Thursday 15 March 2012

Probe risks of oil drilling

The Alaskan coast has turned into a death trap for the state'sfishing and tourism industries, following the spill on March 24 ofsome 10 million gallons of oil from the tanker Exxon Valdez.

The responses - from Exxon Corp., the federal government andAlaskan officials - have delivered more rhetoric than action in thelast 11 days.

While the animal-rescue effort has intensified, how can Exxonever replace the sea otters, the birds and the beauty now destroyed?An apology will never repair the environmental damage.

So far, the attention has focused on the immediate circumstancesof the spill. But what will the FBI probe find? That the ship'scaptain was …

ConocoPhillips looks to sell Pa. refinery

NEW YORK (AP) — ConocoPhillips says it is looking for buyers for its oil refinery in Pennsylvania.

Like other East Coast refineries, the Trainer, Pa. facility has struggled to compete with foreign imports, weak fuel demand, and stringent regulations that make the refining business more costly.

Willie Chiang, Conoco senior vice president, said in a statement that the company decided to sell the …

US diplomat: post-9/11 embassies too fortress-like

The outgoing U.S. ambassador to Poland criticized the "fortress-like" feel of American embassies built since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, saying Thursday that some are excessively expensive and send an unfriendly message to non-Americans.

Victor Ashe is calling on U.S. authorities to reassess policies put in place after 9/11, which require equally tight security standards in both hot spots and places deemed much safer. He said there should not be a "one size fits all" approach.

"The type of embassy you might build in Pakistan has a different set of security needs _ which in that case would be substantial _ than an embassy you might …

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Peters reveals `Secret of Life'

Gretchen Peters has written lots of songs, ranging from theGeorge Strait hit "Chill of an Early Fall" to Martina McBride's"Independence Day," the 1995 Country Music Association song of theyear.

But what would Peters play for President Clinton?

"I'll do my Lava Lamp version (acoustic guitar, congas, fretlessbass) of `The Secret of Life,' and `Circus Girl,' " she said in aninterview last week. Peters, who appears at Schubas Saturday, was enroute to Nashville to sing in Sunday's 50th birthday bash for thepresident.

As Clinton was partying at New York City's Radio City MusicHall, John Hiatt, Jerry Jeff Walker, the Fairfield Four gospel groupand Peters …

DIVISIONS AND FORUMS PRESENT HONORS

Each year, AlChE's technical divisions and forums present nearly 50 awards that honor contributions across a wide spectrum of chemical engineering specializations (www.aiche.org/About/Awards/Division.aspx). These honors are presented at events held during AlChE's Spring and Annual meetings. The following awards were presented during the Oct. 201 1 Annual Meeting in Minneapolis, MN. Other groups will present their honors at the Spring Meeting and Global Congress on Process Safety in Houston, TX, Apr. 1-5, 2012.

CATALYSIS AND REACTION ENGINEERING DIV.

Division Practice Award

Robert McCabe, Ford Motor Co.

COMPUTATIONAL MOLECULAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING FORUM …

Rangers beat Royals 6-5 on passed ball in 9th

Ian Kinsler scored the go-ahead run on a passed ball in the ninth inning and the Texas Rangers used five unearned runs to rally from four down to beat the Kansas City Royals 6-5 on Tuesday night.

Kinsler led off the ninth with a double against Yasuhiko Yabuta (1-1), the fourth of five Royals pitchers. He advanced on a groundout and scored from third when Ramon Ramirez's pitch got away from catcher John Buck.

Eddie Guardado (1-1) picked up the victory, while C.J. Wilson worked the ninth for his 12th save in 14 opportunities. Wilson gave up a two-out single to Alex Gordon and Jose Guillen reached on an error before Mark Teahen struck out looking.

First …

More attacks on cops or skewed stats? Policies may prompt extra officer reports, fewer complaints

A third more Chicago Police officers reported getting attackedlast year, while fewer citizens filed complaints of excessive forceagainst cops, authorities said Tuesday.

Batteries on officers jumped 32 percent in 2004 and 38 percent in2003, according to a newly released department report. The number ofallegations filed against officers for using excessive force fell 26percent in 2004, said David Bayless, a police spokesman.

From the numbers, it might appear cops are facing skyrocketinglevels of violence and fewer citizens feel they're being mistreatedby the police. But those statistics could be skewed by changes in howofficers' reports and citizens' complaints are …

Dares to Addiction: Youth Definitions and Perspectives on Gambling

ABSTRACT

Background: Over the past decade, there has been a rapid growth of gambling in Canada and internationally. Although youth are a potentially vulnerable group, little is known about what they understand and if they are being affected by the recent increase in gambling.

Methods: This study examined how youth view gambling using an inductive qualitative research design and analysis based on grounded theory principles. Twelve focus groups were conducted comprising 103 participants (median age = 15 years) with diverse representation of Ontario youth. Focus-group questions were designed to capture youth's experiences and opinions about gambling.

Results: Youth …

Democratic aides: Pelosi supports automakers help

Democratic aides say Speaker Nancy Pelosi intends to seek legislation to provide relief to the battered auto industry, and wants it done in a post-election session of Congress likely to convene in the next few days.

Pelosi is not expected to specify how large a bailout she wants. The aides who described her views Tuesday did so on condition …

Tough tests for under-11s

WHITLAND Under-11s played two hard games against St Clears andMilford Haven.

The first game was an entertaining 4-4 draw with the home side StClears.

Whitland try scorers were Hywel Jackson, Stephen Pilot, JosephOwen and Joshua Davies. Whitland …

7 New Wonders of the World Chosen

LISBON, Portugal - The Great Wall of China, Rome's Colosseum, India's Taj Mahal and three architectural marvels from Latin America were among the new seven wonders of the world chosen in a global poll released on Saturday.

Jordan's Petra was the seventh winner. Peru's Machu Picchu, Brazil's Statue of Christ Redeemer and Mexico's Chichen Itza pyramid also made the cut.

About 100 million votes were cast by the Internet and cellphone text messages, said New7Wonders, the nonprofit organization that conducted the poll.

The seven beat out 14 other nominated landmarks, including the Eiffel Tower, Easter Island in the Pacific, the Statue of Liberty, the Acropolis, …

Venezuela's Chavez confirms he is willing to help negotiate release of US hostages

President Hugo Chavez said he will try to facilitate the release of three Americans held captive by Colombia's largest rebel group _ even though he has lost contact with the guerrillas.

Chavez confirmed his willingness to help on Sunday, a day after New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said the socialist leader had agreed to mediate a possible exchange of the U.S. defense contractors for imprisoned guerrillas.

"I told him that we're at their service, to try to help even though the issue is very complicated," said Chavez, speaking during his weekly television and radio program.

Chavez helped pave the way for the release of six captives …

American consumers unwittingly fuel toxic global trade in electronic waste

Most Americans think they are helping the earth when they recycle their old computers, televisions and cell phones. But chances are they are contributing to a global trade in electronic trash that endangers workers and pollutes the environment overseas.

While there are no precise figures, activists estimate that 50 to 80 percent of the 300,000 to 400,000 tons (270,000 to 360,000 metric tons) of electronics collected for recycling in the U.S. each year ends up overseas. Workers in countries such as China, India and Nigeria then use hammers, gas burners and their bare hands to extract metals, glass and other recyclables, exposing themselves and the environment to a cocktail of toxic chemicals.

"It is being recycled, but it's being recycled in the most horrific way you can imagine," said Jim Puckett of the Basel Action Network, the Seattle-based environmental group that tipped off Hong Kong authorities. "We're preserving our own environment, but contaminating the rest of the world."

The gear most likely to be shipped abroad is collected at free recycling drives, often held each April around Earth Day, recycling industry officials say. The sponsors _ chiefly companies, schools, cities and counties _ often hire the cheapest firms and do not ask enough questions about what becomes of the discarded equipment, the officials say.

