Thursday, March 15, 2012

Darrell Hair reinstated as test match umpire by ICC after completing rehabilitation program

Darrell Hair has been reinstated as a test match umpire by the International Cricket Council.

Hair had been banned since November 2006 because of his conduct during a test between Pakistan and England that led to the first forfeit in test cricket's 129-year history.

His return comes after he completed a so-called "rehabilitation program" him handed him in September when he agreed to drop a claim of racial discrimination by the ICC.

"(The ICC) believes Darrell Hair is a very good and competent umpire," ICC president-elect David Morgan said of the unanimous decision.

"He will be allocated test matches and one day …

Hope for workers at factory

Employees at the Remploy factory in Aberdeen have been offeredhope from the Scottish Government.

Employment Minister Jim Mather has said he is in favour of findingbusiness for the under-threat factory which employs disabledworkers.

He made his comments at a …

Black Belt

STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM

It's 1974. "Kung Fu Fighting" is number one on the charts, the TV show Kung Fu airs every Thursday on ABC, and Bruce Lee (who died the previous year) is a box-office draw. As a non-white hero battling The Man, Lee's popularity extended to African Americans as well as Asian audiences. For a generation of artists, the kung fu phenomenon of the '70s left an indelible impression: "I was struck by …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Computer is last clue in Ark. Democrat's slaying

A computer used by the gunman who killed a state Democratic Party chairman is the last clue to be investigated in the search for his motive, authorities said Monday.

Timothy Dale Johnson, 50, burst into the Arkansas party headquarters and killed Bill Gwatney on Aug. 13, then was shot and killed by police after a long chase later that day.

Little Rock Police spokesman Lt. Terry Hastings said car keys and a phone number listed on a note found at Johnson's home in Searcy did not turn up any connection between the two men.

"We have everything pretty well figured out except for the computer. ... We've found nothing so far to indicate any motive …

Berghaus, Ruth

Berghaus, Ruth

Berghaus, Ruth, German opera director; b. Dresden, July 2, 1927; d. Zeuthen, Jan. 25, 1996. She received training in dance at the Palucca School in Dresden (1947–50). In 1964 she became a choreographer with the Berliner Ensemble, serving as its Intendant (1971–77). She garnered notoriety as an opera director at the Berlin State Opera with her staging of II barbiere di Siviglia. From 1980 to 1987 she was an opera director at the Frankfurt am Main Opera, where she oversaw …

Ebert's Little Movie Glossary

Snicker-Snack Effect In horror movies, whenever we see a knife with a big shiny …

Paris readies electric car sharing program

VAUCRESSON, France (AP) — The City of Light is preparing to go live with what aims to be one of the world's largest electric car-sharing schemes.

Organizers say Autolib' — named after Paris' four-year-old Velib' bike-sharing system — will begin a two-month testing phase Sunday, before full-scale operations begin Dec. 5.

At first, only 250 of the four-seat "Bluecars" developed by the French Groupe Bollore and the …

Stocks set for modest gains as futures rise

Stock futures are pointing to a higher opening Monday after members of the Group of 20 nations pledged to cut budget deficits.

The modest gains come ahead of a big week of domestic economic data as well, culminating with the key monthly jobs report due out Friday. Investors will want to see private sector job growth because any signs of hiring would likely add confidence that the economy is improving. Economic reports in recent months have painted a mixed picture about the pace of a recovery.

That has led some leaders to push for new stimulus measures to bolster growth, though a jump in government spending would make it difficult to control deficits.

Jamison 'Reminiscin" about love and jazz at the Wang

During rehearsals for "Reminiscin'," dancers Clifton Brown and Boston native Kirven Boyd execute a pas de deux that says as much about the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (AAADT) as practically all the artides about the illustrious company.

"Clifton, who is six feet, is flying through the air. He lifts Kervin, who is about 5'9'', over his shoulders, and Kervin's legs clamped around Clifton's torso. I say, 'Reverse it.' But before I can add the next phrase, Kirven has Clifton above his head! Not only is it beautiful because the two of them are wonderful dancers, but the moment is a wonderful expression of how any Ailey dancer is willing to strech themselves during the creative …

Israel delays transfer of armored vehicles to Palestinians

Israel has held up the transfer of 25 Russian armored vehicles to Palestinian police in the West Bank, because the Palestinians want to have them mounted with machine guns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said Monday.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert approved the shipment two weeks ago over the objections of his own security forces, in an effort to bolster Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ahead of last week's U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace conference.

But the Israeli security officials said Monday that the shipment has been delayed because the Palestinians want to equip the vehicles with guns. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not …

Things to do

GROWING UP ORGANICALLY

"Kids learn about plants, gardening and the importance of nature in a hands-on environment," said Timothy J. Mitchell, general superintendent of the Chicago Park District. The Park District offers programs for after-school, summer and fall sessions. The Harvest Garden program teaches 8- to 12-year-olds how to eat healthier by growing and harvesting their own vegetables.

Where: 16 parks in Chicago

More information: For the list of parks and registration, see www.chicagoparkdistrict.com or call (312) 742-4786.

MOM WILL LOVE IT

Surprise her with a gift of a tree peony from Klehm's Song Sparrow Farm and Nursery. Hurry up and place …

The Parcel as a Whole: A Presumptive Structural Approach for Determining When the Government Has Gone Too Far*

"The DENOMINATOR is the number which shows into how many parts a thing has been divided .... The NUMERATOR is the number which shows how many parts, expressed by the denominator, are taken."1

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1968, the owners of the Grand Central Terminal in New York City submitted a proposal to build a high-rise over their existing property.2 The City of New York, under a historic preservation regulation, refused to let the property owners continue with construction because of fears that the plan would destroy the historic architecture of the building. As a result, the building owners brought an inverse condemnation suit.3 In determining how to analyze the significance of …

HOME LISTENING: It's new album season in Boise; Piso Mojado - Piso Mojado // Central Boise Library - Airwave Cycle // Nada Brahma - Nada Brahma // Vivisection Syndicate - Kansas She Said // Anjahl - Fallen // Lloyd - Lloyd

Piso Mojado--Piso Mojado

Piso Mojado just released their first full-length album. There's only one song on it, but it's over 30 minutes long. It's a self-titled album, sort of. There is an arrangement of strange numbers on the cover and it might be a secret code. The code might symbolize the mental gymnastics needed to work out the (at least) 27 parts of the song. Lead guitarist and singer, Joe Horn describes the band's style is "Math Prog. Rock with a hint of Waylon Jennings." The math is there. They can do complex equations with the formulas used to put the song together. But, please do not assume that the music isn't in perfect harmony with itself. That is the Tao of Piso Mojado.

The band manages to keep one song interesting for half an hour. The song is full of choruses and verses bobbing and weaving through each other, all coming from this one great source.

The song is full of differing tempos, intense volume contrast and multiple changes in rhythm and melody. All the while, the song is linked by a repeating theme. Their style changes from segment to segment, but always keeps a distinctive feeling. All the guys in the band have their own opinion about Piso Mojado's unique sound. After several pitchers of beer at Cricket's, Thomas Brown, Piso Mojado's bassist, explains the music in historical terms. He compares their vision to that of the Baroque. "Baroque music was really rhythmic and complicated. It was dependent upon intricate rhythms and melodies." Drummer Shane Brown added, "We do have a lot of melodies." Tom Brown continued "... and harmonies. They imitated machines in Baroque music. We imitate computers." Horn popped off with, "or Def Lepard."

