Thursday, March 15, 2012

Monday, September 29

Today is Monday, September 29, the 273rd day of 2008. There are 93 days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1567 - Second War of Religion begins in France between Huguenots and King Charles IX.

1650 - France's Parliament imposes peace on Bordeaux, which virtually ends second Fronde revolt.

1789 - The U.S. War Department establishes a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.

1829 - London's reorganized police force, which becomes known as Scotland Yard, goes on duty.

1875 - Rebellion in Cuba leads to deterioration of U.S.-Spanish relations.

1911 - Italy declares war on …

State briefs

CEO of credit union admits embezzling

WHEELING - The chief executive officer of a failed northern WestVirginia credit union has pleaded guilty to embezzling almost $9million from the institution.

Bernie D. Metz pleaded guilty Monday to a federal informationcharging her with embezzling from a credit union and moneylaundering.

Acting U.S. Attorney Betsy C. Jividen says Metz embezzled fromthe Center Valley Federal Credit Union in Wheeling and used themoney to finance construction of the Roadworthy Tavern and Resort inWest Liberty. Metz also bought vehicles and paid off family creditcards.

The credit union was liquidated in February 2009 after an auditby …

Immigration Rally Turnout Lower Than '06

LOS ANGELES - Immigration rallies held across the country Tuesday produced only a fraction of the million-plus protesters who turned out last year, as fear about raids and frustration that the marches haven't pushed Congress to pass reform kept many at home.

In Los Angeles, where several hundred thousand turned out last year, about 25,000 attended the first of two scheduled rallies, said police Capt. Andrew Smith, an incident commander. In Chicago, where more than 400,000 swarmed the streets a year earlier, police officials put initial estimates at about 150,000.

Organizers said those who did march felt a sense of urgency to keep immigration reform from getting pushed to …

Palmeiras, Sport Recife draw 1-1

A 10-man Sport Recife rallied and held on to a 1-1 draw against Palmeiras to consolidate its hold on second place in Group 1 of the Copa Libertadores on Wednesday.

Palmeiras striker Keirrison converted a penalty kick in the 14th minute and Wilson equalized in the 45th, only to be immediately red-carded for lifting his jersey to commemorate.

Palmeiras was frequently on attack, while Sport played a more defensive game, strongly …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Biker who called 911 died hours before he was found

Staff Reporter

A motorcyclist who made two frantic 911 calls on his cell phoneafter crashing in rural McHenry County died several hours before hewas found by rescuers, officials said Wednesday.

Kurt Regnier, 47, suffered severe head, neck and chest injurieswhen his motorcycle swerved off the road early July 9 and crashedinto a cornfield, officials said during an inquest into his death.

'WE DID ALL WE COULD'

Regnier made two 911 calls pleading for help, but was unable totell rescuers where he was. Authorities also weren't able to trackthe cell phone calls because McHenry County lacks upgraded 911technology and …

Memoria del amor que no quiso nacer

Y NACIO UN POEMA

Con la ternura dolorosa que deja el sue�o roto de una maternidad frustrada, el poeta uruguayo Roberto Ib��ez retorna el camino humanistico. Lo hace con maestr�a, con un retorno a la lira garcilasiana, para que su expresi�n moderna se afiance en un modelo cl�sico que nunca morir�.

Por Roberto Ib��ez

Amor, amor no llores

tu soledad de ruise�or con fr�o.

Prisionero entre flores

tu p�lido nav�o

herir no quiere el delicado r�o.

Amor, amor, el viento

-cuyo fresco rel�mpago de aroma

fino como el …

France's Sarkozy says he is ready to personally try to secure release of hostage in Colombia

France's president says he is ready if necessary to go personally to Colombia to try to secure the release of ailing hostage Ingrid Betancourt, who is being held by rebels there.

Nicolas Sarkozy urged the Colombian rebels to free Betancourt without delay. He said it was a matter of life or death. He was speaking Thursday, on a visit to …

Searching For Niches Finally, some sort of differentiation is taking place among the top Indian IT players. That, and a more global footprint, is what they will need to blast into the next growth trajectory.

On May 30, the top management of India's largest software exporterTata Consultancy Services (TCS) found itself thousands of kilometresaway from their Mumbai headquarters, at Guadalajara, the capital ofthe Mexican state of Jalisco and the economic nerve centre of theSouth American country. Guadalajara, often referred to as the City ofRoses, would become yet another location for TCS' rapidly expandingnetwork of global centres, as the company--and, indeed, India'srapidly growing it industry--scouts for locations beyond India toexpand its operations.

Nothing surprising, one might think. Except that the new centrewasn't just another marketing beachhead for TCS. It was the …

Attending the 42nd annual American Nephrology Nurses Association (ANNA) conference, Boston, Massachusetts, March 27-30, 2011

I had the pleasure of attending the 42nd annual American Nephrology Nurses Association (ANNA) conference held in Boston, March 27�euro?30. Boston is a city bursting with American history. Whether walking the Freedom Trail, visiting Fenway Park (home of the Red Sox) or walking through the Boston Common, there is so much to see and do while in Boston. I managed to find time to head down to the local pub where �eurooeeveryone knows your name�euro?�euro*Cheers!

The �eurooebig event�euro? dance party was held in a hotel adjoining the convention centre. Similar to our �eurooeevening of entertainment�euro? it was a lot of fun�euro* it is nice to see that the ANNA members enjoy the …

South Korean prosecutors seek fine for Samsung Heavy over last year's oil spill

South Korean prosecutors are seeking a 30-million-won (US$29,120) fine against Samsung Heavy Industries Co. for its role in the country's worst oil spill last year, an official said Wednesday.

Prosecutors recommended Wednesday that the local court in Seosan also sentence three crew members of a crane-carrying barge and its two tugboats _ all operated by Samsung Heavy _ to three years in jail on charges of polluting the ocean, local prosecutor Park Ha-young said.

The Samsung Heavy barge slammed into the Hong Kong-registered tanker Hebei Spirit on Dec. 7, releasing 78,920 barrels of oil into South Korea's western coastal waters. The spill jeopardized the …

For several years, the house of Mark Traisman is a cat lovers meeting place. This harmonious community is growing year after year, now the Cat Club Assembly comprises 12 clubs, consisting of about seven thousand animals and their masters. A head of this "restless household" is Mark Traisman, the President of the Assembly, the felinologist with a great experience.


He knows exactly what a cat wants, and he is willing to share his knowledge with the owners of four-footed. If somebody had not yet purchased a furry friend, he says to think about whether they really need it. Maybe it's the desire to show off the rare breed of pet to friends. "The prestige should not be a criterion for the acquisition of an animal”, says Mark Traysman. “Cats should be understood and loved as children then the house will be comfortable for everyone – both animals and their owners."
To make the right choice of breed, you need to know the specifics of each of them. For example, in the eastern group of cats (including Siamese, Orientals, etc.), the excitation predominates over inhibition. The owners need to have strong nerves with such a kitty. On the contrary, Persian cats are unusually calm and imperturbable creatures. If the question is who to get - a male or female cat, you again need a piece of advice from a felinologist. "As a congregatory species, male cats tend to be leaders”, explains Mark Traisman, “he likes communication, can not stand indifference. His "ritual dances" is a way to attract your attention. If you came home, walked by, without stroking him, not addressed to your pet as the first of the household, the male cat may be offended and declare you a "war". The cat would express his protest, performing various small tricks. Female cats are very selfish and not so susceptible to inattention of their owners. They have other worries — to reproduce and raise offspring. If you have a "sweet couple" at home- a male and a female, get on track with your male cat and the female will obey you without question."
Everyone who comes to consult Mark Traisman will receive useful tips and recommendations. "The only field where I do not consult is veterinary medicine”, says the felinologist. “I can not take on such responsibility I suppose the professionals should do it."

Singer comes back to Charleston

Arista Austin recording artist Jeff Black will bring his refinedroots rock back to Charleston tonight.

Black, who appeared on Mountain Stage during the CharlestonSternwheel Regatta Festival, will appear at The Empty Glass at 9:30p.m.

Black has garnered praise for his debut album, "Birmingham …

Evaluation of the Flow-Dialysis Technique for Analysis of Protein-Ligand Interactions: An Experimental and a Monte Carlo Study

ABSTRACT Flow dialysis has found widespread use in determining the dissociation constant (K^sub D^) of a protein-ligand interaction or the amount of available binding sites (E^sub 0^). This method has the potency to measure both these parameters in a single experiment and in this article a method to measure simultaneously the K^sub D^ and E^sub 0^ is presented, together with an extensive error analysis of the method. The flow-dialysis technique is experimentally simple to perform. However, a number of practical aspects of this method can have a large impact on the outcome of K^sub D^ and E^sub 0^. We have investigated all sources of significant systematic and random errors, using the …

Podsednik hit leads White Sox past Dodgers

Scott Podsednik lined a two-out RBI single in front of diving center fielder Matt Kemp in the 13th inning to give the Chicago White Sox a 6-5 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday.