Many so-called recyclers simply sell the working units and components, then give or sell the remaining scrap to export brokers.

"There are a lot of people getting away with exporting e-waste," said John Bekiaris, chief executive of San Francisco-based HMR USA Inc., which collects and disposes of unwanted IT equipment from Bay Area businesses. "Anyone who's disposing of their computer equipment really needs to do a thorough inspection of the vendors they use."

The problem could get worse. Most of the 2 million tons (1.8 million metric tons) of old electronics discarded annually by Americans goes to U.S. landfills, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data. But a growing number of U.S. states are banning such waste from landfills, which could drive more waste into the recycling stream and fuel exports, activists say.

Many brokers claim they are simply exporting used equipment for reuse in poor countries. That is what happened in September, when customs officials in Hong Kong were tipped off by environmentalists and intercepted two freight containers. They cracked the containers open and found hundreds of old computer monitors and televisions discarded by Americans thousands of miles away.

China bans the import of electronic waste, so the containers were sent back to the U.S.

The company that shipped out the containers was Fortune Sky USA, a Tennessee-based subsidiary of a Chinese company. General manager Vincent Yu said his company thought it was buying and shipping used computers, not old monitors and televisions, and is trying to get its money back.

Fortune Sky exports used computers and components to China, Malaysia, Vietnam and other Asian countries.

"There's a huge market over there for secondhand computers that we don't use anymore," Yu said. "I don't think it's going to cause any pollution. If the equipment can still be used, then that's good for everybody."

Yu refused to say where he bought the material, but Basel Action Network tracked it to a San Antonio, Texas, company that collects computers, printers and other electronics from schools and businesses.

Activists complain that most exporters do not test units to make sure they work before sending them overseas.

"Reuse is the new excuse. It's the new passport to export," said Puckett of Basel Action Network. "Other countries are facing this glut of exported used equipment under the pretext that it's all going to be reused."

At the other end at customs, the goods do not always get checked either.

"It is impossible to stop and check every single container imported into Hong Kong," said Kenneth Chan of Hong Kong's Environmental Protection Department. "Smugglers may also deliberately declare their ... waste as goods."

In the first nine months of this year, Hong Kong authorities returned 85 containers of electronic junk, including 20 from the U.S.

Exporting most electronic waste is not illegal in the United States. The U.S. does bar the export of monitors and televisions with cathode-ray tubes without permission from the importing country, but federal authorities do not have the resources to check most containers.

The EPA recognizes the problem but does not believe that stopping exports is the solution, said Matt Hale, who heads the agency's office of solid waste. Since most electronics are manufactured abroad, it makes sense to recycle them abroad, Hale said.

"What we need to do is work internationally to upgrade the standards (for recycling) wherever it takes place," he said.

The EPA is working with environmental groups, recyclers and electronics manufacturers to develop a system to certify companies that recycle electronics responsibly. But so far the various players have not agreed on standards and enforcement.

Many activists believe the answer lies in requiring electronics makers to take back and recycle their own products. Such laws would encourage manufacturers to make products that are easier to recycle and contain fewer dangerous chemicals, they say.

Eight U.S. states, including five this year, have passed such laws, and companies such as Apple, Dell, Hewlett-Packard and Sony now take back their products at no charge. Some require consumers to mail in their old gear, while others have drop-off centers. HP says it also now designs its equipment with fewer toxic materials and has made it easier to recycle.

__

On the Net:

Basel Action Network: http://www.ban.org/

Computer Take Back Campaign: http://www.computertakeback.com/

International Association of Electronics Recyclers: http://www.iaer.org/

Tuesday 13 March 2012

Husband of slain Wis. woman vindicated, angry

Lane McIntyre's world stopped in March 1980.

McIntyre, then 23, came home from his third-shift job to the one-bedroom apartment in Columbus he shared with his 18-year-old wife, Marilyn. He'd saved her from an abusive foster father and married her when she was 17.

"I've never felt that strong of love since. It was pure," he said Thursday. "Marilyn was a living angel."

But his angel was dead. A knife stuck out of her chest. Her skull had been fractured. Her neck was bruised from being strangled. A coroner later reported "evidence of traumatic sexual contact."

Their 3-month-old son, Christopher, lay sleeping, untouched, in his crib. Lane McIntyre managed to call his mother, who called police. As five officers pushed past him into the apartment, he remembered, "my brain didn't want to believe what I was seeing."

Since that day, McIntyre watched his life crumble. Two more marriages dissolved. His son, now 29, doesn't speak to him. Through it all, the murder hung over him like a shadow.

"You're darn right I'm angry," he said.

On Tuesday, detectives acting on new DNA evidence arrested McIntyre's longtime friend Curtis Forbes in connection with Marilyn McIntyre's death.

Forbes, 51, of Randolph, remains in the Columbia County Jail. District Attorney Jane Kohlwey said charges could come on Monday but that she hasn't decided what specific counts to file.

Authorities typically can hold a person for only 48 hours without an initial court appearance, but Kohlwey said a judge has granted the jail permission to hold Forbes beyond that.

Kohlwey said Thursday that Forbes hadn't retained a lawyer yet. The Baraboo public defender's office, which handles Columbia County cases, said Forbes hadn't asked for representation. Public defender Mark Gumz said he hasn't been allowed to see Forbes.

For Lane McIntyre, now 52, the arrest has generated a mix of vindication and anger. He now lives in Beaver Dam, a city of 15,000 about 40 miles northeast of Madison and a dozen miles from Columbus, where Marilyn McIntyre was killed.

Sitting on the porch of his apartment Thursday, he recounted meeting Marilyn when she was 16.

He said she had bounced from foster home to foster home, but she still cared about other people. He remembered collecting donations for UNICEF with her one Halloween and how she wouldn't let him stop, even when he grew tired.

He said he helped her flee from an abusive foster father, and that was when she decided to marry him.

He's known Forbes since grade school. They were mortal enemies, he said, always getting into fights until they finally became friends in high school.

But Forbes abused his girlfriend, McIntyre said, and the girlfriend turned to Marilyn McIntyre for help.

The girlfriend left Forbes a week before the killing, he said. He theorized that Forbes stopped at the McIntyre apartment looking for the girlfriend. According to court documents, Lane McIntyre told investigators the day after the murder that Forbes should be their prime suspect.

But the investigation went nowhere. Meanwhile, Lane McIntyre said, people talked about him, wondered if he did it.

His son told the Wisconsin State Journal in 2008 that stories about his father being involved in his mother's death were a big factor in their estrangement. No phone listing for Christopher McIntyre could be found Thursday.

In 2007, the state crime lab matched DNA from the McIntyre apartment to hair samples Forbes gave police in 1980. The body was exhumed in March 2008 for collection of more evidence.

This past February detectives interviewed an informant, unnamed so far in court documents, who said he witnessed a conversation between Forbes and Forbes' son around 2002. Forbes began talking about how he took a wife's friend home from a bar and she didn't breathe anymore that night.

Now Lane McIntyre, bitter and angry, is looking for payback from those who thought he killed his wife. He wants to write a book about the murder and "the way people are in a small town."

He chose to stay in Wisconsin because an innocent man doesn't run, he said. If the book sells, though, he hopes to retire someplace far away.

"I want to go where nobody knows me, where I don't have to defend myself, and live the rest of my days in peace," he said. "I have a right to be happy. I didn't do anything wrong."

Filmmaker scores with `Basketball'

Filmmaker scores with `Basketball'

"Love and Basketball" (New Line Cinema) rates as a three pointer. The winning story of childhood sweethearts both of whom passionately love playing basketball was written and directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood.

This young African American film-maker deserves a big grandstand cheer for bringing to the screen a story where decency matters.