The members of the band come from garage rock and punk roots--except for Todd Plum, rhythm guitar player who grew up around a Country Western band and picked up a guitar, at his dad's prodding, at age eight. Plum has great versatility and adds a lot of depth to the music. Horn can scream like none other. He can serenade and he can tell a story. He uses some ninja vocal techniques, pouncing gracefully from the calm and screaming from his guts. Horn admitted that he began singing when he was one. "I was also in Kiwanas choir and I'd sing like a little bird."

Underlying all of this is a rhythm section so tight that discerning different instruments is sometimes tough. The bass thumps along, twisting the rhythm at will and the drums stand out. Sometimes, the guitar blares and Horn screams about attacking "Jack the Machinist" with a staple gun. Sometimes, it stands alone a with simple ditty about stir fry during a loose, impromptu cover of "The Passenger" by Iggy Pop. Several times Piso Mojado's one song returns to a segment about hypochondria. Horn becomes excited, screams violently and perfectly on key and the revolution occurs repeatedly, each time gaining depth and breadth, until the whole album climaxes. Horn expels his soul through his lungs as he insists, "THIS ISN'T OVER YET!" several times. And then it ends.

Central Boise Library--Airwave Cycle

Airwave Cycle is an instant Boise classic. Twelve potent portions of brain candy. Sam Counsil, lead singer and keyboardist explained that Airwave Cycle has a theme. It's all about human relations, communication between lovers, friends and relatives. It's about the static between understanding and confusion. The drawing of the bike on the cover represents an "airwave cycle," too. The album consists of three movements.

It begins with the computer voice from a Commidor 64, "Start Transmission." A young, trained voice pops in. Counsil sings and a piano riff hops along. The little girl back up vocals of Andrea Berical chime, "airwaves! airwaves!" The progressive pop of Central Boise Library is as progressive as it is pop. Counsil explained that his influences are the "holy cosmic formation of a five-pointed star," including: 1. The Beatles 2. The Beach Boys 3. Frank Zappa 4. Pink Floyd 5. Miles Davis. And these influences are all there in the music. The pop hook, the back-up singing, the strange slant on melody, the simplicity, the phrasing.

The first movement ends in a cover of The Beatles' "Only a Northern Song," designated, "Only a Boise Song." The first movement is the beginning of a story, a change happens, things become cloudy and misunderstood. Communication is breaking down.

The next movement begins with MC Commidor 64 and "Romantic Dysfunction." The next few songs punctuate misunderstandings. The catchiest song in the movement is "Don't (Fall Down and) Spin Away." But, on "Cousin Martha" a duet between Counsil and Berical adds a nice conversational touch to the story about a trip to San Francisco and a misunderstanding between cousins. The upbeat verses and Lorie Brommand's guitar strumming bring to mind a go-go dancer wearing dayglo yellow. Everything is punctuated by the sharp drumming `a la Aaron Nattall. A story unfolds in an unconventional form as Counsil rambles a bit about Martha and cartoons. The second movement ends with the song "A Flying Fly." The Zappa influence comes through. It sounds a bit like a Native American war song, plus added pop.

Oddly, the last movement begins with a brilliant cover of a Zappa song, "I'm the Slime." Fittingly, the song is about television and the corrosion of humanity. Counsil sounds exactly like Zappa. It's uncanny. The band jams and the keyboards sound like an organ. The best part is the inclusion of MC Commidor singing like the giddy little computer that it is. Central Boise Library wraps up their musical commentary on human relations with a cover of "Coming Down" by The United States of America. And in the end it becomes clear that you just took a fantastic trip through airwaves and TV signals and had a disconnected, distorted, bird's eye view of modern communication via Central Boise Library.

Nada Brahma--Nada Brahma

Local world music gurus, Nada Brahma, have emerged from the studio bearing a 12-song album. The music is beautiful and groovy, it's organic and electric, it's finger picking on a sitar and jamming on the mandolin. It's ambient and trancelike, it's rockin,' pure funk.

"Uhuru" conjures the blackest magical sky, like a carpet held up by the stars; it rolls out slowly like a band of nomads wandering across the landscape. Chimes cast a spell and hand drums, like a camel in the desert, keep the story rolling along. Brad Nelson, guitarist, oud and sitar player, begins chanting like a monk and singing about wandering. The sitar tells an eerie tale of snakes and the African plains. If you've ever listened to Dead Can Dance, the sound is similar.

"Sometimes I wanna be alone." The song "Sometimes" captures the sentiment. The freedom of isolation, the joy of knowing one's self, the expression of self-realization. In keeping with the theme, the sitar breaks out alone and two voices speak of independence. The song is more mantra than groove.

"Two Fingers" starts out with a swing beat, and it really swings. In Squirrel Nut Zippers fashion Nada Brahma weaves a story about two notorious fingers, picking the guitar, "the sweetest sound," as Nelson picks the guitar and the bass thumps. It makes you want to jump. Then, the music stops just when you wish it would keep going, but only for a moment, long enough to consciously realize what a great song "Two Fingers" is, and then, in full force, it comes back swinging.

As if the music wasn't enough, bassist and mandolin master, Scott Tyler, came up with the great title to this bluegrass breakdown, "Sven the Groovy Viking." Allegedly, the song made Tyler dream of a Viking ship rowing on the high seas, fast and furious, and then, calm and tranquil. Tyler's mandolin picks out all of the tiniest details of the Seven Seas Sven sails from Scandinavia. The moss on the rocks of the distant shore, the sea gulls calling out and the echo of the waves returning their call, then, CRASH, the wind picks up and the sailors' hair becomes a flag of loyalty to the sea, the waves toss and rise and the music testifies.

"Sierra de la Luna" is a good example of Nada Brahma's own brand of rock. The guitar wails and the boys chant, "Sierra de la Luna." The song was written for didgeridoo by Aaron Maynard's daughter, Sierra. Nelson explained that Nada Brahma has begun to play more rock "out of necessity." They needed "hotter dance stuff." Guess it's always a good thing if you gotta rock. The album rocks as much as it soothes.

Vivisection Syndicate--Kansas She Said

Thomas Paul, member of the now-defunct Clock, is Vivisection Syndicate. Kansas She Said has been called "eclectic" and that is the album in a nutshell. The album ranges from bluegrass ballads to 30-second hardcore punk. Paul covers "Dress," the Madonna song, and writes soundtrack music for strange movies. There is great jazz piano in this album, as well as lounge music fit for any slinky bouffant waif in polyester sipping a martini. Paul calls this an album of "B-sides." They are old songs stuck in his head that had to come out, and we're glad they did.

The album starts out with a hoedown of sorts. "Sutures" is the introduction to this roller coaster of musical expression. Paul explained that he grew up in one of those families we all wish we were a part of, a family of musicians who would all sit around during the holidays and jam. Paul picked up a guitar when he was 11. The bluegrass influence is original, but Paul has done an excellent job escaping the confines of traditional music. The second song on the album is "punch you in the face" punk that comes swinging out of left field. Then, in keeping with the "Thomas Paul Variety Show," the third song sounds like the theme from a Bela Lugosi flick. Paul explains the mysterious and hallucinatory "Ginastera" is part of a symphony by Alberto Ginastera, a modern composer from South America. The entire album carries on this way through all 19 of its songs. Some favorites: Catchy tune, "How to Make an American Quit" is true to both pop and bluegrass. The title is a great play on words. It's pretty straight forward, but Paul's voice cracks just right and the guitar strumming is very alive, it almost breathes. It ends with a harmonica out. "Waltz: Cine," great art rock title if ever there was one. Strange, opaque organ playing, you can almost see the ghost at the Hammond, having a ball, 3 a.m. Along with another later track on the album, "Waltz: Cine" was written for a local movie soundtrack, but never used.

