisian meeting recently with some of the protesters, who were hospitalized following the violence.

On Monday, Kocharian issued an order allowing political parties to resume some activities, though a ban on mass gatherings and harsh controls on the media remained in place.

Bryza also called on the government to investigate and prosecute all those from the opposition or the government, who violated election laws and unlawfully used violence.

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Tuesday, 13 March 2012

No-show alderman is ward's inside joke; Go looking for the 51st Ward, and you'll find a balloon store worker with a wicked sense of humor

Larry Washington says he's on the lookout for Ald. Lalowe C.Brown of the 51st Ward.

"If you see him, tell him to stop on by here," Washington says."I got a question to ask that man."

Washington works at Balloons Plus just off 79th and Colfax inSouth Shore, a couple of doors down from what a sign says is Brown'saldermanic office.

Below the sign is a storefront that's actually a church thatappears abandoned during the week with its windows guarded by metalfencing and a plastic sign.

Anybody who's lived in that part of town for the last 24 yearsknows "Big" Bill Beavers -- or "the Hog with the Big Nuts" as heonce called himself -- has been the only ward boss around untilrecently, when Jesse Jackson's daughter-in-law took over.

Washington is one of those neighborhood guys. He went to SouthShore High School and has worked at the balloon shop for 20 years.

"People who are new around here are always coming in asking mewhere they can find the 51st Ward alderman. I tell them I've neverseen him," Washington says with a sly grin. "I say, 'You know howpoliticians are. They come around at election time, then disappear.Maybe he's on vacation. A long one. Three years or something likethat.'"

But Washington's just having some fun.

Some rapper called Highbeam claims to be from the 51st Ward, anarea where he says "we all ghetto" -- which certainly isn't a fairdepiction of South Shore.

Harry "Bus" Yourell once ran a south suburban Democraticorganization that was so effective other power brokers called itChicago's 51st Ward. But Worth Township is nowhere near 79th andColfax.

And you can argue there's enough convicted politicians and bagmenserving time at Oxford, Wis., to qualify that federal prison as aseparate Chicago ward.

But it's not. There's only 50 wards in Chicago. And Lalowe C.Brown's 51st Ward -- no matter what the sign dangling above the busstop says -- is pure fiction.

It's just a leftover prop from the filming of "Barbershop 2" backin 2003.

And until outsiders stop wandering into the store asking for Ald.Brown, Washington's sticking with the neighborhood joke.

"I still want to know where he's been," Washington says.

Because after all these years, he thinks it's pretty funny.

Pakistani commander warns of collateral damage

Pakistan's military chief denounced terrorists as enemies of the country and Islam, but warned his officers Monday to avoid killing civilians as they widen their operations against the Taliban.

The government is seeking to capitalize on general public support for its six-week-old offensive in the Swat Valley region and open a new front in a nearby lawless tribal zone where al-Qaida and the Taliban are entrenched.

The military action is being welcomed by the United States as a strong stand against militants after years of failed offensives and striking deals rather than confronting Taliban hard-liners head-on.

But the politically weak government is also keenly aware that public support could sour if civilian casualties become heavy or if the task of resettling more than 2 million refugees displaced by fighting in the northwest is badly handled.

A top official in the northwest said Sunday that the government had given the order to send the military after Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud. The announcement was interpreted as effectively giving the go-ahead for a fresh military offensive in Waziristan, the semiautonomous tribal region on the border with Afghanistan that is rumored to be a hiding place of Osama bin Laden and where Mehsud makes his base.

The military reportedly closed key roads leading into the area on Monday, but there was no immediate sign of fighting.

In a carefully stage-managed event Monday, selected television outlets taped armed forces chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani dressed in a tight-fitting flight suit clambering into the copilot's seat of an F-16 fighter-bomber before taking off for a flight over the Swat Valley.

In an address to officers before the trip, the army general denounced Mehsud and the Taliban leader in Swat, Maulana Fazlullah, saying they had nothing to do with Islam.

"Terrorists are the enemies of Pakistan and enemies of Islam. We have to eliminate them," Kayani was quoted as saying by Geo TV, one of three networks invited to cover the event. Journalists were not allowed to ask questions.

But he also stressed the importance of avoiding civilian casualties.

"In the present circumstances ... it is difficult to differentiate between friend and enemy," Kayani told the officers in comments broadcast by Geo. "The problem is that you have to separate black from white ... to avoid collateral damage."

Focus has increasingly shifted from Swat to Waziristan in recent days, though the military says it is still fighting pockets of resistance in the northwestern valley. In one skirmish Monday, the military said troops battled militants fleeing on mules from Fazlullah's rear base of Piochar.

The military has struck suspected militant strongholds in South Waziristan and neighboring Bannu with shells and bombs in recent days but insists the operations are a response to increased militant attacks on troops and not the beginning of a major offensive.

The U.S. has frequently targeted South Waziristan with missile strikes. The latest was on Sunday and killed five suspected militants, two Pakistani intelligence officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Owais Ghani, governor of North West Frontier Province, said late Sunday that the government felt it had no choice but to use force against Mehsud and his network, calling him "the root cause of all evils."

"The government has decided that to secure the innocent citizens from terrorists, a meaningful, durable and complete action is to be taken," he told a news conference.

Mehsud is blamed for a spate of suicide attacks across Pakistan since late May that have killed more than 100 people, and which the Taliban says are retaliation for the Swat offensive.

Those attacks, which have included at least two mosque bombings and the slaying of a leading moderate cleric, have reinforced the anti-Taliban mood.

In the southern city of Karachi on Monday, hundreds of protesters furiously beat and kicked effigies of Mehsud and a hardline cleric who negotiated a failed peace deal that handed control of Swat to the militants prior to the military operation.

"They are the murderers of the Muslims," the mob chanted, setting the effigies alight.

Meanwhile, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said police in Islamabad had foiled "a number" of plots to kidnap diplomats and carry out bombings in the Pakistani capital in the past six months. He did not elaborate.

