четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

BofA: Laughlin tapped for chief risk officer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Bank of America Corp. said Friday it has tapped Terry Laughlin to be the lender's chief risk officer.

Laughlin is now head of the Charlotte-based company's legacy asset servicing business.

The bank that Paula Dominick, its global compliance executive, will fill in as chief risk officer until Laughlin takes over late in the third quarter.

The previous chief credit officer, Bruce Thompson, recently moved to the post of chief financial officer.

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan noted that Laughlin has helped the company make significant progress dealing with its legacy mortgage issues.

The bank has been facing lawsuits from investors over …

Saudi official questions new sanctions on Iran

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister on Monday expressed doubts about the usefulness of more sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program.

Prince Saud al-Faisal told a news conference in the Saudi capital that the threat posed by Iran's nuclear ambitions demands a more immediate solution than sanctions. He described sanctions as a long-term solution, and he said the threat is more pressing.

The Saudi minister spoke at a joint appearance with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is in the Persian Gulf to shore up support for new sanctions against Iran. The Saudi minister also said efforts supported by the U.S. to rid the Middle East of …

As market drops, recruits less interested in options

As many tech stocks dive and employees watch the value of theirstock options evaporate, the currency of the "new economy" may giveway to an old standby: cash.

Compensation experts say the tumbling Nasdaq composite index iscasting a shadow over the liberal use of stock options, the "carrots"that cash-strapped high-tech firms and start-ups dangle in front ofjob candidates.

Experts say tech companies may have to scale back generous optiongrants and offer, instead, larger salaries and cash bonuses to lureworkers.

"Cash is king," said James McElligott Jr., a compensation expertand partner at Richmond, Va., law firm McGuire Woods Battle & BootheLLP. "That has …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Anchorage to Phoenix flight diverted to Seattle

SEATTLE (AP) — A U.S. Airways flight from Anchorage, Alaska, to Phoenix made an emergency landing at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport after one of its engines went out.

Airport spokesman Perry Cooper says the Airbus A319 landed safely and none of the 130 people aboard was injured when Flight 149 was diverted to Sea-Tac around 5:45 a.m. Friday.

U.S. Airways spokeswoman Valerie Wunder says a mechanical problem led to the engine shutdown. She says the passengers were placed on another plane to continue the flight to Phoenix.

THIS IS A …

Bill Clinton to bankers: engage the left

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton urged the people who run Latin America's biggest development bank on Saturday not to turn their backs on the leftists in the region who parlayed the poor's discontent into electoral victories.

Clinton didn't name Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia, whose presidents have all demonized Washington and expelled U.S. diplomats in recent months, referring to them rather as "Colombia's neighbors."

He said he doesn't agree with their politics but "I do understand why poor people who feel powerless turn away from the messy world of democracy."

"It shouldn't be surprising that a reaction to global …

Repairs complete after rockslide closes parts of road W.Va. 3

SUNDIAL - Work crews have finished construction on W.Va. 3 inSundial where a rockslide from overhanging cliffs had left the roaddamaged since January.

For more than nine months, the rock fall zone has remained a one-lane highway with a temporary stoplight.

Brent Walker, West Virginia Division of Highways spokesman, saidthe lag time for the project's completion is typical throughout WestVirginia.

"It doesn't surprise us ... there are slides all over WestVirginia. We live in a mountainous state," he said. "Many slides gowithout repairs. We practice triage - we do the best we can with theresources we have."

Walker explained that the DOH …

Palestinians Install More Moderate Gov't

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Palestinians installed a new, more moderate coalition government on Saturday, in hopes of persuading the international community to end its isolation of the Palestinian Authority and lift a year of bruising sanctions.

Israel promptly announced it wouldn't deal with the coalition, because governing partners Hamas and Fatah stopped short of explicitly recognizing the Jewish state or renouncing violence, as the international community has demanded.

But the new alliance, which replaced the militantly anti-Israel government led by the Islamic Hamas, appeared to implicitly recognize Israel by calling for a Palestinian state on lands the Israelis captured …

French university suspends classes after protest

A university in the French city of Toulouse shut down indefinitely Tuesday, a day after students broke down doors and occupied administrative offices to protest government education reforms.

The University of Toulouse-Mirail suspended classes "until further notice," university president Daniel Filatre said.

Students and professors have held numerous protests and strikes since late January that have forced some schools to temporarily close in the past six weeks over the reforms aimed at streamlining the country's …

U.S. team tops Soviets in basketball

The United States won its first major men's internationalbasketball competition in three years Tuesday with an 88-80 victoryover the Soviet Union in the gold medal game of the World UniversityGames at Duisburg, West Germany.

Stephen Thompson of Syracuse scored 16 points to lead the U.S.team, while Stacey Augmon, the only player on the squad who alsoplayed on the bronze medal team at Seoul, added 15 points.

Larry Johnson, who will join Augmon at Nevada-Las Vegas nextseason, had 14 points and 11 rebounds for the United States, whichovercame an early eight-point deficit to take a 47-40 halftime lead.

Goundars Vetra led all scorers with 27 points, 17 in the …

Australian court clears sale of Samsung Galaxy tab

SYDNEY (AP) — Samsung Electronics Co. is closer to selling its new Galaxy tablet computer in Australia after a court on Wednesday overturned a ruling that sided with Apple's allegations Samsung had copied its iPad and iPhone.

The Federal Court's decision is a victory for Samsung in its bitter, international patent war with Apple Inc., and might be just in time for the Suwon, South Korea-based company to capitalize on the Christmas shopping season in Australia.

The ruling Wednesday said evidence fails to show that the Galaxy tablet infringes Apple's touch screen patent and that Apple Inc. would be unlikely to win if the case went to a trial. It blasted the earlier decision in …

Canada to review Nortel-Avaya deal

Canada's industry minister said Thursday he will review the sale of Nortel's enterprise division to U.S. telecom company Avaya to determine if the deal significantly benefits Canada.

The insolvent company announced last week it would sell the enterprise division to New Jersey-based Avaya Inc. for $900 million.

The enterprise unit supplies landline phone systems and other communications equipment to businesses and large organizations around the world.

Industry minister Tony Clement told an investment group that the Canadian government will review the deal under the Investment Canada Act to ensure the transaction benefits the country.

Call us with your commuter questions

A strike on four commuter lines is headed our way. Lake ShoreDrive construction is shutting two lanes in each direction. TheKennedy is, well, the Kennedy. When the going to work gets tough,what's a commuter to do?

Call …

US Patriots to be stationed in northern Poland

The Polish Defense Ministry says a battery of U.S. Patriot missiles will be stationed in northern Poland in April.

Ministry spokesman Janusz Sejmej said Wednesday that a base with up to eight launch pads and manned by some 100 U.S. troops will be installed in the town of Morag.

The Patriot defense missiles will be used to train the Polish military.

The Patriot garrison was a Polish condition for a 2008 deal to host long-range missile defense interceptors. The deal, which was struck by the Bush administration, angered Russia and was later reconfigured under President Barack Obama's administration.

Morag is 37 miles (60 kilometers) from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Grupo Mexico offers $2.9 billion for Asarco

Grupo Mexico SAB offered $2.9 billion Tuesday to regain control of Arizona-based Asarco LLC and pull it out of bankruptcy protection, topping a bid from India's largest copper producer.

The two mining giants are seeking Asarco's assets, including three U.S. copper mines and a smelter. The Tucson-based Asarco has been attempting to reorganize under bankruptcy protection since 2005.

Under terms of its amended plan, Grupo Mexico's affiliate, Americas Mining Corp., would contribute $2.9 billion, which includes $1.3 billion in cash and $1.3 billion in escrow plus cash Asarco has on hand.

In April, Mumbai-based Sterlite Industries Ltd., a subsidiary of Vedanta Resources PLC, offered $1.1 billion in cash and a $600 million note.

A third plan came from hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners, which Grupo Mexico said included $500 million in cash but no collateral.

The plans are pending before a U.S. bankruptcy judge in Texas overseeing the case.