"Copper Mines" could almost be done a capella. Paul's double-tracked vocals are strong in this song. They are accompanied by a simple piano. This is Paul's favorite song on the album.

Past an underwater scene with a clarinet, "INTERLUDE (Signal to Noise)" picks up the tempo a bit. Straight jazz, expertly executed, lends a nice change of pace. A moment to collect your thoughts. The song "Tell It Like It Is" comes to mind. There is something reminiscent of MoTown about this song.

In "Wasted," alternative rock meets the Smoky Mountains. Oh, that's because it's a Mazzy Star cover. Paul pulls this song off beautifully with his slow, drawn out vocals.

Paul makes a very interesting tribute to Michael Jackson and later pulls out some of his newer material. These two songs, "Feign" and "Hibernaculum" sound like old Smashing Pumpkins, and there's no way around it. Acoustic trance pop. "Kansas She Said" incorporates some flamenco guitar playing, some downhome blues and a spy song before saying adieu. Eclectic.

Anjahl--Fallen

Tim Hammes is Anjahl. Together with one of Boise's best DJs, DJ Flow, Anjahl has managed to produce a rap album with the style of Dr. Dre and the class of KRS-ONE. Poignant and honest, Hammes raps about his life. He has been writing for many years and found an outlet for his words through music two years ago.

Hammes has lived in Boise most of his life. His raps are about the pain and anger, the love and friendship of his life in Boise. He composes on a keyboard and most of his music is piano music. Flow spins beats and scratches. Flow and Hammes have been working on the album for a year now. And it sounds like it. The music is catchy, but don't let it fool you, it has layers.

Anjahl is all about "real." He doesn't pretend to be anyone he's not. He doesn't do anything he doesn't feel. Hammes explains, "I present it and perform it the way I feel it." Fallen is a rap album. Hammes' style is pretty hardcore. Hard beats and hard raps, but with a sense of grace. He admits it's all about the words. It's the air of confession around the album that makes it such an anomaly. A poet emerges.

"Me and My Crew" is one of the lightest songs on the album. It's all about hangin' and having a good time. Flow makes his existence known a bit more on this song and offers a nice spin session. The bass is real funky.

"U Know I Want U" has all the components of a great summer song--driving down the road with the windows down, bass pumping and sex all over it. The chorus is a conversation between Anjahl and a girl with a phone sex voice. They talk dirty. The bass thumps. It's great.

"Rhyme Wars" is another of Hammes' high-energy songs. Flow is all over this song. The piano line is catchy, but not as catchy as the hook on "Bear Witness," which is the pop classic on Fallen. Almost a Michael Jackson song, plus rap. It's got that "Billy Jean" percussion, and good lyrics--"Bear witness, share my sickness, share my pain ... I'm like silences broke by the sound of silence."

The title track, "Fallen" is the thirteenth and last song on the album. It's about falling from grace and other apocalyptic subjects. It includes coffins, wolves, fairies and eternal darkness. Hammes leaves us with the thought, "Life is just a dragged out mental fight."

Lloyd--Lloyd

Who is Lloyd? We aren't really sure. The name Lloyd has two "L"s in it, though. Micah Sullivan explained, "I've always liked the letter "L," even when I was a kid I used to write the letter "L." Sullivan plays bass for the band Lloyd. Lloyd is a new local band. The members haven't been playing their instruments or playing together for very long, about a year. As viola player, Carrie Quinney explains, "people shouldn't expect refined musicianship. It's raw. It's simple." So, what makes Lloyd worth listening to? Two words: Damon Bradshaw.

To understand Lloyd, one must understand Bradshaw. He is a lot like Eeyore. To say he's a nihilist, a believer in nothing, is an understatement. His sarcasm and scoffing run deep. Bradshaw is the guitarist and singer/songwriter for the trio. The band is his vision, if you will. He is a rather jaded and depressed guy. But, he has a great sense of humor about it all. Here is the beauty: He writes little acoustic ditties about his angst and frustration. Strumming ballads to his enemies. Angry folk songs. He whines like he was born to whine. The overly dramatic lyrics and vocal inflections are hilarious.

"Monkey" is a song about a "bad little monkey." The chorus goes something like, "This bad little monkey's gone wild / but who really cares / who really cares ... Mon ... key ... Mon ... key." It is simple. Each tune has a different chorus. They all strum and bob along in 3/4 time. The lyrics and sarcasm are the key.

"The Law of Thermal Dynamics" is all about what would really happen if one were to float away into space. You know, we all just want to float away sometimes. Well, Bradshaw brings that dream crashing down, all while he strums on his guitar.

"Look at the constellations, now honey, close your eyes ... if you float into space, you'll explode ... just beware the terrors above, because in space, no one can hear you scream."

There are six songs on the album, but "Genuine Bliss" takes the cake. Bradshaw explains that he wrote the song after having sat in his room for days staring at the ceiling playing "The Saddest Song in the World" over and over again. His girlfriend was tired of hearing the sad song and asked him to write something "happy." Well, here it is, the most ironic and sarcastic song in the world. Bradshaw begins, "Genuine Bliss" in a sugary sweet voice, "It's such a beautiful day. Sun beams are on my back. Children and puppies frolicking. Beneath the trees, lovers holding hands." And then comes the chorus, "La la lalalalala la la la ..." And the best line, "Feed the ducks and ride a bike."

The album is short and funny. As Bradshaw noted, the lyrics are "influenced by death metal" and there is a song titled, "Sanctuary of Death."

We'll see you at the big show ...

Photograph (CD cover: ANJAHL - FALLEN)

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

WADA president calls on MLB to test for HGH

World Anti-Doping Agency president John Fahey called on Major League Baseball and its players' union to start testing for human growth hormone.

Fahey said that if they were serious about getting rid of cheats, MLB and the Major League Baseball Players Association should immediately start out-of-competition testing and the collection of blood samples.

"We continue to read statements from the MLB commissioner and MLBPA representatives questioning the appropriateness of implementing blood testing in their league. This is nonsense," Fahey said in a statement. "The blunt reality is that a number of doping substances and methods, including HGH, are currently detectable only through blood testing."

Management and the union say they would accept a validated urine test for HGH and that their science advisers are checking into the accuracy of the blood test for HGH.

Rob Manfred, MLB's executive vice president for labor relations, said WADA is not aware of baseball's efforts and that the sport is "exploring the feasibility of conducting blood testing for HGH in the minor leagues as soon as practical."

"Blood testing in the major leagues is subject to collective bargaining," he said. "We have opened a dialogue on the issue of HGH testing with the major league baseball players."

WADA says the blood test is valid.

"International scientific experts agree that HGH is found in extremely small quantities in urine and that a potential detection method for this substance in urine is years away," Fahey said. "Joint blood and urine testing is the only way to go for sports organizations to ensure that they use proper means to protect the integrity of their sport."

WADA has repeatedly criticized MLB for what it considers inadequate testing.

WADA has been pushing for more testing for HGH after a Britain rugby league player last month became the first athlete suspended for using the hormone.

"The key for effective HGH detection is enhanced use of intelligence and strategic out-of-competition testing," Fahey said.