____

Associated Press Writers Asif Shahzad in Islamabad, Ashraf Khan in Karachi and Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan contributed to this report.

Walgreens Pulls Lipton Tea // Bottles at Store Had Been Tampered With

Walgreens drugstores was pulling bottles of Lipton Ice Tea fromshelves in 300 stores Thursday as Chicago police and the U.S. Foodand Drug Administration investigated suspected tampering of theproduct.

Michael Polzin, a spokesman at Walgreens Deerfield corporateheadquarters, said most affected stores are in the Chicago area.Others are in northern Illinois, northern Indiana and the Milwaukeearea, he said.

All the stores are served by the same bottling plant that servedthe Walgreens store at 641 N. Clark St., where Brandi Geiger, 23, ofthe 1300 block of North Dearborn, told police she purchased a taintedbottle of iced tea Wednesday evening. Police said they found twomore bottles that had been tampered with at that store.Geiger told police that after swallowing a mouthful she guessedthe drink was tainted with paint thinner. She suffered esophagusdistress, police said. She was released after treatment atNorthwestern Memorial Hospital.Reached by phone Thursday at her home, she said, "I'm sorry. Ihave no comment," then hung up.The iced tea is bottled in a joint venture by Pepsi Cola andLipton Tea Co., Polzin said.Malcolm Chester, a vice president of Pepsi Cola General BottlersInc., acting as spokesman for Pepsi and Lipton's, said there were noindications the problem went beyond one store.Chester said it would be premature for any type of a generalrecall at this point. He said Walgreens was the only retailer thathas removed the iced tea from shelves.At the Walgreens where Geiger made her purchase, there was agaping section in the beverage cooler Thursday.Customers informed of the incident were stunned, and leery."Iced tea customers are simply buying other brands," said storemanager John Chang. "I'm glad the girl is OK."Polzin said the iced tea comes in a number of varieties and allvarieties were being removed from shelves by Walgreens as aprecaution. Customers were not being advised to return any bottlesthey purchased, Polzin said.The bottle Geiger drank from contained "a foreign substance,"Polzin said. "We're still trying to determine what the substance isand how it may have gotten in there."He said Lipton bottles have a vacuum seal safety screw cap inwhich "the middle pops when you unscrew the cap."

Former Gitmo detainees help al-Qaida grow in Yemen

As a prisoner at Guantanamo, Said Ali al-Shihri said he wanted freedom so he could go home to Saudi Arabia and work at his family's furniture store.

Instead, al-Shihri, who was released in 2007 under the Bush administration, is now deputy leader of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, a group that has claimed responsibility for the Christmas Day attempted bomb attack on a Detroit-bound airliner.

His potential involvement in the terrorist plot has raised new opposition to releasing Guantanamo Bay inmates, complicating President Barack Obama's pledge to close the military prison in Cuba. It also highlights the challenge of identifying the hard-core militants as the administration decides what to do with the remaining 198 prisoners.

Like other former Guantanamo detainees who have rejoined al-Qaida in Yemen, al-Shihri, 36, won his release despite jihadist credentials such as, in his case, urban warfare training in Afghanistan.

He later goaded the United States, saying Guantanamo only strengthened his anti-American convictions.

"By God, our imprisonment has only increased our persistence and adherence to our principles," he said in a speech when al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula formed in Yemen in January 2009. It was included in a propaganda film for the group.

Al-Shihri and another Saudi released from Guantanamo in 2006, Ibrahim Suleiman al-Rubaish, appear to have played significant roles in al-Qaida's expanding offshoot in Yemen. While the extent of any involvement in the airliner plot is unclear, al-Rubaish, 30, is a theological adviser to the group and his writings and sermons are prominent in the group's literature.

After the group's first attack outside Yemen, a failed attempt on the Saudi counterterrorism chief in August, al-Rubaish cited the experience in Guantanamo as a motive.

"They (Saudi officials) are the ones who came to Guantanamo, not to ask about us and reassure us, but to interrogate us and to provide the Americans with information _ which was the reason for increased torture against some," he said in an audio recording posted on the Internet.

Pentagon figures indicate that al-Shihri and al-Rubaish are a small if dramatic minority among the released detainees: Overall, 14 percent of the more than 530 detainees transferred out of Guantanamo are confirmed or suspected to have been involved in terrorist activities since their release.

Still, three other Saudis released from Guantanamo under the Bush administration surfaced with al-Qaida in Yemen over the last year. They include field commander Abu al-Hareth Muhammad al-Oufi, who later surrendered and was handed over to Saudis, and two fighters who were killed by security forces: Youssef al-Shihri and Fahd Jutayli. All five men passed through a Saudi rehabilitation program praised by U.S. authorities before crossing the southern border into Yemen.

At least one Yemeni from Guantanamo apparently rejoined the fight.

A Yemen Defense Ministry newspaper said last week that Hani al-Shulan, who was released in 2007, was killed in a Dec. 17 air strike that targeted suspected militants.

At Guantanamo, some of the men had played down their links to terrorism.

Said al-Shihri, who is now formally known as the secretary general of the al-Qaida branch, told American investigators that he traveled to Afghanistan two weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks to aid refugees, according to documents released by the Pentagon.

The file also says he received weapons training at a camp north of Kabul and was hospitalized in Pakistan for a month and a half after he was wounded by an airstrike.

Although he allegedly met with extremists in Iran and helped them get into Afghanistan, he claimed he went to Iran to buy carpets for his store. He said that if released, he wanted to see a daughter born while he was at Guantanamo and try to work at the family store in Riyadh, according to the documents.

In contrast, Youssef al-Shihri, who was killed in October near the Yemeni border with Saudi Arabia, openly declared rage against America to his captors at Guantanamo. He is not related to Said al-Shihri.

"The detainee stated he considers all Americans his enemy," according to documents from his Guantanamo review hearings. "Since Americans are the detainee's enemy, he will continue to fight them until he dies. The detainee pointed to the sky and told the interviewing agents that he will have a meeting with them in the next life."