Asarco's debts include more than $5 billion in claims for asbestos-related environmental cleanup and damages.

Grupo Mexico purchased Asarco in 1999 but lost control after Asarco filed for bankruptcy reorganization.

__

On the Net:

Asarco LLC: http://www.asarco.com/

Grupo Mexico SAB: http://www.grupomexico.com

Sterlite Industries Ltd.: http://www.sterlite-industries.com

Isotechnika completes recruitment for psoriasis trial

Edmonton - Isotechnika Inc. has completed recruitment for its Canadian Phase III psoriasis trial for its lead immunosuppressive compound, ISA247. Of the 400 subjects enrolled in the trial, 207 subjects have commenced treatment. The company received a "No Objection Letter" from Health Canada on December 1, 2004 and commenced the trial on December 2, 2004.

The Phase III trial will be performed over a twenty-four week period at thirty-two centres across Canada involving subjects with moderate to severe psoriasis. It will be conducted as a randomized, double-blind study with four dose arms. Of the 400 subjects, 100 subjects will receive the high dose (0.4 mg/kg twice daily), 100 subjects will receive the mid dose (0.3 mg/kg twice daily), 100 subjects will receive the low dose (0.2 mg/kg twice daily) and 100 subjects will receive placebo. Subsequent to the first 12 weeks, those subjects who received placebo will move into the mid dose range dose of 0.3 mg/kg twice daily for the remaining 12 weeks of the study.

"We are pleased that our recruitment has been completed in just two months," stated Dr. Randall Yatscoff, Isotechnika's President and CEO. "This indicates an unmet medical need for people suffering from this debilitating disease."

Millionaire leaves estate to Calif. university

Bruce Lindsay left behind a tip officials at Vanguard University won't soon forget.

Lindsay, who passed away last month at 79, bequeathed his estate to the small Christian university in Orange County where he ate daily at the cafeteria for decades. The donation, estimated to be at least several million dollars, will likely help the school that is saddled with $42 million in debt.

Known as the "campus grandpa" by students, Lindsay amassed his fortune by buying up cut-rate oil leases and flipping beachfront homes. A product of the Great Depression, Lindsay relished a good, cheap meal and abandoned a nearby hospital cafeteria for Vanguard where he found all-you-can-eat meals for $1.25.

"'Frugal' is not the right word for Bruce," suggested business professor Ed Westbrook, who befriended Lindsay. "He was real miserly."

Lindsay ate all of his meals on campus and often talked with both students and teachers, doling out advice. A former university president gave Lindsay the title of "student advocate" in the 1980s and with the title came free cafeteria food.

He became such a fixture at the 2,200-student university, he would often hold court in the crowded dining hall.

"I didn't sit with him every day, but there was always a big group of people who would eat with him at breakfast," recalled sophomore Brandon Arias.

Lindsay, who was never married and had no children, wasn't shy about commenting on the cafeteria fare. Lindsay's last words to Westbrook: "The cook put too much salt in the soup."

It's a good bet that a portion of Lindsay's money will be used to help build a new dining hall.

"That way," Westbrook said, "students will always be eating with Bruce."

___

On the Net:

http://www.vanguard.edu/

A step ahead

It starts at infancy: Babies are now introduced to computerkeyboards through infant software.

By the age of 10, some kids are so technologically savvy thatthey're creating their own Web sites and teaching their teachers andparents how to download software.

"The kids know more than me," said Claudia Braithwaite, a first-grade teacher at Washington School in Evanston. "Some third-gradersjust showed me how to create a booklet on a computer when I washaving trouble."

Computers are transforming education for tens of thousands ofChicago area students, most of whom know their way around technologybetter than teachers.

Many teachers are trying to catch up by taking courses to learnmore about computers and software. Still others, like Braithwaite,are taking their students on computer-related field trips to TheChildren's Museum at Navy Pier, where kids recently checked out newMicrosoft science software.

Computers have helped both high- and low-ability students learn ina way that is "richer, better connected and more applicable tosubsequent learning," according to Thomas C. Reeves, a professor atthe University of Georgia who has studied the impact of computers onlearning.

Students say they wish their teachers used computers more.

"One of my teachers used a PowerPoint presentation to show ussomething_it was incredible and it made it fun," said Sam Rosen,referring to the computerized version of the overhead projection."But I think a lot of teachers are scared of the computer."

Sam, a freshman at Niles West High School in Skokie, should know.

The 14-year-old makes "computer house calls," helping teacherswith their computers for $15 an hour. He also works for Niles West,replacing computer hardware and fixing cables for $8 an hour. In hisspare time, he has made about $2,000 creating Web sites.

"Computers are a wonderful way to make learning more fun_the bestteachers realize that," said Sam, of Lincolnwood.

Thanks to technology, Sam doesn't even type his school papersanymore. He uses voice-recognition software and dictates into aheadset microphone. The computer recognizes the words and creates thepaper for him.

Many kids are so enthusiastic about computers that parents limitthe amount of time they're online to ensure that they still play andread books.

"We make sure our kids only spend 15 or 20 minutes a day on thecomputer," said Kathy Readyoff-Jones, 37, of Evanston.

But her boys, Joshua, 9, and Gabriel, 7, often ask for morecomputer time.

Many children are teaching themselves computer programminglanguage. Bryant Smith, 10, taught himself programming codes frombooks he checked out from the Oak Park Public Library.

Now, not only does he have his own Web page,www.bryant.allhere.com, but he also has the potential to earn moneyfrom his Web site sponsors, including Barnes & Noble and AmericanGreetings.

Every time someone clicks on some of the sponsor links, Bryantgets a few cents. He says he's just happy to have kids checking outhis site, which includes games, music and movie clips.

"I like having people know more about it and being entertained bysomething I built," said Bryant, a fifth-grader at Beye School in OakPark.

Jonathan Berger, 17, a senior at the Illinois Math and ScienceAcademy, uses wireless technology to do homework on his laptop from a24-hour-a-day Internet connection in his dorm room. For years, hetaught his parents to use their computer. Now that he's getting readyto go to Stanford University, his parents are worried, he said.

"My parents are getting a lot better at it, but they keep askingme, `What are we going to do now that you're leaving?' " Jonathansaid.

Harsh crimes, hard time: when juveniles are sentenced to life without parole

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Another in a series of occasional stories on a growing effort to reduce penalties against juvenile offenders.

By ADAM GELLER

AP National Writer

DETROIT (AP) _ It began as a feud only a child could invent _ teenage chest-thumping over who had the right to sneak across a golf course after dark and scoop lost balls out of a pond.

But by the time it ended in the pre-dawn blackness of a long-ago June morning, that juvenile bravado had exploded into a crime whose horror defied adult comprehension.

Buried inside the charred skeleton of a home, three children lay dead. They perished at the hands of two local teens who hurled pop-bottle firebombs through the windows so one could settle a petty score.

For taking three innocent lives, a judge decided, Michael Lee Perry had to pay. Perry was 16 at the time of the fire in the Michigan city of Saginaw, but for an adult crime he would have to do adult time _ and spend the rest of his life in prison, without any chance for parole.

That was 17 years ago. And today, when Perry rises and offers his hand to a visitor allowed inside the razor wire-topped brick of Detroit's Mound Correctional Facility _ 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of the crime scene _ it is clear that prisoner No. 217645's claim on childhood has long since lapsed.

He is graying at the temples, his hairline receding. No question, Perry is a man now.

He appeals, though, for the understanding he says the boy he once was still deserves.

"I was wrong. I took people's lives who didn't even have a chance to grow up and experience life. But, I mean, I didn't even experience life myself," says Perry, now 34. "I'm not saying a child should go unpunished. ... (But) it's like I'm just abandoned, discarded, left for nothing."

Perry is far from alone.

At least 2,381 people are serving life without parole in U.S. prisons for crimes when they were 17 or younger, the vast majority for taking another life.

Ever since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2005 that sentencing juveniles to death is unconstitutional, advocates have been nudging lawmakers, courts and the public to go one step further and re-examine the life sentences meted out to young people convicted of the most serious crimes.