"If they are serious about getting rid of cheats, the MLB and the MLBPA should listen to those players who supported blood collection in the past few weeks and start implementing a testing program that includes smart out-of-competition testing. Blood sample collection has been conducted for years in many sports around the world without any problem. So why do others still refuse it?"

New union head Michael Weiner said his side still is investigating the blood test.

"We have discussed with the commissioner's office the recent announcement by the UK Anti-Doping Agency, and we look forward to further discussions as we jointly explore how we might strengthen our program as it relates to HGH," he said.

MLB All-Stars defeat Taiwan team 6-4

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Robinson Cano of the New York Yankees and Ty Wigginton of the Colorado Rockies each hit solo home runs Sunday to lead an MLB All-Star team to a 6-4 win over Taiwan and a sweep of their five-game series.

Cano's blast in the third inning and Wigginton's in the seventh helped seal the game in the southern city of Kaohsiung and added to the MLB power display. During the series Michael Morse of the Washington Nationals hit two home runs and the Yankees' Curtis Granderson added a grand slam.

Local hero Chien-Ming Wang of the Nationals was the starting pitcher for Taiwan but left in the third after throwing 45 pitches. He gave up three runs on four hits.

After the game Wang said he was delighted that the MLB players had a chance to visit his native Taiwan.

"I'm really happy," he said. "It's a lot of fun."

Report: U.S. Hits Militants' Somali Base

MOGADISHU, Somalia - U.S. warships bombarded a remote, mountainous village where Islamic militants had set up a base, officials in the northern Somali region of Puntland said Saturday.

The attack from a U.S. destroyer took place late Friday, said Muse Gelle, the regional governor. The extremists had arrived Wednesday by speedboat at the port town of Bargal.

Gelle said the area is a dense thicket, making it difficult for security forces from the semiautonomous republic of Puntland to intervene on its own.

A local radio station quoted Puntland's leader, Ade Muse, as saying that his forces had battled with the extremists for hours before the U.S. ships arrived and used their cannons. Muse said five of his troops were wounded, but that he had no information about casualties among the extremists.

CNN International, quoting a Pentagon official, also reported the U.S. warship's involvement. A Pentagon spokesman told The Associated Press he had no information about the incident.

Somalia's U.N.-backed transitional government was sidelined by a radical Islamic group until Ethiopia's military intervened in December and turned the tide.

Insurgents linked to the Islamic group have vowed to wage an Iraq-style guerrilla war, saying the government is allowing Ethiopia to occupy the country.

The government claimed victory over the insurgents a few weeks ago after battles in Mogadishu that killed at least 1,670 people and drove a fifth of the city's 2 million residents to flee.

Somalia has not had an effective central government since 1991, when warlords ousted longtime dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on one another.

Lawmakers Target House Emissions Plan

WASHINGTON - Several lawmakers said Thursday they would try to prevent a House energy plan that seeks to block California and other states from regulating tailpipe emissions.

During a hearing, several House Democrats joined opposition from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. They said they could not back legislation that would limit California's efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions or the Environmental Protection Agency's ability to regulate them.

"This bill is cutting the legs out from under the states just as they are starting to sprint forward on carbon pollution regulation," said Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass.

Reps. Jane Harman and Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said they support a proposal next week that would attempt to strip away the provision preventing California from regulating the vehicle emissions.

The comments came at the start of a lengthy hearing on a comprehensive energy plan that would propose that the auto industry meet gas mileage standards of at least 36 miles per gallon for passenger cars after 2021 and 30 mpg for trucks after 2024. It would also create a low-carbon fuel standard and push the auto industry to boost their production of vehicles running on alternative fuels such as ethanol.

California has asked the federal government for a waiver for two years to implement a state law that would cut greenhouse gas emissions, mostly carbon dioxide, by 25 percent from cars and 18 percent from sport utility vehicles beginning in 2009. At least 11 other states are ready to follow California's lead.

The House bill, drafted by Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., would prohibit the EPA from issuing a waiver a state would need to impose auto pollution standards if the new requirements are "designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions."

Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., the committee's chairman, said states would be able to set their own requirements, along with separate regulations from the Department of Transportation and the EPA, to create "vast gridlock."

"How many different regulators are we going to be confronted with?" Dingell asked.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and the governors of Arizona, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Washington released a letter to Boucher on Thursday opposing the plan. "Congress must not deny states the right to pursue solutions in the absence of federal policy," they wrote.

Some lawmakers said the bill would also attempt to overturn the findings of a Supreme Court decision in April that said the EPA has the authority to regulate greenhouse gases from cars and trucks. But supporters of the bill said it would preserve the ability of states to regulate toxic air pollutants from motor vehicles.

Boucher, who heads a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee that is developing the plan, has said it is important to have "unified regulations" for sources of carbon dioxide emissions. During Thursday's hearing, he said it would "respond to the regulatory confusion" following the Supreme Court decision.

EUROPE NEWS AT 1800 GMT

UPCOMING FOR WEDNESDAY, DEC. 1:

BRITAIN-WIKILEAKS

LONDON — WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson and journalists attend debate on revelations of the recent WikiLeaks document release at London's Frontline Club. 1900 GMT.

KAZAKHSTAN-OSCE

ASTANA, Kazakhstan — Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe summit to open in the capital of Kazakhstan, which now holds the rotating chairmanship of the 56-nation organization.

MOVED TUESDAY:

RUSSIA-MEDVEDEV ADDRESS

MOSCOW — NATO's failure to build a joint European missile shield with Moscow may force Russia to deploy new offensive weapons and trigger a new arms race, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in a stern warning reflecting the deeply rooted Kremlin distrust of Western intentions. By Mansur Mirovalev. AP Photos.

BRITAIN-ROYAL WEDDING

LONDON — A William and Catherine monogram mug? A pair of hand-crafted swan paperweights? A dainty wedding bell, perhaps? With the array of romantic memorabilia flooding the market, royal fans worldwide don't have to wait till next year to celebrate Prince William's wedding. By SYLVIA HUI. AP Photos.

IRELAND-NEW EMIGRANTS

DUBLIN — Carrying cardboard boxes groaning with crockery and clothes, Kylee O'Brien clears a space at her makeshift market stall and lays out her wares — trappings of a life in Ireland brought to an abrupt end by the country's economic crisis. Thousands are heading overseas, fleeing the debt-wracked country, pushing emigration to a level not seen since Ireland's financial gloom of the 1980s. By David Stringer. AP Photos.

ITALY-POMPEII COLLAPSE

ROME — A stretch of garden wall ringing an ancient house in Pompeii gave way after days of torrential rain, the latest structure to collapse at the popular archaeological site. By Frances D'Emilio. AP Photos.

ITALY-OBIT-MONICELLI

ROME — Deftly mixing comedy with tragedy, director Mario Monicelli laid bare Italy's flaws and sins for a half-century on the screen. In his final script of his own life, he chose a dramatic ending: Plunging off the fifth-floor balcony of a Rome hospital Monday night where he had been admitted several days earlier. By Alessandra Rizzo. AP Photos.

MOLDOVA-ELECTIONS

CHISINAU, Moldova — The future of Moldova's pro-West governing alliance looked bleaker after it failed to gain a strong majority in a parliamentary election and break the political deadlock that has choked one of Europe's poorest countries for more than a year. By Corneliu Rusnac. AP Photo.

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YOUR QUERIES: The Europe Desk in London can be reached at +44 207 427 4300.

Lochte dominates with 2 more golds at world meet

SHANGHAI (AP) — Ryan Lochte rescued the United States from impending defeat in the 4x200-meter freestyle relay at the world championships with a gutty swim after he won the 200 backstroke.

