четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Oba William King joins CPL for Black History Month; Pianist Keith Jarrett dazzles Symphony Hall

During Black History Month, some of the Chicago Public Library's Neighborhood Branches provided students with various African American programs. The stories told by Oba William King were some of the most thrilling to the children who saw and heard him at Douglas, Lincoln Belmont, Rogers Park, West Chicago and Woodson Regional branches.

Actor Oba William King has earned tremendous acclaim here in Chicago and in other parts of the United States. He brings his characters to life on stage with tremendous impetuosity and blazing dramatic urgency.

The actor's involvement with the children was overwhelming with imagination. They glued their eyes to his slightest movement and …

Britney Spears' strange behavior now in the hands of doctors, and possibly the legal system

With Britney Spears whisked out of the public spotlight and committed to a hospital psychiatric ward, it is now up to a team of professional caregivers _ and possibly the legal system _ to reverse her seemingly endless downward spiral.

Spears, accompanied by more than a dozen police officers, was taken to the UCLA Medical Center before dawn Thursday in what one officer would only say was an effort to "get help" for the troubled pop star.

It was her second 72-hour commitment in four weeks, though her previous stay lasted less than two days and was followed by more strange episodes that have accompanied her divorce and bruising child custody …

Wild, wild Proviso West

The wildest ideas often have the most humble beginnings.

Last year at the Proviso West Holiday Tournament, there were a few delays caused by a leak in the gym roof. It led to some of the teams warming up in the adjacent field house.

That got tournament director Joe Spagnolo thinking.

"I started wondering what we could do if we used the field house more," Spagnolo said. "There are always teams asking me if they can join the tournament and I was tired of saying no. So I went to the drawing board."

What he came up with is certainly a bold move. Starting next year, the Proviso West Holiday Tournament will double in size, increasing from 16 to 32 teams — nearly …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Cars worth noting: 2003 Honda Accord

Honda's new Accord achieves something that I previously only felt in big, expensive German cars - it feels German. If I were the only one that noticed that "feel" I might not have mentioned it, but several people that rode in the car with me commented that the car felt unusually heavy yet nimble.

To be honest, I don't exactly know how you make a 3,000-pound vehicle feel like it weighs 5,000, but the Accord simply mows down irregularities in the road rather than skimming over them. When you close the doors, they sound bank-vault solid. When you hit a pothole you get the distinct impression that the hole got the short end of the stick.

Adding to the illusion is Honda's …

AP Weekly News Calendar

Thursday, February 9:

FESSENHEIM, France — French President Nicolas Sarkozy visits France's oldest nuclear plant amid a dispute over whether to shutter it or resuscitate it, a debate that is weighing on France's presidential election campaign and reflects global soul-searching about the future of nuclear energy.

PARIS — French airports see continued cancellations and disruptions as strike by pilots and cabin crew heads into a fourth and probable last day. Unions are angry over a law limiting the impact of strikes.

BOGOTA — Colombian anti-bullfight protest.

CARACAS — Venezuela expected to extradite to Colombia the last major Colombian far-right paramilitary …

UN watchdog warns of nuclear 'stalemate' with Iran

The U.N. nuclear watchdog is locked in a "stalemate" with Iran over the country's suspect nuclear program, the agency's chief said Monday, pressing Tehran to answer lingering questions about its atomic ambitions.

Flashing fresh defiance, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said his government will neither halt uranium enrichment nor negotiate over its nuclear rights, although it's ready to sit and talk with world powers over unspecified "global concerns."

"From our point of view, Iran's nuclear issue is over," Ahmadinejad declared in Tehran.

In a statement to the 35-nation board of the International Atomic Energy …

THE TICKER // WORLD

McDonald's to Enter South Africa JOHANNESBURG - South Africans may be munching on their first BigMacs by the end of the year. Oak Brook-based McDonald's, the world'slargest fast-food retailer, said it has opened a business office inSouth Africa ahead of launching its first restaurants in the countrythis year. Franchises will open in Johannesburg and Cape Town byyear-end. Toyota Names New President TOKYO - Toyota Motor Corp. named Executive Vice-President HiroshiOkuda as its new president, giving the key job to a person outsidethe founding Toyoda family for the first time in 28 years. …

Dollar up ahead of Bernanke speech

NEW YORK (AP) — The dollar rose in afternoon trading as the stock market fell on worries about the economy and concern that Federal Chairman Ben Bernanke will not lay out further plans on Friday to support markets when he speaks at a conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

A new round of bond-buying by the Fed might boost growth, but it would also weaken the dollar. Last year, when Bernanke talked about support measures for the economy at the same conference, the dollar dropped sharply.

The dollar …

Beauty queen's lawyer denies evidence of drug link

The lawyer for a beauty queen accused of luring models into drug trafficking insisted Thursday that the evidence against her is purely cosmetic.

Former Colombian coffee queen Angie Sanclemente Valencia was detained Wednesday in the capital's fashionable Palermo neighborhood, where she had been living under a false identity, dyed her dark brown hair reddish-blonde and told people she was a Mexican student.

"There isn't a single indication of a direct link between Miss Sanclemente Valencia and this gang," attorney Guillermo Tiscornia told reporters before her appearance in a closed-door hearing Thursday.

Argentine authorities say she is …

Taking it higher; Penney's, Kohl's, Nordstrom post better gains

Mid-price department store powerhouses J.C. Penney Co. and Kohl'sCorp. turned in solid profits that beat analysts' expectations, evenas their middle-class consumers struggle with high gasoline pricesand a weak housing market.

Kohl's said earnings jumped 15.9 percent to $269.2 million, or 83cents per share, and officials said the back-to-school season wasoff to a good start. Analysts had expected 82 cents per share.

Total sales rose 8.7 percent, to $3.60 billion. Same-store salesrose just 1.3 percent at Kohl's, based in Menomonee Falls, Wis.

Penney's profit edged up nearly 2 percent to $182 million, or 81cents per share in the quarter ended Aug. 4. Earnings …

Congress Passes Kids Health Bill, Again

A defiant Democratic-controlled Congress voted Thursday to provide health insurance to 4 million lower-income children, ignoring President Bush's threat of a second straight veto on the issue.

The legislation cleared the Senate on a vote of 64-30. It passed the House last week, but supporters were shy of the two-thirds majority needed to override Bush's threatened veto.

"We're convinced that the president has undermined an effort to protect children," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said shortly before the vote.

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, predicted there eventually would be an agreement that all …

Gaza's Hamas rulers approve $540 million budget

Gaza's Hamas parliament approved a government budget of $540 million for 2010, legislators said Saturday, suggesting that a tight border blockade isn't stopping the cash flow to the Islamic militants.

Up to $60 million stems from local taxes and the rest from "gifts and outside assistance," said legislator Jamal Nassar. Iran is believed to be one of Hamas' main financial backers, with cash assistance hauled through smuggling tunnels under Gaza's border with Egypt.

Nassar and fellow lawmaker Yehia Moussa refused to provide a detailed breakdown of the spending plan, and it was impossible to verify that Hamas indeed has $540 million at its disposal.