If we believe that juveniles are intrinsically different from adults _ that their judgment is lacking, that they are capable of learning from mistakes _ then how can we justify locking them away forever?

It is a difficult question and a painful one to contemplate. Some of the crimes are horrific. The age of the perpetrators _ and often of their victims _ is enough to make any parent say a quiet prayer.

Then there is the fact that laws often give courts little choice in weighing punishment. Even when some discretion is allowed, it can distort the choices.

When the time came to sentence Michael Perry, state law forced a judge to decide between widely disparate options. He could treat Perry as a juvenile and see him released by 21. Or he could send him away forever.

"The only conclusion that I can reach," Judge Leopold Borrello told two grieving families gathered in the courtroom that day, "is that the law deprives me of doing justice."

___

Quantel Lotts was 14. He and his brothers were at a friend's house in St. Francois County, Missouri, and Quantel and his stepbrother Michael Barton started fighting. Quantel chased Michael _ who was three years older _ with a bow and arrow before an adult stepped in. Not long after, while they snacked, one of the younger children noticed Quantel holding a knife and reported him to Michael.

"Let's take this outside," Michael told Quantel. In the yard, their shoving match ended in Michael's death. Found guilty, Quantel Lotts was sentenced to life without parole.

Today, speaking by telephone from prison, Lotts will not talk about what happened that day. But he remembers clearly where it left him.

"They say my stepbrother's dead and they say I killed him," he says. "When I first got locked up, I spent the first six months crying to myself every night."

___

Americans believe in stiff punishment. But U.S. courts long applied a more forgiving standard when the accused was a juvenile.

Then in the late 1980s and early 1990s, alarm over violent youth crime set off widespread fears. In state after state, lawmakers and prosecutors decided to get tough.

Many states began requiring that juveniles accused of first-degree murder be tried as adults. To show they meant business, lawmakers mandated stiffer punishments.

Today, inmates in 39 states and a federal prison are serving life without parole for crimes they committed as youngsters. Five states _ Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Michigan, Florida and California _ account for two-thirds of the cases documented by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.

Tougher laws were applauded by prosecutors and victims' advocates as necessary tools to fight crime and protect the public.

"If they can do these kinds of crimes, then they've got to face the punishment," says Maggie Elvey, a California activist whose husband, Ross, was beaten to death in 1993 by two teens, ages 15 and 16.

"My theory is when Ross can walk the face of the Earth again, that's when you can get out," Elvey says.

But the sharp rise in juvenile violence that the new laws were meant to fight never came. Now some question whether the tougher approach went too far.

"There are probably many cases where I'd say, 'Yes, lock them up and throw away the key,'" says Linda J. Collier, a dean at Delaware County Community College in Media, Pennsylvania, among those who called for stiffer juvenile sentences. "But there are probably other cases where that kid, if you look into his eyes, if you look into his soul, you can say yes, they can be rehabilitated."

But how to do that? Should life without parole be eliminated for all juvenile offenders or only for some of them? What should the alternative be?

The questions get harder when they are applied to real lives rather than abstracts.

Addolfo Davis was only 14, but he had already known plenty of trouble _ the child of a Chicago crack addict, he'd been arrested for shoplifting, robbery and other offenses starting when he was 10. Then, in October 1990, Davis joined two other teens _ one 16, the other 18 _ in something far worse.

The trio, all carrying guns, headed to the third-floor apartment of a rival drug dealer, and when it opened, pushed inside.

One of the men inside knocked Davis' gun away and ran. But Davis' companions began shooting, killing two and wounding two others.

After he was arrested, Davis was transferred to adult court, in part because of his prior record. When he was convicted of murder _ found accountable although he had not fired a shot _ the law made it clear he would be sentenced to life. Today, he is 31.

"Gun towers, bars, walls, lock downs, hand cuffs, visits, letters, collect calls," he wrote for an assignment in a prison ministry class two years ago. "This is all I know."

___

Sentencing juveniles to life raises a host of tough questions. Colorado tangled with them last year when lawmakers made juvenile lifers eligible for parole after 40 years and the governor established a special clemency board to review cases.

Now, Michigan could be the next to face those questions.

At least that is the hope of Deborah LaBelle, an Ann Arbor attorney. She lambastes a legal system that deems people too immature to drink alcohol or serve on juries, but says they are old enough to be held accountable as adults for their crimes. Worse, she says, mandating life sentences forces courts to treat all youth convicted of murder the same.

"Aren't there kids who have done horrible things? Yes. But then you have to grant that aren't there kids who didn't, who just made a horrible decision," she says. "Shouldn't we individualize them? Aren't they at least entitled to that?"

LaBelle's files are filled with dozens of such stories.

They are people like Trevor Brownlee, who admonishes himself _ 18 years too late _ for his days as a teen drug dealer. In 1989, when Brownlee was 15, he and two friends set out for a party. Gangs in the city of Ypsilanti were feuding. Underneath his trenchcoat, Brownlee carried a sawed-off shotgun.

Soon Brownlee's group ran into teens they had never seen before. They traded words over turf. The confrontation seemed to fizzle. Then, Brownlee's friend shouted an alarm: Was one of the out-of-towners reaching for a gun?

Brownlee did not wait to find out. He opened fire, killing one teen, paralyzing another from the waist down.

Brownlee, serving life at Riverside Correctional Facility in Ionia, has plenty of time to think about that night. He's troubled about more than that he killed someone. It's that, in his words, the crime was "about nothing."

"It wasn't until I was 25 that I actually sat down and realized the full extent of what I did," says Brownlee, now 33. "Man, I was an idiot."

Brownlee and others like him hope Michigan lawmakers see that they are worthy of a second chance.

But backers of life without parole, like Saginaw Prosecutor Michael Thomas, sharply disagree. Years of violent juvenile crime have defiled his hometown, Thomas says, making clear the need to protect the public and see that justice is done.

"I think most people sitting on a jury, most people with houses in your neighborhood, pretty much understand that they (juveniles accused of heinous crimes) are the worst of the worst and that the penalty does fit the crime," he says.

___

On the day Michael Lee Perry was sentenced for the Saginaw firebombing, the judge sought a middle ground that did not exist.

Instead, he sentenced Perry to life, while recommending that after 20 years a Michigan governor consider him for a reprieve, commutation or pardon.

Perry is already preparing his petition for freedom.

"When I go see Michael he gives me hope that everything will be better when he comes home," his mother, Maria Chavira, says.

But Perry recognizes that political calculus makes exoneration rare. Even as he reassures his mother, he tries to makes peace with the possibility that will never happen.

"If I do (spend) my life within these walls and fences, I'll accept my punishment," he wrote the judge two years ago, in a letter intended for the family of his victims, "and do it in the memory of the pain, suffering, heartaches and deaths I helped cause."

"I will never forget."

Moya, Simon reach BCR Open final

Carlos Moya defeated top-seeded Richard Gasquet of France 6-2, 6-4 Saturday to reach the final of the BCR Open Romania.

He will play defending champion Gilles Simon after the second-seeded Frenchman beat eighth-seeded Jose Acasuso of Argentina 4-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4 in a match lasting nearly three hours.

The sixth-seeded Moya, who reached the final in 1996, was more aggressive and appeared fresher than Gasquet despite winning a grueling three-set quarterfinal on Friday.

Gasquet was plagued by inaccuracy, winning less than a third of second-serve points and serving five double faults.

Djokovic makes winning return at Swiss Indoors

BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Novak Djokovic made his return after missing six weeks with a back injury and defeated Xavier Malisse 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 in the first round of the Swiss Indoors on Tuesday.

The top-ranked Serb overcame some difficult moments before improving his record this season to 65-3.

Djokovic arrived on the court for the first time since Sept. 18 wearing a fright mask resembling rock star Alice Cooper the night after Halloween. Dressed all in black, Djokovic broke his Belgian opponent's first service game.

However, Malisse rallied against the U.S. Open champion in the second set and broke in the ninth game.

Djokovic then broke to a lead in the decider, and Malisse required a medical time out one game later after colliding with the umpire's chair when racing to retrieve a drop shot.