Every detail is made to count in this beautifully constructed film. Take for instance Monica and Quincy's first encounter. He's shooting baskets with some of his 11-year-old buddies when a lanky, new neighbor their same age, Monica, asks to join the game. They scoff to think a girl could be any good at basketball but her outstanding ability at the game soon earns their admiration.

She also wins little Q's affections as well. Soon, he asks her to be his girlfriend, a relationship that lasts about a minute when he tries to order the feisty little girl around. Their scuffle produces a scar on her face.

In later scenes the camera will offer a glimpse of that mark at moments where their adult relationship is in turmoil too.

Prince-Bythewood offers this sort of touch to her story subtly but in a way that draws the audience deeply in.

The main thrust of the story follows their individual dreams of playing professional basketball but as significantly "Love and Basketball" is also about important relationships in their lives, especially Quincy with his father and Monica with her mother. These relationships become as fraught with emotion for the moviegoer as is the sweet romance of the two youngsters we see grow up.

Always our interest is perked by the way their basketball careers progress.

We're more accustomed to watching the way young men leap from the high school floor to scholarships to college and sometimes even a bid from the pros. So Monica's heartfelt desire to be a pro and the lengths she goes to achieve her dream exert even a greater fascination on us.

Interestingly, it is her stubborn unwillingness to give in even in the face of apparently insurmountable obstacles that most endears her to us. This tomboy is as sweet a young girl as the screen has given us in a long time.

A generally superior cast give intense performances, certainly Omar Epps as Q gives a star turn, but the passions of Monica, her mother, and Q's father are the most involving.

A hero to his son, Q's dad, a pro ball player, is sensitively delineated by Dennis Haysbert as a man who adores his son and to that degree wants to be a good family man, but on the sly accepts the sexual favors of young women who flock to his door when he is on the road. All the while he advises his son, a rising star in basketball, to stay away from such temptations. Haysbert manages to give a strong performance of a weak man.

The remarkable Alfre Woodard, one of Hollywood's most powerful actresses, portrays a mother devoted to her daughter, Monica, but leary of her child's obsession with basketball. Mother and daughter often fail to communicate well but have a deep emotional attachment, all of which is evident through Woodard's exquisite performance.

Last, but certainly not least, there is the theatrically experienced Sanaa Lathan who gives the high strung Monica every drop of heartfelt concentration that a young athlete with dreams of being the best at her game would have. Seldom do you see a character mature before your eyes during a film story but Lathan subtly portrays the tender story of how Monica grows into womanhood.

Of interest to Bostonians, Lathan is the daughter of Stan Lathan, who arrived here in the Sixties to act in Bryant Rollins' stage play "Riot" and stayed on as a cameraman and director of 'GBH-TV's black community show "Say Brother."

Photo (Two young people playing basketball)

Le Toux scores to give Union 1-0 victory over Fire

CHESTER, Pa. (AP) — Sebastien Le Toux scored his 11th league goal of the season in the 36th minute, leading the Philadelphia Union over Chicago 1-0 Saturday and extending the Fire's winless streak to five.

The French-born Le Toux received a green card this year, potentially making him eligible to play for the U.S. national team. The 26-year-old midfielder and forward is third in MLS in goals, trailing Los Angeles' Edson Buddle (13) and New York's Juan Pablo Angel (12).

Le Toux beat goalkeeper Sean Johnson after receiving a pass from Justin Mapp.

Philadelphia (6-11-6) became the last MLS team with a shutout this year. In goalkeeper Brad Knighton's only previous start, he received a red card Aug. 8 at Dallas and was replaced by Chris Seitz.

Chicago (6-8-8) has three losses and two draws in its last five matches.

Gaza's Businesses Under Rising Pressure

BEIT HANOUN, Gaza Strip - Mamoun Hamada's cannery, which used to provide a living for hundreds of people, is phasing out production, along with 80 percent of the factories in Gaza, after the territory was sealed off from the world following the violent Hamas takeover last month.

The international community, including its visiting new Mideast envoy Tony Blair, must now decide whether it wants to keep Gaza isolated as part of its boycott of Hamas, but at the cost of destroying Gaza's economy and turning the area's 1.4 million residents into increasingly resentful welfare recipients.

International aid agencies warn that time is running out.

The strict closure has forced the dismissal of about 70,000 of 120,000 private sector workers since mid-June, driving unemployment above 40 percent, according to the Palestinian Federation of Industries. Even before then, 1.1 million Gazans received foreign food assistance, a figure that rose sharply as a result of Israeli trade restrictions and an international aid embargo imposed after Hamas won 2006 elections.

"The pillars of Gaza's economy have weakened over the years. Now, with a sustained closure on this current scale, they would be at risk of virtually irreversible collapse," the World Bank wrote in a document obtained by The Associated Press.

Since the Hamas takeover, Israel has permitted shipments only of food and basic supplies into Gaza, but largely halted the imports of raw materials for industry and all exports of Gaza goods. Gaza's main cargo crossing, Karni, has been closed; shipments have been sent through two smaller passages.

Israel, which shuns Hamas as a terrorist organization, says it cannot reopen Karni because there's no one with whom to coordinate border traffic. Gaza militants keep attacking crossings with mortars and explosives, and Israel says it is too risky to operate Karni, where Israeli border officials would be exposed to danger.

It's difficult to gauge how hard Hamas' political rival, the West Bank-based government of moderates installed by President Mahmoud Abbas, is pushing for a reopening of the Gaza crossings. Abbas still claims to be the legitimate authority over Gaza, but he has cut off ties with Hamas since the Gaza takeover.

Gaza's worried business leaders are still trying to arrange a meeting with government officials in the West Bank to discuss the fallout from the closure, said Nasser el-Helou, who imports doors, windows and medicine.

Mideast analyst Mouin Rabbani said Abbas appears to be trying to punish Hamas.

"There's an element of trying to demonstrate to the population (in Gaza) that this is what you get when ruled by Hamas," said Rabbani, of the International Crisis Group.

Several international aid officials, speaking privately, agreed with this assessment.

However, Abbas aide Saeb Erekat, who regularly meets with Israeli officials, said he has repeatedly urged them to reopen Gaza crossings. Erekat said it would be shortsighted to try to exploit the Gaza closure for political gain. "No one thinks like that in Abbas' office," Erekat said.

Blair's new employer, the international diplomatic Quartet comprised of the U.S., the European Union, the U.N. and Russia, has not yet staked out a position. U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon has called for opening Gaza.

After a two-day visit to Israel and the Palestinian areas, Blair is to return to the region in September, but by then it might already be too late for Gaza's economy.

Since June, 3,190 factories and workshops in Gaza have closed and the remaining 20 percent have reduced production, Palestinian business leaders said. The U.N. has halted $93 million worth of projects because it couldn't bring in raw materials. Of 68,000 private sector workers who have been fired in recent weeks, 10,000 have already applied for assistance, a U.N. official said.

The closure of the crossings hurts every aspect of Gaza's economy.

In the case of the Hamada cannery, the losses begin with farmer Abed Abu Mustafa. The 42-year-old, four of his 10 children and five seasonal workers pick tomatoes on their farm in southern Gaza. Hamada pays the farmer $100 for every ton of tomatoes, and bought Abu Mustafa's crop before the closure.

"This season, I can sell my tomatoes, but what about next season?" Abu Mustafa said during a demonstration outside Gaza's parliament, where farmers blocked the road with trucks to protest their uncertain future.

Hamada said he's still canning tomatoes he's already paid for, and would store them in a warehouse, but that he wouldn't buy any more crops. He used to export most of his goods to the West Bank and sell the rest in Gaza's smaller market. Hamada hasn't fired his 60 workers yet, but he has shortened their shifts.