There's not much he hasn't done this week, collecting five medals — four gold — and the only world record so far. That kind of success used to be the domain of Michael Phelps.

Now it's Lochte's world and Phelps is just swimming in his wake.

"If you go by medals alone, I would say yes. It's a definite change of the guard," said American Tyler Clary, third in the 200 back. "The cool thing about swimming is your times speak for themselves. In pretty much every one of his races, he's won it hands down."

Phelps also has five medals, but just one individual gold with two days remaining.

"Unfortunately, Lochte's not doing the fly, so that's a big opening for him," Australia's Geoff Huegill said, laughing.

Lochte carried his teammates in the relay Friday after Phelps and Ricky Berens lost the lead. Lochte trailed France's Fabien Gilot by half a body length until the final 100 meters, when he moved ahead off his second turn.

From there, Lochte increased his lead to nearly two body lengths and cruised into the wall with a time of 7 minutes, 2.67 seconds. The Americans have won the event in every international competition since the 2004 Athens Olympics.

"We had a pretty good fight to keep it," Phelps said. "I don't think there's anybody else we want to have on the end of the relay than Ryan. We all set it up and he brought it home."

In his only final of the night, Phelps led off the relay and was briefly under world-record pace on his opening lap against old rival Paul Biedermann of Germany. Phelps led after 100 meters, then dropped to third while swimming slower than Biedermann on his final two laps.

"I would've liked to have swum a little faster on the leadoff," Phelps said. "But I think I've said that almost every day so far — hopefully with more training I can swim faster."

Peter Vanderkaay restored the Americans' lead before Berens lost it again on the third leg, leaving Lochte to put them back on top.

"Once we hit around the 75 (meter) mark, I knew it was over," Lochte said. "I knew I had a lot of energy left, and I was going to hit that second wall and just go for it."

That's what Lochte did earlier in the 200 back, leading all the way to win by 1.15 seconds over Japan's Ryosuke Irie and regain the title he first won in 2007.

Lochte touched in 1:52.96, giving the United States its seventh consecutive world title in the event. Irie finished in 1:54.11, and Clary took the bronze at 1:54.69.

"I don't think that was a good time for me," Lochte said. "There are some things I got to work on."

Earlier in the meet, Lochte won the 200 free and 200 individual medley, beating Phelps both times. He also set a world record in the 200 IM — the first world mark since high-tech bodysuits were banned 19 months ago.

"I have a lot of confidence, especially what happened last year," said Lochte, who won six golds to Phelps' five at the Pan Pacific championships a year ago.

Earlier, Phelps led the 100 butterfly semifinals in 51.47. He won't be facing Milorad Cavic in Saturday's final. The American-born Serb who nearly spoiled Phelps' bid for eight golds at the Beijing Olympics failed to advance out of the morning heats as he recovers from back surgery.

Lochte's performances highlighted the most successful night yet for the U.S., with Rebecca Soni winning the 200 breaststroke to go with her earlier title in the 100 breast.

After easily moving through the prelims and semifinals, Soni struggled the second half of the race, touching in 2:21.47 to hold off a late rally by Yuliya Efimova of Russia. Efimova took silver in 2:22.22 and Martha McCabe of Canada earned bronze at 2:24.81.

"It felt great the first 100 and then I was trying to hold on at the end," Soni said. "I ran out of gas."

Still, it was a satisfying turnaround from 2009, when Soni was 1.5 seconds ahead of world-record pace halfway through the race and then dropped to fourth on the last lap.

"I try to put that in the past," she said. "I proved I can win the gold medal."

Denmark's Jeanette Ottesen and Aliaksandra Herasimenia of Belarus finished in a dead heat for gold in the 100 freestyle at 53.45 seconds. Ranomi Kromowidjojo of the Netherlands took the bronze at 53.66.

World record holder Britta Steffen dropped out after finishing 16th in Thursday's preliminaries. The German swept both the 50 and 100 free at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and at the worlds two years ago in Rome.

It was the second time in these championships that there was a dead heat for gold, after Camille Lacourt and Jeremy Stravius of France shared the top spot on the podium in the men's 100 backstroke Tuesday.

Olympic champion Kosuke Kitajima of Japan endured a bitter disappointment in the men's 200 breast.

He was on world-record pace with one lap to go, but got overtaken by defending champion Daniel Gyurta of Hungary.

Gyurta finished in 2:08.41, while Kitajima took the silver at 2:08.63. Christian vom Lehn of Germany earned the bronze in 2:09.06.

"It's probably the biggest day of my life because ever since I started taking part in the world championships in 2003, I've tried to catch (Kitajima) and now I've succeeded," Gyurta said.

Earlier, Kitajima was fourth in the 100 breast.

"We had a good, exciting race," he said in a barely audible voice. "Having all these younger swimmers come up will motivate me and challenge me for the Olympics."

Afghan mine clearers rescue artifacts

On a rocky hillside in central Afghanistan, men in visored helmets and protective blue smocks gently scratch the earth for land mines _ or shards of pottery from the sixth century.

Afghanistan is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world. But this valley presents a challenge to deminers because of its history, from Silk Road traders to Buddhists who carved towering statues destroyed by the Taliban.

So deminers here double as amateur archaeologists, protecting the dirt as well as the people who will walk on it. Rather than exploding mines in the ground, the deminers ease them out gently with a strap around the explosive. And they spend as much time excavating bits of pottery or rusted jewelry as mines.

On the hilltop sits a sixth-century citadel called Shahr-i-Ghulghula that archaeologists say shows the transition from Buddhist to Islamic cultures in Central Asia. It's one of eight area spots named World Heritage sites by the U.N.'s cultural and education arm, UNESCO. All are in a "fragile state of conservation," UNESCO says, from abandonment, military action and dynamite explosions.

Usually a deminer can clear about two square meters a day, but here it is slower because artifacts set off metal detectors. A glimpse of a pottery shard can stop work outright while archaeologists are called over. About 100,000 square meters must be cleared by the end of October.

The precision of mine work is good preparation for extracting artifacts, says Sorna Khakzad, a conservationist with UNESCO.

"They are more careful than archaeologists sometimes," Khakzad says.

Many of the sunburned, bearded deminers are proud that they are making their country safer, but say the work at Shahr-i-Ghulghula is equally necessary.

"This place is like gold. This place is a treasure for our country," says Ghulam Dastagir Hairan, 45.

Hairan recently found a bracelet lodged in the dirt of Shahr-i-Ghulgula. He says it was a "great moment to be working." The Islamic-style etching on the bronze bracelet suggests it is from sometime around the 10th century.

Ironically, the mines protected the sites from looters, Khakzad says. Once the mines are cleared, protection falls to the Afghan government. UNESCO will provide advice and money for guards, Khakzad says. But with war still waging, it's unclear how high a priority the fragile sites will be.

Moderate earthquake shakes Colombian capital

A moderate earthquake shook the Colombian capital Saturday afternoon, knocking over furniture in buildings and sending residents running into the streets.

The 5.6-magnitude quake started around 2:20 p.m. (19:20 GMT) and was centered about 30 miles (50 kilometers) southeast of Bogota, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

It struck at a depth of just 6 miles (10 kilometers) and lasted for about 40 seconds.

A number of smaller aftershocks were felt over the next hour.

Many people fled buildings fearing they could collapse and anxiously waited on the streets of Bogota. There were no immediate reports of deaths or major damage.

Phone systems were down briefly and calls to officials went unanswered.