However, Djokovic failed to serve out the match at 5-3 and wasted a match point chance in the next game.

The Serb then quickly closed out the last two games to complete a 2-hour, 13-minute win.

In Djokovic's previous match, he retired in a Davis Cup singles match against Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina.

Earlier, fifth-seeded Mardy Fish retired against fellow American James Blake after just one game because of a hamstring injury.

Fish held serve in the opening game and lost the first point of the next game when he decided the pain in his left leg was too much to continue.

Fish is hoping to qualify for the season-ending ATP World Tour Finals for the first time. He stands in the eighth and final qualifying spot for the tournament starting in London on Nov. 20.

Although Fish cannot be overtaken this week, the last qualifying tournament is next week in Paris.

After third-seeded Roger Federer's victory Monday, Switzerland had two more first-round wins.

Michael Lammer, ranked No. 327, beat 37th-ranked Mikhail Youzhny of Russia, 6-4, 6-3 for his first tour win this year.

Swiss No. 2 Stanislas Wawrinka beat Ivan Dodig of Croatia 6-4, 6-4.

Jarkko Nieminen of Finland fought back to beat Thomaz Bellucci of Brazil, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3, and Italy's Andreas Seppi edged Gilles Muller of Luxembourg 7-6 (4), 6-7 (5), 6-2.

At Least 25 Die in Violence Around Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide bomber rammed a police checkpoint in northern Iraq with an explosives-laden vehicle Saturday, killing 14 people, including some who died when their homes collapsed in the blast.

The suicide bombing in Tal Afar - a city cited by President Bush earlier this year as an example of improving security in Iraq - was the deadliest attack on a day when more than two dozen people died in violence around the country.

Four policemen and 10 civilians were killed when the vehicle detonated after speeding into the checkpoint, police Brig. Sabah al-Maamari said. Some of the victims died when parts of nearby homes collapsed from the force of the blast in the city about 30 miles from the Syrian border.

Separately, more victims of Iraq's Shiite-Sunni violence were found, with seven bullet-riddled bodies in Baghdad, where U.S. and Iraqi troops have been trying for more than a month to put down sectarian killings in intensified neighborhood-by-neighborhood sweeps.

One American soldier with the 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, died Friday near Beiji, 155 miles north of Baghdad, the military said Saturday. No other details were given.

In the city of Mosul, gunmen killed a woman who was walking with her 5-year-old son, Mosul police Col. Abdel-Karim al-Jubouri said. The boy was not harmed, he said.

The U.S. military had predicted a spike in violence with the onset of Ramadan two weeks ago - something that the chief U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell said had been borne out.

"Unfortunately, as expected, attacks have steadily increased in Baghdad during these past weeks," he said Wednesday, adding that the number of car bombs found and cleared were at an all-time high.

Authorities extended indefinitely a regular Friday ban on all pedestrian and vehicular traffic in the northern city of Kirkuk, which has been hit by a wave of violence recently. A series of six bombings there on Sept. 17 killed 24 people and wounded 84.

Some 2,000 police and Iraqi soldiers used the curfew to conduct a series of raids, arresting 150 suspected insurgents, Police Lt. Gen. Sherko Shaker said.

Two bodies were fished out of the Tigris River in downtown Baghdad on Saturday, said police Lt. Bilal Ali Majid. Both had their hands and legs bound and showed signs of torture - hallmarks of the sectarian death squads that roam the capital.

Later in the southeastern suburbs of the capital, the bodies of five more people who had been shot and handcuffed were discovered, police Cap. Mahir Hamad Mousa said.

Two workers at a Shiite-run bakery in Baghdad's Mansour district were killed by unknown gunmen in the early afternoon, said police Lt. Maitham Abdel Razzaq. The gunmen got out of their car, sprayed the bakery with bullets - injuring a third person - and then drove away, he said.

On Friday night, gunmen killed a 37-year-old former Iraqi national volleyball player, said Saif al-Maliki, a member of the union of Iraqi sports journalists. Naseer Shamil, a Shiite, was killed in his shop in Baghdad, al-Maliki said.

The United States has put increasing pressure on the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to take action to stop sectarian violence amid deep divisions within his Cabinet. Sunnis complain al-Maliki is hesitant to take tough action against Shiite militias because many of them are linked to parties he relies on.

In a joint statement, Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq and Gen. George W. Casey, the top American military commander in the country, pledged to help the government find those behind Thursday's killing of a Kurdish lawmaker.

Mohammed Ridha Mahmoud and his driver were seized and killed after they left the northeast Baghdad offices of a government agency that oversees Sunni mosques. A Sunni Kurdish party blamed the attack on Shiite militias.

"The terrorists who carried out this attack are the enemies of the Iraqi people, desperate to derail the progress Iraq is making toward freedom and prosperity," Casey and Khalilzad said.

In two raids in the province of Diyala, an increasingly violent region north of Baghdad, Iraqi forces killed two al-Qaida suspects and captured 40, said Brig. Qassim al-Mussawi, spokesman for the the prime minister's military office.

Five insurgents were captured in a joint U.S-Iraqi operation in Mahaweel, 35 miles south of Baghdad, said police Capt. Muthana Khalid. Eight other suspected insurgents were seized in an Iraqi army raid in Saba al-Bor, also south of Baghdad, Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammed al-Askari said.

Meanwhile, the U.S. command said it had captured 28 suspected terrorists in a raids Tuesday in southeastern Baghdad. The military said one of three "high-value" suspects captured was alleged to be responsible for killings and attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Polls: Key Senate Races Very Competitive

WASHINGTON - Democratic Rep. Harold Ford is running even with Republican Bob Corker in Tennessee, while Democrat Jon Tester has edged ahead of Sen. Conrad Burns in Montana, according to polls released Sunday for some of the most contested Senate races.

The findings suggest an intensely competitive campaign for Congress heading into the Nov. 7 elections.

Republican Sen. Mike DeWine is in a virtual tie with Democratic Rep. Sherrod Brown in Ohio.

The three races are three that Democrats need to win if they are to take control of the Senate.

The Mason-Dixon polls done for various media outlets found:

-Ford had the backing of 43 percent in Tennessee, while former Chattanooga, Tenn., Mayor Corker was backed by 42 percent. Corker had a lead in midsummer polling matching the two.

-Tester has pulled ahead of Burns in Montana, by 47 percent to 40 percent. They were tied in August polling.

-Brown had 45 percent and DeWine had 43 percent in Ohio, findings similar to those of a Quinnipiac poll released a week ago.

The polls were conducted for MSNBC, McClatchy Newspapers and newspapers in each of the states - The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, the Lee Newspapers in Montana and The Commercial Appeal of Memphis, Tenn., and Chattanooga Times Free Press in Chattanooga, Tenn.

The polls of 625 likely voters in each state were conducted Sept. 25-28. They had margins of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Gay group organizes 'Pink Christmas' in Amsterdam

A Dutch gay group said Monday it has planned a "Pink Christmas" festival for the first time in Amsterdam, featuring a manger stall with two Josephs and two Marys.

Other attractions in the 10-day festival include parties, an open-air market, gay-themed films, an ice skating rink and religious services on Dec. 25.

ProGay group chairman Frank van Dalen said Monday the event is intended to increase the choices for homosexual men and women during the Christmas holiday week.

"Right now, there's not much to do," he said.

The festival will also encourage people to think about homosexuality and religion, Van Dalen added.

Some Christian groups protested. The organization Christians for Truth said the idea "mocks the core concepts of Evangelism."

"By putting Joseph and Mary down as homosexuals, a cracked human fantasy is being tacked on to history from the Bible," the organization said in a statement urging the city and organizers to cancel the event.

The manger, with actors playing the parts of Joseph and Mary, goes on display Dec. 21.

Van Dalen said it was not intended to be offensive, but was meant as a "wink" at heterosexual assumptions.

"Christmas is about more than religion, it's also about love and families, not to mention shopping," he said. "Two men or two women can form a family too these days, even one with a child."

Gay marriage was legalized in the Netherlands in 2001, and adoption rules are the same here for gay or straight couples.