It was the second game-ending hit in two weeks for Podsednik, who was signed to a minor league contract in April after Colorado cut him, and it gave the White Sox consecutive home victories for the first time since May 22-23.

Podsednik's hit came against Jeff Weaver (4-2) with the bases loaded.

The Dodgers, whose 47-26 record is the best in baseball, lost their first road series in nearly two months.

Working in his third inning of relief, Weaver opened the 13th by giving up singles to Paul Konerko and A.J. Pierzynski. After intentionally walking Chris Getz, Weaver retired Josh Fields and DeWayne Wise on shallow flies.

Podsednik, a star for Chicago's 2005 championship team who was let go after an injury-filled '07 season, worked the count to 2-2 before his winning hit. He had snapped an 0-for-15 slump with a 12th-inning single.

Aaron Poreda (1-0), a top White Sox prospect who was making his fourth appearance after being called up from Double-A Birmingham, worked a perfect 13th. Fellow relievers Scott Linebrink, Matt Thornton, Bobby Jenks and Octavio Dotel combined for five scoreless innings.

Two RBIs each by Orlando Hudson and Mark Loretta staked Chad Billingsley to a 4-0 fifth-inning lead as the Dodgers ace attempted to become the NL's first 10-game winner.

But Konerko led off the fifth with a homer, Wise added an RBI triple and Pierzynski put Chicago ahead with a three-run homer in the sixth. Billingsley, who gave up a season-high five earned runs in six innings, had allowed only three homers in his first 15 starts.

The Dodgers made it 5-all in the seventh when Russell Martin reached on shortstop Alexei Ramirez's throwing error, went to third on Hudson's third single of the game and scored on Casey Blake's grounder.

White Sox starter Clayton Richards lasted only 4 1-3 innings, allowing four runs on six hits and hitting three batters.

NOTES: Konerko has homered in three straight games and has a 10-game hitting streak. ... Billingsley has pitched at least six innings in 15 of his 16 starts. ... Kemp went 0 for 6 with four strikeouts. ... The White Sox wore throwback uniforms to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1959 team, which won the AL pennant before losing to the Dodgers in the World Series.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Cubs' loss a bummer for Zimmer // Vows change after Sanderson is chased

PHILLIES 6 CUBS 0

PHILADELPHIA The Cubs are trying to keep Montreal withinshooting distance, but it is two ex-Expos who are firing the biggestblanks.

Scott Sanderson and Andre Dawson continued their slumpsWednesday night as Philadelphia's Ken Howell pitched his first bigleague shutout and complete game in a 6-0 victory.

The loss put the Cubs three games behind the Expos and cloudedthe future of Sanderson, who allowed five runs in only 3 1/3 innings.In his previous start, Sanderson allowed five runs in 2 1/3 innings.

"I ain't satisfied with Sanderson and (Paul) Kilgus. Two tofour innings ain't going to cut it," Zimmer said. "It's killing us.

"I've got to do something about it and I'm going to. I justdon't know what it will be yet.

"I might come up with a four-man rotation. We can't stay in therace going this way. I'm not going to sit back. I'm going to dosomething about it very shortly. I'm not going to watch us go downthe drain when we still have a chance."

Kilgus will make his scheduled start Sunday, but Sanderson couldbe shuttled back to the bullpen.

Sanderson didn't seem overly surprised at the news.

"He's the manager," Sanderson said. "I've had two bad games in arow, I'll agree with that.

"But before that, I thought I threw a good game against theGiants (seven innings, two runs)."

Wednesday's news was made worse by the continued problems ofright fielder Dawson, who was 0-for-3 with two strikeouts. Dawsonhas not had a hit in his last 22 at-bats and is hitting only .125(5-for-40) since he sat out with a sore knee on the West Coast.

Dawson keeps playing despite the slump. He had thesecond-lowest batting average (not counting the pitcher) inWednesday's Cub lineup.

"He's a very key man in our lineup," Zimmer said. "The only timeI want to take him out is to give him a day off because of his legs.

"But it would be nice if he got in one of his little (hot)streaks. I'm sure that's what he's trying to do."

"I feel good physically most of it's probably mental," Dawsonsaid. "It seems the more I try to bear down, the worse it gets. Itseems borderline calls go against you and then you start swinging atborderline pitches."

Always a streak hitter, Dawson isn't used to one a slump thisdeep.

"I've had similar ones. I can't explain it," he said. "I cansee not hitting home runs, but not getting hits at all. Somewherealong the line you've got to get a lucky one."

The slump is beginning to get to Dawson, who twice in thisseries has thrown his bat after making an out. On Wednesday, he madea waving hand motion at first base umpire Greg Bonin after Boninruled he swung at a third strike.

"I've missed some borderline pitches and I flipped my bat indisgust," he said. "If you're going bad, you miss pitches. Whenyou're going good, you hit it out of the ballpark.

"It's a fine line between between hitting them out and not,"Dawson said. "Somewhere along the line I'm going to come out of it.I'm just glad we're staying close (to Montreal)."

But Montreal seems to be on a pace of its own.

And the Cubs are struggling to keep up. They certainlystruggled against Howell Wednesday, getting only three singles.

Howell is 6-2 against the Cubs in his career, but 21-34 againsteveryone else.

"The whole night belonged to Howell. He overmatched us," Zimmersaid. "He just had us eating out of his hand. We might have stayeduntil midnight to get a run the way he pitched."

Sanderson (9-7) found deep trouble after retiring the firstseven Phillies. Five of the last eight batters he faced reachedbase.

It started in the third inning on bases-empty homers by DickieThon and Lenny Dykstra.

In the fourth, Charlie Hayes doubled home two runners beforeCalvin Schiraldi was summoned. He allowed Sanderson's fifth run andone of his own on Thon's homer, his first two-homer night since 1983.

It left Zimmer simmering.

"I'm going to ask myself a lot of questions in the next day ortwo," he said. "And I'm going to come up with some answers." Box score, Page 107.

Disaster-recovery firms help companies stay afloat

A Bethlehem-based firm will soon open a site in Central Pennsylvania to help companies stay productive in the face of disaster.

DBSi hopes to locate in a 22,000-square-foot office facility near Harrisburg before the end of the year. The building will be equipped with desks, computers, faxes, Internet service anything necessary for companies to remain productive during floods, computer shutdowns or a bigger emergency, such as a terrorist attack.

IBM, SunGard and Hewlett Packard dominate the local disasterrecovery market now, said Bill Bachenberg, DBSi's founder and chief executive officer.

But the Central Pennsylvania area is underserved because the closest emergency sites for local companies are in Philadelphia or New Jersey, Bachenberg said.

"That's a long way for employees to go if something happens," he said.

Bachenberg's 23-year-old company has disaster-recovery subscriptions with more than 100 companies. Many of those are pharmaceutical firms, manufacturers or financial-services companies in eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Washington, D.C. About twothirds of those initiated contracts after Sept. 11, 2001.

Industry analysts predict that disaster-recovery firms will grow steadily in the coming years as more companies become aware of how threats of terrorism, computer viruses or regional disasters such as hurricanes or floods can affect their bottom lines.

Legacy Bank contracts with the Bisys Group Inc. for its computer and software issues. That company, in turn, has subcontracted with a disaster-recovery company in Cherry Hill, N.J., should something unexpected occur at the Susquehanna Township-based bank, said George H. Groves, Legacy's chairman and chief executive officer.

During an emergency about 10 to 15 Legacy employees would go to a temporary New Jersey site, Groves said.

"I don't know (DBSi's) marketing plan, but it seems like a viable industry. it would certainly be easier to get to their site than to Philadelphia or New Jersey," Groves said.

Other companies, like Wirehead Business Technologies in New Cumberland, do not have a disaster plan.

"We're going to be one of those lucky companies that never need a disaster plan," joked Wirehead President Andrew Rill. "It's one of those things that would be great to have, but it's easy to ignore."

Rill would consider such a plan for his 20-employee systems integrator company if it were not too costly. Such a plan makes sense for larger companies that would lose significant revenue if they were closed for a few days, he said.

"We're small. We could go anywhere," Rill said.

Companies that hire disaster-recovery firms typically pay a monthly subscription fee, as welt as a disaster declaration fee, which is charged every time a disaster is declared. There are also daily usage fees charged for every day a client uses the facility during a disaster.