President Alvaro Uribe interrupted a live town hall meeting in the country's southwest to urge Colombians to contact their families.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Canada's unemployment rate hits 6.1 pct

The Canadian economy lost 55,000 jobs in July, the biggest number since February 1991, due mainly to struggling manufacturing and corporate construction industries, a government agency said Friday.

Statistics Canada reported that the July unemployment rate was 6.1 percent, down one-tenth of a percentage point from June, but only because fewer people were in the work force. There were actually 55,000 fewer people working in July in Canada than in the previous month.

"Corporate Canada is beginning to think the worst, and the result has been a summer crop of pink slips," said Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets. "Employment fell a sharper than expected 55,000 in July, a second consecutive decline after months in which hiring was puzzlingly strong relative to output."

Avery said the result of the economy's recent job declines put job creation in the first seven months of the year at its weakest pace since 1992.

Most of the job losses in July came in part-time work and were centered in manufacturing, business building and other support services and educational services mainly in Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island.

The pace of job growth has slowed sharply this year, with gains averaging only 10,000 a month compared with the average monthly gain of 30,000 reported for 2007.

"The Canadian economy is clearly downshifting in response to the downturn in the U.S. and the past run-up in the Canadian dollar," said Michael Gregory of BMO Capital Markets.

The Canadian dollar continued its decline after Friday's employment numbers were released, dropping 1.21 Canadian cents to 93.76 U.S. cents, to the lowest levels its seen since last August.

The only job gains across the country were in accommodation and food services, where 22,000 people were hired.

"The Canadian job boom is over," said James Marple of TD Bank.

He said the drop in the number of people seeking work suggests they have simply become too discouraged to pursue the job hunt.

Gregory said despite the job losses and a string of declines in gross domestic product in recent months, it's too early to talk about the Bank of Canada cutting its key interest rate to provide economic stimulus. Canada's central bank held its overnight rate at 3 percent last month. The country's overnight rate has dropped from 4.5 percent since December, including sharp half-point cuts in March and April.

Central banks in Canada, the United States and Europe have all recently indicated they are concerned about the potential for runaway inflation due to the trickle-down effect of higher energy prices on the economy.

However, crude prices have recently fallen from their record highs and demand for other commodities has cooled amid concerns that the slowdown that began in the United States has spread to other countries.

Marple said he expects to see volatility in the job market in the coming months.

FROM CHICAGO TO COOPERSTOWN

Caption only.

Richards Leads Lightning Past Flyers 5-2

TAMPA, Fla. - Brad Richards had two goals and Vinny Prospal scored his eighth goal of the season to lead the Tampa Bay Lightning past the Philadelphia Flyers 5-2 on Thursday night.

Jason Ward and Michel Ouellet also scored for the Lightning, who tied a franchise record set in 2002 by starting the season 5-0 at home. Tampa Bay is also 12-1 against the Flyers since the start of the 2003-04 season.

Philadelphia got goals from Jeff Carter and Mike Knuble. The Flyers played without left wing Simon Gagne (dizziness) and defenseman Derian Hatcher (sore right knee). Gagne, hit in the head by a shot in Wednesday's 4-3 loss at Florida, might return this weekend.

Prospal made it 3-1 during a power play at 3:38 of the second. He redirected Richards' pass past backup goalie Antero Niittymaki, making his first start this season.

Knuble cut the Flyers' deficit to 3-2 at 3:46 of the third. Philadelphia has lost two in a row after starting the season by winning six of seven.

After a Philadelphia turnover, Ouellet scored to put Tampa Bay ahead 4-2 with 6:34 left in the third. Richards scored an empty-net goal with 1:11 remaining.

Tampa Bay took a 2-1 lead after the first on goals by Ward and Richards, who scored during a power play. Carter picked up his sixth goal this season midway through the period.

Notes:@ The two goals allowed by the Flyers in the first was just second time in 19 periods Philadelphia had given up more than one goal. ... Lightning C Vincent Lecavalier, who led the NHL with 52 goals last season, got a fighting major for the second consecutive game.

Wigan's N'Zogbia arrested over driving test fraud

Wigan forward Charles N'Zogbia has been arrested by police on suspicion of fraud over allegations that he got someone to complete part of his test for a driving license for him.

N'Zogbia was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of fraud by false representation before being released on bail until June 3.

Wigan manager Roberto Martinez says N'Zogbia "has been badly advised and he's made a naive mistake."

Martinez added that the player had "reacted in a very mature way" by cooperating with police.

Serena beats Venus in all-Williams final at MSG

Serena Williams looked up at the rafters after beating her older sister Venus to win the Billie Jean King Cup. Following a short trip to her courtside chair, she walked to the center of the court, held her racquet up and waved to the crowd.

Yes, the world's No. 1 player enjoyed her first tennis tournament at Madison Square Garden.

Serena wore down Venus in a 6-4, 6-3 victory Monday night, wowing the fans with her impressive power as women's tennis returned to the Garden after a nine-year absence.

"Definitely winning in Madison Square Garden, also with Billie Jean and this Cup is just really fun and it being the first time is really cool," said Serena Williams, who took home $400,000 of the $1.2 million purse.

"I'm really excited about that opportunity. Hopefully it will continue to open more doors for women's sports and women's tennis.

The Williams sisters gave the crowd of 12,026 exactly what it wanted by advancing to the championship, but Venus was never the same after she was broken in a marathon game in the first set.

"The crowd was really nice, definitely," said Venus Williams, who won the Mexican Open on Saturday night for her second WTA Tour title in two weeks. "I thought they were rooting for me to get back in and take it to the third, which I couldn't quite do."

The Garden hosted the WTA season-ending championships every year but one from 1977-2000, but the marquee event hasn't been back since. After Roger Federer beat Pete Sampras in a riveting three-setter at MSG last year, four of the top seven women's players in the world agreed to stage their own exhibition at "the world's most famous arena."

Serena Williams shook off an early challenge from seventh-ranked Ana Ivanovic and won 6-3 in the second semifinal after Venus advanced with a 6-4 victory over Jelena Jankovic in the one-night exhibition.

The sisters were tied at 4 in the championship when they engaged in easily the longest game of the night. After nine deuces, Venus dumped a backhand into the net on Serena's eighth break point of the game. Serena then held to take the first set and opened the second with another break as a weary Venus struggled with her serve.

"I just would've loved to have held there," Venus said of the critical stretch in the first set. "That's tennis _ you can't get broke that much. Too many breaks today."

Before the final, former President Bill Clinton, figure skaters Sarah Hughes and Nancy Kerrigan and race car driver Janet Guthrie participated in a tribute to Billie Jean King, who founded the Women's Tennis Association in 1973.

"She has probably done more than any other woman in the world to empower women and educate men," Clinton said.

The Williams sisters were clearly the biggest attraction for the crowd, which braved a winter snowstorm to catch the stars before they come back to the area this summer for the U.S. Open. Many of the fans filed out after Serena won the first set of the championship.

The first semifinal featured solid serving and erratic groundstrokes. Venus Williams got the only break when the third-ranked Jankovic hit a backhand wide and won when the Serb belted a forehand long on match point after Williams failed to put away an overhead.

Serena Williams rallied from 15-40 down to hold serve in the third game of her semifinal, then broke Ivanovic to go up 3-1. Ivanovic earned two more break points in the seventh game but Williams rallied to take a 5-2 lead.

The Billie Jean King Cup was part of "Tennis Night in America," an effort by the U.S. Tennis Association to get youth registered for the sport. More than 750 tennis and community centers were signing up kids for spring and summer leagues.