Van Dalen said the Pink Christmas initiative was also intended to help promote Amsterdam as a gay capital after a decline in its reputation in recent years.

A study last month found that homophobia is an ingrained problem in the city despite the Dutch reputation for tolerance, and physical attacks on gay men are a weekly affair.

Most colleges not ready to ask about LGBT status

ELMHURST, Ill. (AP) — Gary Rold didn't necessarily consider himself a pioneer when he decided that Elmhurst College would begin asking applicants about their sexual orientation.

"I thought from the recruitment standpoint we might be more proactive" in attracting gay and lesbian students, said Rold, admissions dean at the small, private liberal arts school tucked in a middle-class Chicago suburb. He also wanted to make sure the students got any help they needed. "I realized that many of them come to college feeling really isolated and alienated."

Rold's decision touched off a flurry of publicity after advocates for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students lauded Elmhurst as the first in the nation to ask applicants about sexual orientation — an idea that has gotten little traction elsewhere. Now the question is, will other colleges follow suit?

Advocates say that besides being a recruiting tool to help diversify campuses, openly assessing a school's LGBT population would make colleges more aware of needs such as finding tolerant roommates and providing appropriate health care. And it would send a positive message to prospective students who may have faced discrimination in high school.

But officials at other colleges, especially those that are large and well-known, say they don't need to ask because they already have reputations for being diverse and inclusive, and a student's sexual orientation would have no bearing on admission. Others wonder if some schools worry about the controversy such a question might generate.

Nevertheless, the idea of asking about sexual orientation is not likely to go away.

"Colleges have a responsibility to take care of students they admit so all can succeed academically; a lot of (LGBT) youth get to campuses ... and are largely invisible," said Shane Windmeyer, executive director of the national advocacy group Campus Pride, who said asking applicants about sexual orientation should be as common as questions about race and ethnicity.

His group pushed for adding the question to The Common Application — a uniform document used by more than 450 colleges and universities, including some of the nation's most exclusive — but that group's board of directors rejected the idea earlier this year.

Schools already had other ways to signal support for LGBT students and for students to indicate their sexual orientation, said Rob Killion, executive director of The Common Application. What's more, some admissions officers and high school counselors worried the question could cause anxiety for some students, even though it would be optional.

"I think places like Elmhurst will be the vanguard," said Killion. "It will be good to get feedback from their applicants on whether the question is appealing or not. We're constantly changing as a society, so we'll see what happens."

Rold said Elmhurst, affiliated with the United Church of Christ — which officially supports same-sex marriage — will use the optional question to help increase diversity at its 2,900-student campus about 15 miles west of Chicago, to ensure it has the services LGBT students need and to consider them for scholarships.

The bottom line, he said, is to enrich the college experience for all students. A diverse environment is "the real world," he said.

The college received some complaints, including from within the conservative-leaning community and some supporters, but most feedback was positive, officials said.

Elmhurst students Ally Vertigan and Emily Ponchinskas, who is president of a campus group called Straights and Gays for Equality, say they're proud of their school.

"It's important if for the sole reason that Elmhurst is letting people know that diversity is more than just what color your skin is or what language you speak," said Vertigan, a senior majoring in religion and Spanish.

Shannon Sullivan, executive director of the Illinois Safe Schools Alliance, a nonprofit that works with high school gay-straight alliances, said some colleges may be uncomfortable with the topic or afraid of offending people. "People sometimes think it's easier not to deal with it," she said.

Doris Dirks, coordinator of the Northwestern University LGBT Resource Center, said a campus advisory group has asked the private school to consider adding a sexual orientation question to its supplemental application.

"It's one of those potentially touchy issues," Dirks acknowledges, "but to my mind it's a diversity issue."

Penn State discussed whether to add the question "with some in favor and some suggesting it's not the best decision to make at this time," said Terrell Jones, vice provost for educational equity. So far, the university doesn't see the need, he said. Instead, the school touts its gay-friendly atmosphere in recruitment brochures, has a strong LGBT student resource center, "pride" ambassadors who give tours to prospective students, a scholarship for LGBT students and a presidential advisory commission on LGBT equity.

"We think we do project and provide a climate that is inclusive to all students," Jones said. "But I don't think the debate on this is over by any means."

___

Tammy Webber can be reached at http://twitter.com/twebber02.

Capitals-Devils, Sums

Washington 0 1 3_4
New Jersey 0 0 0_0
First Period_None. Penalties_Washington bench, served by Ovechkin (too many men), 4:04Fedorov, Was (roughing), 15:32.
Second Period_1, Washington, Green 17 (Semin, Fedorov), 11:27 (pp). Penalties_Greene, NJ (tripping), 10:36Steckel, Was (delay of game), 12:08.
Third Period_2, Washington, Kozlov 13 (Ovechkin, Backstrom), :43. 3, Washington, Semin 20 (Poti, Backstrom), 8:59 (pp). 4, Washington, Brashear 4 (Bradley, Poti), 17:05. Penalties_Elias, NJ, double minor (high-sticking), 5:47.
Shots on Goal_Washington 4-12-13_29. New Jersey 6-10-2_18.
Power-play opportunities_Washington 2 of 3New Jersey 0 of 3.
Goalies_Washington, Huet 22-12-6 (18 shots-18 saves). New Jersey, Brodeur 35-20-5 (29-25).
A_16,580 (17,625). T_2:12.
Referees_Don Van Massenhoven, Greg Kimmerly. Linesmen_Derek Amell, Pierre Champoux.

Ohio beats Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 83-70

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — DeVaughn Washington scored 16 points off the bench to help Ohio defeat Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 83-70 on Sunday.

The Bearcats (2-1) shot 50 percent (16 of 32) in the opening half en route to a 44-26 halftime lead. Ohio led 18-17 with 8:31 left in the first half before extending its advantage with a 26-9 run.

The Islanders (1-3) climbed back into the game in the second half thanks to 15-of-26 shooting (57.7 percent). Texas A&M-Corpus Christi pulled within 10, 73-63, with 2:29 left to play before a 3-pointer from Tommy Freeman pushed the Ohio lead to 13, 76-63.

Despite outscoring the Bobcats 44-39 in the second half, the Islanders shot 1 for 6 from behind the arc (16.7 percent) and 13 of 23 from the free-throw line (56.5 percent).

Demond Watt led all scorers with 26 points on 11-of-13 from the floor (84.6 percent) for the Islanders.

Poor show ; This sunshine industry has failed on many fronts and needs to do better.

It has been half a decade since Young India redefined not onlythe way it consumes content, but also what that content should be.But the industry is still looking at content in a linear fashion.

In 2007, projections were made that the Media and Entertainment,or M&E, Industry would be a Rs. 100,000 crore sector by the year2011. Well, 2011 is ending and we are at just Rs. 76,000 crore.People are calling Media and Entertainment the 'sunshine' industrybut we've done 11 per cent CAGR growth while sectors likepharmaceuticals, healthcare and even FMCG are seeing growth at 17-18% CAGR.

We need to understand the consumer and what he is consuming.

Do we really ask ourselves who our audience is? Do we really knowit well? Do we hear what it is saying or are we just following aherd mentality - where as soon as something new works everyoneclaims it as the next big thing to follow, mostly even withoutprobing why it worked first place. Young India wants content to bebeyond just entertainment - it wants a 360 degree experience.Content needs to be personal, Interactive, community and socialbased, offering immediate gratification across all the technologyplatforms they have adopted.

If we go segment by segment, then in the movies spaceblockbusters are few and far between. So what we need is much moreresearch and feedback, innovation, sharpening the art ofstorytelling and thinking of building franchises. While TV broadcastforms a big chunk of the M&E industry today, what has been the lastinnovation for the consumer on this platform? How will the broadcastsegment see scale when the biggest player enjoys just $50 to 70million profits in the largest emerging market in the world? Pay TVneeds to change the fortunes of this segment but are we reallyprepared for it? When Pay TV arrives, the consumer will be brutallyselective of his viewing habits and may demand commercial free andon demand viewing. That's a transition only mature and reallyfocused players can make.