World Golf Ranking

1. Tiger Woods USA 9.61
2. Sergio Garcia Esp 7.87
3. Phil Mickelson USA 7.39
4. Padraig Harrington Irl 6.25
5. Vijay Singh Fji 6.13
6. Henrik Stenson Swe 5.11
7. Robert Karlsson Swe 5.08
8. Geoff Ogilvy Aus 5.00
9. Kenny Perry USA 4.74
10. Camilo Villegas Col 4.71
11. Anthony Kim USA 4.45
12. Lee Westwood Eng 4.40
13. Steve Stricker USA 4.23
14. Ernie Els SAf 4.13
15. Jim Furyk USA 3.88
16. Justin Rose Eng 3.82
17. Rory McIlroy NIr 3.78
18. Adam Scott Aus 3.77
19. Mike Weir Can 3.72
20. K.J. Choi Kor 3.69
21. Martin Kaymer Ger 3.46
22. Stewart Cink USA 3.45
23. Paul Casey Eng 3.43
24. Miguel Angel Jimenez Esp 3.32
25. Alvaro Quiros Esp 3.14
26. Trevor Immelman SAf 3.10
27. Zach Johnson USA 3.02
28. Justin Leonard USA 3.00
29. Ben Curtis USA 2.93
30. Robert Allenby Aus 2.93
31. Luke Donald Eng 2.90
32. Andres Romero Arg 2.90
33. Tim Clark SAf 2.84
34. Ian Poulter Eng 2.82
35. Jeev Milkha Singh Ind 2.72
36. Retief Goosen SAf 2.71
37. Rory Sabbatini SAf 2.70
38. Ross Fisher Eng 2.67
39. Graeme McDowell NIr 2.64
40. Dustin Johnson USA 2.57
41. Shingo Katayama Jpn 2.57
42. Stephen Ames Can 2.52
43. Aaron Baddeley Aus 2.51
44. Richard Sterne SAf 2.40
45. Oliver Wilson Eng 2.33
46. Stuart Appleby Aus 2.33
47. Louis Oosthuizen SAf 2.30
48. Hunter Mahan USA 2.27
49. Anders Hansen Den 2.25
50. Sean O'Hair USA 2.25
51. Boo Weekley USA 2.23
52. Prayad Marksaeng Tha 2.18
53. Soren Hansen Den 2.18
54. Lin Wen-Tang Twn 2.17
55. Angel Cabrera Arg 2.15
56. Rod Pampling Aus 2.14
56. Kevin Sutherland USA 2.14
58. Davis Love III USA 2.12
59. Mathew Goggin Aus 2.12
60. Peter Hanson Swe 2.10
61. Soren Kjeldsen Den 2.05
62. Pat Perez USA 2.05
63. Charl Schwartzel SAf 2.03
64. Brendan Jones Aus 2.02
65. David Toms USA 1.97
66. D.J. Trahan USA 1.96
67. Richard Green Aus 1.96
68. Ryo Ishikawa Jpn 1.95
69. Dudley Hart USA 1.94
70. Chad Campbell USA 1.89
71. Carl Pettersson Swe 1.89
72. Woody Austin USA 1.85
73. Ryuji Imada Jpn 1.83
74. Darren Clarke NIr 1.79
75. J.B. Holmes USA 1.78

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Canadiens Take Home-And-Home With Bruins

BOSTON - Tomas Plekanec and Chris Higgins each had a goal and two assists to lift the Montreal Canadiens to a 6-3 victory over the Boston Bruins on Thursday night.

Montreal scored five unanswered goals in the last 22 minutes of the game and swept the home-and-home series after shutting out Boston 1-0 Tuesday.

Trailing 3-1, Plekanec cut the Bruins' lead with 1:49 left in the second period when he flipped the puck past Bruins goalie Tim Thomas.

Mike Johnson, Maxim Lapierre and Higgins put the game away when they each scored 2:16 apart in the third period to take a 5-3 lead with 11:09 remaining in the game.

Phil Kessel, Marco Sturm and Mark Mowers scored for the Bruins, who lost their third straight.

Jaroslav Halak made 32 saves for Montreal, which scored three power-play goals.

Policeman hurt in clashes with hooligans recovering from injuries

A policeman who suffered serious injuries in a clash with violent soccer fans is recovering and is not expected to have any permanent damage, police said Monday.

The officer was delivered to a local hospital with a broken lumbar vertebrae during Saturday's Bundesliga game between Bochum and visiting Karlsruhe.

Police are still trying to determine whether the policeman was injured in a fall or by violent Karlsruhe fans.

Another policeman received several blows and kicks in the body and his head after falling to the ground. He and another lightly injured policemen have been released from the hospital.

Karlsruhe fans were tossed from the stadium just before kickoff for fighting and outside were joined by 100 hooligans. Together they tried to crash the stadium gates, overwhelming security personnel.

Police clashes with hooligans happen on a regular basis in Germany, but its rare an officer is seriously injured.

Today in History - Nov. 24

Today is Friday, Nov. 24, the 328th day of 2006. There are 37 days left in the year.

Today's Highlight in History:

On Nov. 24, 1963, Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President Kennedy, in a scene captured on live television.

On this date:

In 1784, Zachary Taylor, the 12th president of the United States, was born in Orange County, Va.

In 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published "On the Origin of Species," which explained his theory of evolution.

In 1863, the Civil War battle for Lookout Mountain began in Tennessee; Union forces succeeded in taking the mountain from the Confederates.

In 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers based on Saipan attacked Tokyo in the first raid against the Japanese capital by land-based planes.

In 1950, the musical "Guys and Dolls," based on the writings of Damon Runyon and featuring songs by Frank Loesser, opened on Broadway.

In 1969, Apollo 12 splashed down safely in the Pacific.

In 1971, hijacker "D.B. Cooper" parachuted from a Northwest Airlines 727 over Washington state with $200,000 in ransom - his fate remains unknown.

In 1985, the hijacking of an EgyptAir jetliner parked on the ground in Malta ended violently as Egyptian commandos stormed the plane. Fifty-eight people died in the raid, in addition to two others killed by the hijackers.

In 1987, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to scrap shorter- and medium-range missiles.

In 1991, rock singer Freddie Mercury died in London at age 45 of AIDS-related pneumonia.

Ten years ago: On the eve of an Asia-Pacific trade conference in the Philippines, President Clinton met with Chinese President Jiang Zemin. Both sides signaled their troubled relations were on the mend, and agreed to exchange presidential visits over the next two years.

Five years ago: A Swiss airliner carrying 33 people crashed near Zurich, killing 24, including American pop singer Melanie Thornton. British actress Rachel Gurney, who played Lady Marjorie Bellamy on the popular television series "Upstairs Downstairs," died at age 81.

One year ago: A suicide bomber struck outside a hospital south of Baghdad while U.S. troops were handing out candy and food to children; the blast killed some 30 people. A giant balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York snagged a street light and caused part of it to fall, injuring a woman and a child. Actor Pat Morita died in Las Vegas at age 73.

Today's Birthdays: Columnist William F. Buckley is 81. Country singer Johnny Carver is 66. Rock-and-roll drummer Pete Best is 65. Rock musician Donald "Duck" Dunn (Booker T. & the MG's) is 65. Actor-comedian Billy Connolly is 64. Former White House news secretary Marlin Fitzwater is 64. Motion Picture Association of America President Dan Glickman is 62. Singer Lee Michaels is 61. Actor Dwight Schultz is 59. Actor Stanley Livingston is 56. Rock musician Clem Burke (Blondie; The Romantics) is 51. Record producer Terry Lewis is 50. Actress Denise Crosby is 49. Actress Shae D'Lyn is 44. Rock musician John Squire (The Stone Roses) is 44. Rock musician Gary Stonadge (Big Audio) is 44. Rock musician Chad Taylor (Live) is 36. Actress Lola Glaudini is 35. Actor Colin Hanks is 29. Actress Katherine Heigl is 28.

Thought for Today: "Slander injures three: the slanderer, the person who hears the slander, and the person slandered." - From the Talmud, a collection of writings that constitute the Jewish civil and religious law.

Husband Arrested After Wife Gunned Down

OAKLAND, Calif. - The estranged husband of a woman who was shot dead in a church parking lot just before Sunday morning services has been booked on suspicion of murder after surrendering to police.

Matthew McCall, 42, was arrested Sunday evening but refused to talk to police about the killing of his wife, Tanya McCall, 40, Oakland police Sgt. Tony Jones said.

Horrified parishioners watched a man pull out a gun and shoot Tanya McCall four times as they fought in the parking lot of Acts Full Gospel Church in Oakland. He shot her twice at close range, then twice in the head, police said. She died at the scene.

Tanya McCall, who worked as a real estate agent and had attended the 7,000-member church for several years, had recently filed for divorce after the couple separated in November.

It was not clear Monday whether Matthew McCall had retained a lawyer. He was scheduled to be arraigned on Wednesday.