The U.S. has repatriated 120 Saudi detainees from Guantanamo, including some still considered to pose a threat, in part because of confidence the Saudi government can minimize the risk. The Saudi rehabilitation program encourages returning detainees to abandon Islamic extremism and reintegrate into civilian life.

The deprogramming effort _ built on reason, enticements and counseling _ is part of a concerted Saudi government effort to counter extremist ideology. Returning detainees have lengthy talks with psychiatrists, Muslim clerics and sociologists at secure compounds with facilities such as gyms and swimming pools.

Bruce Hoffman, a security studies professor at Georgetown University, stressed that the large majority of those going through the program have not rejoined extremist groups.

"It's unrealistic to say none of them will return to terrorism," he said. "Is two too many? I don't know how to make that judgment. But you have to look at it in the broader perspective ... There's also a risk in imprisoning people for life and throwing away the key."

For the roughly 90 Yemeni detainees remaining at Guantanamo, the recent terror plot's Yemeni roots will add new layers of scrutiny to any transfers. Repatriation talks with the Yemeni government have stalled for years over security issues, with the U.S. sending back only about 20 Yemenis out of concern over the impoverished nation's ability to contain militants.

U.S. Congress members have called on the Obama administration to stop releasing any detainees to Yemen or other unstable countries.

"I have read the classified biographies of the detainees to be released. They are dangerous people. I am troubled by every one of the detainees who is being sent back," said U.S. Rep. Frank Wolf, a Virginia Republican.

Six Yemenis were sent home from Guantanamo in December, and detainees' attorneys say about 35 more have already been cleared for release by an administration task force. They are the largest group left at Guantanamo, so finding new homes for them is key to Obama's pledge to close the prison. Their attorneys are not optimistic about the transfers going through.

"I'm fearful that will grind to a halt after the events of Christmas Day," said Rick Murphy, a Washington attorney who represents five Yemenis at Guantanamo.

Obama has vowed not to release any detainee who would endanger the American people.

A senior administration official said the U.S. has worked with Yemen's government to ensure that "appropriate security measures" are taken when detainees are repatriated. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss bilateral talks.

____

Sarah El Deeb reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Ahmed Al-Haj contributed to this report from San'a, Yemen.

Mexican port captain jailed for alleged drug ties

Mexican marines have arrested the captain of a major Pacific coast port that has become a hot spot for the smuggling of methamphetamine precursor chemicals, accusing him of drug trafficking ties.

Manzanillo port Captain Jorge Arturo Castaneda was the second top official to be arrested for alleged drug links this week. On Tuesday, federal police arrested Cancun Mayor Gregorio Sanchez for allegedly protecting two violent drug cartels.

The Mexican Navy said Castaneda was arrested Wednesday in a joint operation with the organized crime unit of the federal Attorney General's Office. The statement said he was suspected of ties to organized crime but gave no details.

Navy officials said there would be no further comment, and the Attorney General's Office had no immediate information.

As captain, Castaneda was in charge of authorizing the arrival and departure of ships in Manzanillo.

Security forces have made several major seizures of methamphetamine precursors in Manzanillo and Lazaro Cardenas, the two biggest ports on Mexico's Pacific coast.

In April, nearly 4 tons (3.6 metric tons) of ephedrine were seized in Manzanillo. Last week, authorities seized 88 tons (80 metric tons) of ethyl phenyl acetate, also known as phenylacetic acid in five shipping containers sent from China to Manzanillo. It was the second seizure of its type this month in the port.

Drug traffickers have turned to phenylacetic acid for making methamphetamine since Mexico effectively banned imports of another precursor, pseudoephedrine.

Corruption is a major impediment in Mexico's efforts to combat drug trafficking. Since President Felipe Calderon took office in December 2006, hundreds of officials have been fired or arrested for allegedly protecting drug gangs, from municipal police officers to top federal officials.

There have also been fears that drug cartels may try to influence the country's July 4 state and local elections, concern thta was heightened with the arrest of Cancun's mayor, who had taken a leave of absence to run for governor in the Caribbean coast state of Quintana Roo.

On Thursday, Ricardo Najera, the spokesman for the federal Attorney General's Office, said Sanchez had denied the drug trafficking, organized crime and money laundering charges against him at his arraignment Wednesday night. The judge in the case will decide by Saturday whether the evidence warrants ordering Sanchez to stand trial.

Sanchez's party claims the charges are a politically motivated attempt to knock him out of the race, an accusation the government has denied.

Speaking during a visit to Canada, Calderon said Sanchez's arrest "in no way had any political motive. I even regret that it could generate political tension, a possible confrontation between political parties. I really regret it."

In the northern city of Piedras Negras, meanwhile, a soldier was killed and another wounded when gunmen ambushed army troops inspecting flood-risk zones, the Defense Department said Thursday.

Three gunmen in a car opened fire on the military patrol Wednesday in the city across the border from Eagle Pass, Texas. The soldiers had been inspecting neighborhoods to prepare for floods after several days of heavy rains.

Officials said soldiers captured the gunmen and seized 12 guns, including 10 assault rifles, ammunition and bulletproof vests from the assailants _ an arsenal typical of Mexico's brutal drug cartels.

The statement did not say if the gunmen were affiliated with any particular gang.

Soldiers have increasingly come under attack in northeastern Mexico, where the Gulf cartel is battling its former ally, the Zetas gang of hit men.

Mexican and U.S. officials said the Gulf cartel has aligned itself with the Sinaloa and La Familia gangs seeking to wipe out the Zetas in the region.

The Defense Department also said a member of the Arturo Beltran Leyva cartel was killed in a gunbattle with soldiers Wednesday in the northern city of Monterrey.

The agency identified the man as Sergio Adrian Martinez, a former state police officer who was allegedly the leader of the Beltran Leyva cartel's operations in San Pedro Garza Garcia, a wealthy suburb of Monterrey.

Caroline Wozniacki loses to Cibulkova at Wimbledon

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki has lost in the fourth round at Wimbledon, beaten by 24th-seeded Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia 1-6, 7-6 (5), 7-5.