Hamada still struggles along where others have shut down. The AG Garment factory halted production June 14, putting 240 people out of work. It's unable to deliver $38,000 worth of clothes to its Israeli contracting company, according to the Palestinian Private Sector Coordinating Council.

Israel's business community is also increasingly concerned.

Ronen Leshem, head of the business department at Israel's Peres Center for Peace, said Israeli businesses will be hurt by losing Gaza, a key market.

"In a few weeks, the business sector in Gaza is going to collapse, and one of the big losers is going to be Israel," he wrote in an op-ed piece in The Marker, an Israeli business publication.

A Brave New Fagginess?

Glenn O'Brien advises American men to embrace flamboyance with abandon.

Lawn-mower haircuts and J. C. Penney polos are to Glenn O'Brien what Haiti is to Sean Penn. They provoke in him a kind of heroic passion that makes him want to save untold thousands from fashion disaster, or at least from the creeping sadness of the Gap.

O'Brien has been a downtown Zelig for more years than he's willing to reveal: one of Warhol's Factory workers, an editor and art director of interview magazine, host of the pre-MTV public-access new-wave show TV Party, creative director at Barney's. Now he's GQ's Style Guy columnist and a freelance something-or-other to the fabulous. Husband, father, devout golfer. It's a picaresque biography, and you have to envy the guy. Name your favorite punker emeritus. O'Brien is friends with him. The only misstep he could make now would be to overplay his hand.

Enter How to Be a Man: A Guide to Style and Behavior for the Modern Gentleman (Rizzoli, $25 ; illustrated by Jean-Philippe Delhomme). It's bound in a jacketless clothette cover that puts it in the same class of highly giftable how-tos as that red thing bought by so many and read by so few, The Dangerous Book for Boys. The headings to most of its fifty brief chapters borrow the users'-manual conceit: "How to Not Look Stupid," "How to Have a Vice," "How to Be an Individual."

Don't let the nuts-and-bolts framing device fool you. This three-hundred-page tome (much of it repurposed from his columns) is only a "guide" in the way that a drunk uncle's monologue is "advice." A few nuggets are in there, but you have to be patient, and maybe start drinking yourself, to get them.

A men's-style writer first must make the case that it's OK to care about how you look. Many hetero men take a certain pride in appearing hideous, but O'Brien wants us to know we're only hurting ourselves. Here he is at his best, on wearing the right suit: "Some in the pack seem to wear suits that adhere more reasonably to their bodies, and we make a mental note that these are the young alphas, the future chiefs of that corporate tribe, because men without vanity, with no ability to perceive themselves in the mirror, are fated to be drones. " It's a sparely written truth, unbearable to concede but impossible to deny. It could almost have come from our sex's greatest living philosopher, Jack Donaghy, Alec Baldwin's fictional executive on 30 Rock.

As promised, O'Brien supplies sartorial advice for avoiding dronehood. Here, unabridged, are the net additions to my fashion sense provided by HTBAM:

* Jacket lapels of just over three inches will look good forever.

* Having a tailor open the cuffs on an off-the-rack suit can make it look bespoke.

* Socks don't have to match your shoes or your pants.

And that's it. The rest I either knew already or had to reject as being unlikely to matter in the basement at Syms. (Sorry, Glenn. Even if I won the Powerball I would not pay four hundred dollars for a necktie.) O'Brien has, simultaneously, too much and too little to say. Being an expert on affectation, he inflates his cause into a rambling manifesto of apocalyptic dandyism:

What is the answer to the neoconservatives, the Islamic fundamentalists, twelve-step earnestness, and Scientology? Maybe it's mass cultural extravagance. Bring on the sissies, the fops, and high fashion. Fashion is the one thing I can imagine taking young men's minds off institutional religion, which to me is nothing but failed fagginess. We need a brave new fagginess that will blow the Pope's red shoes right out of the water and make the Taliban's heavyhanded mascara run from weeping. Straight men need to find their flamboyance. We need gay men to be gayer too. We need straight men to take up the kilt and swish with abandon. Bend it like Beckham! We need a new superficiality that can challenge the insane illusions that pass for reality in the media.

Um . . . OK. I was really just wondering whether I could wear my blazer over a T-shirt, but if putting on a tartan skirt and painting my toenails would defeat Islamic terror, Tom Cruise, and Rick Santorum, who am I to say no?

I nearly suggested, snidely, that A Brave New Fagginess would have been a better title for this book. But now I'm saying it with no snideness at all. It would certainly prepare us better for the latter half of HTBAM, which departs the fashion district for higher climes in three ambitious sections: "Behavior," "Culture and Society," and "Wisdom." A sampling:

If you can afford it, hire a person with a BBC accent to answer your telephone. If you must pick up your own phone, answer it "Hello, studio." In New York City, many landlines are answered "Hello, studio," or simply "Studio." This is a glamorous way to answer, suggesting that you have reached an art studio or a photo studio ? possibly even a movie studio or massage parlor.

Brave new fagginess, indeed! I'm all for correcting Hemingway's silly male imperatives of combat and stoicism, and in fairness, O'Brien's masculine ideal often strikes a good balance between strength and refinement. But the times he blows it are so grating it's hard to take the rest seriously. His chapter "How to Fight like a Man" boils down to a few options for the gentleman in melee: Coldcock your opponent, kick him in the nuts, or run away. What ? would taking yourself hostage and backing out of the room, like Clea von Little in Blazing Saddles, be too undignified?

When we seek medical care, O'Brien wants us to page our inner Janet Leigh: "Decorum will get you many places, but it will get you nowhere in a hospital or a doctor's office. If you are not being treated right or even treated at all, why not scream? Not just a little venting of steam but a real bloodcurdling, ululating scream from the depths of Hell. " Count me among the men who would rather die quietly in an emergency-room vinyl chair.

"Now, hold on," a charitable soul might protest. "O'Brien is a satirist ? he has the golden-satyr cuff links to prove it! Can't you recognize irony when you see it? " Alas, I can. The waiting-room advice comes at the end of a three-page diatribe on the evils of our health-care system so earnest in tone that it lapses into perhaps our most boring contemporary cliche: the HMO horror story.

Nor do I believe O'Brien to be pulling our legs in "How to Age," when he suggests that "our rulers" effect a campaign of indirect murder against promising young people.

Give them heroin and guns and guitars, and for God's sake, keep them downtown! As long as natural leaders are neutralized, as long as the young can be alientated from the old, and as long as women and men can be set at one another's throats, it is unlikely that anyone will pay much attention to the more essential issues of ethics and social justice.

Yeah, so anyway, this blazer with this T-shirt? Thumbs down?

I wish he were joking when he informs us, in the same chapter, "It is in the interest of big business for there to be fewer workers and for them to have shorter lives. " Yes, that's why every week America loses another couple factories to India and China: They have such attractively tiny workforces. By the time I got to "How to Be Famous (or Not)" ? which suggests that "if you are going to be riding in a car, always wear underwear" ? he had completely lost me. There are only two possible things he could be referring to: the exposed cooters of Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. Yes, he's having fun. But what man jokes to a male audience about not flashing your vagina?

It's a shame, because when he's standing on firm ground, O'Brien is capable of something indistinguishable from wit: "The worst offense is wearing suspenders and a belt simultaneously. That's what you call profound pessimism. " And, "I would never wear chalk stripes to a funeral unless I was celebrating." And, "White athletic socks should only be worn with actual athletic shoes during athletics or work boots while doing physical labor, and tube socks should only be worn when masturbating in someone else's bed, or better yet, never." I could read that guy all day! OK, maybe not all day, but for a while. Actually, come to think of it, a lot of these pieces could be stripped down and pressed into good service as glossy magazine copy. Hey, there's an idea!

In LUXURY & DEGRADATION, writers explore the ups and downs of the reading season.