The victim had obtained a restraining order from Solano County Superior Court against her husband on Thursday after citing threats and acts of violence dating back to 1982, Jones said.

Roth IRA a good option to aid grandchild

Q. I'll have $380 per month for the next eight years for which Iwish to open an investment account of some kind. It will be for myalmost 10-year-old grandson.

I am aware of the 529 accounts, but it is not likely he willattend college due to his psychiatric diagnoses. I do not want torisk the chance of the penalties on the 529 accounts. I am 63 yearsold and have thought of either a Roth or traditional IRA, but I'm notsure if they would work.

A. What a wonderful position to be in! The typical American isliving paycheck to paycheck and has a difficult time meeting his orher own needs. Being able to set something aside for your grandson isa real blessing.

A Roth IRA would be a great tool to save money for your grandson.You would be the owner of the Roth IRA and could control theinvestments and distribution of funds, and your grandson could belisted as the beneficiary. As long as the IRA was held at least fiveyears, the withdrawals would be free from taxation.

A traditional IRA would not work as well as a Roth. Deposits intoa traditional IRA would be tax-deductible, but your withdrawals wouldbe taxable. Furthermore, you would be required to pay tax onmandatory withdrawals from a traditional IRA when you reach age 70oe,something you can avoid with a Roth.

Keep in mind that you must have wage or self-employment income inorder to contribute to an IRA and your overall income must be below$95,000 ($150,000 if married) to fully participate in a Roth IRA.

Scott Hanson, CFP, is a senior adviser with Hanson McClain, aninvestment advisory company and registered principal with SecuritiesAmerica.

Hamburg fires coach Bruno Labbadia

Hamburger SV fired coach Bruno Labbadia on Monday, one day after a 5-1 Bundesliga loss at Hoffenheim and only three days before the second leg of the Europa League semifinal at Fulham.

Assistant coach Ricardo Moniz will take charge to the end of the season, club chairman Bernd Hoffmann said.

"We examined the situation and decided that we could not and did not want to continue so," Hoffmann said. "The latest performances did not give us hope that we could be successful in the important game on Thursday and that we could advance to the final of the Europa League."

Some German media reports linked Germany coach Joachim Loew to a move to Hamburg after the World Cup. Loew has not extended his contract with the German football federation and his chief scout, Urs Siegenthaler, is becoming sports director at Hamburg next season. Hamburg has gone through three coaches in the last three seasons.

Labbadia had been under pressure for several weeks and the firing was widely expected after Sunday's disaster in Hoffenheim. Many German media speculated that the players were happy to provoke Labbadia's ouster.

While his assistant Moniz conducted Monday's practice, Labbadia was summoned to the management's office to be told of his dismissal.

"It's a dramatic day," said Moniz, a 45-year-old Dutchman who was previously skills coach at Tottenham. He stayed in Hamburg after the departure of Martin Jol, Labbadia's predecessor.

Hoffmann said Moniz was knowledgeable about English football and could prepare the team "in the best way" for the match against Fulham. Moniz is leaving at the end of the season to join the staff of Red Bull Salzburg in Austria.

There are two games left in the Bundesliga and Hamburg's stadium will host the Europa League final on May 12. Fulham earned a 0-0 draw in Hamburg last week in the first leg.

The firing of a coach in the middle of the semifinals is rare. Otto Rehhagel, now coach of Greece, was fired by Bayern Munich three weeks before the 1996 UEFA Cup final. Franz Beckenbauer took over the team on an interim basis and won the title.

Labbadia arrived in Hamburg at the start of the season. After a promising beginning with the club hoping to win its first title of any kind in 23 years, the club has dropped to seventh place and Labbadia has feuded with some top players. Hamburg has won four of the 15 Bundesliga games since the winter break.

There is practically no chance Hamburg can qualify through the Bundesliga for the European competition next season.

The 44-year-old Labbadia, the ninth child of Italian immigrants, had a similar experience at Bayer Leverkusen last season, although he stayed in the job until leaving at the end of the season to move to Hamburg.

A former striker whose career included stints at Bayern Munich, Werder Bremen and two seasons at Hamburger SV, Labbadia scored 103 goals in 328 Bundesliga games for different teams. He played twice for Germany.

Labbadia's stern attitude won him no friends among players.

The atmosphere in the team worsened after the 1-0 loss at home in the previous round against Mainz, culminating in a loud dispute in the dressing room between Labbadia and his most experienced player, 36-year-old goalkeeper Frank Rost.

Labbadia chided Rost for taking a group of players to a movie on the eve of the match against Mainz. The team traditionally spends evenings before home matches in a Hamburg hotel. The German media compared Labbadia to a schoolmaster disciplining his pupils.

Labbadia also had problems with strikers Ruud van Nistelrooy and Mladen Petric, two of the team's stars.

Counties will deny services to illegal immigrants; No access to parks, libraries, routine health care?

Ines Olivia Martinez wonders if her family will be denied medicalcare. Even her mentally disabled 13-year-old son has been anxiouslypointing out police cars amid fears of a local crackdown on illegalimmigrants.

Resolutions to deny a potentially wide range of public servicesto illegal immigrants have thrust northern Virginia's Prince Williamand Loudoun counties into the spotlight.

The new approach comes as some jurisdictions back off plans tocrack down on landlords and employers who knowingly rent to and hireillegal immigrants, following a federal court ruling last month thatstruck down a law in Hazleton, Pa.

That law would have imposed fines on landlords who rent toillegal immigrants and denied business permits to those who employthem. Hazleton on Thursday filed a notice of appeal in federalcourt, but it could take up to six months before the appeal isheard.

Critics say the northern Virginia measures, passed in July, are aracist reaction to demographic changes in Prince William andLoudoun, two of the fastest-growing counties in the Washington area.

'IT'S REACHED A BOILING POINT'

According to census estimates, Prince William's Hispanicpopulation has more than doubled since 2000. In Loudoun, the shareof minorities increased from 20 percent to 32 percent.

Proponents blame illegal immigrants for changing the character ofthe region, accusing them of packing too many people into homes andfailing to learn English.

"It's reached a boiling point -- or a boil-over point," saidSupervisor John T. Stirrup, who sponsored the Prince Williammeasure.

Martinez, a 41-year-old Mexico City native who has lived inPrince William County for two years, said the resentment againstillegal immigrants "broke my heart."

County officials are still studying which public services legallycan be withheld and how such restrictions could be implemented.

The resolutions say emergency medical care will not be denied,and federal restrictions already control many other services. TheSupreme Court has ruled that children who are illegal immigrantscan't be kept out of school, while food stamps are already offlimits to illegals.

The status of other services, such as health care for theuninsured, libraries and parks, are less clear-cut.

In protest, Hispanic activists are planning a weeklong boycott ofall non-immigrant, non-Hispanic businesses in Prince William Countybeginning Monday and a one-day general labor strike in October.

JACCI DEN HARTOG

JACCI DEN HARTOG

CHRISTOPHER GRIMES GALLERY

Jacci Den Hartog has made a career of exploring rocks and water both as substance and subject. She investigates materials, processes, and stylistic devices for modeling them and examining the shapes they impose on one another. Isolated from broader land- or seascape contexts, and supported by wall mounts and stands, her boulder-spotted pools and torrents, cast in polyurethane and, in one instance, Hydrocal (a high-density plaster) over steel armatures, seem to hover in space as if time had stopped and the rest of the world had fallen away.

Den Hartog's most recent sculptures represent a departure from earlier works in which waves and crags seemed bound by aesthetic codes halfway between Japanese and japonaiserie, Chinese and chinoiserie, Instead, her latest offerings seem to take cues from Romanticism and nineteenth-century realism and dazzlingly manage to pack the spirit of the epic into small static objects.