Disaster-recovery contracts usually run for a term of 36 to 60 months, and the monthly subscription fees can range from $1,500 to $100,000, depending on the amount of equipment and technical services needed, according to DBSi.

After Sept. 11, more companies requested disaster-recovery sites outside major metropolitan areas, Bachenberg said. He hopes to draw clients from Philadelphia and New York City to his firm's Harrisburg office.

DBSi also intends to increase marketing efforts to mid-size companies - those with $100 million to $500 million in annual revenue - in Central Pennsylvania.

The disaster-recovery industry began in the mid-1970s with the introduction of several computer backup facilities in the Midwest. Since then, about 15 to 20 companies - which generated $3 billion in subscription fees in 2001 - represent the majority of the hotsite providers, according to DBSi. A hotsite is an alternate facility that has computer, telecommunications and infrastructure for business functions.

SunGard and IBM dominate the national industry today Those companies control more than 70 percent of the market in both revenue and subscriber base.

SunGard has 170 hotsites and 10,000 clients throughout the world. Seven out of 10 Fortune 500 companies are within 50 mites of a SunGard facility said Mike Walsh, the company's marketing and communications director.

SunGard's Harrisburg customers would use a 300-seat facility in Philadelphia.

Walsh said most of the company's clients have saved permanent seats at their emergency location, and the company's hotsites have never been 100 percent filled.

The definition of "disaster" varies by client. Some may consider a computer system malfunction an emergency. Others may turn to a hotsite during the threat of a power outage, such as the one that affected New York City on a Friday in August 2003.

"If that event had happened on the weekend, we probably would have had clients use our sites on Monday because they wanted to make sure they had power," Bachenberg said.

The most common disaster for companies today is equipment failure, Bachenberg said.

Once a firm pays for a disaster-recovery subscription, rehearsals for potential emergencies are important. Most companies practice their disaster-recovery plans at the hotsite locations several times a year, said Walsh and Bachenberg.

During the rehearsals, the clients' equipment is duplicated, and companies' information-technology employees ensure they are able to carry on critical business functions at their off-site location.

"A key component of disaster recovery is to rehearse two or three times a year," Bachenberg said.

Both Bachenberg and Walsh declined to name their local clients because of privacy issues.

Recovery costs

Companies that hire disaster-recovery firms typically pay a monthly subscription fee, as well as a disaster declaration fee, which is charged every time a disaster is declared. There are also daily usage fees charged for every day a client uses the facility during a disaster.

Disaster-recovery contracts usually run for a term of 36 to 60 months, and the monthly subscription fees can range from $1,500 to $100,000, depending on the amount of equipment and technical services needed, reports Bethlehem-based DBSi.

YES, I CAN

Straight talk on balancing the budget

NEW YORK- The federal budget deficit is like the weather. Everybody talks about it; except for Bill Clinton, no one ever does anything about it.

President Barack Obama's bipartisan Fiscal Debt Commission released a draft report that starts out with a problem: even talking about reducing spending is insane when you're in the midst of a depression. Triumphant Republicans say they want to balance the budget. So does Obama. Are they serious? Of course not.

Theoretical budget-balancing exercises help enlighten us about where our tax dollars go. So let's start some slashing.

The 2010 federal budget shows $3.6 trillion in spending and $2.4 trillion in revenues. Net deficit: $1.2 trillion. It is nearly 13 percent of GDP, the highest since 1943. The goal is to close a $1 .2-trillion budget gap. Can we find at least $1.2 trillion in budget cuts?

Any serious budget cutter has to start with defense: it accounts for 54 percent of discretionary federal spending. Of that 54 percent, 18 percent is debt service on old wars.

That leaves 36 percent, or $1.3 trillion, of which $200 billion a year goes to Afghanistan and Iraq. Let's pull out. We're losing anyway.

New deficit: $1 trillion.

In 2007 Chalmers Johnson wrote a book about the costs of American imperialism. "The worldwide total of U.S. military personnel in 2005, including those based domestically, was 1,840,062 supported by an additional 473,306 Defense Department civil service employees and 203,328 local hires," he wrote. "Its overseas bases, according to the Pentagon, contained 32,327 barracks, hangars, hospitals and other buildings, which it owns, and 16,527 more that it leased. The size of these holdings was recorded in the inventory as covering 687,347 acres overseas and 29,819,492 acres worldwide, making the Pentagon easily one of the world's largest landlords."

It's time to bring those 2.3 million men and women home. At an average of $140,000 per employee we could save $322 billion annually.

New deficit: $676 billion.

After defense, the other big costs are Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. The obvious place to start is with wealthy recipients. Why should Bill Gates, worth $58 billion, get Social Security or Medicare benefits? Eliminating benefits for the approximately 1 percent of families older than 65 who earn more than $100,000 a year could save $150 billion.

New deficit: $526 billion.

Now let's talk about the other side of the equation: income. How can the U.S. government scare up some extra cash?

Allowing the Bush tax cuts for the richest 3 percent of Americans to expire on schedule would bring in $70 billion a year.

New deficit: $456 billion.

When it comes to revenues, you have to go where the money is: the wealthy.

Despite the economy, there are still 2 million households earning a whopping $250,000 or more per year. (Their average income is $435,000.) If we were to increase these superrich Americans' income tax rate from 35 to 50 percent, we'd bring in an extra $131 billion. If we raised it back to 91 percent - the rate during the boom years between 1 950 to 1 963 - the Treasury would collect $487 billion.

Budget surplus: $31 billion. And we haven't started on corporate taxes.

Cavs Beat Nets for 4th Win in 5 Nights

CLEVELAND - LeBron James scored 19 points and added a season-high 13 rebounds, helping the Cleveland Cavaliers cap their most successful week in nearly 14 years with a 96-91 victory over the New Jersey Nets on Saturday night.

By beating San Antonio, Boston, Milwaukee and New Jersey since Tuesday, the Cavaliers have won four games in five nights for the first time since Feb. 2-6, 1993. It's just the streak they were looking for before departing on a seven-game, two-week road trip.

Larry Hughes and Drew Gooden scored 21 points apiece and Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 16 as the Cavaliers improved to 15-3 at home this season - and 26-3 since March 5 at Quicken Loans Arena.

Vince Carter and Mikki Moore had 18 points apiece and Richard Jefferson 17 for the Nets, who pulled within 93-91 on Jefferson's 3-pointer with 17 seconds left.

Gooden gave the Nets a chance to tie it by missing one of two free throws with 9.3 seconds to go. However, Carter misfired on a 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds remaining and Gooden sealed Cleveland's seventh win in eight games by hitting a pair of free throws in the final second.

Stocks head for mixed open ahead of GDP reading

Wall Street was poised to take a bit of a break Tuesday after a huge two-day rally as stock index futures were mixed while investors awaited a reading on the economy's output.

The pause in the market's gains was to be expected given the enormity of the advance over two sessions. Stock futures had been lower early Tuesday before turning moderately higher and then fluctuating.

While a reading on the nation's gross domestic product most certainly will show the economy weakened, investors will be eager to determine the rapidity of slowdown. The report comes after two strong sessions for the market in which investors held out hope that the economy could begin to repair itself.

Stocks rallied Friday on word that President-elect Barack Obama was close to naming his economic team _ a step he formally took Monday. Stocks extended their gains Monday as investors cheered the government's bailout plan for troubled Citigroup Inc. Many observers regarded the plan as a template for how other banks could be propped up and gleaned from comments of officials that the government wouldn't allow major institutions to fail.

Wall Street expects that economic activity contracted for the July-September quarter at a faster pace than the annual rate of 0.3 percent that the Commerce Department initially reported last month. Gross domestic product likely decreased at a 0.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, according to economists polled by Thomson Reuters. The report is due at 8:30 a.m. EST.

Investors also will be awaiting a report on consumer sentiment in November. The Conference Board's report is expected to show a further decline from already weak levels as the job market has deteriorated and the stock market has retreated.

Economists, on average, expect the research group's Consumer Confidence Index to fall to 37.9 in November from 38 in October. Last month's reading was the weakest since the research group began tracking the index in 1967. The report is due at 10 a.m.

Investors also will be looking to comments from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who is scheduled to provide an update on the government's efforts to stabilize the financial system. He is expected to speak at 10 a.m. Meanwhile, Obama is expected to unveil his plans for fiscal restraint even as his economic team puts together a stimulus package that could total several hundred billion dollars.

Ahead of the data and the comments, Dow Jones industrial average futures fell 19, or 0.23 percent, to 8,366. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures rose 6.00, or 0.71 percent, to 854.00. Nasdaq 100 index futures advanced 6.50, or 0.57 percent, to 1,153.50.