Monday's loss extends Wozniacki's streak of never reaching the quarterfinals at Wimbledon. She is still searching for her first Grand Slam title.

The top-ranked Dane has played in only one major final, losing to Kim Clijsters in the championship match at the 2009 U.S. Open.

Service lets kids buy online Parents open accounts, set limits

BOSTON Vickie Dowling, who enters eighth grade this fall inWoodbridge, Va., faced a problem that many teenagers confront. Shewanted to shop online but she didn't have a way to pay.

Instead of giving Vickie a credit card, her mother, Laura, signedher up for an iCanBuy account. The service, one of several newonline payment options for children, allows preteens and teens toshop on the Web. But unlike cash, this online money allows parentsto control where their children shop and how much they spend.

"She's accumulated all this money in her savings account and wejust never have time to go out and spend it," says Laura Dowling."This gives her time to sit down and browse on her own."

The limit: Vickie can only buy up to $50 worth of merchandiseunless her mother chooses to replenish the account.

Other parents may want to put on more controls. "Parents mightdecide a 10-year-old is too young to buy perfume," says Carol Kruse,cofounder and vice president of marketing for RocketCash Corp., basedin Saratoga, Calif. So they can turn off access to RocketCash'sperfume vendor. They can also disable access to the service duringcertain times of day, such as school hours or homework time.

The services also offer interest-bearing accounts (to encouragechildren to save) and links to charities (so they can donate some oftheir money).

"We really want kids to think seriously about all the ways theirmoney works in the world," says Ginger Thomson, president of doughNetInc. The San Francisco-based payment service lets children use theirelectronic money to support groups such as Save the Children, NaturalResources Defense Council and the Rainforest Alliance.

The services differ somewhat in their presentation. The iCanBuyservice has signed up users as young as 5 and as old as 19; doughNetonly targets those age 13 and up. RocketCash and iCanBuy screen outadult-content books and videos that their online partners offer,while doughNet does not (although parents can disable access to theentire site).

"What we've pioneered in this industry is the ability to implementsmart money - money that has permissions on it," says Paul Herman,chief executive and cofounder of iCanBuy.com.

Meanwhile, children are growing up with a new kind of money.

"I like it," says Vickie, who bought books and computer games onthe iCanBuy site. "It's very easy to get to instead of having to goout of the house."

Monday, 12 March 2012

Liverpool wants greater share of TV rights money

LONDON (AP) — Liverpool wants the Premier League's top clubs to be allowed to emulate Barcelona and Real Madrid by selling their own overseas television rights.

The Premier League describes its TV revenue distribution system as the "most equitable of Europe's major leagues," with each of the 20 clubs receiving 17.9 million pounds ($28 million) from overseas broadcasters last season.

But Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre believes it is unfair that high-profile clubs with a global appeal are part of a collective deal that is worth 1.4 billion pounds ($2.2 billion) under a three-year deal.

"At some point we definitely feel there has to be some rebalance because what we are actually doing is disadvantaging ourselves against other big European clubs," Ayre said.

The domestic TV deal with Sky Sports and ESPN is weighted more in favor of the larger clubs, with part of the payment based on how many times their games are shown live in Britain.

Liverpool, which won the last of its 18 English titles in 1990, received 55 million pounds ($86 million) in total from broadcasters last season despite finishing sixth, 2 million pounds ($2 million) more than fifth-place Tottenham.

Spanish and European champion Barcelona receives around $250 million annually from broadcasters.

Ahead of Liverpool's match against Manchester United on Saturday, Ayre said "in Kuala Lumpur there isn't anyone subscribing to ESPN to watch Bolton."

"The large majority are subscribing because they want to watch Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea or Arsenal," Ayre added. "So is it right that the international rights are shared equally between all the clubs?"

But most Premier League clubs support the status quo because their revenue would drop if there was a change, which would require approval of 14 of the 20 sides.

"Do we just share ours because we'll all be nice to each other?" Ayre asked. "The whole phenomenon of the Premier League could be threatened if the Spanish clubs just get bigger and bigger and they generate more and more. Then all the players will start drifting that way.

"Will the Premier League bubble be burst because we are sticking to this equal-sharing model? It's a real debate that has to happen."

The league released new figures Wednesday from business research consultancy SPORT+MARKT claiming that match coverage last season reached 643 million homes worldwide and 777 million viewers away from their homes.

The research projected a global following for the league of 1.46 billion, or an estimated 70 percent of football fans.

"This remarkable increase lies largely in the redistribution of international rights for the start of the new three-year broadcast term last year," said Andrew Walsh, SPORT+MARKT's head of international affairs. "One of the main drivers of that development was the switch of the league's broadcast rights from a Pay TV broadcaster to terrestrial coverage in China which really has burst open the floodgates in terms of the Premier League's popularity in the world's most populous and fastest-growing market."

The research was carried out in 36 countries, surveying 1,000 people in each of those markets.

Chelios relishes role as Hawks' agitator

It's a role that often goes unnoticed, which is the whole point.

Because to be an effective agitator, subtlety is of the essence.