In fact, Den Hartog's latest efforts flow between an assortment of unusual referents. The sleekness of their molding and initial appearance of precision suggest compliance with a trend toward the hyperrual that has denned much recent sculpture (especially from Los Angeles), but their energy and the traces registered by their surfaces signal a kind of expressionism. The ridges of the artist's fingertips are echoed in the surface of the plastic, |as what initially appears to be an obvious attempt at replicating water, guided by fidelity to how the liquid troughs and crests, gradually reveals itself as a record of the artist's act of making, the traces of hands modeling raw material.

Yet as much as manner, artifice and gesture become subtexts, if not themes, the works are also informed by a sensitivity bom of observation. This is most evident in Den Hartog's manipulation of color and opacity: Where the water is stormy, its surface seems to take on the reflected gray of cloud cover, and where the artist suggests turbulent shallows, her materials become appropriately frothy. So handy is Den Hartog with such nuances that the works, absent of nearly anything that might channel, contain, and otherwise affect the water, encourage us to imagine a physical world around them.

And while it's fun to flesh out the narratives and locations suggested by Den Hartog's frozen fragments of ocean and stream in one's imagination, it is also productive to relate to them as sculptural interruptions and interrogations of actual space. Just as water carves out coastlines and canyons, Den Hartog's fluid forms, as they trail off or splash in front of us, carve up our space. Like expressionist gestures in the round, they change as we negotiate them. Regrettably, the point at which one fully apprehends the successes of these works also heralds a discovery of their weaknesses. Rather than assuming a politely distant vantage point, we want to move around and above and below them to get as physical with them as they are with us. Unfortunately, in so doing, we become aware of the clunkiness of their stands and substructures. This is less a problem of shattering an illusion than throwing a wrench into otherwise elegant dynamism.

-CM

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Online retailers ramp up deals to capture dollars

Online retailers are ramping up heavy-duty deals to turn skittish shoppers into buyers during the crucial Thanksgiving weekend and "Cyber Monday" _ but even so, online sales are expected to be fairly flat after years of strong growth.

Free shipping is virtually a given, and many are offering financing options such as no payments for 90 days and deals like $10 off purchases of $50 or more, along with traditional discounts on products.

"Last year, people were spending a lot more money on gifts and products," says Jeff Wisot, vice president of marketing for online retailer Buy.com. "With the economic challenges arising this year, people are definitely spending less."

"Cyber Monday," a term coined by the trade group National Retail Federation in 2005 to describe the Monday after the Thanksgiving holiday, is the unofficial kickoff for the busy online retail season.

However, this year, consumer spending has dropped dramatically _ down 1 percent in October, the largest amount since the 2001 terrorist attacks _ as consumers grapple with a shaky economy, mounting job losses and a prolonged housing slump.

During the holidays, the trade group expects overall holiday spending will total about $470.4 billion, a 2.2 percent rise from a year ago and the slowest growth since 2002, and online retail is being hit along with brick-and-mortar stores. ComScore, a digital technology monitoring company, said Tuesday it expects online retail spending for November and December to be flat compared with the same two months in 2007. Last year's growth rate was 19 percent.

The expected slowdown in online growth is "dramatically different than what we've seen," says Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst at NPD Group. "Consumers are not in a rush to shop."

In an effort to entice them, online retailers are offering a bounty of deals.

Wisot of Buy.com says his site is offering free shipping on most items, instant rebates and deals on TVs, GPS devices and other items.

Online jeweler BlueNile.com sent out a targeted e-mail promotion offering $100 off a $500 engagement ring, valid until Tuesday. And through Bill Me Later, an online payment site eBay.com is acquiring, BlueNile.com is offering 0 percent financing on purchases of $500 or more for six months. Bill Me Later has similar promotions for other online retailers.

Meanwhile, Amazon.com will take up to 65 percent off watches and offer one-day deals such as knife set that is usually $157 on sale for $49.99.

"We're bringing prices down as low as we can get them," Berman says. "These are great deals."

Online auction site eBay.com is holding what it calls the largest sale in its history, with $1 holiday doorbuster items hidden on the site that consumers hunt for, including a 65-inch Panasonic plasma HDTV and a 2009 Chevy Corvette. EBay also will offer items typically in demand for the holidays for bids starting at $1.

Toys "R" Us is offering more online promotions on Cyber Monday than last year, including 70 percent off Star Wars figures, $50 off the normally $59.99 Guitar Hero wired guitar controller from Activision and other deals.

And PayPal, another online payment site that eBay owns, is partnering with several retailers on deals. At Toys "R" Us, customers get $10 off purchases of $50 or more. Elsewhere, customers using PayPal can receive cash-back incentives ranging from 5 percent to 30 percent off at retailers including American Eagle Outfitters Inc., Overstock.com and Blockbuster.

Whether all the deals, rebates and discounting offers will help remains to be seen, says Dr. Michael Belch, a professor of marketing at San Diego State University.

"There's little doubt the consumer is still going to be very price sensitive," he says. "They're going to be looking for values."

Drogba gives Chelsea win over Ranieri's Juventus

Didier Drogba's fourth goal of the season led Chelsea to a 1-0 win over Juventus in the first knockout round of the Champions League on Wednesday.

The Ivory Coast striker finished in the 12th minute from a clever disguised pass through the middle from Salomon Kalou to give the Blues a slim advantage ahead of the return leg in two weeks and continue the Italian team's dismal record in England, where it has won just twice in 18 visits.

With Frank Lampard and John Terry the only players in the Chelsea lineup remaining from his final season at Stamford Bridge, former Blues coach Claudio Ranieri was unable to use his knowledge of his opponents to the advantage of the Juventus side he has guided to second place in Italy's Serie A.

Instead, Guus Hiddink has two wins from his first two matches as Chelsea manager.

"I'm satisfied with the result. Overall, I'm not satisfied," Hiddink said.

"In the first half, we started very good and defensively we were well organized. But after the goal we dropped back too far. We allowed some gaps between our defense and midfield and attack for Juventus to use.

"They created danger but not very open chances for the equalizer."

Ranieri was greeted by a standing ovation by the Chelsea fans who protested his removal five years ago but, despite the second-half efforts that could have easily brought his team an equalizer against last season's runner-up, that was arguably the highlight of his evening.

"I was extremely happy because it shows that they haven't forgotten me," Ranieri said. "I spent four wonderful years here. In football, people tend to forget things very quickly, so I'd like to thank them."

Juventus struggled to cope with Chelsea's speed and former Liverpool midfielder Mohamed Sissoko's wayward distribution under pressure from Lampard and John Obi Mikel curtailed much of what possession the visitors did get.

Still, the two-time European champions did increase the tempo after halftime despite the 51st-minute loss of Mauro Camoranesi to a hamstring injury and can have some confidence for the second leg after the change troubled a Chelsea defense still missing the injured Ricardo Carvalho.

"I would have preferred to play less well and to get a better result," Ranieri said.

Chelsea dominated the first half in front of 38,000 fans, creating few clear opportunities but denying Juventus players the time and space they are accustomed to in Serie A.

Kalou and Drogba each had a half chance, the former shooting straight at goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon from about 20 meters (yards) and the latter heading over from close range, before the Blues took the lead.

Looking toward the right-hand touch line and with his left shoulder to goal, Kalou slipped a disguised pass straight through the middle from 30 meters (yards) out. With Lampard in the area confusing the visiting defense, Drogba helped the ball on with a firm, low shot past Buffon.

Drogba headed a corner past the post four minutes later when he should have at least got an effort on target, but while the Ivorian was thriving in a central role, Anelka was an ineffectual and peripheral figure on the left.

The Premier League's leading scorer barely linked with Drogba and spent more time picking up the ball deep than threatening in the area.

Anelka improved slightly after switching to the right in the wake of Kalou's 72nd-minute replacement by Florent Malouda but, aside from one fierce shot, looked far different to the player who has hit 21 goals in all competitions this season.

"They are disciplined in what we are asking of both of them," Hiddink said of his strikers. "It's good to have Didier in the central position."

Juventus did manage two worthy openings in the first half. Alessandro Del Piero drew a save from goalkeeper Petr Cech with a shot from inside the area and Amauri headed on the resulting corner just past the outstretched leg of Giorgio Chiellini at the far post.