[Author Affiliation]

Ross Is a writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. He is also a cowriter of the best-selling America: The Book (2004) and Earth: The Book (2010; both Grand Central).

JASON ROSS is a staff writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, for which he has received five primetime Emmy Awards, a Writers Guild Award, and a Peabody Award. He was a cowriter of the bestselling America: The Book (2004) and Earth: The Book (2010; both Grand Central). In May, he was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award. (They can't all be home runs, people.) In these pages, he peruses style guru Glenn O'Brien's guide How to Be a Man.

Pakistani came to U.S. to help al-Qaida, FBI says

NEW YORK--A Pakistani held for four months in the government'sterrorism investigation was charged Friday with entering the UnitedStates to help clear the way for an al-Qaida associate to sneak inafter him.

Uzair Paracha, 23, detained as a material witness since his Marcharrest in New York, waved and smiled to more than a dozen familymembers as he entered U.S. District Court in Manhattan for a briefappearance. He was held pending a bail hearing next week.

According to the criminal complaint, Paracha agreed to help the al-Qaida associate obtain documents that would let him enter the UnitedStates and help him obtain legal immigration status. The governmenthas not released the associate's identity but say the man hasremained overseas.

Anthony Ricco, Paracha's lawyer, said outside court that hisclient was manipulated into helping the associate and was lookingforward to a trial to prove that he had no criminal intent.

He described Paracha as "a very bright, but, I say, a very naiveyoung man" and added that he did not expect to contest that hisclient knew the associate was in al-Qaida.

"Having knowledge someone is in al-Qaida is not a criminal act,"Ricco said. "Many members of al-Qaida are not involved in criminalactivity."

Prosecutors said Paracha met with a man believed to be an al-Qaida associate in Karachi, Pakistan, before Paracha traveled to theUnited States in mid-February.

Paracha was told that the man wanted to invest about $200,000 inthe business for which Paracha worked in Karachi--and that he was notto ask any questions because the associate and a second man weresupporters of Osama bin Laden, the complaint alleged.

The complaint, prepared by an FBI agent, said Paracha believed thefunds belonged to al-Qaida and that he needed to perform certaintasks for the money to be invested.

On Thursday, Farhat Paracha said in a telephone interview from herhome in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi that the UnitedStates is holding her son illegally.

AP

Edwin Starr, who sang 'War,' dies in England at 61

LONDON--Edwin Starr, the soul artist who sang the No. 1 Motown hit"War," died of an apparent heart attack Wednesday, his manager said.He was 61.

In the 1970 hit, Mr. Starr roared, "What is it good for?Absolutely nothing!"

Mr. Starr died at his home near Nottingham, England, said managerLilian Kyle.

Last year, Starr, from the Motown stable and similar in style toJames Brown, sang at the wedding of Liza Minnelli and David Gest. Healso had performed with Bruce Springsteen, who covered "War."

Born Charles Hatcher in Nash-ville, Tenn., Mr. Starr formed hisfirst group, the Future Tones, in 1957. In 1965, he was offered asolo deal. Early hits included "Agent Double-O Soul" and "Stop Her onSight (S.O.S)." But his biggest success came in 1970 with theVietnam-era protest song "War." Other top 10 hits included "Twenty-Five Miles" and "Contact."

Mr. Starr, who made a comeback during the disco craze, later spentmost of his time touring Europe on the oldies circuit. Last weekend,he performed in Stuttgart, Germany.

"His death has come as a total shock," said Paul Carvell, afriend. "His health hasn't been brilliant recently, but he kept thataway from most people and continued to give it his all when heperformed."

AP

Armed Services chairman: Cuts could mean draft

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Armed Services Committee chairman is warning that further reductions to projected defense spending could make a military career so unattractive that it would force the Pentagon to revive the draft.

Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, R-Calif., suggested that spending cuts beyond the $350 billion that President Barack Obama and Congress agreed to in the debt accord this past summer could force the military to slash the number of service members, now some 2.3 million, including National Guard and reserves.

A special bipartisan committee is trying to come up with $1.5 trillion in spending cuts from all government spending. If it fails, or if Congress rejects its proposal, automatic cuts of $1.2 trillion would kick in, with half coming from defense.

"We also need to understand what it's going to mean to keep an all-volunteer force. Do we want to reinstitute the draft? Some of the cuts we're talking about would take over 200,000 out" McKeon said Monday in an interview with Fox News.

The military draft ended in 1973 as the U.S. switched to an all-volunteer force after the Vietnam War. In the decades since, some in Congress have suggested reviving the draft, but the Pentagon has rejected the idea and efforts have gone nowhere with Republicans or Democrats.

McKeon fears that defense cuts would force the Pentagon to reduce the size of the force, delay improvements for weapons and slice military benefits, steps that would made a military career far less attractive to recruits.

"Our troops that go outside the line over in Afghanistan every day should not be having to think about what their retirement's going to be, what their pension's going to be, are they going to be able to stay in the military," McKeon said.

Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., chairman of the Armed Services personnel subcommittee, on Wednesday expressed concerns about defense cuts but said a draft was unnecessary.

"I'm concerned that the cuts are so devastating to our national security that almost any negative consequence can arise, but I actually have supported and continue to support as a budget-cutting measure elimination of the Selective Service," Wilson said in an interview.

The lawmaker, who attended the Marine Corps graduation at Parris Island last Friday, said service members are volunteering even in a time of two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"We have the new greatest generation," Wilson said. "We don't need as large a military due to the technology we have, the equipment we have outfitting our personnel. They really are storm troopers."

Democratic Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts said "there are savings to be had in the military. The all-volunteer Army seems to be working pretty well. Reinstating the draft? I don't know what that accomplishes."

In recent weeks, McKeon suggested that he might back an increase in revenue through taxes to avoid deeper cuts in defense.

Monday 12 March 2012

China shares hit 11-month high on revival hopes

Chinese shares rebounded to an 11-month high Wednesday on optimism about the economy after a government official issued a forecast of strong second quarter growth.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index jumped 29.6 points, or 1 percent, to close at 2922.3, the highest since July 17. The Shenzhen Composite Index for China's smaller second exchange added 1.8 percent to 953.93.

Investors were encouraged by a forecast issued by an official of China's statistics agency saying economic growth in the April-to-June quarter should be 8 percent compared with the year-earlier period, analysts said.

"The remark is instilling confidence in the market. Since the official is from the statistics bureau, he must have some data to back himself up," said Huang Xiangbin, an analyst for Cinda Securities in Beijing. Huang said the forecast is stronger than expected.

Resources, a sector closely linked to economic performances, climbed.

China Shenhua Energy Ltd., the country's biggest coal producer, gained 4.8 percent to 27.84 yuan, while Datong Coal Industry Co. rose 4.4 percent to 35.19 yuan.

PetroChina Ltd., Asia's biggest gas and oil producer, added 1.3 percent to 14.06 yuan, and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., Asia's largest refiner by capacity, increased 2 percent to 10.52 yuan.

Analysts said metals shares were boosted by expectations that Beijing might ease curbs on exports of industrial materials after the United States and the European Union filed a World Trade Organization complaint over them.

Jiangxi Copper Ltd., China's second largest producer, surged by the daily limit of 10 percent to 32.4 yuan, and Aluminum Corp of China vaulted 4.4 percent to 12.37 yuan.

Brokerages rose on expectations they will get more business after regulators lifted a ban on initial public offerings last week. Hongyuan Securities climbed 2.8 percent to 21.14 yuan, while Guoyuan Securities gained 2.1 percent to 18.59 yuan.

In currency markets, the yuan strengthened to 6.8335 to the U.S. dollar, up from Tuesday's close of 6.8362.