"You're not going to get away with too much," Blackhawksdefenseman Chris Chelios said. "If the referees don't see it, thecameras see it."Chelios was a victim of the latter on April 1 at Anaheim. Asthe players lined up for a faceoff, SportsChannel caught Cheliosputting his stick under the back of Paul Kariya's helmet and tippingit forward, temporarily turning out the lights on the Ducks' forward.Just a joke?"No. I was just trying to bother him," Chelios admitted. "Andit did bother him because he took a shot at me later in the game."You have to do something to throw him off his game. He scoredon a power play, but 5-on-5 he didn't do too much. I know he waslooking over his shoulder."Chelios has the reputation as someone who has opponents aroundthe league looking over their shoulders."When nobody likes you in the league, you know you're doing agood job," said Hawks forward Tony Amonte, a former New York Rangerwho knows what it's like to skate against Chelios. "He's a guy wholikes to compete."But Chelios commands more than apprehension in his opponents, hecommands respect."I don't consider Chris an agitator," said Brett Hull, whoseBlues visited the United Center Wednesday. "I have too much respectfor his game to call him an agitator."If you want to talk about an agitator, you're talking aboutguys who aren't very good but go out and fill that role. Chris is aguy who has the ability to play - whatever you want to call it -dirty, and that's agitating in itself, but he's not a guy who justgoes around yapping at you and giving you little jabs in the back.Those are the guys who are agitators; little weasly guys."It's not an ideal situation to have your best player be the teampest. But Chelios has been filling that role since he broke into theleague in 1983 with Montreal.Three Norris Trophies later, he's still filling that role. Someopponents call it dirty. His teammates call it competitive. Chelioscalls it hockey."It's a role, and every team needs role players," he said. "Ialways have (filled that role)."I've tried to cut down on penalties the last couple of years,but I still like to get under people's skin. And I know I do."The agitator usually does his work behind the play when all eyesare on the puck.Calgary's Theo Fleury kicked the Hawks' Alex Zhamnov during agame Sunday. There was no penalty to Fleury, and to Zhamnov'scredit, there was no retaliation penalty.That's the point of agitating a top player. Not only does itresult in a power play, but it's a power play with the star in thebox.The Blackhawks are bound to face an agitator in the first roundof the playoffs, assuming they qualify. Colorado's Claude Lemieux isone of the most notorious agitators in the NHL, and Dallas' ToddHarvey also makes opponents wary."Everybody knows what their intentions are," Amonte said. "Youjust have to control your emotions and be aware of them before you goon the ice."Once in a while they get a guy to lose his mind a little bitand get a penalty."It's part of the game, and it's part of Chelios' personality."It's an intimidation factor," Chelios said.

Summary Box: WSJ points to print, online ad gains

THE NUMBERS: The Wall Street Journal's revenue climbed 17 percent in its just-ended quarter, according to a staff memo the newspaper's publisher, Les Hinton, sent Wednesday.

THE BACKROUND: The gains — in both print and digital ad sales — come as the Journal pursues an aggressive national expansion. It has branched far beyond business and financial news with sections devoted to local and cultural coverage, positioning the newspaper as a direct rival to The New York Times.

THE RESPONSE: The Times shrugged off the Journal's memo. "All that we know for sure is that Mr. Hinton's strategy of significantly discounted ads and circulation has had no effect on The Times," Abbe Serphos, a Times spokeswoman, said in an e-mail message.

Deluxe customer service

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Deluxe offers the most sought-- after licensed image check designs, cause-related designs and other options to match most consumers' interests.

Deluxe Financial Services is a business unit of Deluxe Corporation, which is based in St. Paul, Minn. More information about Deluxe is available at www.deluxe.com.

Rockefeller says Yeager will remain strong despite losing airline

Sen. Jay Rockefeller issued a prepared statement today aboutIndependence Air. There is no doubt that our bringing IndependenceAir to Yeager Airport was a boon for consumers in the Kanawha Valleyand all over West Virginia, Rockefeller said. Independence enjoyedgreat success in our state because it attracted so many newcustomers, but the huge spike in fuel prices this summer was just toomuch for a low-cost operation to handle. The truth is that longbefore Independence Air arrived, Yeager Airport was a strong andthriving airport, and I have every confidence that it will continueto be strong after Independence, he said. In the coming weeks andmonths, I will work with airport officials as we work to attract newcarriers and service operations because I know how important it isfor West Virginia travelers to have access to the best service at thelowest prices.

Island Nations Warn of Warming Threat

UNITED NATIONS - Island countries from around the world warned Tuesday that despite debate over global warming and the potential for a significant increase in sea levels, there has been little concrete action to stem the climate changes that threatens their existence.

"The international community has convened numerous conferences and summits at which it has agreed on wide-ranging plans and programs of action," Foreign Minister of the Maldives Abdalla Shahid, told the U.N. General Assembly. "However ... all too often the reality of implementation has failed to match the ambitious rhetoric."

He was speaking just days after the world body convened its first-ever climate summit which sought to put new urgency into global talks to reduce global-warming emissions.

The dangerous emissions, or greenhouse gases, come primarily from the burning of fossil fuels like coal-burning power plants. Scientists and environmentalists say carbon dioxide in particular is to blame for warmer temperatures, melting glaciers and rising sea levels.

The United Nations organized last week's summit to create momentum for December's annual climate treaty conference in Bali, Indonesia, when Europe, Japan and others hope to initiate talks for an emissions-reduction agreement to succeed the Kyoto Protocol in 2012.

The 175-nation Kyoto pact, which the U.S. rejects, requires 36 industrial nations to reduce carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

The Maldives is a low-lying island nation consisting of a number of atolls in the Indian Ocean. As the flattest nation on earth - with an average height of only 7 feet above sea level - it is considered particularly vulnerable to the perils of global climate change.

Climate researchers say that many of its islands will disappear over the next century as the seas rise.

Shahid's warnings were echoed by other speakers at Tuesday's General Assembly session.

"We view associated problems of high frequency of abnormal climate, sea level rise, global warming and coastal degradation as matters affecting the economic and environmental security of all small island states," said Timothy Harris, foreign minister of the Caribbean nation of St. Kitts and Nevis.

Charles Savarin, foreign minister of nearby Dominica, said that rising sea temperatures were causing the death and bleaching of corals and a decline of fish stocks.

"Climate change is the most pressing environmental problem humankind has ever faced," he said.

And Sonatane Taumoepeau-Tupou, foreign minister of the Pacific kingdom of Tonga, urged developed nations to implement emissions reductions and help developing nations to do the same.

"Climate change is not regarded just as an environmental issue, since it has implications for economic growth and sustainable development," he said.

Scalia Defends Positions in TV Debate

WASHINGTON - Justice Antonin Scalia on Sunday defended some of his Supreme Court opinions, arguing that nothing in the Constitution supports abortion rights and the use of race in school admissions.

Scalia, a leading conservative voice on the high court, sparred in a one-hour televised debate with American Civil Liberties Union president Nadine Strossen. He said unelected judges have no place deciding politically charged questions when the Constitution is silent on those issues.