"Billie Jean King has done so much for the game," Jankovic said. "She's really a true legend in the sport. I think this is a really great tribute to her."

UN: 25 million exposed to arsenic in Bangladesh

The United Nations children's agency urged governments and aid agencies Sunday to act quickly to prevent the sickening of tens of millions of Asians who are at risk of arsenic poisoning because of a lack of safe drinking water.

Odorless and tasteless, arsenic enters water supplies from natural deposits in the ground or from agricultural and industrial waste. Consuming even small amounts over a long period can cause cancer, skin problems, abnormal heart rhythms and death.

Rick Johnston, a UNICEF specialist in water, environment and sanitation, told a meeting on arsenic mitigation in the Bangladeshi capital that arsenic in drinking water already affects more than 137 million people worldwide and that a further 60 million were at high risk. Over 80 percent of them live in Asia, Johnston said.

UNICEF estimates that at least 25 million people in Bangladesh are exposed to arsenic contamination in their drinking water, Johnston said on the sidelines of the UNICEF-sponsored five-day meeting.

He said he could not estimate how many people died every year because of exposure to the chemical.

"This is a very serious issue. It needs more efforts," Johnston said.

Experts from 12 Asian countries affected by arsenic in groundwater are attending the meeting to share their knowledge and experience. They discussed how governments and aid agencies can work together to provide safe drinking water for all, Johnston said.

Millions of dollars have been spent on providing safe drinking water since arsenic was first discovered in groundwater in Bangladesh in the 1990s. Yet most people in the country of 150 million still depend on wells for their drinking water, and about 80 percent of wells in more than 8,000 Bangladeshi villages are highly contaminated, according to UNICEF.

"It is painful for me to speak of arsenic in Bangladesh, because of the scale of the problem," Carel de Rooy, who heads UNICEF in Dhaka, told the meeting.

De Rooy said Bangladesh's government needed to spend about $300 million to ensure the country meets its target of safe drinking water for all by 2011.

Bangladesh is home to UNICEF's largest arsenic mitigation program, which installs arsenic-free water points and helps the government raise awareness about the dangers of drinking groundwater and how to locate safe wells.

Bangladesh's Department of Public Health and Engineering said it would install 21,000 new arsenic-free water points over five years under a plan funded by Britain's Department for International Development.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Computer glitch causes widespread air delays in US

A problem with the system that collects airlines' flight plans caused widespread flight cancellations and delays across the U.S. Thursday. It was the second time in 15 months that a glitch in the flight plan system caused delays.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said she doesn't know how many flights are being affected or when the problem will be resolved.

Another FAA spokesperson, Paul Takemoto, said the problem started between 5:15 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. EST (1015 and 1030 GMT). The outage is affecting mostly flight plans but also traffic management, such as ground stops and ground delays, he said.

Regarding flight plans, airplane dispatchers are now sending plans to controllers and controllers in turn are entering them into computers manually, he said.

"It's slowing everything down. We don't know yet what the impact on delays will be," Takemoto said.

An AirTran Airways spokesman said there's no danger to flights in the air, and flights are still taking off and landing.

However, spokesman Christopher White said flight plans must now be loaded manually because of a malfunction with the automated system.

"Everything is safe in the air," White said.

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest airport, has been particularly affected.

AirTran had canceled 22 flights and dozens more flights were delayed as of 8 a.m. EST (0100 GMT). Delta Air Lines also has been affected.

The FAA said in a statement that it is having a problem processing flight plan information.

"We are investigating the cause of the problem," the agency said. "We are processing flight plans manually and expect some delays. We have radar coverage and communications with planes."

Passengers are being asked to check the status of their flights online before going to airports.

Only minor delays were being reported at metropolitan New York City area airports, according to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

Flight plans are collected by the FAA for traffic nationwide at two centers _ one in the Salt Lake City area and the other in the Atlanta area, Bergen said. She did not know which center was affected Thursday.

In August 2008, a software malfunction delayed hundreds of flights around the country.

In that episode, the Northeast was hardest hit by the delays because of a glitch at the Hampton, Georgia, facility that processes flight plans for the eastern half of the U.S.

The FAA said at that time the source of the computer software malfunction was a "packet switch" that "failed due to a database mismatch."

Quinn: Probe of Blago hires still alive

Despite no charges yet filed, a federal probe into alleged hiring fraud under impeached ex-Gov. Rod Blagojevich remains active, Gov. Quinn's office confirmed Monday.

The disclosure came after Democratic gubernatorial candidate Dan Hynes attacked Quinn for not adhering to his pledge to ''fumigate'' state government by purging the payroll of dozens of Blagojevich holdovers whose hiring records were subpoenaed by federal investigators since 2005.

The Chicago Sun-Times last week reported that at least 70 Blagojevich hires remain in their government jobs after having their personnel records subpoenaed.

All in that group had political sponsors, the Sun-Times reported, …

Monday, March 5, 2012

Big 12 revenue sharing approved: ; Conference still could lose Missouri to SEC

Big 12 university leaders agreed to equally share the wealth fromthe conference's most lucrative television deals if its membersagree to lock those top-tier TV rights into the league for at leastsix years.

The league's announcement Monday was an encouraging sign for thelong-term health of the conference, but it is no done deal.

Missouri is considering leaving the Big 12, possibly for theSoutheastern Conference, and the university's Board of Curators isscheduled to meet today in St. Louis.

Interim Big 12 Commissioner Chuck Neinas hopes the approval bythe presidents and chancellors of equal revenue sharing and a grantof tier-one and tier-two TV …

New York Metro McDonald's Beefs Up Snacking Options With New Mac Snack Wrap.

Today, New York Metro McDonald's(R) restaurants debuted the Mac Snack Wrap, a new addition to the Snack Wrap line that combines the delicious flavor of a classic Big Mac(R) sandwich in a tortilla, which can be easily eaten on the go. Wrapped in a soft tortilla, the Mac Snack Wrap is packed with 100 percent USDA-inspected beef, lettuce, onions, pickles, American cheese and Big Mac special sauce. Now customers have even more choices to customize their meal when dining at their local McDonald's location.

"Customers love the value and portability of McDonald's chicken Snack Wrap options. We are confident that combining the one-of-a-kind taste of the Big Mac sandwich with …

COYLE SPRINGS NAMES.(SPORTS)

Alexis Coyle scored the game's only goal in the second half as the Academy of Holy Names trimmed Mechanicville 1-0 Saturday in a girls' Colonial Council soccer match.

The win lifted Holy Names to 3-1 and Mechanicville fell to 2-1 in league and 4-1 overall.

Kate Mammen had three saves for Holy Names and Laura Morcone stopped 14 shots for the Red Raiders. MORE GIRLS' SOCCER SUBURBAN

Saratoga 2, Guilderland 1: Bethany Lofferdo scored the tying goal and Jen Frisch tallied the game winner with 18 minutes left for the Blue Streaks, who also got nine saves from goalie Kathryn Phillips. The Lady Dutchmen (1-2, 3-3) got a goal from Amy Loughridge and 20 …

Stepping stones to success.(10 Women To Watch In Media)(a profile of NBC Studios' Angela Bromstad)(Biography)

BROADCAST NETWORKS

NBC STUDIOS

Angela Bromstad

TITLE: Executive vice president, NBC Studios

BORN: Aug. 26, 1961, Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif.