Del Piero started to get frustrated and, after giving the ball away with unnecessarily fancy back heel, he fouled Jose Bosingwa as the fullback charged past him to switch play back to the other end.

Drogba missed with another header in the 50th and Cech could have handed Juventus an equalizer nine minutes later when he dropped the ball in the area and brought down Amauri in an effort to gather it. The referee waved for play to continue, as he did when Drogba twice appealed for a penalty.

Ranieri brought on David Trezeguet for the last four minutes as Chelsea hung on for a valuable victory ahead of the second leg on March 10.

STRAWBERRY-MERINGUE TART WITH WALNUT SHORTBREAD CRUST

MAKES 6 SERVINGS

CRUST

2/3 cup walnuts, chopped

� cup sugar, divided

� cup unsalted butter, softened

1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour (plus extra for rolling dough)

� teaspoon salt

TART

3 extra large eggs, separated

3 to 4 cups sliced strawberries

� cup cornstarch or arrowroot

1� cups sugar, divided

� teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon grated lemon zest

� cup fresh lemon juice

For the crust: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place walnuts plus 2 tablespoons sugar in food processor; process to powder with series of bursts. Add remaining sugar and butter; process 3 minutes more. Add flour and salt; process just until dough holds together. Press dough into flattened disc (if dough is too soft, chill for 20 minutes in refrigerator).

Gently press dough into (9-inch) tart pan with removable base; press dough down and ease dough into corners and up sides. Prick dough all over with fork. (Use extra dough to make sides thicker.)

Place sheet of parchment or foil in crust; weight it down with 2 cups pie weights or dried beans, and bake in lower third of oven 15 minutes. Remove parchment or foil and pie weights; continue baking crust until deep golden all over (10 to 12 minutes longer). Cool completely before filling.

For the tart: Separate eggs, placing yolks in small bowl and whites in large bowl; cover both bowls and set aside.

Place strawberries in medium-size saucepan. Without adding any liquid, cover and cook 5 to 8 minutes over medium heat until soup-like (watch carefully so not to stick or burn); set aside.

Meanwhile, in larger saucepan, combine cornstarch or arrowroot, 1/2 cup sugar, salt and lemon zest. Stir in lemon juice, whisking until uniform.

Beat egg yolks until smooth, then drizzle yolks into cornstarch mixture, beating constantly. Continue beating mixture and slowly pour in hot strawberries and their liquid.

Place saucepan over medium heat; bring mixture to a boil, stirring constantly (but not too fast) with wooden spoon until mixture thickens. Set aside to cool, about 30 minutes.

Pour cooled strawberry filling into tart shell, smoothing top with spatula. Chill until set, about 2 hours.

Heat oven to 450 degrees. In bowl of electric mixer, beat egg whites until foamy and beginning to stiffen. Sprinkle in � cup sugar and whisk to soft peaks. Add remaining � cup sugar; whisk again until shiny and very stiff peaks.

Transfer meringue to piping bag fitted with star tip. Pipe meringue over chilled strawberry filling. Bake in preheated oven until meringue is delicately browned, 5 to 10 minutes.

Serve at room temperature.

Mollie Katzen for California Walnut Board

Nutrition facts per serving: 608 calories, 27 g fat, 11 g saturated fat, 146 mg cholesterol, 89 g carbohydrates, 63 g sugars, 8 g protein, 330 mg sodium, 3 g fiber

DEAR ABBY: ; Harsh words might be result of stroke

DEAR ABBY: Several years ago my father-in-law suffered a stroke.He is now able to live by himself, but my husband, "Frank," and Ideliver his meals, handle his finances and take him to his doctor'sappointments. My dilemma is that my father-in-law treats me betterthan he does Frank. It hurts Frank's feelings to hear his father saynasty things and accuse him of not helping. Frank is an only child,and he does everything for his father.

I promised Frank I would not say anything to his father about howunkind he is, but it gets harder every day to keep my mouth shut.

Frank and I are extremely close, and I can't stand to see himhurt. Should I stay out of it like I promised, or should I get moreinvolved?

Angry Daughter-in-law

DEAR ANGRY: Start by confidentially asking your father-in-law'sdoctor if the stroke affected the part of his brain that regulatespersonality, behavior and mood. If your father-in-law treated Frankmore kindly before the stroke, his agitation may be the result ofthe illness.

Depression is common in stroke victims, and is treatable throughmedication, psychotherapy and behavior modification.

If your father-in-law has any insight into his abusive behavior,it can be adjusted. If not, your husband, through counseling, mustlearn behavioral strategies so he can avoid "triggering" anemotional outburst from his father.

For more information, contact the National Stroke Association,9707 E. Easter Lane, Englewood, CO 80112-3747. The telephone numberis 1-800-STROKES (1-800-787-6537), and online: www.stroke.org.

DEAR ABBY: When is it proper to use a preprinted mailing label?Over the past year I have received thank-you notes, holiday cardsand wedding invitations with mass-produced mailing labels stuck onthe envelopes.

Whatever happened to handwritten names and addresses? Am Iexpecting too much? I feel as if the sender is rushed andungrateful.

Unglued

Massachusetts

DEAR UNGLUED: While it is still considered proper to hand-address personal correspondence such as invitations and thank-younotes, people are so rushed these days that it is often moreconvenient to use printed labels. (Also, they are more legible.)

Ask yourself what is more important, the envelope or itscontents?

DEAR ABBY: I read with interest the columns you printed about theimportance of health-care professionals washing their hands. Butwhat about food handlers?

Whenever I am at deli counters, I have had to ask the workers toplease change their gloves. They leave the work area, open doors, gofrom bloody roast beef to cheese displays, then pleasantly ask, "MayI help you?"

I have repeatedly requested that supermarket managers dosomething about it. Nothing gets done. It's disgusting.

Frustrated

Bryantville, Mass.

DEAR FRUSTRATED: The employees you mentioned may not havereceived proper training; perhaps you would see some results if youcomplained to the county health department. If there isn't aregulation against this, there should be.

New Technology Showcase

SILICONE MOLDING MANUFACTURING

AdvantaPure has expanded its clean room manufacturing facility to meet increasing demand. It has increased production capabilities by converting space and moving some manufacturing operations to other areas. The transformed areas house stations forthe manufacture ofsingle-use silicone manifolds and the company's BioQosure Systems. AdvantaPure repurposed its hose assembly area into a new clean room. The space now has HEPA filtration, sealed doors, gowning rooms, and restricted personnel usage. The clean room is third-party certified to ISO Class 7 (Class 10,000). The company offers manifolds consisting of tubing orreinforced hose;fittings inT,cross, Y,and reducer styles; and components such as filters, bags, and aseptic connectors. BioClosure silicone stoppersjrue Union and GL45 inserts, and caps are manufactured for glass, plastic, ormetal containers and are available in solid or with tubing inserts. AdvantaPure, 215.526.2151, www.advantapure.com.

SINGLE-USE BIOPROCESSVESSELS

Integrity single-use bioprocess vessels (BPVs) are available from ATMI LifeSciences in both 2-D and 3-D bag formats, and are manufactured using the company's Integrity TK8 polymer film. The BPVs have been designed for use in the storage and transfer of dean or sterile liquids that are critical to biotechnology processes. Integrity BPVs have been developed to meet the demand for cost-effective, scalable, single-use storage containers that are compatible with ATMI's single-use mixing and bioreactor technologies. The single-use vessels can help companies reduce risk while driving down costs in comparison with traditional stainless steel equipment. Designed for deployment across a wide variety of applications, the 2-D and 3-D BPVs range in sizes up to 3,000 L and are configurable to a broad range of end-user processes. ATMI LifeSciences, 859.263.1135, www.atmi-lifesciences.com/ html/formulaire.php.