A few things that can change the M&E story in India:

-Games, while currently ignored, have a huge potential with theadvent of Smart Phones, 3G, Broadband and Payment gateways ondigital. They can overtake the 100 year old movie Industry in lessthan five years.

-Mindset towards the small screen has to change. It does not haveto be a TV set and the delivery does not necessarily need to happenvia cable or DTH. What we need to create is content that offers a100% new experience and not just re-jigged linear TV shows & Movies.

-The potential of the Rural Market must not be underestimated.Rural folk learnt to SMS even though they were not literate, theyadopted DTH services which grew faster in rural areas than what itdid in cities but most importantly they have a growing agriculturalincome and more free time for content consumption.

-Content is usually brought down to 'entertainment' but the powerof innovative storytelling and strong creativity with effectivecommunication if used in sectors like education, career enhancement,healthcare and wellbeing can explode this nascent Rs. 76,000 croreindustry manifold. Traditionally we are not used to paying forcontent. Pay possibility is likely to come from kids and youth whichis a very circumspect audience - so what will be the offering?

-Audience Democracy has emerged as the most powerful tool, whichcan influence the fate of a product / service instantaneously. Itsword of mouth, user generated and most of all interactive and istherefore scoring big with young audiences.

-Franchise is a big hit globally especially cross-platform, butin India the thinking is not there yet.

My deepest regret has been that over the last decade all segmentsof the M&E ecosystem could have and should have worked together tocreate a sector of global scale, rich with IP's and a strongrecurring consumer base across platforms. That has not happened.

I will end by saying if we don't want to let the next decade passas this one has done, Media and Entertainment has to be part of the'India consumption story' and that's not a simple task as thegrowing consumerism is creating new pull for consumption but theindustry has not risen to the occasion. We should get our acttogether and walk the talk!

The author is Founder & CEO, UTV

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

EU concerned by surge in imports of counterfeit drugs, toys, cosmetics

The European Union expressed concern on Monday about a major increase in imports of counterfeit drugs, cosmetics and toys, calling it a threat to public health and the region's economies.

Last year, customs authorities in the 27 EU nations discovered 51 percent more cases of fake medicines, while seizures of counterfeit toys were up by 98 percent on 2006 levels and counterfeit cosmetic and personal care items up by 264 percent, according to a new EU report.

"Counterfeiting continues to pose a dangerous threat to our health safety and our economy," said EU Taxation Commissioner Laszlo Kovacs.

Overall, Monday's report said the EU registered 43,000 cases of fake goods seized at the bloc's borders, up by 17 percent, despite a decline in cases involving counterfeit cigarettes, compact disks and DVDS.

China remained the main source of counterfeit goods, accounting for 60 percent of all articles seized, the EU said in a statement. However, Kovacs said he was encouraged by increased cooperation from the Chinese authorities.

The report also pointed to Turkey and Georgia as major sources of counterfeit cosmetic products. Switzerland, India and the United Arab Emirates were named as a sources of fake medicines.

In all, customs officials seized 79 million fake articles, a sharp decrease on 2006. Kovacs said that suggested counterfeiters were dealing in smaller shipments to avoid detection.

How a Madman Changed Our Lives: When a gunman drove through our quiet town on a shooting spree, he shattered our sense of peace.(My Turn)(Brief Article)

Two years ago I started high school in a peaceful suburb on the North Side of Chicago. I was terrified at first (as many freshmen are) to make the leap into this new stage of my teenage years. Luckily things began wonderfully. I adjusted to the new courseload, teachers and friends, and I discovered one of the best perks that my small Jewish private school offered: an open campus where every student could leave during free periods. I spent a lot of my own free time walking through the sleepy West Rogers Park neighborhood where my school was located. The windows and doors of my school were left unlocked, and there was not one security guard or camera in the building.

On weekends, I often slept over at friends' houses just blocks away from school, and since no one could drive on the Sabbath, we would walk around the area on Friday nights. I never felt an ounce of fear. It is amazing how one man changed that for all of us.

On the night of July 2, 1999, Benjamin Smith began his shooting rampage in the streets of West Rogers Park. My school is located directly in the path that Smith took.

I found out the next day that the first person Smith took a shot at was my friend Efraim. He and his father were walking back from synagogue when his father saw a man in a car parked in front of their house. He went to tell the man to park the car away from the fire hydrant, lest he get a ticket, when suddenly the car door swung open. The man stepped out, pointing a gun and shooting. Efraim's father yelled for him to run into the backyard with him.

While his father made it to the safety of the back door, Efraim stood paralyzed in fear, staring into the face of the madman. Efraim later told me that it wasn't until he felt a bullet zip past his ear that he got the courage to run. The gunman sped away, and Efraim's father rushed to the aid of a neighbor who had been hit by a stray bullet.

The rampage did not end there. Smith drove on and shot at five more people in the area, including a teacher and a student from my school.

Meanwhile, a few miles away in my hometown of Skokie, my parents and sister began their weekly Friday-night stroll. I had decided to stay home and read. We've always walked in the same direction--down the block, across the busy street at its end and down the street that follows. For some reason, on that night my father chose to take a different route.

About five minutes later Smith drove into our quiet suburb, shot and killed former Northwestern University basketball coach Ricky Byrdsong, then sped off. It happened just one block from where my father had decided to turn. For the next week I was haunted by the thought, "What if my family had never come home?"

Time went by slowly that weekend as we anxiously awaited news about the gunman. The suspense was over by Sunday night, when we heard he had killed himself in a struggle with police. The shooting spree was worldwide news. Though it was soon overshadowed by other events, the residents of the West Rogers Park area did not forget.

Nor did my school. At an assembly at the start of the school year, we were told about the new security measures that were being taken. Cameras were being installed, and every exit would be monitored by a guard. All outside doors would be locked during the day, and no one would be allowed to leave unless he or she used the main entrance, which would be patrolled by another guard.

As sad as it was to see our school turn into a chapter from the book "1984" (in which Big Brother is constantly watching you), every citizen of West Rogers Park is now aware how sorely the new security is needed. One crazy man speeding through the streets of Illinois, two troubled kids at Columbine High and an angry Atlanta man who took his frustration out on office workers have made us feel we can't step out of our homes without looking over our shoulders. And these are just some of the most dramatic incidents. Each act of violence chips away at our sense of safety.

My parents chose my high school because they believed I'd be safe there. They bought a house in Skokie because it was known to be a quiet place. Unfortunately, anything can happen anywhere. Efraim has told me that for a while after that fateful night, his heart raced whenever he heard a car coming down the street.

My classmates and I now feel that same foreboding when we stroll through West Rogers Park. With the whir of each approaching car, the unfortunate slogan of the '90s flashes through our minds: "Which way do I run?"

Pollack is a junior in high school.

How a Madman Changed Our Lives: When a gunman drove through our quiet town on a shooting spree, he shattered our sense of peace.(My Turn)(Brief Article)

Two years ago I started high school in a peaceful suburb on the North Side of Chicago. I was terrified at first (as many freshmen are) to make the leap into this new stage of my teenage years. Luckily things began wonderfully. I adjusted to the new courseload, teachers and friends, and I discovered one of the best perks that my small Jewish private school offered: an open campus where every student could leave during free periods. I spent a lot of my own free time walking through the sleepy West Rogers Park neighborhood where my school was located. The windows and doors of my school were left unlocked, and there was not one security guard or camera in the building.

On weekends, I often slept over at friends' houses just blocks away from school, and since no one could drive on the Sabbath, we would walk around the area on Friday nights. I never felt an ounce of fear. It is amazing how one man changed that for all of us.

On the night of July 2, 1999, Benjamin Smith began his shooting rampage in the streets of West Rogers Park. My school is located directly in the path that Smith took.

I found out the next day that the first person Smith took a shot at was my friend Efraim. He and his father were walking back from synagogue when his father saw a man in a car parked in front of their house. He went to tell the man to park the car away from the fire hydrant, lest he get a ticket, when suddenly the car door swung open. The man stepped out, pointing a gun and shooting. Efraim's father yelled for him to run into the backyard with him.