The gains over the course of Friday and Monday left the market with its first two-day advance in three weeks. The 11.8 percent gain gave the Dow its biggest two-day percentage gain since October 1987, the month of the Black Monday crash. The blue chips' 891-point jump over the two sessions also wiped out the 872-point plunge it suffered on Wednesday and Thursday, when investors worried about the prospects for Citigroup and financial companies in general, and the nation's automakers.

Early Tuesday, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.23 percent from 3.33 percent late Monday. For the three-month T-bill, considered one of the safest investments, the yield rose to 0.10 percent from 0.01 percent late Monday.

The dollar was higher against most other major currencies, while gold prices fell.

Light, sweet crude fell $2.76 to $51.74 in premarket electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

In corporate news, Starbucks Corp. warned in a regulatory filing late Monday that it expects sales will continue to weaken, at least through the end of the fiscal year. The Seattle-based coffee chain said in its annual report that it expects same-store sales, or sales at stores open at least a year, to decline in fiscal 2009. Same-store sales are an important retail metric because they measure how established stores are performing, not just new ones.

Hewlett-Packard Co. on Monday posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's forecast as strong laptop sales helped offset falling printer orders and weakness in some server lines.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 5.22 percent. In afternoon trading, Britain's FTSE 100 rose 1.79 percent, Germany's DAX index rose 0.58 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 1.01 percent.

___

On the Net:

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com

Soapbox: Good cop or bad cop debate

I Must put in a good word for the Avon and Somerset police in thelight of the gloomy headlines regarding the latest crime figures.

We were recently burgled, the front door being forced open as weslept.

From the start the response from the police was impressive.

Two officers came round that morning, offering reassurance as wellas taking notes.

They were followed minutes later by a Scene Of Crime officer, whocarefully identified possible fingerprints. Nonetheless, I did notexpect anyone to be caught, and a follow-up letter warned me theinvestigation might not lead to an arrest.

Weeks later detectives got back to me; the fingerprints matched.

An officer was round the next day to get a full statement, tellingme that the suspect was an ex-offender whom they had linked toseveral other crimes. The officer was courteous, helpful and verythorough when I made my statement.

An arrest has now been made, and I'm looking forward to seeingjustice done in cour t.

This wasn't a high-tech investigation or a high-profile crime; itwas just good, old-fashioned police-work.

To the police I say thank you.

To everyone else I say don't believe the doom-mongers; as theBritish Crime Survey shows, there's much less crime than a few yearsago, and the Avon and Somerset force deserve some credit for that.

Name and address supplied.

AS we live in a city where policemen seem to waste enormousamounts of time loitering in cars in side streets, waiting to pounceon motorists a few miles over the speed limit or with a back lightbroken, is it really any wonder they're failing to solve real crime?You remember - solving real crime - apparently it's what we paybizarrely high council tax for in this beleaguered city (well, and tobuild grotesque monuments in the city centre, but that's anotherstory entirely).

I've been burgled twice, the first time we knew who'd broken in asI had my neighbour as a witness who could provide an identity. Thepolice? Utterly disinterested.

We had one visit, were given a crime reference number - and thatwas the end of it.

No update, no result . . . but I did get a nice "victims of crime"leaflet.

The second time we were burgled we had a 24-hour wait for thepolice to even turn up, and then the finger print officers left moremess than the actual burglars.

It's a depressing fact that people in Bristol don't call thepolice thinking they may actually do their job and solve the crime,but only to get a crime reference number for the insurance companies.

It's high-time this force was placed on emergency performance-related wages.

It would be amazing to witness the rise in solved crimes then, andeven more welcome would be the disappearance of the infuriating cops-in-cars brigade, often seen lurking round areas of the city wherethey'd be far better deployed looking for criminals, not motorists.

Russ Thomas, by e-mail.

white

white by rob mdennan, $16.95, 102 pgs, The Mercury Press, box 672, Station P, Toronto, ON, M5S2Y4, themercurypress.ca

rob mclennan's white leaves a lot of space to fill with questions, but I am inclined to say that it is exactly the right amount of space for this story, which needs room to feel lonely and lost in.

At the beginning of the book we meet P and H-we are not given full names-and told that they married hastily after meeting on vacation, had a boring postcard honeymoon in Niagara Falls, and settled into a house in the suburbs. We aren't told what suburbs.

white contains blankness, emptiness, amnesia, winter. P stays at home in the suburbs while H goes to work in computer networks. P slowly gets sick and paranoid. She gets lost fifteen minutes from the house. She is afraid to talk to neighbours, go outside. At 26, she feels like she is dying.

The new, white blankness of married suburban life pushes up against P's past-her mother, a gardener up to her elbows in dirt, disagrees with P's marriage.

Points go to mclennan for managing to articulate P's perspective so authentically in poetic snapshots of an alienated life. (Sarah Greene)

"Joseph Cornell Karen Kilimnik"

"Joseph Cornell Karen Kilimnik"

SPR�TH MAGERS LONDON

What's the real object of curator Todd Levin's exhibition "Joseph Cornell Karen Kilimnik"? There are no surprises at the level of individual works; the Cornell boxes and collages typify the artist's later, sparer, post-1940s style, while almost all the Kilimniks (from 1989 to the present) are familiar from a flurry of solo shows around the world over the past decade. And Levin's installation - gallery walls painted ultramarine, velvet trimmings, lashings of glitter, all looking way slicker in reproduction than in actuality - is classic Kilimnik too.

Some London reviewers have been busy with the idea that this is a study of the two artists' fixation on Romantic ballet - its characters, stars, and scenarios. Well, OK, that's the subject matter of many of the works. The exhibits include Cornell's late-'50s collage Hommage to the Romantic Ballet (Fanny Cerrito, 1817-1907) - a sculpted cherub presiding over a baroque skyscape - and a box, via Parmigianino (Villa Allegra), 1956, dedicated to ballerina Allegra Kent. There are two teasingly hapless transcriptions of Degas dance scenes painted by Kilimnik in water-soluble oils, plus her 1993 assemblage Paris Opera Rats (a clump of grubby tulle, a gaggle of satin pointe shoes, a "foam faux rock," and two yucky plastic mice). Elsewhere is a late-1870s Degas sketch of dancers' feet, and two vitrines showcasing ephemera from sources such as the Royal Ballet School: Cornell-designed copies of the journal Dance Index, antique prints of Marie Taglioni and her clan, Margot Fonteyn's paste tiara from a 1956 production of Frederick Ashton's La P�ri. But the show isn't really about ballet any more than Kilimnik's Chic Robins Egg Nest, 2005 (a wreath of twigs adorned with a sparkly brooch, a bedraggled - sorry, artfully ruched - hair ribbon, and a clutch of electric blue plastic Kinder eggs), is about avian reproduction.

Instead, by aligning Cornell with Kilimnik and her particular take on the "slacker" sensibility, Levin nuances the dominant interpretation of both artists. Put crudely, current critical narratives ask that to be valued, Cornell's practice be construed as symptomatic, Kilimnik's as strategically iconoclastic. If Cornell's boxes are not explainable as pathological formations around lost objects of desire (reliquaries "where the subject haunts its desire like a ghost," suggests Hal Foster in Art Since 1 900 [2005]), they are dismissible as "agreeable knickknacks": nostalgic, sentimental, twee. Conversely, Kilimnik's work scores on the basis of its supposed quasi- Warholian archness. ("I like the colder regions of thought and feeling. . . . My sloth is a pose," Wayne Koestenbaum once had Kilimnik saying in an imagined conversation between her and Brigitte Bardot.) Evacuating campy tatters from a dressing-up box of obsolete European culture, it knowingly tacks extra frills of scare quotes onto the inverted commas already in place.

But "Cornell as slacker" cuts a different figure, one also hinted at in a 2003 article by Adam Gopnik. Cornell's recherches, he suggested, weren't into temps perdus but into the actuels: "He didn't long to go to France; he longed to build memorials to the feeling of wanting to go to France while riding the Third Avenue El. He preferred the ticket to the trip, the postcard to the place." Likewise, Kilimnik's work relishes substitutes and vague approximations not to gesture archly toward the old rubrics of high versus low or the simulated versus the real, but to explore the capaciousness and adaptability of the stuff packed into the cultural landfill site we inhabit right now. Already a mulch of sublimity and kitsch, ballet makes perfect raw material for these two. Kilimnik's Kinder eggs morph from overpackaged commodities to preteen treasures to trash to fodder for rich art collectors while somehow retaining the particularity of each stage of their development. Degas's drawing is reinterpretable as a virtuoso invocation of baggy cotton tights. All this plays a complex, important, often witty (and never univocally satiric or backward-looking) game with questions of cultural value.