ECO ULTRAFILTER

Sartorius Stedim Biotech's Sartocon ECO is based on Hydrosart ultraf iIter technology that uses stabilized polymer membranes based on hydrophilic regenerated cellulose. Hydrosart membranes enable high yields by minimizing protein binding to the membrane and are thus virtually nonfouling. Sartocon ECO features high stability under strongly alkaline conditions and over wide temperature ranges, so it is easy to clean and reusable even after several cleaning cycles. Sartocon ECO ultrafilters will be available in Slice, Sartocon, and Sartocube formats for preferred nominal molecular weight cutoffs of 1 0, 30, and 1 00 kD in a cassette design. Sartorius Stedim Biotech, 800.368.7178, www.sartorius-stedim.com.

MULTI-WAY FLUIDIC CONNECTIONS

The Mitos In-line connector system from Dolomite provides in-line sealing and accurate alignment between tubes, enabling uninterrupted liquid flow. Available in three standard sizes: A-, 8-, and 12-way, the Mitos In-line connector operates over a wide temperature and pressure range, providing chemical compatibility. A low dead volume reduces the risk of crosscontamination between fluid samples, thereby maintaining experimental integrity. The technology benefits a broad range of applications, including chemical and biological analysis, parallel microfluidic processing, providing multi-way fluidic connections between various laboratory equipment. The connectors also are compatible with a variety of polymeric tubes including PTFE, FEP, and PEEK. Custom sizes and geometries also are available. Dolomite, +44 (0)1 763 246125, www. dolomite-microfluidics.com.

MOBILE PROCESSING STATION

GE Healthcare's ReadyKart mobile processing station is a flexible cart for the quick configuration of a wide range of sterile and disposable fluid processing systems for product and process development or pilot manufacturing. The setup with disposable ReadyToProcess components saves time, and with its nesting capabilities, the carts can be combined, adding yet more flexibility. The ReadyKart supports the use of GE Healthcare's ReadyToProcess equipment, which provides ready-to-use tools for all process stages, from fermentation, through to chromatography and filtration. GE Healthcare, www.gelifesciences.com/ readytoprocess.

BIOLOGICAL SHAKERS

New Brunswick Scientific manufactures a wide range of biological shakers, with benchtop, floor standing, or space-saving stackable models, offered with or without incubation. Refrigerated models also are offered. Innova Shakers with Triple-Eccentric Drive provide good performance, even when fully loaded and running at top speed. Advanced programming capabilities allow set-it and forget-it convenience. Optional photosynthetic lighting, gassing, humidity monitoring, and UV germicidal lights enable a broad range of applications. The economical Excella Shaker line (shown), is also available with membrane keypad and counterbalanced drive for accurate control and simple operation.

New Brunswick Scientific, 800.631.5417, www.nbsc.com.

JACKETED REACTOR SYSTEMS

Syrris has developed optional upgrades to its range of Atlas automated synthesis systems. The introduction of new stainless steel reactors and a high temperature upgrade kit has increased system flexibility, making the Atlas product range suitable fora broader spectrum of applications. Using the same jacketed vessel damp, oil drain unit, and fluid pipe connectors as the Atlas Potassium system, the standard glass vessel can be easily exchanged for the stainless steel version in less than a minute. Available in sizes from 1 0O mL to 5 L, an integrated bottom outlet valve compensates for any thermal expansion, while the torispherical profile and consistent length-to-diameter ratio mimics the dimensions of large-scale plant reactors. Syrris, +44 1763 242555, www.syrris.com.

GLASS REACTOR

The Advanced-Flow LF from Corning Incorporated is a flexible, low-flow glass reactor that enables a cost-effective transition to higher-volume, continuousflow chemical processing. The Corning Advanced-Flow reactors can continuously stream chemical reactants together with integrated heat exchange. Engineered glass fluidic modules form the basis of the reactor, providing mixing and heat exchange not possible in batch reactors used today. The modules are constructed into customized reactors that can be scaled up to industrial scale production banks according to customer specifications.

Corning Incorporated, 607.974.9000, www.corning.com.

Biotech seed bill tabled by Montana senators

A Montana Senate committee has sidelined a bill that sought standards for how biotech companies test crops for patent infringement, burying the measure after members attended a private dinner also attended by biotech giant Monsanto Co. representatives.

The Senate Agriculture Committee's action on Tuesday provoked charges of unfairness after news emerged of the dinner, which was attended by most of the committee at a private club in Helena.

The bill would have required Monsanto and other companies to get permission from a farmer before taking a sample from their crops. If the farmer denied permission, the company could seek a court order. Under the measure, either the farmer or the company could also ask the state Department of Agriculture to oversee the sampling.

The bill was tabled on a 6-3 vote.

The St. Louis-based Monsanto did not offer public testimony about the bill but did express its opposition in private at the dinner, according to committee chairman state Sen. Donald Steinbeisser, R-Sidney. Five of nine committee members attended the dinner, paid for by another bill opponent.

"The lobbyists wanted to inform the committee of their concerns, and that's all it was about," Steinbeisser said.

A nonprofit North Dakota-based group known as Growers for Biotechnology said it picked up the tab and sent out the invitations.

Democratic Rep. Betsy Hands, the bill's sponsor, blasted the private meeting, saying "the cards were stacked" by the time the committee met for the bill's actual hearing.

Committee dinners are not illegal in Montana, but veteran lawmakers and lobbyists both said hosting such an event prior to a bill hearing is highly unusual.

The controversial measure discussed at the dinner split the state's farm lobby. It would have set rules for how companies such as Monsanto can test farmers' fields for what is known as seed piracy.

When farmers buy genetically engineered seeds, they must agree not to harvest and reuse them from year to year. Some farmers, however, argue that pollen can drift with wind and water, exposing small growers to expensive legal tussles with big biotech companies even when they are innocent.

"After the death penalty and horse slaughter bills, this is the largest number of communications I've had, and these are from farmers," said Sen. Cliff Larsen, D-Missoula, before voting in favor of the measure.

Opponents of the bill, which included both the Montana Farm Bureau and the Montana Agribusiness Association, told lawmakers it would discourage the development and sale of biotech products in the state.

"I don't want to lose any kind of research, whether it's the big boys like Monsanto or anyone else, because we have serious, serious problems out there," committee member Ken Hansen, D-Harlem, said in voting against the bill.

___

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) _ Rep. Frank Lucas of Oklahoma and eight other Republicans on the U.S. House Agriculture Committee have asked Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to reconsider a plan that would make farmers release their tax records.

Lucas, the committee's ranking GOP member, and the others made the request in a letter sent to Vilsack on Wednesday, calling the plan an "invasion of privacy" that "is clearly against Congressional intent."

The U.S. Department of Agriculture said last week that farmers who request federal subsidies will be required to sign forms allowing the IRS to provide their tax records to the USDA. The program is expected to begin with subsidies for this year's corn crop.

Vilsack said the new policy was being implemented in response to the discovery of nearly $50 million in payments to farmers ineligible for the subsidies. Farmers are ineligible for some subsidies if they have more than $500,000 in nonfarm income or $750,000 in farm earnings.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Fetus Theft Adds to Mo. Town's Notoriety

SKIDMORE, Mo. - If records were kept on per capita misery, Skidmore, population about 350, might be near the top of the list.

The town sits on a hill above the Nodaway River amid cornfields in northwestern Missouri. Residents farm, man the town's lone gas station and clock in at nearby factories.

Skidmore is not a hotbed of any activity, much less the criminal kind. In 2005, all of Nodaway County recorded 16 violent crimes.

But for such a small town, Skidmore has an unusually violent history. The most recent of the especially brutal crimes was the slaying of a pregnant woman whose fetus was cut from her womb.