While his father made it to the safety of the back door, Efraim stood paralyzed in fear, staring into the face of the madman. Efraim later told me that it wasn't until he felt a bullet zip past his ear that he got the courage to run. The gunman sped away, and Efraim's father rushed to the aid of a neighbor who had been hit by a stray bullet.

The rampage did not end there. Smith drove on and shot at five more people in the area, including a teacher and a student from my school.

Meanwhile, a few miles away in my hometown of Skokie, my parents and sister began their weekly Friday-night stroll. I had decided to stay home and read. We've always walked in the same direction--down the block, across the busy street at its end and down the street that follows. For some reason, on that night my father chose to take a different route.

About five minutes later Smith drove into our quiet suburb, shot and killed former Northwestern University basketball coach Ricky Byrdsong, then sped off. It happened just one block from where my father had decided to turn. For the next week I was haunted by the thought, "What if my family had never come home?"

Time went by slowly that weekend as we anxiously awaited news about the gunman. The suspense was over by Sunday night, when we heard he had killed himself in a struggle with police. The shooting spree was worldwide news. Though it was soon overshadowed by other events, the residents of the West Rogers Park area did not forget.

Nor did my school. At an assembly at the start of the school year, we were told about the new security measures that were being taken. Cameras were being installed, and every exit would be monitored by a guard. All outside doors would be locked during the day, and no one would be allowed to leave unless he or she used the main entrance, which would be patrolled by another guard.

As sad as it was to see our school turn into a chapter from the book "1984" (in which Big Brother is constantly watching you), every citizen of West Rogers Park is now aware how sorely the new security is needed. One crazy man speeding through the streets of Illinois, two troubled kids at Columbine High and an angry Atlanta man who took his frustration out on office workers have made us feel we can't step out of our homes without looking over our shoulders. And these are just some of the most dramatic incidents. Each act of violence chips away at our sense of safety.

My parents chose my high school because they believed I'd be safe there. They bought a house in Skokie because it was known to be a quiet place. Unfortunately, anything can happen anywhere. Efraim has told me that for a while after that fateful night, his heart raced whenever he heard a car coming down the street.

My classmates and I now feel that same foreboding when we stroll through West Rogers Park. With the whir of each approaching car, the unfortunate slogan of the '90s flashes through our minds: "Which way do I run?"

Pollack is a junior in high school.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Alaska-to-Russia walk gets 2 men arrested

MOSCOW -- Russian authorities have detained a Briton and anAmerican after the pair made a rare crossing by foot of a frozen 56-mile stretch of the Bering Strait, officials said Tuesday. The twowere arrested for not …

Germans keep the faith in downbeat Detroit.

Byline: Jason Stein

The waffles were offered for breakfast. The filet mignon was served at lunch. And small hamburgers and shrimp appetizers delivered for dinner.

And who was the chef in Detroit? Who kept the fire burning on a series of frigid nights in the Motor City?

Not the Detroit 3, but the German 4. The 2009 North American International Auto Show lived and breathed and thrived as if it were a Frankfurt preview.

The Europeans rediscovered America last week in the face of the largest economic and automotive downturn in recent memory.

"Some of the exhibits shown by the Detroit companies were smaller than our dealerships in …

LYNCH WRONG NOT TO TREAT STUDENTS AS CUSTOMERS.(MAIN)

Byline: JEAN A. BAVE-KERWIN Slingerlands

As a professional with deep interest in customer service issues, I cannot let Dan Lynch's column on a local school district's efforts to treat students as customers go unanswered. Mr. Lynch emphatically expressed his opinion that he, as the taxpayer, is the customer, not the student.

In the course of my work helping government agencies understand what customer service means in their environment, I frequently find that people who have just scratched the surface of this issue make the same mistake as Dan. Customers are the direct recipients of a work product, as almost any serious writing on this subject will confirm. …

Summary Box: Stocks rise for 3rd straight day

LOOKING FOR VALUES: Stocks rose broadly after the market shook off its longest weekly losing streak in nearly a decade. The downturn brought the S&P 500 close to its average level over the prior 200 days. Many technical traders see it as a sign to start buying stocks again.

EURO HOPES: European Union …

E-commerce seminar in Mexico City

In March, Baylor professors Jonathan Trower and Samuel Seaman were in Mexico City to present a seminar focusing on e-business in Mexico. Participants included top-level business executives from a variety of industries, including telecommunications and banking. Drs. Trower and Seaman discussed e-business strategy and implementation, along with such features as customer relationship management, security, electronic payments, and strategic planning for integrating e-business functions.

Executives learned how e-business encompasses much more than selling or buying on the Internet. Whether the interaction is business-to-business or business-to-customer, e-business is the electronic …

National survey seeks to improve retention, graduation rates. (noteworthy news).(Documenting Effective Educational Practices)(Brief Article)

BLOOMINGTON, IND.

Too many college students leave college before finishing; only about half earn a baccalaureate degree within six years; and many of those who stay in school don't learn as much as they should. But a new project, based at Indiana University in Bloomington, aims to reverse these troubling trends.

The project, "Documenting Effective Educational Practices" (DEEP), will examine the everyday workings of high-performing colleges and universities to learn what they do to promote student success. The effort is the first in a series of activities undertaken by the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), an annual survey of colleges based at …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Acquisitions.

Acquisitions

Arrhythmia Research Technology (ART; Fitchburg, Massachusetts) said its wholly owned subsidiary, Micron Products, has completed the purchase of substantially all of the operating assets of privately held New England Molders (NEMI; Shrewsbury, Massachusetts). Micron is one of the worlds largest manufacturers of silver/silver chloride and conductive resin sensors used in disposable ECG, EKG and EEG monitoring and diagnostic electrodes. Micron paid NEMI total consideration of $1.5 million, including $1.1 million in cash and $400,000 in ART common stock or cash at ARTs option. In addition to the expected synergies in engineering, manufacturing and administration, the fact that medical products are close to 50% of NEMIs approximately $2 million in sales should create significant opportunities in sales and marketing, Micron …

Farming singles meet match on Web.(Life-Today)

Byline: LAURA BRUNO (Morris County, N.J.) Daily Record

City slickers looking for a roll in the hay. That's who Tami Linne found on Internet dating sites.

Linne is a 42-year-old combine and tractor driver in Burr Oak, Iowa. A three-piece suit won't do. She needs a man who can get mud on his boots.

"They all lived in the city," Linne says. "Why would they be interested in a farm girl?"

Then farmersonly.com came along. The men on this site know the difference between tractors and combines. "The site is a blessing," Linne says. "I'm talking to some real gentlemen now."

Although big Web sites boast thousands of members, single farmers - dating-challenged by virtue of isolation and long work hours - find slim …

CIA SPIED ON JAPAN DURING AUTO TALKS, REPORTS SAY.(BUSINESS)

Byline: Associated Press

NEW YORK During the Clinton administration's sensitive negotiations over Japanese luxury car imports, the CIA spied on talks between Japan's auto executives and trade minister, The New York Times reported in today's editions.

And U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor got a daily morning briefing on the contents of those private Japanese discussions as part of the CIA's growing role in economic spying, the paper said.

The information came from the Central Intelligence Agency's Tokyo station and the electronic-eavesdropping equipment of the National Security Agency, the Times said.

The spies gave Kantor …

Important considerations in documentation and record retention.

CAMICO has long advocated that accounting firms establish a written record retention policy that is applied consistently to all engagements. When developing a record retention and destruction policy, the firm should consider the level of service it provides as well as what is best for its clients. For example:

** Should different record retention periods be allocated for different types of clients and different scopes of service? A policy for tax services versus one for audit services may depend on statutory requirements as well as on what works best for the CPA firm and the client.

** Should a shorter record retention period be allocated for former clients (at least seven years for audit services) and a longer one for current clients? Incidentally, the likelihood of having a claim filed against a CPA firm is not affected by whether the claimant is a current or former client. The firm will also want to consider the potential impact of its record retention policy on storage costs and space limitations.