-Rachel Withers

Monday, March 12, 2012

Kent State Wins MAC Title

Haminn Quaintance scored 16 points and Kent State crowned a dominant conference season by beating bitter rival Akron 74-55 in the Mid-American tournament championship Saturday night to reserve a slot in the NCAA brackets.

With their fifth tourney title and second in three years, the Golden Flashes left little doubt about their place in the MAC. They won the league's East title and had the player of the year, the top coach and its best defensive player, Quaintance, who showed he can do it at the other end, too, and was chosen tournament MVP.

Win or lose, Kent State may have already been a lock for the NCAA tournament. But the Golden Flashes gave the selection committee nothing to do but find them a place to play.

Mike Scott scored 14 points with 13 rebounds, Chris Singletary scored 13 and Al Fisher 12 for Kent State.

When the final horn sounded, Fisher, the MAC's player of the year, did a backflip in front of Kent's bench as Golden Flash fans flipped out.

Akron's NCAA dreams fizzled again. The Zips were beaten by Miami of Ohio on a buzzer-beating 3-pointer in last year's final, and were hoping to erase that painful memory by making the NCAA field for the first time since 1986.

But an extended scoring drought at the end of the first half put Akron in a hole the Zips could never escape.

Senior Jeremiah Wood scored 13 points but made just five of 14 free throws for Akron, which will have to settle for an NIT bid. The Zips were only 18-of-33 from the line.

Kent State closed the first half with a 16-1 run to take a 33-20 lead. Last week at Akron, the Golden Flashes held a 17-point halftime lead before the Zips stormed back. There would be no such comeback this time as Kent State closed it out with authority.

Akron did cut it to 51-41 with 8:20 left on a basket by Nate Linhart. But Scott scored on a baseline jumper and was intentionally fouled after a steal. He made both free throws, and Kent State got to keep the ball. Singletary then converted a three-point play, but was flattened after making the free throw by Linhart, who backed into the unsuspecting Kent State guard.

Singletary went down in a heap and an angry Kent State coach Jim Christian said something to Linhart as he walked onto the floor.

There has always been bad blood between the schools, which are separated by 15 miles of scenic Route 59. Earlier this season, the teams traded shoves at the end of a game at Kent.

About the time Cavaliers megastar LeBron James, the Rubber City's most famous native son arrived to cheer for Akron, the Zips took on their nickname.

They went without a field goal over the final 7:46 of the first half, missing their final nine shots and three straight free throws in a drought they couldn't afford.

Down by one point, Fisher converted a three-point play and then dropped a long 3-pointer to give Kent State a 23-19. The mini spurt seemed short-lived when Quaintance picked up his second personal foul and had to go to the bench with 6:40 left.

But Julian Sullinger scored inside, and Rashad Woods sandwiched a pair of 3-pointers around a bucket by seldom-used Isaac Knight for Kent State. Akron's Cedric Middleton rushed up the floor and tried to score on Akron's final possession, but his layup came after the horn and was waved off.

Cardinals 4, Padres 0

San Diego St. Louis
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Cnghm lf 4 0 1 0 Schmkr 2b 2 1 0 0
Eckstn 2b 3 0 1 0 Jay rf 4 2 3 0
MTejad ss 4 0 0 0 Pujols 1b 4 1 1 1
AdGnzl 1b 3 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 2 0 2 1
Ludwck rf 4 0 1 0 Rasms cf 4 0 0 0
Headly 3b 4 0 2 0 YMolin c 3 0 1 2
Torreal c 4 0 0 0 B.Ryan ss 4 0 0 0
Venale cf 3 0 2 0 Westrk p 3 0 0 0
Stauffr p 2 0 0 0 Winn ph 1 0 0 0
Thtchr p 0 0 0 0 McCllln p 0 0 0 0
R.Webb p 0 0 0 0 Greene 3b 2 0 0 0
Durang ph 1 0 0 0 P.Feliz 3b 2 0 1 0
CRams p 0 0 0 0
ARussll p 0 0 0 0
Frieri p 0 0 0 0
Stairs ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 31 4 8 4

San Diego 000 000 000—0
St. Louis 100 003 00x—4

E_Greene (6). DP_San Diego 1, St. Louis 2. LOB_San Diego 9, St. Louis 8. 2B_Jay (19), Pujols (35). SB_Y.Molina (8).

IP H R ER BB SO
San Diego
Stauffer L,4-4 5 6 4 4 2 2
Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
R.Webb 2-3 1 0 0 0 2
C.Ramos 1-3 1 0 0 1 1
A.Russell 2-3 0 0 0 1 1
Frieri 1 0 0 0 1 2
St. Louis
Westbrook W,2-3 8 6 0 0 3 3
McClellan 1 1 0 0 0 2

Stauffer pitched to 4 batters in the 6th.

WP_C.Ramos. Balk_C.Ramos.

Umpires_Home, Ed Rapuano; First, Tom Hallion; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third, Lance Barksdale.

T_2:37. A_38,252 (43,975).

Asian countries eager for Olympic torch relay despite Tibet violence

The Olympic torch relay is unlikely to be detoured by China's recent crackdown on protests in Tibet, with Asian countries saying they are eagerly awaiting the flame's arrival.

"It is out of the question" that the torch rally would skip Pakistan, said Mohammed Yahya, a spokesman for its Olympics Association. His sentiments were echoed by sports officials from a range of Asian nations.

One Australian opposition leader even suggested that the torch's arrival would be an opportunity for peaceful protests against China.

The torch is to be lit Monday at a traditional ceremony in Greece before being carried through 20 countries on its way to opening the Beijing Olympic Games on Aug. 8.

China said Wednesday that the torch would scale Mount Everest, which straddles Tibet and Nepal, as planned despite the situation in Tibet. Countries are busy choosing their torchbearers and planning security and celebrations along the routes.

Tibetans and their supporters have protested in cities around the world against China, which cracked down on demonstrations in Tibet last week against Chinese rule. Some fear the arrival of the Olympic torch as it travels toward Beijing could spark violent protests against China, while others are calling for heads of state, dignitaries and even corporate sponsors to boycott the Olympics, or at least the opening ceremony.

Asian countries said Thursday they may need to increase security but not ban the torch.

"The relay will continue as planned," said Thailand's tourism minister, Weerasak Kohsurat. He said police would "evaluate the situation when the time comes if there is a need for tighter security. Still, (we) don't expect any unrest or any major protest in Bangkok."

The Olympic committees in India, Japan, South Korea and Vietnam all said they had no plans to alter the torch relay in their countries.

"We've got five hours and 80 runners lined up and are looking forward with much anticipation to April 24 in Canberra," said Australian Olympic Committee media director Mike Tancred.

Bob Brown, leader of a minor Australian opposition party and a vocal advocate of Tibetan independence, welcomed the torch relay as an opportunity for peaceful protest.

Brown said banning the torch relay would "deny the opportunity for people in the Australian capital to show what they think of the oppression of Tibet and generally the suppression of freedoms in China."

In Indonesia, one of the torchbearers _ former world badminton champion Icuk Sugiarto _ said he hoped nothing would block the torch's route through Jakarta, its first time in the country.

Sugiarto said he hoped "there will be no disruption and the event will happen as scheduled."

____

Associated Press writers Rod McGuirk and Dennis Passa in Australia, Ali Kotarumalos in Jakarta, Indonesia, and Matthew Pennington in Islamabad, Pakistan, contributed to this story.

US troops in Afghanistan mark Memorial Day

U.S. forces serving in Afghanistan and Iraq remembered friends and colleagues Monday in solemn Memorial Day ceremonies to commemorate all of their nation's war dead.

As some soldiers paused, violence raged on in both places.

In Afghanistan, U.S.-led NATO forces launched airstrikes against Taliban insurgents who had forced government forces to abandon a district in Nuristan, a remote province on the Pakistan border. NATO also said it killed one of the Taliban's top two commanders in the insurgent stronghold of Kandahar in a separate airstrike.

At the sprawling Bagram Air Field, the largest U.S. military base in Afghanistan, about 400 soldiers in camouflage uniforms and brown combat boots stood at attention for a moment's silence as Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the commander of some 94,000 U.S. troops in the country, led the ceremony.

A bugler played taps and a color guard displayed the U.S. flag and the flags of units serving in eastern Afghanistan where the base is located, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Kabul.