Arguing that liberal judges in the past improperly established new political rights such as abortion, Scalia warned, "Someday, you're going to get a very conservative Supreme Court and regret that approach."

"On controversial issues on stuff like homosexual rights, abortion, we debate with each other and persuade each other and vote on it either through representatives or a constitutional amendment," the Reagan appointee said.

"Whether it's good or bad is not my job. My job is simply to say if those things you find desirable are contained in the Constitution," he said.

Strossen countered that such a legal approach would have barred the landmark 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, a unanimous decision outlawing racial segregation in public schools.

"There are some rights that are so fundamental that no majority can take them away from any minority, no matter how small or unpopular that minority might be," she said. "And who is better positioned to represent and defend and be the ultimate backstop for rights of individuals and minorities than those who are not directly accountable in the electoral process - namely federal judges?"

The ACLU debate comes as the Supreme Court this term will hear closely divided issues involving partial-birth abortion and school integration. They are expected to test the conservative impact of the court's two newest members, Chief Justice John Roberts and Samuel Alito.

Scalia, 70, has consistently voted to limit the use of race in school admissions and has called for the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision establishing a woman's right to abortion to be overruled. But his influence was often limited by moderate Sandra Day O'Connor, who cast deciding votes on those issues against him.

With O'Connor now retired and Alito succeeding her, Scalia - whom President Bush passed up for chief justice - will have new opportunities to sway his new colleagues and centrist Anthony Kennedy closer to his viewpoints.

During Sunday's debate, Scalia outlined his judicial philosophy of interpreting the Constitution according to its text, as understood at the time it was adopted. He reiterated that race has no place in school admissions, a viewpoint that put him on the losing side in 2003.

"The Constitution very clearly forbids discrimination on the basis of race," Scalia said in response to a question by moderator Pete Williams of NBC. "It doesn't seem to me to allow Michigan to say we think it's good to discriminate on the basis of race when you want to make sure everyone is exposed to different backgrounds. We cannot use race as the test of diversity."

Scalia, who marked his 20th anniversary on the court last month, generally finds himself taking the opposite position to the ACLU. Most notably, he wrote a majority 5-4 opinion last term giving police more leeway to enter private homes.

He also unsuccessfully sided with the government in cases where the court struck down Ten Commandments displays in Kentucky courthouses and declared that the military commissions President Bush established to try suspected al-Qaida members were unconstitutional.

But during Sunday's debate, Scalia noted there were cases in which he and the ACLU agreed. They included rulings upholding flag burning and a 2004 opinion arguing that a U.S. citizen seized in Afghanistan in wartime could challenge his detention as an enemy combatant in U.S. courts.

Strossen, who enjoys a friendly relationship with Scalia despite their differences, applauded those opinions but added, "I don't want you to think you're too popular with this group."

"I'm very distressed about your failure to find protections in the Constitution for the right of consenting individuals in their homes to decide what they see and read, and what type of sexual relations they have," she said as hundreds of ACLU audience members cheered.

Scalia, who has at times had a prickly relationship with the media, agreed to have C-SPAN televise Sunday's event live - a more recent accommodation as the court begins to show greater signs of openness under Roberts.

---

On the Net:

Supreme Court: http://www.supremecourtus.gov

American Civil Liberties Union: http://www.aclu.org

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Charles Dumas, Research Director, Lombard Street Research LTD.

(This is not a legal transcript. Bloomberg LP cannot guarantee its accuracy.)

CHARLES DUMAS, RESEARCH DIRECTOR, LOMBARD STREET RESEARCH LTD, TALKS ABOUT EUROPE AT BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE

MARCH 23, 2011

SPEAKERS: TOM KEENE, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE HOST

CHARLES DUMAS, RESEARCH DIRECTOR, LOMBARD STREET RESEARCH LTD

8:52

TOM KEENE, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE HOST: Let's go to Charles Dumas, Lombard Street Research. Good morning, sir.

CHARLES DUMAS, RESEARCH DIRECTOR, LOMBARD STREET RESEARCH LTD.: Hello, how are you?

KEENE: Well, we're very good. So much going on in Europe. We see Osborne with a set of headlines. Is austerity working for the United Kingdom?

DUMAS: Well, in the sense that Osborne is concerned with maybe that the gilded securities continue to be bought in large quantities at low yields, yes. And that was his main thing was to avoid a national crisis.

But, of course, the danger is - the risk is that once the world starts to slow down, which, by the way, I don't expect this year, once the world starts to slow down seriously then Britain will go back into recession.

KEENE: What are you watching in Portugal today? What are you looking for as we see Irish yields explode higher?

DUMAS: Yes, well, I mean Ireland is reflecting the Portuguese story and the Portuguese are getting shaky jakey and actually have to wait for this afternoon for the parliamentary vote I think there.

But they are getting shaky jakey about supporting the austerity program by Prime Minister Socrates. And without a government, you can't really have an austerity program. Without an austerity program, the whole premise of this rescue business (inaudible) goes away and Ireland, of course, from this standpoint is in the boat with the government.

So people are just sort of saying, hey, wait a second, the three small peripherals - let's say Greece, Portugal and Ireland - are now looking (inaudible). There is no great pressure on (inaudible) because (inaudible) are happening in Greece anyway.

KEENE: Yes.

DUMAS: And the Spanish have kept people quiet by adopting an austerity program.

KEENE: Well, let's leave -

DUMAS: So (inaudible) -

KEENE: We're going to have to leave it there, Charles. Thank you so much. Charles Dumas, sorry to cut him off, folks, but we've got to get here to the top of the hour as well. Charles Dumas with Lombard Street Research.

And I love the idea there the word premise because that is what this has all been. It has been politics, politics, politics, politics. And like the Irish vote, I mean the headline here is without question as Peter Boockvar said about 11:00 am New York time it's just simple, Portugal gets to vote if they want to play.