Cakewalk Dimension Pro

* I can no longer remember when the first virtual sampler came to my attention. It was probably the EXS 24 that Emagic sold as an add-on to Logic 4 or 5, way back at the turn of the century. A lot has changed in six years. Almost every company that makes music production software has thrown some kind of soft synth or sampler into a very crowded market. High-end sequencing software like Logic, Cubase and even Pro Tools all include some kind of synth or sampler. Many other companies like Applied Acoustics, McDSR Native Instruments and countless others offer many varieties of virtual synths and samplers. Cakewalk has been including Dimension with its Project 5 Version 2 software, and now also offers Project 5 users the option to upgrade to its Pro version at a special price. Dimension Pro is also available on its own as a plug-in for any other sequencer. Dimension Pro, unlike other Cakewalk products, is now available for Mac as well as Windows, and works with any sequencer that supports AU, VSTi, or DXi.

At first glance there isn't much to differentiate Dimension Pro from the many other sampler/synthesizers out there. In brief, it is a multi-timbral synth and sampler, loaded with 1,500 presets. As a synth it combines sound generators with modulators, EQs, filters, and effects. As a sampler it comes loaded with 7 GB of .wav files, but any audio sample can be used. Its synth and sampler capabilities are fully integrated. Each program uses up to four voices, referred to as "Elements." An Element can be either a generated sound, one of the included sample sets, or any audio file.

The interface is refreshingly simple, especially compared to Sculpture, Apple's flagship Logic Pro sampler. The top line is for loading and creating programs, and changing MIDI and file settings. When selecting a program a separate browser window opens, which is a great time saving device. The bottom section is a mixer, where levels, panning and FX levels are changed for each of the four Elements.

The mid section is for selecting and modifying Elements. Pushing a button marked El, E2, E3, or E4 turns the middle of the interface into an editor specific to that particular Element. There is a subsection to the editor labelled "Modulator," which operates the same way, effectively using buttons to switch pages. So despite how simple the interface looks, deep editors can get right to the root of their sounds, while those of us happy to browse can simply move from one preset to the next.

Personally, I always enjoy scrolling through presets before I dive into a soft synth's editor, and many of the 1,500 programs that come pieloaded are quite remarkable. Those built from samples are especially great. The first thing that I checked out were the orchestra samples, and they are all very detailed. There is a selection of presets included called the Garritan Pocket Orchestra, which includes enough samples to put together a reasonably good sounding symphony. Many individual acoustic instruments, from upright basses to accordions, all sound terrific, although there are a few instruments that seem like a little filler. Of course, there is nothing wrong with having a selection of samples that are merely average when the Dimension Pro's editor gives you the option to turn them into something great.

The programs based on generated sounds are also good. The Dimension Pro includes many pads and atmospheres, sure to please sound designers as well as musicians. There are also drum samples, and loops included, although these are a little limited and probably exist only to show off what Dimension Pro can do.

Here are a few other things worth mentioning:

* Any program based on a loop can be edited in your sequencer, by dragging its icon onto the arrange page. Samples themselves cannot be edited in Dimension, but since you are using it in your high-end sequencer, you already have those tools.

* Doing the free upgrade from 1.1 to 1.2 got rid of most of my minor gripes, especially since the newer version allows parameters to be mapped to MIDI controllers.

* The Cakewalk website has lots of other great tips for using Dimension Pro, shedding light on just how versatile this software is.

Although this is a plug-in only, the Dimension Pro would also be a great live instrument. In fact, any audio producer or performer could benefit from this software. Visit the Cakewalk website to hear audio samples.

The manufacturer's suggested retail price for Dimension Pro is $249 US.

For more product information, contact: Cakewalk, FAX (617) 423-9007, sales@cakewalk.com, www.cakewalk. com.

Manufacturer's Comments

Dimension Pro's simple tagline "Amazing Sounds, Endless Possibilities" sums up our mission with this product. Dimension Pro achieves this creative ideal by combining realistic instrument samples with highly advanced synthesis. And Dimension Pro should not be confused with the ROMpler instruments currently crowding the market. Why? The thing that sets Dimension Pro apart from the competition is the unrivalled non-aliasing Expression Engine, a hallmark of the unparalleled sound quality found exclusively in the Cakewalk Instruments line. Also, at press time, we are pleased to make available the free Dimension Pro Expansion Pack 1, which contains 350 new programs and over 120 MB of new samples and wavetables.

Steve Thomas

Cakewalk

[Author Affiliation]

Jeff Pearce is a Toronto-based musician, producer, and recording engineer.

Peabody's 4Q profit soars

Coal-mining Peabody Energy Corp. reported fourth-quarter profits that easily topped Wall Street expectations on surging contract prices in Australia. Company shares surged 12 percent.

Acknowledging continued softening in U.S. coal demand, however, the St. Louis-based company said it would stick with the 2009 production outlook it lowered recently _ 190 to 195 million tons in the U.S., 22 to 24 million tons in Australia.

Peabody, among of the world's biggest coal producers, said it would wait until later this year to issue earnings guidance, citing "global economic uncertainty."

Peabody reported net income of $293.3 million, or $1.10 per share, in the latest quarter, up from $35.8 million, or 13 cents per share, a year earlier, when the company took a charge from spinning off Patriot Coal Co.

Revenue in the most recent period rose to $1.9 billion from 1.2 billion.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected, on average, earnings per share of 74 cents and revenue of $1.71 billion.

Peabody's shares jumped $2.89, or 12 percent, to $26.73 in early trading Tuesday.

"Amid challenging near-term markets, we enter 2009 with a sound financial position and will pursue opportunities to further strengthen the portfolio," said Greg Boyce, Peabody's chairman and chief executive.

For all of last year, Peabody said it earned $953.5 million, or $3.51 per share, on sales of 255.5 million tons of coal. That compares with 264.3 million, or 98 cents per share, on 236.1 million tons in 2007. In addition to charges from the Patriot spinoff, Peabody said its 2007 results were hurt by foreign-exchange rates, higher debt expenses and lower prices for metallurgical coal, which is used in steel production.

Revenue for 2008 was $6.6 billion, up from $4.5 billion the previous year.

"Peabody exceeded expectations with their sales and operating performance, proving to be a tough act to follow for its peers over the coming weeks," said Daniel Scott, an analyst with Dahlman Rose & Co.

Shares of major coal mining companies _ in many cases the darlings of the energy sector in recent years _ have been under pressure lately. Some of the biggest customers are steel companies, which have been slashing production amid a global economic downturn.

Peabody said its U.S. production essentially is sold out for 2009, with roughly three-quarters of its domestic production already priced for 2010, leaving 45 million to 55 million tons of its U.S. production yet to be contracted for that year.

In Australia, Peabody said it has 5 million to 6 million tons of seaborne thermal coal still unpriced for the last nine months of this year and 10 million to 11 million tons for 2010. The company says it has 4 million to 5 million tons of Australian-based metallurgical coal available to be priced for 2009's last three quarters, and 7 to 8 million tons still unpriced for 2010.

While many analysts have cut price targets for Peabody and other big players in the sector, observers expect the massive stimulus package planned by the Obama administration to increase business by bolstering spending on infrastructure projects _ repairing roads and bridges, and advancing energy efficient programs.

Peabody said global coal demand rose 2 percent last year to meet electricity demand, largely in emerging economies overseas such as China and India. The miner noted that this year's coal demand will be impacted by the global pullback in steelmaking and moderate softness in global electricity generation, offset by growth from new construction of power plants and increased market share for coal.

"We believe that inventories will rebalance, steel demand will recover, new coal plants will come on line and existing plants will run at higher utilization, while difficult geology and lack of capital access will deplete supply and limit infrastructure development," Boyce said.