"It doesn't matter where I go in the U.S.," …

Amtrak train smashes into huge tractor-trailer, injuring at least 52. (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)

    INTERCESSION CITY, Fla. _ An oversized tractor-trailer trapped across the tracks. An Amtrak passenger train rocketing around a long, sweeping curve. A series of cascading miscalculations and misunderstandings that left both crews unaware of each other and of impending disaster.     The result: Amtrak's Silver Meteor, carrying 103 passengers and eight crew members, blindsided a truck carrying a mammoth, 82-ton generator Tuesday as state troopers frantically tried to flag down the train.     At least 52 people were hurt, most with cuts and bruises. The first four cars of the eight-car train, bound from Tampa, Fla., to New York, were smashed and derailed.     The impact crumbled the truck, trailer and generator and pushed them 150 yards down the tracks in a wooded, rural area about 10 miles southwest of Kissimmee in central Florida.     ``It was like a slow-motion bomb going off,'' said Mark Robinson, a deliveryman who saw the crash. ``The train cars started twisting and turning off the track.''     The train's engineer, James Thomas, 46, said he never had a chance. Amtrak officials said Thomas needed at least a mile to stop the train, which was traveling at the authorized speed of 78 miles an hour.     He had 30 yards. At most.     ``We had just come around the curve and it was there,'' said Thomas. ``We hit Boom! Bang! Just like that.''     No fire erupted, but the impact raised a thunderhead of dust. As it cleared, dazed and bleeding passengers crawled from the train's windows and from the ripped fuselages of rail cars.     Employees of a nearby, small plastics company comforted them on a patch of grass. Paramedics quickly established a triage center on the same patch of grass, now littered with rubber gloves and bloodstained towels.     Helicopters and ambulances carried the most seriously injured to local hospitals. Others were treated on the spot.     The uninjured were boarded on buses, one from nearby Disney World. ``A strange day for me, let me tell you,'' said the driver, identified by his Mickey Mouse badge as Steve.     Chris Gent, a spokesman for the Kissimmee Utilities Authority, which owned the generator, was photographing the operation at the time of the accident. He watched helplessly as the very thing his company was determined to avoid happened anyway.     ``All of a sudden the train was there,'' he said. ``Twenty of us were up on the track. I just yelled and everybody ran and took cover.''     Gent and Lt. Chuck Williams, a spokesman for the Florida Highway Patrol, provided this account of the accident _ and of an operation plagued at the end by miscalculations and misunderstandings:     The $12.6 million generator was being slowly ferried from Tampa's port to a new power station being built west of Kissimmee. The 55-mile journey began at 11:30 p.m. Monday and was just ending at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday.     The generator was so big that it had to be carried on an ``articulated'' trailer, one that is hinged in the middle and requires someone on the back to steer the rear section.     The process is so slow and painstaking _ so likely to inhibit surrounding traffic _ that the truck was escorted, as required by the state Department of Transportation, by two highway patrol cars.     Just a few hundred yards from its destination, a new power station called Cane Island, the trailer approached from the west along Old Tampa Road. But Gent said it could not make the sharp turn onto an access road and had clipped a stop sign as it tried.     So, the subcontractor who owned the truck and was in charge of the moving job _ Roundtree Transport Co. of Tampa _ backed the trailer out and had it come around the other side, from the east.     The turn was easier, but halfway across the track, the trailer scraped bottom and became stuck. Now, a crew began jacking it up; the truck had a special hydraulic system to lift the bottom over the rise created by the tracks.     ``The tractor-trailer was raised as high as it would go, but it wasn't high enough,'' said Williams, the Highway Patrol spokesman.     According to Gent, someone from Roundtree called the local Amtrak office to warn dispatchers of the trapped truck. He was told that the first train through at that point would not come until 1 p.m. and was led to believe it would be approaching from the east, Gent said.     So, the crew had about a half-hour, according to Gent. They worked hurriedly, but without panic, he said.     But within five minutes, according to Gent, a train barreled around a curve and came right at them _ from the west.     The crossing gates came down, hitting the truck and trailer. The red lights flashed their warning. The two troopers who had escorted the truck and were now leaving, stopped and waved at the engineer.     It was too late. The train was moving too quickly, the distance too short.     The driver of the truck still struggled to get the truck off the tracks, but he could not. He jumped from the cab just as the train hit. He was knocked unconscious and was in critical condition Tuesday night at a local hospital.     Gent said he heard no train horn. Other witnesses reported hearing a short blast from the horn followed immediately by the deafening impact.     ``I didn't know what was happening,'' Gent said. ``Then I saw the train. Then it hit, and the bang was loud. ... I heard the scraping and the screeching of the steel all along the track.''     Passengers praised the train's crew, saying the evacuation was orderly.     Amtrak spokeswoman Pat Kelly said dispatch was the responsibility of CSX Transportation, which owns the track.     Donna Rohrer, a spokeswoman for CSX Transportation, which dispatches the trains that run on their tracks, said the truck successfully negotiated another CSX crossing earlier in the day in Tampa, but said her company had no idea the rig would be crossing the tracks in Intercession.     ``For whatever reason, we were unaware that they were crossing this private crossing today,'' she said.     CSX was notified in advance that the truck would be crossing tracks in Tampa.     But the railroad was never notified that the truck was in trouble once it got stuck, Rohrer said. She said special toll-free emergency lines are available to law enforcement and emergency crews in every community crossed by CSX tracks, and that the line in the Intercession area never rang.     ``All those calls are answered on the highest-priority basis,'' she said.     Rohrer said reporters on the scene were told that witnesses tried to call the railroad before the Silver Meteor struck. ``We have no idea where that call went,'' Rohrer said.     The first CSX knew of any problem was at 12:46.20, when the Kissimmee Police called the railroad's emergency center in Jacksonville.     As darkness descended on a vista of twisted metal and yellow emergency police tape, Gent was asked:     Whoever was at fault, was this the result of a failure to communicate?     ``Yes,'' he said, ``it was.''     (Graphic available from KRT Graphic Service; call (202) 383-6064. Photo available from KRT Photo Service; call 202-383-6099. Photos move on KRT Photo Service and are posted to the ``KRT Daily Photos'' icon in category folder on PressLink the day the story moves. One week after transmission, photos are available via keyword search in the KRT Photo Archive on PressLink; call (800) 435-7578 or (202) 383-6099.)
Amtrak train smashes into huge tractor-trailer, injuring at least 52. (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
    INTERCESSION CITY, Fla. _ An oversized tractor-trailer trapped across the tracks. An Amtrak passenger train rocketing around a long, sweeping curve. A series of cascading miscalculations and misunderstandings that left both crews unaware of each other and of impending disaster.     The result: Amtrak's Silver Meteor, carrying 103 passengers and eight crew members, blindsided a truck carrying a mammoth, 82-ton generator Tuesday as state troopers frantically tried to flag down the train.     At least 52 people were hurt, most with cuts and bruises. The first four cars of the eight-car train, bound from Tampa, Fla., to New York, were smashed and derailed.     The impact crumbled the truck, trailer and generator and pushed them 150 yards down the tracks in a wooded, rural area about 10 miles southwest of Kissimmee in central Florida.     ``It was like a slow-motion bomb going off,'' said Mark Robinson, a deliveryman who saw the crash. ``The train cars started twisting and turning off the track.''     The train's engineer, James Thomas, 46, said he never had a chance. Amtrak officials said Thomas needed at least a mile to stop the train, which was traveling at the authorized speed of 78 miles an hour.     He had 30 yards. At most.     ``We had just come around the curve and it was there,'' said Thomas. ``We hit Boom! Bang! Just like that.''     No fire erupted, but the impact raised a thunderhead of dust. As it cleared, dazed and bleeding passengers crawled from the train's windows and from the ripped fuselages of rail cars.     Employees of a nearby, small plastics company comforted them on a patch of grass. Paramedics quickly established a triage center on the same patch of grass, now littered with rubber gloves and bloodstained towels.     Helicopters and ambulances carried the most seriously injured to local hospitals. Others were treated on the spot.     The uninjured were boarded on buses, one from nearby Disney World. ``A strange day for me, let me tell you,'' said the driver, identified by his Mickey Mouse badge as Steve.     Chris Gent, a spokesman for the Kissimmee Utilities Authority, which owned the generator, was photographing the operation at the time of the accident. He watched helplessly as the very thing his company was determined to avoid happened anyway.     ``All of a sudden the train was there,'' he said. ``Twenty of us were up on the track. I just yelled and everybody ran and took cover.''     Gent and Lt. Chuck Williams, a spokesman for the Florida Highway Patrol, provided this account of the accident _ and of an operation plagued at the end by miscalculations and misunderstandings:     The $12.6 million generator was being slowly ferried from Tampa's port to a new power station being built west of Kissimmee. The 55-mile journey began at 11:30 p.m. Monday and was just ending at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday.     The generator was so big that it had to be carried on an ``articulated'' trailer, one that is hinged in the middle and requires someone on the back to steer the rear section.     The process is so slow and painstaking _ so likely to inhibit surrounding traffic _ that the truck was escorted, as required by the state Department of Transportation, by two highway patrol cars.     Just a few hundred yards from its destination, a new power station called Cane Island, the trailer approached from the west along Old Tampa Road. But Gent said it could not make the sharp turn onto an access road and had clipped a stop sign as it tried.     So, the subcontractor who owned the truck and was in charge of the moving job _ Roundtree Transport Co. of Tampa _ backed the trailer out and had it come around the other side, from the east.     The turn was easier, but halfway across the track, the trailer scraped bottom and became stuck. Now, a crew began jacking it up; the truck had a special hydraulic system to lift the bottom over the rise created by the tracks.     ``The tractor-trailer was raised as high as it would go, but it wasn't high enough,'' said Williams, the Highway Patrol spokesman.     According to Gent, someone from Roundtree called the local Amtrak office to warn dispatchers of the trapped truck. He was told that the first train through at that point would not come until 1 p.m. and was led to believe it would be approaching from the east, Gent said.     So, the crew had about a half-hour, according to Gent. They worked hurriedly, but without panic, he said.     But within five minutes, according to Gent, a train barreled around a curve and came right at them _ from the west.     The crossing gates came down, hitting the truck and trailer. The red lights flashed their warning. The two troopers who had escorted the truck and were now leaving, stopped and waved at the engineer.     It was too late. The train was moving too quickly, the distance too short.     The driver of the truck still struggled to get the truck off the tracks, but he could not. He jumped from the cab just as the train hit. He was knocked unconscious and was in critical condition Tuesday night at a local hospital.     Gent said he heard no train horn. Other witnesses reported hearing a short blast from the horn followed immediately by the deafening impact.     ``I didn't know what was happening,'' Gent said. ``Then I saw the train. Then it hit, and the bang was loud. ... I heard the scraping and the screeching of the steel all along the track.''     Passengers praised the train's crew, saying the evacuation was orderly.     Amtrak spokeswoman Pat Kelly said dispatch was the responsibility of CSX Transportation, which owns the track.     Donna Rohrer, a spokeswoman for CSX Transportation, which dispatches the trains that run on their tracks, said the truck successfully negotiated another CSX crossing earlier in the day in Tampa, but said her company had no idea the rig would be crossing the tracks in Intercession.     ``For whatever reason, we were unaware that they were crossing this private crossing today,'' she said.     CSX was notified in advance that the truck would be crossing tracks in Tampa.     But the railroad was never notified that the truck was in trouble once it got stuck, Rohrer said. She said special toll-free emergency lines are available to law enforcement and emergency crews in every community crossed by CSX tracks, and that the line in the Intercession area never rang.     ``All those calls are answered on the highest-priority basis,'' she said.     Rohrer said reporters on the scene were told that witnesses tried to call the railroad before the Silver Meteor struck. ``We have no idea where that call went,'' Rohrer said.     The first CSX knew of any problem was at 12:46.20, when the Kissimmee Police called the railroad's emergency center in Jacksonville.     As darkness descended on a vista of twisted metal and yellow emergency police tape, Gent was asked:     Whoever was at fault, was this the result of a failure to communicate?     ``Yes,'' he said, ``it was.''     (Graphic available from KRT Graphic Service; call (202) 383-6064. Photo available from KRT Photo Service; call 202-383-6099. Photos move on KRT Photo Service and are posted to the ``KRT Daily Photos'' icon in category folder on PressLink the day the story moves. One week after transmission, photos are available via keyword search in the KRT Photo Archive on PressLink; call (800) 435-7578 or (202) 383-6099.)