A steel construction beam from the World Trade Center destroyed in the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks was unveiled, with the inscription "WTC 9 11 01". The beam was donated by citizens' group the Sons and Daughters of America of Breezy Point, a suburb in Queens, New York, where 29 victims of the Sept. 11 attacks lived, according to a letter read out at the ceremony.

McChrystal praised the soldiers for their sacrifice.

"Today is about people. It is about the people we have lost and most importantly it's about the people who have been left behind," McChrystal said, referring to the families of those who have died. He later attended another ceremony at Camp Morehead, a smaller base for a commando unit.

At Bagram, Maj. John Sherwood, 38, of San Antonio, said Memorial Day is more somber in Afghanistan than in the U.S., as people remember friends who died.

"I think about a few people I knew, mostly back in Iraq," said Sherwood, of the 82nd Airborne Division based in Fort Bragg.

Maj. Sonya Powell, 42, of Cincinnati, said she thought of two people: her executive officer who was killed in an aircraft crash in October, and her 4-year-old son, who is waiting for her to come home.

"It's very hard, but you don't dwell on it," said Powell, of the 401st Army Field Support Brigade. "You come here, you do your mission, and you pray."

In the Iraqi capital, hundreds of American troops gathered to remember their fallen comrades in one of ousted dictator Saddam Hussein's former palaces in Baghdad that is now part of the U.S. military's Camp Victory.

Troops placed a wreath at the foot of a towering American flag inside the palace, and a brass band played the American national anthem. Troops enjoyed cake after the ceremony.

Lt. Gen. Robert W. Cone, deputy commanding general for U.S. forces in Iraq, urged his countrymen to "take time today to think about those who made their freedom possible."

Separate attacks in Iraq killed four people _ including a prominent leader of anti-insurgent forces _ and wounded several others, police and hospital officials said Monday.

In Afghanistan, NATO aircraft pounded Taliban positions in Nuristan's Barg-e-Matal district after fighters _ many of whom traveled from Pakistan, Afghan officials said _ routed government forces there last week in a major assault.

Taliban strength has grown in Nuristan since U.S. troops abandoned an outpost where eight American soldiers were killed in a fierce attack last October.

NATO said an airstrike in Panjwai district on Sunday killed Haji Amir, who it called one of the Taliban's top two leaders in Kandahar province, where coalition troops are laying the groundwork for a major operation. Amir escaped from prison two years ago and had been directing Taliban attacks in Kandahar from Pakistan until April, when he returned to Afghanistan, NATO said.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousaf denied any militants had been killed by NATO forces in Panjwai in recent days, and said he had never heard of Haji Amir.

NATO reported the death of another service member, taking a tally by The Associated Press to 50 for May _ the deadliest month since February when American, NATO and Afghan forces seized the Taliban stronghold of Marjah in Helmand province. NATO did not identify the service member, but Britain's Defense Ministry said Monday that one of its marines had been killed in an explosion in Helmand.

May is already the deadliest month of 2010 for U.S. troops, with 33 deaths, and also brought the grim milestone of America's 1,000th military death in the Afghan war since it began in 2001.

McChrystal, who is also NATO commander in Afghanistan, said Sunday that while Tehran has generally assisted the Afghan government in fighting the insurgents, there was clear evidence that some Taliban were being trained in Iran, Afghanistan's western neighbor.

In Paktia province, a civilian contractor's helicopter crash-landed Sunday, killing one civilian on the ground and slightly injuring three crew members, NATO said, adding there were no reports of insurgent involvement.

In the north, seven police were killed in a roadside bomb attack Sunday in Badakhshan, local officials said.

In nearby Kunduz, three militants were killed and seven wounded when they attacked a police checkpoint on Sunday.

And eight Afghan police were wounded Sunday by a suicide bombing at a checkpoint in Khost.

The AP's casualty figures are based on Defense Department reports of deaths as a direct result of the Afghan conflict, including personnel assigned to units in Afghanistan, Pakistan or Uzbekistan. Non-U.S. deaths are based on statements by governments with forces in the coalition.

___

Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez and Rohan Sullivan in Kabul and Mirwais Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.

Melanoma drug showing promise: ; Experimental medication made tumors shrink in nearly half of patients

An experimental drug designed to attack a tumor's genetic triggerhas produced dramatic results in patients with advanced melanoma,one of the deadliest and most impervious cancers, researchersreported Sunday.

The drug - known so far only by its technical names vemurafeniband PLX4032 - made tumors shrink significantly in nearly half ofpatients studied, reduced the risk the disease would progress bynearly two-thirds and slashed the chances of dying by 63 percent.

The eagerly awaited results provide some of the clearest evidenceyet that drugs created to pinpoint molecular characteristics ofpatients' cancers can produce unprecedented benefits.

"This is really a huge step toward personalized care inmelanoma," said Paul Chapman of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering CancerCenter in New York, who led the study. "This is the first successfulmelanoma treatment tailored to patients who carry a specific genemutation in their tumor."

Chapman and others cautioned that the drug is not a cure and manypatients' tumors appear to become resistant to the treatment, makingit unclear how long it may prolong their lives. But for a diseasethat has been so difficult to treat, the results are striking.

"This is really unprecedented for patients with melanoma," saidLynn Schuchter of the University of Pennsylvania, who moderated thepanel where the results were presented at the annual meeting of theAmerican Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago. "It just changesthe landscape for patients."

Conventional chemotherapy usually works by killing any rapidlydividing cells. Because cancer cells proliferate quickly, chemodrugs can shrink tumors. But they also kill healthy cells, which iswhy they cause nausea, vomiting, hair loss and other oftendebilitating side effects.

PLX4032 is one of a new generation of drugs that researchers hopewill be more effective and less toxic because they zero in ongenetic characteristics of cancer cells that are not found inhealthy cells.

"Whereas in the past we had to use a shotgun approach to cancertreatment - treating many to help a few - we now are on the cusp ofa new era in cancer treatment where we can use these predictivetests to focus our treatments on those patients who are most likelyto respond to a specific cancer treatment," said J. LeonardLichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer at the American CancerSociety .

Melanoma strikes more than 68,000 Americans each year and killsabout 8,700. Despite decades of research, it remains one ofdeadliest malignancies with few treatment options.

"This is a very exciting and important study in a disease thatfor decades has resisted any meaningful treatment when it has spreadthrough the body," Lichtenfeld said.

30

Israeli war probe urges army to reconsider rules for dropping cluster bombs

The final Israeli report on the 2006 war in Lebanon has recommended that the Israeli army reconsider its rules for dropping cluster bombs, contrasting with a recent internal army probe that determined the weapons were used properly during the 34-day conflict.

The report into the government's handling of the war was issued Wednesday after a 16-month investigation. The five-member commission, headed by a retired judge, criticized both the government and the army for "serious failings and flaws," though Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who was expected to be a target of criticism, emerged relatively unscathed.

The 629-page report devoted six pages to cluster bombs, which open in flight and scatter dozens of bomblets over wide areas. The United Nations and human rights groups have accused Israel of dropping about 4 million cluster bomblets during the campaign against Hezbollah guerrillas. Up to 1 million failed to explode and now endanger civilians, according to U.N. demining experts.

In its report, the commission said Israel did not violate international law by dropping cluster bombs. But it raised questions about the army's use of the weapons, noting a lack of "operational discipline, oversight and control."

"We recommend that on this matter there be a re-evaluation of the rules and principles that apply to the army in using cluster bombs," the report said.

It urged the army to work to limit harm to civilians, including ensuring that people aren't hurt by unexploded bomblets, and to clarify the conditions when firing is permitted. It called on the army to develop less dangerous bombs and better document the whereabouts of unexploded bombs.

According to U.N. monitors in Lebanon, 26 civilians have been killed in explosions in southern Lebanon since the war ended in August 2006, most of them from cluster bombs and a few from other leftover explosives.

The army declined to comment on specifics of the report, but said it was closely evaluating its recommendations. An army statement said it is "fully aware of the failures and lessons that were revealed in the different fields" during the war. "Therefore it is in a midst of a comprehensive and continuing process of correction."

In Beirut, Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora's office said the Israeli probe failed to hold the army accountable for its actions, including the use of cluster bombs. It said the practice was "a flagrant violation of international norms, human rights and is tantamount to a daily war crime committed against Lebanese civilians."

Last month, the army said it would not press charges against officers who ordered the use of cluster bombs during the Lebanon conflict. It said a yearlong probe had determined the use of the bombs was a "concrete military necessity" and did not violate international humanitarian law.

The investigation found that the majority of cluster bombs were fired at open, uninhabited areas used by Hezbollah, and that cluster bombs were fired at residential areas used by Hezbollah for cover to fire rockets.