___

On the Net:

Peabody Energy Corp., http://peabodyenergy.com

First ladies' gowns return to view at Smithsonian

WASHINGTON (AP) — Dresses, china and mementos dating back to days when Americans referred to the first lady as "lady presidentress" or "republican queen" will return to view Saturday at the National Museum of American History, along with Michelle Obama's dashing inaugural gown as a centerpiece.

The new exhibition "The First Ladies" features 26 dresses and about 160 other objects ranging from Martha Washington's White House collection to a first look at Laura Bush's china. It's the 10th version of the first ladies exhibit in nearly 100 years. The last one closed in October as the museum moves historic objects out of its west wing for a major renovation beginning early next year.

"We knew that it would be unacceptable during the renovation timeframe for the public to go two years without this popular and almost 100-year-old tradition at the Smithsonian," interim museum director Marc Pachter said.

When it first opened in 1914, the first ladies collection was the first time the Smithsonian Institution gave women a prominent place in history, he said. Every first lady since Helen Taft has followed the tradition of donating her inaugural gown to the collection. Last year, Obama gave the museum her dress designed by Jason Wu.

According to the Smithsonian, the term "first lady" was first used in 1849 by President Zachary Taylor in his eulogy of Dolley Madison. Before that, a variety of other terms were used over the nation's first 100 years.

The new exhibit examines how first ladies have shaped their roles as the influence of women in society has changed and ponders what will happen when a woman is elected president. Eight dresses and at least 10 other items, including Laura Bush's state china service, are on view for the first time or the first time in decades as the museum freshens its display and incorporates new stories.

"There is no job description for first lady of the United States," said Lisa Kathleen Graddy, curator of the collection. "Each one remakes the undefined and challenging position to suit her own interests, the needs of the presidential administration and the public's changing expectations of women in general and first ladies in particular."

Sections of the exhibition are devoted to the first ladies' impact on fashion, her role as the nation's hostess, inaugurations and formal events and the changing role over time. Madison, for example, got engaged in politics early by gathering information and talking about public opinion, and Mary Todd Lincoln was criticized for her attempts at patronage.

For decades, first ladies have influenced fashion, whether through popularizing colors like Nancy Reagan's red or setting trends as with Jacqueline Kennedy or Lou Hoover, who was first to appear in Vogue magazine in a bid to promote American-made clothes.

The public scrutiny of their fashion sense is an unexpected part of the job for many first ladies, Graddy said.

Curators refer to Caroline Harrison's evening gown, on display for the first time, as "early bling." The burgundy velvet and gray satin gown is embroidered with a floral gray pearls and steel beads.

For the first time, curators also mixed in mementos and other "secondary objects" along with gowns and china, Graddy said.

There's a scrap of fabric from Lincoln's redecoration of the White House parlor, a piece of burnt wood from when the British burned the executive mansion and a copy of the book "Treasure Island" that Edith Roosevelt gave to her son's friend Charley Taft, the next child who would occupy the White House. She signed it "Charley, from Quentin's mother," and Charley took the book to read during his father's 1909 inauguration ceremony, presumably to keep from getting bored.

"I really wanted it to be about memory," Graddy said of the revamped exhibit. "My word was always scrapbook. These are the things that people save. These are the things that women especially save, and this is so much a women's show."

As the museum plans its renovation of the 120,000 square feet of its west wing exhibit space, there will be a permanent home for the first ladies' gallery in a larger section devoted to American democracy, Pachter said. There will be floors devoted to the nation's economy and entrepreneurship, the underpinnings of the political system and culture ranging from music and entertainment to sports.

"We're going to give people a way to think about the whole of our society and who we are," Pachter said.

Construction is slated to begin in spring of 2012 and with the wing reopening in late 2014 for the museum's 50th anniversary.

___

National Museum of American History: http://americanhistory.si.edu

___

Follow Brett Zongker at https://twitter.com//DCArtBeat

Police blotter

Fayette man faces

two arson charges

FAYETTEVILLE - A Fayette County man has been charged with startingtwo fires in the Minden area.

Aaron William Dabler, 20, of Minden allegedly set two abandonedstructures on fire on Oct. 29, 2003, according to a release from theFayette County Sheriff's Department.

Dabler, who was charged with two counts of second-degree arson andone count of conspiracy, also is a suspect in several other fires inthe Minden area, the sheriff's department reported. Some of theblazes occurred on land owned by the National Park Service.

The sheriff's department said more arrests are pending.

Dabler was being held at Southern Regional Jail in Beaver on$20,000 bond.

Students charged

in theft of signs

SPENCER - Two West Virginia Wesleyan College students have beencharged with stealing two signs from the local West Virginia StatePolice detachment during last year's Black Walnut Festival.

James Atkins, 18, of Spencer and Carl Santamaria, 19, ofMartinsburg were arraigned Tuesday in Roane County Magistrate Courton petit larceny charges, said Trooper F.L. Hammack.

The signs were found in the students' dorm rooms, Hammack said. Hewould not say what led police to the signs, which were not replacedafter they were taken on Oct. 11.

Santamaria was released on a $1,000 personal recognizance bond. ARoane County Magistrate Court clerk could not find records on Atkinson Wednesday.

No problems expected at JSU-Southern game

While Jackson State head football coach Rick Comegy voiced some concerns earlier this week about Saturday's game in Baton Rouge, La. against Southwestern Athletic Conference rival Southern, officials at both schools said they aren't worried about any incidents occurring at the game.

"Our fans are coming, I'm coming with my family," Jackson State president said.

"We enjoy the atmosphere and the camaraderie of the game."

Southern University Chancellor Margaret Ambrose said she didn't expect any problems at the game.

"If they show up, it's an indication of good faith, that they believe the spirit of what we're about," Ambrose said.

During the SWAC coaches teleconference this past Monday, Comegy, in his second season as Jackson State head coach, said he was concerned about safety at A.W. Mumford Stadium and said it might be a hostile environment for his team and fans.

Tony Clayton, the chairman if the Southern University Board of Supervisors athletic committee, said he contacted interim SWAC commissioner Duer Sharp to ask that Comegy's statements be investigated.

Jackson State released a statement Tuesday afternoon saying the school "regrets any misunderstanding caused by Comegy's comments."

"Coach Comegy never intended for his comments to suggest in any way that the atmosphere at Southern football games is unsafe. He has never experienced the excitement and intensity of playing in Baton Rouge," the statement said.

One of the most-heated rivalries in all of Black college football, the Southern-Jackson State games that have been played at A.W. Mumford Stadium have had their share of incidents away from the field of play.

Two games have been marred by gunfire. In 1990, one man was shot during a dice game under the stands and in 1996 Southern police had to fire weapons into the air to halt a brawl near the stadium.

One of the biggest draws in all of college football, the Jackson State-Southern game draws from 50,000 to 60,000 fans either at Munford Stadium or at Memorial Stadium in Jackson, Miss.

But maybe of more concern that the JSU vs. Southern clash may be the lack of Black head coaches in college football.

Mississippi State coach Sylvester Croom doubts diversity can be mandated in college football.

The Black Coaches Association has suggested Division I college football, possibly through the NCAA, needs to implement guidelines similar to NFL's Rooney Rule, which requires teams to interview minority candidates when hiring a head coach.

"I don't think that's feasible ... because every institution is so different," Croom said Wednesday during a teleconference. "You have so many parties to satisfy in college football.

"The NFL is an organization. It's a lot easier to have missions and address issues. I don't see how that would work at this level."

The Rooney Rule has resulted in a gradual increase in black coaches around the NFL. The NCAA has said it does not have the authority to control the way its members hire coaches.

Croom is one of only six Black coaches at 119 major college football schools, along with UCLA's Karl Dorrell, Buffalo's Turner Gill, Washington's Tyrone Willingham, Kansas State's Ron Prince and Miami's Randy Shannon.