EDUCATION: BA, theater, Southern Methodist University, 1983

CAREER BUILDER: "I ended up spending a lot of time in Canada and wanted to stay in town. Someone called me from the network and said Lindy DeKoven was hiring. I called on Thursday, they sent me a package on Friday, I filled it on Monday, and I was hired on Tuesday."

Angela Bromstad knew what she wanted to do, and so, after graduating from Southern Methodist University, she moved to Los Angeles, checked the …

JAMES DRAKE

CHICAGO

JAMES DRAKE

RHONA HOFFMAN GALLERY

Like a latter-day Bernini lost in the deserts of the American Southwest, James Drake, in his recent work, explores the stark and savage milieu of West Texas while assembling a romanticized allegorical overview of his life and oeuvre, treating both with an effusive period sensibility. Selected from his series "City of Tells," 2.001- (shown earlier in 2005 at SITE Santa Fe, in the city where Drake now lives and works), this video and sequence of large charcoal drawings are reminiscent of the Italian high Baroque in their extraordinary lushess. Drake uses charcoal in a broad and almost painterly manner, luxuriating in bravura …

Snake River Physa Snail

Snake River Physa Snail

Physa natricina

Status Endangered
Listed December 14, 1992
Family Physidae (Physa)
Description Amber to brown color snails with a thin, oval-shaped shell that spirals to the left.
Habitat Free-flowing cool spring alcoves.
Food Plant debris or diatoms.
Reproduction Copulation after a courtship ritual …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Intruder alert in Ballymena.

In the first instance, burglars subjected a 64-year-old man to a terrifying ordeal after forcing open a door at his home in Clarence Street off the Cullybackey Road on the evening of Friday, November 20.
Once inside, they assaulted the man, who suffered facial injuries and concussion, and demanded cash.

They later left taking the man's mobile phone and a number of decorative plates.

Almost one week later, in a similar incident which occurred around 2:15 am on Wednesday November 25, a house at Dicksons Hill at the top of Princes Street, was also broken into but it is not believed that anything was taken.

A man arrested in connection with both …

$5M ACTION AGAINST 6 OFFICERS, CITY ALBANY POLICE CASE ENDS IN MISTRIAL.(Local)

Byline: Shirley Armstrong Staff writer

A $5 million civil action against six Albany police officers was declared a mistrial in U.S. District Court late Monday after the jury reported itself deadlocked three times, court officials reported.

Shortly after 10 p.m., Judge Con G. Cholakis called the jury back and asked if they'd made any progress in considering the case of an Arbor Hill couple who accused police of false arrest, use of unreasonable force and violation of their civil rights.

The jury reported it had not, prompting Lanny Walter, attorney for for the plaintiffs, to move for a mistrial, a request joined by Assistant Corporation Counsel John Shea. No date has been set for …

DOROTHY ANGELUS.(CAPITAL REGION)

COLONIE -- Dorothy Daniels Angelus, age 83, formerly of Willett St., Albany died Monday at the Albany County Nursing Home in Colonie. She was born in Ogdensburg, NY and has resided in the Capital District most of her life. She was a graduate of Cornell University and was employed by NY State Department of Taxation as an …

Organometallic chemistry.(Highlights)

Cuprate addition/electrophilic trapping

Electrophilic trapping of enolates generated when organocuprates are added to enones is a common strategy in organic synthesis, But Krische and coworkers argue that use of ketone, ester and nitrile electrophiles in such transformations are unprecedented (J Am Chem Soc 2004, 126, 4528), Reaction 1 shows a nice example in which the original addition reaction is made electrophilic using one of Feringa's monodentate phosphoramidate ligands.

Additions to unsaturated malonates

The specific Feringa ligand used in reaction 1 is not clearly stated in that paper, but it was probably or its enantiomer. The Feringa group …

Colombian rebel deserts with kidnapped 4-year-old

A female guerrilla deserted Colombia's largest rebel army and carried a 4-year-old hostage on a 24-hour jungle trek back to his family, authorities said.

The guerrilla hiked through the jungle with Brian Rincon Arias in her arms to reach a military base in the northeast border town of Arauquita on Tuesday, said Gen. Jose Joaquin Cortes, head of the army's second division, in comments to local media.

The child was kidnapped in June from a nursery school in the city of Cucuta and was placed in the care of the female guerrilla, who was identified only by her nickname, "La Negra."

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was …

Handyman admits killing cop's wife

A neighborhood handyman was charged yesterday with murdering aChicago policeman's wife, who was found beaten to death in thebasement of her South Side home.

Police said Joel Buie, 24, of 1733 E. 74th St., confessed tomurdering Bennie Ervin, 55.

James Delaney, Area 1 violent crimes commander, said Buie hadbeen questioned after neighbors reported seeing him talking to Mrs.Ervin Friday, but had been …

New findings from Ain Shams University describe advances in thrombocytopenic purpura in children.

Current study results from the report, 'Intracranial hemorrhage in acute and chronic childhood immune thrombocytopenic purpura over a ten-year period: an Egyptian multicenter study,' have been published. According to a study from Cairo, Egypt, "Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is a rare but major cause of death in immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). The authors reviewed data of 1,840 patient with ITP, from 5 pediatric hematology centers in Egypt from 1997 to 2007, to study the incidence and risk factors of ICH."

"Ten cases of ICH were identified with a median age at presentation of 7.5 years; 4 patients had acute ITP, 2 persistent and 4 chronic. The platelet count was <10 x …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

A STRONG FINISH FOR MVP.(SPORTS)

Byline: BILL CALLEN and TIM WILKIN Staff writers -

TRENTON, N.J. -- It's a safe bet that nine out of 10 women's head coaches in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference are happy to see Manhattan's Siobhan Kilkenny take a hike.

Kilkenny, a senior from Castlebar, Ireland, closed her final season with a flourish, and was the clear choice as Most Valuable Player of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Tournament.

``She's the glue on that team,'' Siena coach Gina Castelli said. ``She came out and played hard. She played a great game, and you could tell she was ready to play us.''

Kilkenny had 19 points, nine rebounds and four steals Sunday. She …

Making the most of convenience.(convenient beverage offerings)(Brief Article)

PURCHASE, N.Y. -- Chain drug retailers and suppliers have "a huge opportunity" to make shoppers aware of drug stores' convenient beverage offerings, according to a PepsiCo Inc. executive.

Beverages have traditionally been "underspaced" in the drug class of trade, says PepsiCo national sales director Rand Eyberg. That is primarily because of the size of the stores and the emphasis on such other categories as …

NIreland police arrest 2nd man over cop's killing

DUBLIN (AP) — Northern Ireland police say they have arrested a second suspected IRA dissident over the killing of a policeman and the discovery of a major weapons stockpile.

Police say the 40-year-old man was arrested Thursday as he drove between the County Tyrone towns of Omagh and Ballygawley.

He was taken to the main police interrogation center, where detectives already are questioning …

Bombingham. (fiction reviews).

Bombingham by Anthony Grooms The Free Press, October 2001, $24.00 ISBN 0-743-20558-8

In the war-torn rice fields of Vietnam, GI Walter Lee Burke recalls the other battlefields where his mettle was tested--the streets of Birmingham and his childhood home. As Walter struggles to write a letter to the parents of a fallen fellow soldier, he ponders the meaning of battle. As he writes, Walter recalls the moments in his life that tested his faith, with the hope of gaining some understanding. It is that challenge that is the heart of Anthony Grooms' novel Bombingham.

The book gets its title from the scornful moniker blacks gave to Birmingham in the 1950s and 1960s, …