Don't …

German Jewish leader welcomes Hitler exhibition

BERLIN (AP) — A German Jewish leader welcomed a new exhibition in Berlin exploring the Adolf Hitler personality cult that helped the Nazis win and hold power, saying Friday that it takes a good approach to a difficult issue.

"Hitler and the Germans — Nation and Crime," which runs through Feb. 6 at the German Historical Museum, is the first exhibition in the capital to focus so firmly on Hitler's role — another step in the erosion of taboos concerning depictions of the Nazi era.

"I think it's a good exhibition — it is a serious approach to the theme, which is without doubt difficult to deal with," Stephan Kramer, the general secretary of the Central Council of Jews, told AP …

Emmy Awards a tribute to American ideals: ; 'West Wing' wins four top honors at subdued event

LOS ANGELES - "The West Wing" took four top honors as a twice-delayed Emmy Awards - revamped to add patriotic flavor after theterrorist attacks - finally hit the airwaves.

The 53rd annual awards show, staged on Sunday against thebackdrop of biological terror at home and war abroad, waveredbetween celebrating Hollywood's best and paying tribute to Americanideals of freedom and democracy.

After winning her second Emmy for dramatic supporting actress,"West Wing" star Allison Janney concluded her thank-you list bylauding the nation's liberties.

"It occurs to me at this time also how proud I am to be on a showthat celebrates the process of freedom that makes this …

DA calls for debate on Donen report pointing finger at top government officials.(News)

THE Democratic Alliance yesterday moved for a National Assembly debate on the Donen Commission report after details were released that allegedly implicated senior government |officials.

The party also moved that the National Assembly call on President Jacob Zuma to appoint an independent commission of inquiry into the affair. Weekend reports indicated the commission had not been able to pursue certain lines of inquiry as it lacked the power to subpoena people to testify before it.

The notice of motion was proposed by DA chief whip Mike Ellis.

DA parliamentary leader Athol Trollip, along with other opposition party leaders, is to meet Zuma tomorrow. …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

GREAT ESCAPE EXPANSION PART OF EMPIRE ZONE.(BUSINESS)

Byline: KEVIN HARLIN Business writer

The Great Escape & Splashwater Kingdom still has no timetable for its proposed $20 million expansion, though inclusion in Warren County's Empire Zone will help the amusement park sell the plans to its parent, Six Flags Inc.

The Queensbury Town Board approved the park's inclusion in the zone earlier this week, though some board members were reluctant, wondering whether the park needed the benefits and challenging the way its request was packaged with other companies.

But Empire Zone officials said the park deserved the tax credits, cheaper utility rates and other perks it likely will get under the state economic …

PAYPASS AND EXPRESSPAY ACCEPTANCE CONFIRMED AT 7-ELEVEN STORES.(MasterCard PayPass , American Express ExpressPay )(Brief Article)

The world's largest convenience store chain, 7-Eleven Inc., says it will accept MasterCard PayPass and American Express ExpressPay tap-and-go payment cards. 7-Eleven says all 5,300 of its U.S. stores will have compatible terminals by early 2006. A company official previously told CardLine that Visa contactless cards also would be accepted. 7-Eleven currently has equipped 170 stores with the tap-and-go terminals in a test of the technology. Cardholders tap their cards against the terminal, …

Spielberg to film 'Lincoln' scenes in Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The Capitol of Virginia, onetime seat of the Confederacy, is being converted for a few weeks more in keeping with how it looked at the close of the Civil War — for filming scenes from Steve Spielberg's major production, "Lincoln."

Spielberg and members of his production company were guests Monday night of Gov. Bob McDonnell at Virginia's Executive Mansion, just a few hundred feet from the state Capitol.

On the grounds of the 200-year-old seat of Virginia government, the grass is going without mowing in spots for some weeks to give it a more natural appearance at the request of the filmmakers. Lincoln visited Richmond after the fall of the Confederacy in …

Medarex Files $500M Shelf Registration.(Medarex Inc.)(Brief Article)

Medarex Inc. filed a shelf registration statement with the SEC to offer up to $500 million in any combination of its common stock, preferred stock, warrants and debt securities. It said in its prospectus in would use proceeds for general corporate purposes, which may include repaying debts, making additions to its working capital or funding future acquisitions. As of Sept. 30, Medarex had about $386 million in current assets, principally cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities. Medarex, of Princeton, N.J. develops …

DOWNTOWN ALBANY RETURNS WITH A VENGEANCE BACK TO THE CITY.(Main)

Byline: Harvy Lipman and Rosemary O'Hara Staff writers

Peter Kiernan Jr. didn't set out to help revitalize downtown Albany - he just wanted to keep the top two floors of Norstar Bancorp.'s Guilderland headquarters from collapsing on his employees' heads under the weight of an expanding computer system. "It was a coincidence that just as we had to wrestle with that, the news came out that IBM was not going to pursue developing Union Station," Kiernan recalled.

Kiernan, chairman of Norstar Bancorp, decided that creating what would become Norstar Plaza and moving his headquarters there would be good for business: "There's value to being in the area's core community. That's where all the principal businesses are located. It's where you can have the most dramatic impact."

It may have been a coincidence that first led Norstar to think about moving downtown, but it couldn't have fit the city's strategy for revitalizing that area any better if it had been planned by Mayor Thomas M. Whalen III himself.

Less than 20 years ago, nearly the only vibrant business in downtown Albany was the state government. Union Station was an empty echo of better times past, and South Pearl Street resembled a Bronxian wasteland.

It was …

MRSA: deadly superbug: despite health systems beset with deadly drug-resistant MRSA, there is only one new antibiotic in late-stage development.(Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus)(Cover Story)

You cannot open a paper today without reading about Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)--hospital wards closing, patients dying and, most recently, its association with a deadly flesh-eating condition (see Box below).

The irony is that this deadly bug is a strain of a relatively common bacterium that resides on the skin or in the nose of about a third of the population. S aureus causes boils and pimples that are easily treated with antibiotics, But MRSA is a strain of the bug that is resistant to methicillin and other antibiotics, including penicillin, amoxicillin, erythromycin and ciprofloxacin. This is a big problem if the bug finds its way into the lungs or bloodstream, where it can cause serious and progressive systemic infections, such as pneumonia and septacaemia.

In the most extreme cases, doctors used to turn to the antibiotic vancomycin, until recently considered the antibiotic of last resort, to clear the infection. But vancomycin-resistant strains have been uncovered around the world. 'My guess is that in about five years time ... vancomycin will be dead,' says Khalid Islam. CEO of Swiss antibacterial firm Arpida. 'And that is extremely frightening.'

So where is the new generation of super antibiotics to combat the superbugs? Well there is none. Currently, there is only one new antibiotic in phase III trials. And while companies are coming up with new drugs with novel models of action. MRSA is already …

Stocks Jump 70 Pts.

NEW YORK Stocks leaped this afternoon as bond prices extendedtheir gains and pushed interest rates lower.

The Dow Jones industrial average soared 70.90 points to close at3,846.73, breaching a critical 3,800 resistance level.

Stocks rose in concert with bonds and the dollar, after theCommerce Department said orders to U.S. factories for big-ticketitems declined a surprising 4.2 percent in July, the biggest drop in2 1/2 years.

Bonds headed higher early in the session, then extended theirgains after a successful auction by the Treasury of new five-yearnotes. The 30-year bond was nearly a point, reducing its yield to7.46 percent from 7.54 percent …

`THREE STRIKES' CALLED OUT IN TASTELESS EFFORT.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: A.O. SCOTT New York Times

Imagine a scenario in which a young black man, just freed from prison for the second time, haplessly stumbles into a situation that, thanks to the popularity of ``three strikes and you're out'' laws, could put him on ice forever. He must simultaneously try to prove his innocence and evade police and angry criminals who pursue him.

This story might yield a rich, tense psychological thriller rippling with righteous political anger with everything going for it: Hitchcockian suspense, heart-swelling melodrama, and up-to-the minute social relevance.

None of which has anything to do with ``3 Strikes,'' which elects to …