In light of Wednesday's report, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel called for an independent appraisal on the army's use of cluster bombs. It also called for a criminal investigation into the practice during the Lebanon war.

The conflict erupted on July 12, 2006, when Hezbollah men attacked an Israeli border patrol, killing three soldiers and capturing two.

The fighting left 159 Israelis dead, including 119 soldiers, while in Lebanon more than 1,000 people died, most of them civilians, according to counts by human rights groups, the Lebanese government and The Associated Press.

Israel failed to win the freedom of the soldiers, and Hezbollah has given no signs of life from the pair, who were severely wounded.

___

AP correspondent Sam Ghattas in Beirut, Lebanon, contributed to this article.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

5 killed as truck plunges into Philippine ravine

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A truck carrying 43 people from a wedding has plunged into a ravine in the mountainous northern Philippines, killing at least five people.

The Office of Civil Defense says 38 other passengers were taken to three hospitals late Saturday after rescuers retrieved them from the bus wreckage at the bottom of a 262-foot-deep (80-meter-deep) ravine in Bauko township in Mountain Province.

Police say they will resume a search for other possible victims and belongings Sunday. They stopped retrieval work due to heavy fog and darkness a few hours after the accident.

It was not immediately clear what caused the truck to veer off the Halsema highway, a winding upland road popular for its mountain scenes but notorious for frequent deadly accidents.

Smashing success of night racing

Yamin Vong
New Straits Times
10-05-2008
Smashing success of night racing
Byline: Yamin Vong
Edition: New Sunday Times
Section: Cars, Bikes & Trucks
Column: Editorial

FOR Formula One fans who couldn't make it to the GP in Singapore, it was a smashing success.

As an experiment, it couldn't have turned out better. It brings to sharp focus the meaning of motorsports in society, especially in Asia and in sharp contrast, the searing heat of Sepang.
Never mind if Bernie Ecclestone, the owner of Formula One's commercial rights, wanted to hold the Singapore F1 at night to maximise TV audience ratings in Europe. It still benefitted the sport and the host of the event. It worked for both.

When Malaysia won the rights to hold the Formula One event and held its first race at the RM380 million Sepang International Circuit (SIC) in 1999, it was hailed as a triumph for Malaysia.

It was the envy of F1 and motorsports fans in Indonesia and Singapore, both of which had aspirations to hold F1 races.

But now, it has been proven that it doesn't need a multi-million ringgit super sports arena to host a Formula One.

In fact, the Singapore GP opens two new dimensions in motorsports.

Firstly, holding it at night is right for Asian countries like Malaysia or other cultures where there is a tendency for people, when they are having picnics, to look for shade versus western culture where people seek out the sunny spots.

The second dimension is that a city circuit is a good compromise between having a super purpose-built racing circuit like Malaysia's, Shanghai's or Bahrain's and a circuit close to the citizens so that they can party.

The point that the Singapore F1 made was that motorsports is for the people and that a facility cannot be built in a remote location. It must be convenient for spectators.

The best part, however, was in the city proper. At several points along Suntec City, Shaw Plaza and the Stamford Swissotel (the former Westin and South East Asia's tallest hotel), the track was within 100 feet.

At the Balaclava in Suntec City, the pub faced the track about 30 metres away. The debris barrier was curtained off so that there wasn't a free show. But the pub installed TVs that had live feed from Star Sports and it was pure motorsports entertainment for the patrons, expatriates, local girls and boys, drinks in hand, TV to give the commentary, and the crescendo of the F1 machines high- revving for the apex and then the boom of the backfires as they braked down for the 2nd gear corner.

In the circuit-facing rooms of the Swissotel, there were parties going on. The number of people in some of the rooms would have to be estimated by the bags of empty drink cans that were taken out by the hotel clients. Presumably, they were clearing the evidence before the room maids came in.

An F&B outlet on the 70th floor of the hotel was booked by an oil and gas company entertaining their clients from across the region.

At the Shaw Parade, the employees of the Frost and Sullivan consultancy group as well as other corporate occupants also had their parties, with wifi laptops linked to the F1 website, at the void desk facing the circuit.

Back on the track, there were SIC people and a few jibes were made about Singapore's high prices, tickets being about three times that of Malaysia's.

From Malaysia's marketing and tourism point of view, which is core to the building of the SIC and the hosting of the Petronas F1, it would be dangerous to underestimate the Singapore GP's challenge to the Malaysian GP.

The unique selling points Singapore has are its party atmosphere versus Malaysia's indecisiveness on innocuous pop acts like Avril Lavigne.

Also, the night atmosphere is far more comfortable and suitable to sports enthusiasts as well as the participants. Other plus factors include the city's affluence, its sophisticated entertainment industry, adequate hawker food stalls and drinks stands (S$20 per mug of beer) and its upcoming casino resorts.

On the corporate side, there are more regional headquarters, including the financial sector, in Singapore than Malaysia and F1 is vastly funded by corporate sponsors.

For many like Compaq or Credit Suisse, if the budget is only enough for one F1 event in Asean, which would they choose?

It's a tough act to follow but of course one that can be faced if the facts are accepted and then dealt with.

First thing to do is to privatise one part of the SIC to generate a more lively atmosphere for tourists and F1 fans to party. After all, we should remember that one of the main players who made F1 happen in Singapore, hotelier Ong Beng Seng, is also a former Taiping boy.

(Copyright 2008)
Smashing success of night racingYamin Vong
New Straits Times
10-05-2008
Smashing success of night racing
Byline: Yamin Vong
Edition: New Sunday Times
Section: Cars, Bikes & Trucks
Column: Editorial

FOR Formula One fans who couldn't make it to the GP in Singapore, it was a smashing success.

As an experiment, it couldn't have turned out better. It brings to sharp focus the meaning of motorsports in society, especially in Asia and in sharp contrast, the searing heat of Sepang.
Never mind if Bernie Ecclestone, the owner of Formula One's commercial rights, wanted to hold the Singapore F1 at night to maximise TV audience ratings in Europe. It still benefitted the sport and the host of the event. It worked for both.

When Malaysia won the rights to hold the Formula One event and held its first race at the RM380 million Sepang International Circuit (SIC) in 1999, it was hailed as a triumph for Malaysia.

It was the envy of F1 and motorsports fans in Indonesia and Singapore, both of which had aspirations to hold F1 races.

But now, it has been proven that it doesn't need a multi-million ringgit super sports arena to host a Formula One.

In fact, the Singapore GP opens two new dimensions in motorsports.

Firstly, holding it at night is right for Asian countries like Malaysia or other cultures where there is a tendency for people, when they are having picnics, to look for shade versus western culture where people seek out the sunny spots.

The second dimension is that a city circuit is a good compromise between having a super purpose-built racing circuit like Malaysia's, Shanghai's or Bahrain's and a circuit close to the citizens so that they can party.

The point that the Singapore F1 made was that motorsports is for the people and that a facility cannot be built in a remote location. It must be convenient for spectators.

The best part, however, was in the city proper. At several points along Suntec City, Shaw Plaza and the Stamford Swissotel (the former Westin and South East Asia's tallest hotel), the track was within 100 feet.

At the Balaclava in Suntec City, the pub faced the track about 30 metres away. The debris barrier was curtained off so that there wasn't a free show. But the pub installed TVs that had live feed from Star Sports and it was pure motorsports entertainment for the patrons, expatriates, local girls and boys, drinks in hand, TV to give the commentary, and the crescendo of the F1 machines high- revving for the apex and then the boom of the backfires as they braked down for the 2nd gear corner.

In the circuit-facing rooms of the Swissotel, there were parties going on. The number of people in some of the rooms would have to be estimated by the bags of empty drink cans that were taken out by the hotel clients. Presumably, they were clearing the evidence before the room maids came in.

An F&B outlet on the 70th floor of the hotel was booked by an oil and gas company entertaining their clients from across the region.

At the Shaw Parade, the employees of the Frost and Sullivan consultancy group as well as other corporate occupants also had their parties, with wifi laptops linked to the F1 website, at the void desk facing the circuit.

Back on the track, there were SIC people and a few jibes were made about Singapore's high prices, tickets being about three times that of Malaysia's.

From Malaysia's marketing and tourism point of view, which is core to the building of the SIC and the hosting of the Petronas F1, it would be dangerous to underestimate the Singapore GP's challenge to the Malaysian GP.

The unique selling points Singapore has are its party atmosphere versus Malaysia's indecisiveness on innocuous pop acts like Avril Lavigne.

Also, the night atmosphere is far more comfortable and suitable to sports enthusiasts as well as the participants. Other plus factors include the city's affluence, its sophisticated entertainment industry, adequate hawker food stalls and drinks stands (S$20 per mug of beer) and its upcoming casino resorts.