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Apartment building owners lose condo exemption to local law. (Rent Control).(City of West Hollywood v. Beverly Towers)

The owners of apartment buildings in the City of West Hollywood cannot avoid the city's rent control ordinance by relying on 1980s-era approvals to convert the buildings to condominiums, an appellate court has ruled.

The owners of two buildings received approval from the state Department of Real Estate to convert the units to condominiums that could be sold separately. They received this approval before West Hollywood incorporated in 1984. However, the Department of Real Estate's "public report" -- a disclosure to potential buyers -- expired after five years. The owners have received new public reports twice, but only after lengthy periods when no public reports were …

Disparate views of New Yorker's cartoon.(Main)

More on The New Yorker magazine cover mocking the misperceptions of Sen. Barack Obama:

The prissy tone of dudgeon from the Obama campaign was a relatively well-pitched political twofer: It distinguished them from the New Yorker and its untouchable demographic (educated, literate, well-informed people from New York or New York-ish enclaves) and it gave them a news cycle on the high ground of victimization, defensively crouched against credulous souls misreading the New Yorker in coal mines, truck stops and smoky saloons.

- Philip Kennicott,

Washington Post

Unsophisticated yahoos, to the extent they really are, pose a lesser threat to the …

`VIOLIN' COULD CALL FANS BACK TO RICE.(BOOKS)

Byline: JOY DICKINSON

Ghosts of the past are nothing new for Anne Rice. The author has won millions of devotees with characters whose primary calling is confronting literal and psychological demons.

But with her latest tale, ``Violin,'' Rice pits her blisteringly frank prose against ghosts of a much more personal nature -- those that have haunted her own life -- and in so doing has created her best work since 1990's ``The Witching Hour.''

Many of her previous books have had elements of autobiography, notably the child vampire in ``Interview With the Vampire,'' who mirrored her own daughter, dead at 5 of leukemia, and the character Michael Curry in …

Gunmen fire on Honduran journalist's car, 1 killed

Gunmen attacked the car of a Honduran television commentator who has backed the coup-installed government, missing her but killing her pregnant daughter, police said Wednesday.

Interim President Roberto Micheletti blamed members of the movement opposed to the June 28 coup that toppled President Manuel Zelaya, though he presented no evidence.

The National Resistance Front Against the Coup denied involvement.

Two gunmen on a motorcycle shot at Karol Cabrera's car late Tuesday in the capital of Tegucigalpa, police spokesman Orlin Cerrato said.

The daughter, 16-year-old Katherine Rodriguez, was driving the car. She was 8 months pregnant, …

Briefs

PHARMA LAYOFFS

Merck announced layoffs of about 12% of its workforce -6, 800 employees and 400 positions to be left vacant -to be complete by 2011 in response to serious revenue shortfall from falling sales, approval delays, and patent expirations. The global restructuring should result in savings of $3.8 billion to $ii.2 billion from 2008 to 2013, and comes on the heels of an earlier "restructuring" that laid off over 10,000. i|0% of the jobs lost will be in the U.S., and 25% will be among mid- and senior- leve I executives. Research site in Japan, Italy, and Seattle will be closed by the end of 2009, but the company has offered some members of its molecular profiling group in …

Terra Takes Charge for Cost of U.K. Recall.(Terra Industries announces after-tax charges per share of stock)(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)

Terra Industries says it will take an after-tax charge of 13 cts/share, about $9.8 million, because a U.K. subsidiary was found liable for the cost of a 1998 carbonated beverages recall, but Terra says it believes the recall cost should ultimately be paid by its insurance carrier, as well as ICI, the previous owner of Terra's U.K. business, which it acquired at the end of 1997. The charge, as well as $4 million in costs for an "extended …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Potencia Energy.(Brief article)

Potencia Energy has added new distribution partners, including Virginia Beach Beverages; Dixie Distributors in North Carolina; Dr Pepper-RC Bottling of West Jefferson, N.C.; …