Shannon was one of only two minorities hired to fill 23 coaching vacancies at Bowl Subdivision (formerly I-A) schools after last season. The other was Florida International's Mario Cristobal, who is Hispanic.

Shannon said minority candidates have been getting more interviews for top jobs.

"You just have to make sure you're not interviewing somebody just to interview them," he said. "That's what kills you about the Rooney Rule."

Shannon was the defensive coordinator at Miami for six seasons before being promoted to replace the fired Larry Coker after last season. He was talked about as a potential head coach for several years and often his name came up when jobs opened.

He interviewed just once during that time at Mississippi. Ed Orgeron was eventually hired by Ole Miss, but Shannon felt the school was giving him a serious look. He also said a coach can do himself a disservice by taking too many interviews.

"You can't just interview just to interview. You have to make sure you have a legit shot at a job. Sometimes you can interview just to interview and you won't have a shot, but you'll fill their quota," Shannon said.

"This entire process to me is about changing people's attitudes," Croom said, "The fans' attitudes. The people in the hiring process. It's simply a matter of changing attitudes."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

[Author Affiliation]

Defender Staff Report

Wednesday 7 March 2012

Cardinal in Englewood

Cardinal in Englewood

In an historic move for the Archdiocese of Chicago, Cardinal Francis George and St. Sabina Church's Father Michael Pfleger pounded the pavement over the weekend to save souls by knocking on doors as they spread the gospel and offered help to the downtrodden.

It was not just a continuation of Pfleger's "Evangelization Outreach" crusade to offer prostitutes and drug dealers spiritual guidance, social and economic assistance, but it was also a way of showing the relevancy of the Catholic Church and how it is "going beyond the pulpit" in beefing up its social action programs.

Pfleger said in two weeks since he announced his program, he has helped 20 …

Iraq PM accepts Electricity Minister's resignation

Iraq's government spokesman says Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has accepted the resignation of his electricity minister as he faces rising public anger over power outages.

Spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told The Associated Press that al-Maliki may appoint a new electricity minister as early as Wednesday.

Until then, al-Maliki will oversee …

Monday 5 March 2012

Spicer. (New & Noteworthy NDES 2002).(Brief Article)(Product Announcement)

Spicer Corp., a 3D viewing and markup solution provider, will announce the release of Imagenation 7.0 at Booth 8118. Along with standard 3D viewing capabilities, the new version will feature tools for …

Cybercrime: Red Carpet Treatment In Trendy Tribeca: A movie documentary funded by Fortify debuted last month; its aim, to convey the grim reality of cybercrime and be more compelling than PowerPoint slides.

Its not often that bank CIOs and CISOs get invited to walk the red carpet at a film premiere, but it was a full house at the Tribeca Grand Hotels screening room at the end of January when Fortify Software held the New York premiere of its documentary The New Face of Cybercrime.

While it would be a stretch to say that Sundance had nothing on this premiere, it did draw a crowd. There were minor celebritiescounting prolific software security author Gary McGraw, and Ted Schlein, the venture capitalist at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers who cut his info security teeth bringing McAfee to market. There was an all-but-unknown director onstage thanking his editors and crew. …

THE STATE OF THE GOP: A HOLY WAR AGAINST ITSELF.(MAIN)

Byline: TOM PRECIOUS - Capitol bureau

For an update on where the Republican Party stands in its quest to defeat Gov. Mario M. Cuomo just 42 weeks from now, consider the words of U.S. Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-Queensbury.

"Someone needs to hit all these people with a two-by-four and wake them up," Solomon said of party leaders, who he believes are mishandling an opportunity to beat a very vulnerable Cuomo. "It's closely coming to being too late already."

Sound too negative? For a more positive spin, consider Rich Bond, the former chairman of the national Republican Party, who has been working with several state GOP leaders on the contest. "I don't think it's disunity," he said in describing the party's public feud. "It doesn't mean we're messed up just because it looks a little messy."

It's one thing that the Republicans can't agree on who in their ranks should go up against Cuomo this fall. They can't even agree on whether their internal-turned-public wrangling is a problem.

What has happened to the Republican Party? Unlike four years ago, it is out of …

US governor tours area hit by savage storms

Tennessee's governor viewed damage Saturday in areas hit by severe storms that spawned tornadoes across the southeastern United States, killing three people and injuring dozens.

James LaRosa, a National Weather Service meteorologist, said Saturday morning that they are focusing on confirming the size and severity of the storms in Murfreesboro.

"I am astonished," Gov. Phil Bredesen said following a helicopter tour of the area in central Tennessee where a mother and her infant were killed. "Where it hit is very, very intense."

An initial report of the damage said about a 100 homes were destroyed and another 150 had significant …

Grebel graduates six MTS students

Waterloo, Ont.

Making a difference in this world of technology, paradox and incredible possibilities was the underlying message during Conrad Grebel University College's convocation service on April 9. Degrees were granted in the master of theological studies program and achievements of University of Waterloo (UW) undergraduates who have participated in Grebel life were recognized.

A. James Reimer, professor of religious studies and Christian theology at Conrad Grebel and academic advisor at Toronto Mennonite Theological Centre, gave the keynote address, "Control Delete: When the wisdom of the ages meets innovation." Speaking about how the university "brings forth a new …

Sunday 4 March 2012

Midstate Electric Reports Healthy '99.

Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc., reported a healthy 1999 business year at its 48th Annual Meeting.

More than 600 members and guests attended the meeting, which included remarks from President Gordon DeArmond and General Manager Bill Kopacz. Annual reports were distributed, which reported …

Toyota unveils two custom versions of Venza at SEMA.

Auto Business News-5 November 2008-Toyota unveils two custom versions of Venza at SEMA(C)2008 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Auto Business News - 05 November 2008(c)2005 - Electronic News Publishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Toyota Motor Corporation (Toyota) (NYSE: TM) (LSE: TYT) (TYO : 7203), a Japan-based automaker, has unveiled its Venza SportLux and Venza ASV, two custom versions of its new Venza …

FOX SHOWCASES MICHAEL JACKSON'S SIDE.(MAIN)

Michael Jackson's ex-wife says she bore him two children as a present and ``if he called me tonight and said let's have five more, I'd do it in a heartbeat.''

Jackson opened up his life even more Thursday for a special on Fox to counter a damaging portrayal earlier this month on ABC.

Jackson made available tapes taken by his own employee of the interviews conducted by British journalist Martin Bashir. The singer also had his former wife Debbie Rowe, his makeup artist, parents and brother Jermaine give interviews to Fox.

Rowe said he and Jackson ``have a non-traditional family and if it makes people feel uncomfortable, it's a shame they're not more …

SPEECH IMPRESSES D'AMATO, MCNULTY.(Main)

Byline: Mark S.R. Suchecki Staff writer

Sen. Alfonse D'Amato and Rep. Michael McNulty, while representing different political parties, both supported the President's defense of U.S. military action in the Persian Gulf.

In separate interviews following the State of the Union Address, Republican D'Amato and Democrat McNulty each said the President struck the right tone in his insistence that the cause of the United States was right.

"Obviously the highlight was the President spelling out the reasons for our being in the gulf taking on 'Saddam the butcher,'" D'Amato said of the speech.

"I support our President and what he said tonight," he …

2 abandoned baby pygmy elephants saved in Malaysia

Malaysian wildlife authorities rescued two starving pygmy elephant calves on Borneo island in the first known cases of the endangered animals being apparently abandoned by their mothers, an official said Monday.

Plantation workers discovered a 2-year-old female elephant stuck in a moat Friday, two weeks after a 6-month-old female was found wandering in another plantation in Malaysia's eastern Sabah state, said Laurentius Ambu, director of the state wildlife department.

"We have never had this experience before where the mothers abandon their babies," Ambu said, adding that officials were …