On the corporate side, there are more regional headquarters, including the financial sector, in Singapore than Malaysia and F1 is vastly funded by corporate sponsors.

For many like Compaq or Credit Suisse, if the budget is only enough for one F1 event in Asean, which would they choose?

It's a tough act to follow but of course one that can be faced if the facts are accepted and then dealt with.

First thing to do is to privatise one part of the SIC to generate a more lively atmosphere for tourists and F1 fans to party. After all, we should remember that one of the main players who made F1 happen in Singapore, hotelier Ong Beng Seng, is also a former Taiping boy.

(Copyright 2008)
Smashing success of night racingYamin Vong
New Straits Times
10-05-2008
Smashing success of night racing
Byline: Yamin Vong
Edition: New Sunday Times
Section: Cars, Bikes & Trucks
Column: Editorial

FOR Formula One fans who couldn't make it to the GP in Singapore, it was a smashing success.

As an experiment, it couldn't have turned out better. It brings to sharp focus the meaning of motorsports in society, especially in Asia and in sharp contrast, the searing heat of Sepang.
Never mind if Bernie Ecclestone, the owner of Formula One's commercial rights, wanted to hold the Singapore F1 at night to maximise TV audience ratings in Europe. It still benefitted the sport and the host of the event. It worked for both.

When Malaysia won the rights to hold the Formula One event and held its first race at the RM380 million Sepang International Circuit (SIC) in 1999, it was hailed as a triumph for Malaysia.

It was the envy of F1 and motorsports fans in Indonesia and Singapore, both of which had aspirations to hold F1 races.

But now, it has been proven that it doesn't need a multi-million ringgit super sports arena to host a Formula One.

In fact, the Singapore GP opens two new dimensions in motorsports.

Firstly, holding it at night is right for Asian countries like Malaysia or other cultures where there is a tendency for people, when they are having picnics, to look for shade versus western culture where people seek out the sunny spots.

The second dimension is that a city circuit is a good compromise between having a super purpose-built racing circuit like Malaysia's, Shanghai's or Bahrain's and a circuit close to the citizens so that they can party.

The point that the Singapore F1 made was that motorsports is for the people and that a facility cannot be built in a remote location. It must be convenient for spectators.

The best part, however, was in the city proper. At several points along Suntec City, Shaw Plaza and the Stamford Swissotel (the former Westin and South East Asia's tallest hotel), the track was within 100 feet.

At the Balaclava in Suntec City, the pub faced the track about 30 metres away. The debris barrier was curtained off so that there wasn't a free show. But the pub installed TVs that had live feed from Star Sports and it was pure motorsports entertainment for the patrons, expatriates, local girls and boys, drinks in hand, TV to give the commentary, and the crescendo of the F1 machines high- revving for the apex and then the boom of the backfires as they braked down for the 2nd gear corner.

In the circuit-facing rooms of the Swissotel, there were parties going on. The number of people in some of the rooms would have to be estimated by the bags of empty drink cans that were taken out by the hotel clients. Presumably, they were clearing the evidence before the room maids came in.

An F&B outlet on the 70th floor of the hotel was booked by an oil and gas company entertaining their clients from across the region.

At the Shaw Parade, the employees of the Frost and Sullivan consultancy group as well as other corporate occupants also had their parties, with wifi laptops linked to the F1 website, at the void desk facing the circuit.

Back on the track, there were SIC people and a few jibes were made about Singapore's high prices, tickets being about three times that of Malaysia's.

From Malaysia's marketing and tourism point of view, which is core to the building of the SIC and the hosting of the Petronas F1, it would be dangerous to underestimate the Singapore GP's challenge to the Malaysian GP.

The unique selling points Singapore has are its party atmosphere versus Malaysia's indecisiveness on innocuous pop acts like Avril Lavigne.

Also, the night atmosphere is far more comfortable and suitable to sports enthusiasts as well as the participants. Other plus factors include the city's affluence, its sophisticated entertainment industry, adequate hawker food stalls and drinks stands (S$20 per mug of beer) and its upcoming casino resorts.

On the corporate side, there are more regional headquarters, including the financial sector, in Singapore than Malaysia and F1 is vastly funded by corporate sponsors.

For many like Compaq or Credit Suisse, if the budget is only enough for one F1 event in Asean, which would they choose?

It's a tough act to follow but of course one that can be faced if the facts are accepted and then dealt with.

First thing to do is to privatise one part of the SIC to generate a more lively atmosphere for tourists and F1 fans to party. After all, we should remember that one of the main players who made F1 happen in Singapore, hotelier Ong Beng Seng, is also a former Taiping boy.

(Copyright 2008)
Smashing success of night racingYamin Vong
New Straits Times
10-05-2008
Smashing success of night racing
Byline: Yamin Vong
Edition: New Sunday Times
Section: Cars, Bikes & Trucks
Column: Editorial

FOR Formula One fans who couldn't make it to the GP in Singapore, it was a smashing success.

As an experiment, it couldn't have turned out better. It brings to sharp focus the meaning of motorsports in society, especially in Asia and in sharp contrast, the searing heat of Sepang.
Never mind if Bernie Ecclestone, the owner of Formula One's commercial rights, wanted to hold the Singapore F1 at night to maximise TV audience ratings in Europe. It still benefitted the sport and the host of the event. It worked for both.

When Malaysia won the rights to hold the Formula One event and held its first race at the RM380 million Sepang International Circuit (SIC) in 1999, it was hailed as a triumph for Malaysia.

It was the envy of F1 and motorsports fans in Indonesia and Singapore, both of which had aspirations to hold F1 races.

But now, it has been proven that it doesn't need a multi-million ringgit super sports arena to host a Formula One.

In fact, the Singapore GP opens two new dimensions in motorsports.

Firstly, holding it at night is right for Asian countries like Malaysia or other cultures where there is a tendency for people, when they are having picnics, to look for shade versus western culture where people seek out the sunny spots.

The second dimension is that a city circuit is a good compromise between having a super purpose-built racing circuit like Malaysia's, Shanghai's or Bahrain's and a circuit close to the citizens so that they can party.

The point that the Singapore F1 made was that motorsports is for the people and that a facility cannot be built in a remote location. It must be convenient for spectators.

The best part, however, was in the city proper. At several points along Suntec City, Shaw Plaza and the Stamford Swissotel (the former Westin and South East Asia's tallest hotel), the track was within 100 feet.

At the Balaclava in Suntec City, the pub faced the track about 30 metres away. The debris barrier was curtained off so that there wasn't a free show. But the pub installed TVs that had live feed from Star Sports and it was pure motorsports entertainment for the patrons, expatriates, local girls and boys, drinks in hand, TV to give the commentary, and the crescendo of the F1 machines high- revving for the apex and then the boom of the backfires as they braked down for the 2nd gear corner.

In the circuit-facing rooms of the Swissotel, there were parties going on. The number of people in some of the rooms would have to be estimated by the bags of empty drink cans that were taken out by the hotel clients. Presumably, they were clearing the evidence before the room maids came in.

An F&B outlet on the 70th floor of the hotel was booked by an oil and gas company entertaining their clients from across the region.

At the Shaw Parade, the employees of the Frost and Sullivan consultancy group as well as other corporate occupants also had their parties, with wifi laptops linked to the F1 website, at the void desk facing the circuit.

Back on the track, there were SIC people and a few jibes were made about Singapore's high prices, tickets being about three times that of Malaysia's.

From Malaysia's marketing and tourism point of view, which is core to the building of the SIC and the hosting of the Petronas F1, it would be dangerous to underestimate the Singapore GP's challenge to the Malaysian GP.

The unique selling points Singapore has are its party atmosphere versus Malaysia's indecisiveness on innocuous pop acts like Avril Lavigne.

Also, the night atmosphere is far more comfortable and suitable to sports enthusiasts as well as the participants. Other plus factors include the city's affluence, its sophisticated entertainment industry, adequate hawker food stalls and drinks stands (S$20 per mug of beer) and its upcoming casino resorts.

On the corporate side, there are more regional headquarters, including the financial sector, in Singapore than Malaysia and F1 is vastly funded by corporate sponsors.

For many like Compaq or Credit Suisse, if the budget is only enough for one F1 event in Asean, which would they choose?

It's a tough act to follow but of course one that can be faced if the facts are accepted and then dealt with.

First thing to do is to privatise one part of the SIC to generate a more lively atmosphere for tourists and F1 fans to party. After all, we should remember that one of the main players who made F1 happen in Singapore, hotelier Ong Beng Seng, is also a former Taiping boy.

(Copyright 2008)