8:54

***END OF TRANSCRIPT***

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CORRECTION Because of incorrect information from [Derived Headline]

CORRECTION Because of incorrect information from state police, aJuly 7 story incorrectly stated that an incident involving theSeymour Republican Town Committee chairman and a volunteerfirefighter was reported to them by an off-duty Shelton policeofficer. It actually was reported by an off-duty Ansonia policesergeant.

CORRECTION Because of incorrect information from [Derived Headline]

CORRECTION Because of incorrect information from state police, aJuly 7 story incorrectly stated that an incident involving theSeymour Republican Town Committee chairman and a volunteerfirefighter was reported to them by an off-duty Shelton policeofficer. It actually was reported by an off-duty Ansonia policesergeant.

MORNINGLINE

RESULTS Should Michael Jordan go to Asia to see Nike's plants? YES: 84% NO: 16% TODAY'S QUESTION Should the two boys linked to the Ryan Harris murder have been senthome? YES: (847) 326-0903 NO: (847) 326-0904

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Soviets, U.S. monitor Nev. A-blast

MERCURY, Nev. Exactly on schedule and under ideal conditions,Soviet and U.S. technicians made history Wednesday by jointlymonitoring a nuclear explosion beneath the Nevada Test Site.

The bomb - painted red, white and blue - went off to open whatparticipants called a new chapter in nuclear arms control. SevenSoviet scientists sat side-by-side with their U.S. counterparts inthe crowded control room deep inside the classified site.

It was the first such joint effort since the Atomic Age dawned43 years ago.

"This is an auspicious start for the Joint VerificationExperiment and a critical hurdle for this process," EnergyUndersecretary Joseph F. Salgado said after watching techniciansmeasure the power of the explosive that rippled the surface of DeadHorse Flat at 10 a.m.

"As a result," Salgado said, "we are one step closer tocompletion of the verification protocols for the Threshold Test BanTreaty and the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty."

Those treaties were signed in the mid-1970s but not ratified bythe Senate because of concerns over ability to verify Sovietcompliance.

Despite optimistic predictions from both sides Wednesday aboutthe treaties, U.S. and Soviet officials remained at odds over how farthe experiment here would advance the cause of strict new test bans.

Igor M. Palenykh, head of the Soviet delegation to bilateralnuclear testing talks in Geneva, remarked through a State Departmentinterpreter that the experiment could and should lead to "furtherlimitations of nuclear tests, both the number of tests and theiryield."

"The ultimate step, of course, is the total cessation of nucleartesting," he said, recalling the Soviets' unilateral test moratoriumof the early '80s. "We plan to make every effort to achieve thisobjective."

The U.S. leader at the testing talks, C. Paul Robinson, quicklystepped in to say that his country was not nearly as keen to do awayentirely with nuclear tests.

"The United States still believes that it must rely on nucleartesting just as long as it must rely on nuclear weapons for itsdefense," he said. "But this event is proof that we are makingprogress on measures that will lead to a more stable world."

That conflict aside, the Soviet and U.S. technicians anddiplomats were generally jovial after the event, the first of twonuclear blasts planned as part of a Joint Verification Experimentdesigned to demonstrate the feasibility of several test-limitationverification technologies.

Code-named Kearsarge, it had a yield near 150 kilotons - nearly12 times larger than the World War II atomic bomb dropped Aug. 6,1945, on Hiroshima, Japan.

The second explosion is scheduled Sept. 14 at the Semipalatinsktest site in Soviet Central Asia.

Viktor N. Mikhailov, leader of the Soviet technical team,touched off a brisk round of applause in the control room 30 secondsafter the detonation, when he jubilantly punched the air to signal hehad received good news from Soviet technicians staffing recordingequipment in a nearby building.

Monday, 5 March 2012

Too soon to write off Public hoops champ

Conference play for city schools doesn't start for more than twoweeks, but some observers prematurely have dismissed the PublicLeague champion as a serious contender for the boys basketball statechampionship in March.

Preseason favorite Whitney Young lost to the No. 1 team in thecountry, Oak Hill Academy of Mouth of Wilson, Va., by six points inthe recent KMOX Shootout in St. Louis. And the Dolphins were without6-8 forward Marcus White, one of their best players.

Crane beat Peoria Richwoods, arguably the best Downstate threat,then lost to Julian by two points. Nobody really knows how goodFarragut, Marshall, Simeon, Carver, Morgan Park, Curie and …

Actress and Weakest Link host /Fiona Coyne found dead at home.(News)

BYLINE: Luvuyo Mjekula and Sapa

ThE death of Fiona Coyne, a prominent theatre personality and host of The Weakest Link, has sent shockwaves through the theatre and TV industries.

Coyne was found dead in her Fish Hoek home yesterday. Kee-Leen Irvine, the producer of the Weakest Link and Coyne's family spokeswoman, said Coyne's death was a suspected suicide, but the family was waiting for the police to complete their investigation.

She added that the family was in a state of deep shock.

Police said Coyne's body had been discovered by her domestic worker at about 8.40am. Spokesman Stephen Knapp said no foul play was suspected and an inquest …

CAN KERRY PILOT SHIP OF STATE?(PERSPECTIVE)

Byline: MAUREEN DOWD

BOSTON -- So here's the race: The Skipper takes on the Sheriff.

(And, of course, the undercard in the fight: Bambi meets Godzilla.)

Talk about drowning in metaphor.

At least Teresa Heinz Kerry kept her subliminal message simple: She wore a ketchup-red suit to introduce the second senator in her life.

Her husband, as usual, went overboard. The Democratic convention, which was focus-group-dial-a-metered to death, needed a dose of Dramamine. It was awash in allusions about Cmdr. Kerry steering the ship of state -- from the curved design of the metal and wood-paneled lectern, meant to evoke a ship's bridge; to the …

Concordia University to Assist Students Affected by Hurricane Katrina.

Byline: Concordia University - Montreal

MONTREAL, Sept. 8 (AScribe Newswire) -- In response to the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina, Concordia University will assist students from the affected area by admitting them as visiting students into courses for which they are academically qualified and where spaces are available.

Students will able to register until September 20, 2005, for the fall term. After that date, students will …

Pressure rising at PSG over Ancelotti speculation

PARIS (AP) — Paris Saint-Germain's quest to become one of Europe's leading clubs is not going as smoothly as results suggest, with speculation that Carlo Ancelotti is set to take over as coach proving to be unsettling.

Following a huge spending spree, PSG is three points clear at the top of the French league and all would seem to be on track under coach Antoine Kombouare.

Yet PSG has been rocked by the reports of Ancelotti's supposed imminent arrival, just as it is finding its feet after years of fan violence had crippled the club.

Ruthlessly ousting Kombouare, who is a popular figure, would not sit will with the players. But sporting director Leonardo is entrusted with …

The way life was 200 years a go is preserved in the home of Belle's earliest settlers, the Shrewsbury family: ; Old Stone House

DAILY MAIL STAFF

WHAT started as a flicker of an idea for some Belle women is nowburning strong for the Belle Historical Renovation Society. Membersof the organization hope some funding from the West VirginiaLegislative Budget Digest and a one-time grant from the KanawhaCounty Commission will help keep the flame of their project alive.

Simply known as "The Old Stone House," the home partially hiddenby trees on Stubb Drive was built by Belle's earliest settlers, theShrewsbury family, sometime between 1800 and 1810. The house hadbeen lived in continuously ever since.

Some members of the local women's club thought it would be niceto restore the house to the way …

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Ask Elizabeth.(Interview)

Q I'm very confused about feeding my cat. Feather is a healthy 14-year-old Siamese companion. Over the years I've offered Feather a variety of products from different pet food manufacturers--everything from Tender Vittles to dry grocery store brands to fancy little pop-top cans. Whatever I scoop into her bowl, Feather will eat it.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Nevertheless, I've become terribly concerned about her nutrition over the last few years. Inspired by the melamine toxicity problem which occurred in 2007, I decided to pay closer attention to what I feed her. Luckily, I had not fed any melamine-contaminated foods, but the news story really frightened me; I vowed to …

Delgado gets his chance; After four walks, Mets' slugger breaks 2-2 tie in 9th.(Sports)

Byline: ADAM RUBIN - New York Daily News

Mets 6

Cubs 2

CHICAGO - Carlos Delgado didn't need a bat until his final plate appearance Friday. Then he used the lumber well.

Delgado, who already had walked four times when he came to bat in the ninth inning of a tie game, belted a first-pitch double against Ryan Dempster to score David Wright for the go-ahead run. The New York Mets, repeating their demolition of Dempster when the teams last met, scored three more times against the Cubs' closer Friday and beat Chicago 6-2 at Wrigley Field.

"You have to pitch to him eventually," manaager Willie Randolph said about Delgado.

C/NET A TREAT FOR MIND, EYE.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: Peter McWilliams

Internet-related coupons are falling out of my box of Wheaties. College bowl games are being named after video stores. I'm inundated with enough advertising. I don't need nearly every home page I visit to be a front for something being sold.

Yes, considering the medium of the Internet is not unlike television, one can expect small ads every now and then. But movie studios, publishers, other companies and plenty of individuals create home pages that are nothing but billboards trying to push products. It's as if we're stuck in the movie ``Brazil,'' where every day is Christmas and you have to keep buying things all the time.

Agape Foundation Honors Northern California Peacemakers With Awards for Grassroots Approaches to Nonviolence.

Byline: AScribe, The Public Interest Newswire

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 13 (AScribe Newswire) -- As opposition to the war in Iraq continues to grow, the Agape Foundation will celebrate the role of Bay Area social justice activists in spreading the principles and practice of nonviolence by presenting its first annual Peace Prize awards to two Northern California peacemakers. More than 100 of the region's most committed investors in nonviolence will gather for an impassioned show of respect for representatives of today's diverse, dedicated peace movement.

"The Agape Foundation continues to strengthen grassroots peace and justice movements as it has done for generations," said political …

Official: Brazil may build new Sao Paulo airport

Brazil's defense minister says the government may build a fourth airport in South America's largest city and says it would be privately run.

Defense Minister Nelson Jobim also says the government may privatize the operations of the international airport in Rio de Janeiro and another in the city of …

Woman, 81, found guilty of caning cop

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -- Jurors convicted an 81-year-old woman offelony battery Wednesday for hitting a police officer with her cane.

Betty Chambers showed no reaction when the guilty verdict wasannounced, but outside the courtroom she used a newspaper to hideher face from cameras. "I'm sick of seeing my picture on TV! I'vedone nothing wrong!" she said.

2 OFFICERS SUING HER The verdict came one …

Studies in the Area of Thyroid Cancer Reported from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

A report, 'Thyrotrophin receptor signaling dependence of Braf-induced thyroid tumor initiation in mice,' is newly published data in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. "Mutations of BRAF are found in ~45% of papillary thyroid cancers and are enriched in tumors with more aggressive properties. We developed mice with a thyroid-specific knock-in of oncogenic Braf (LSL-Braf(V600E)/TPO-Cre) to explore the role of endogenous expression of this oncoprotein on tumor initiation and progression," researchers in the United States report (see also Thyroid Cancer).

"In contrast to other Braf-induced mouse models of tumorigenesis (i.e., melanomas …

BRIDGE ADVICE IGNORED YEARS BEFORE COLLAPSE.(Main)

Byline: Harvy Lipman Staff writer

Nearly 10 years before the Schoharie Creek bridge collapsed, Thruway officials ignored a consultant's recommendation that they rebuild the stone reinforcements around its foundation to prevent the very kind of erosion damage suspected of having caused the tragedy.

Testifying Thursday at a National Transportation Safety Board hearing on the April 5 collapse in which 10 people died, Thruway officials said they don't know why the authority never followed through on the consultant's recommendation.

The failure to strengthen the heavy stone reinforcement - known as riprap - around the base of the bridge could be a key element in the collapse, according to several experts. The director of the Engineering Research Center at Colorado State University, Ebert V. Richardson, testified Wednesday there is a "high probability" the bridge would not have …