четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

When Traveling on Business, Be Careful

When Rebecca White is at a business conference, she's paid to befriendly.

"My job is to get out there and talk," says the marketingdirector for The Pathfinders, a facilities consulting firm. But herhotel room is booked under her boss' name.

"You've got your name right on your badge and the men will calland say, `Why don't you come down to our hospitality suite?' ' shesays.

White learned early that taking precautions against unwantedsuitors - and criminals - is part of the traveling businesswoman'slife. Security consultant Charles Slepian says criminals have reasonto prey on travelers:

"Thieves go where there's something to steal and travelers …

US Muslims find defending themselves exhausting

DEARBORN, Michigan (AP) — Finishing law school is a challenge for Dewnya Bakri-Bazzi, but being an American and a Muslim can be downright exhausting.

As she crammed before class this week, Bakri-Bazzi caught up on testimony from a congressional hearing on the radicalization of U.S. Muslims. She contends Rep. Peter King, the New York Republican who called it, is ignoring the positive steps Muslims have taken in fighting terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Bakri-Bazzi, president of the Muslim Legal Society at Thomas M. Cooley Law School's Detroit area campus, says she fears Thursday's hearing will only spark a backlash against innocent members of her community just …

2010 Winter Olympic Records

3000 Relay_China, (Sun Linlin, Wang Meng, Zhang Hui, Zhou Yang), 4:06.610, Feb. 24, 2010. Old Record: China, (Liu Qiuhong, Wang Meng, Zhang Hui, Zhou Yang), 4:07.179, Oct. 18, 2008.

___

OLYMPIC RECORDS BROKEN

Speedskating

Men

5000_Sven Kramer, Netherlands, 6:14.60, Feb. 13, 2010. Old Record: Jochem Uytdehaage, Netherlands, 6:14.66, Feb. 9, 2002.

10000_Lee Seung-Hoon, South Korea, 12:58.55, Feb. 23, 2010. Old Record: Jochem Uytdehaage, Netherlands, 12:58.92, Feb. 22, 2002.

Team Pursuit_Canada, (Mathieu Giroux, Lucas Makowsky, Denny Morrison,), 3:42.22, Feb. 26, 2010. Old Record: Italy, (Matteo …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

ESSENTIAL B.B. KING

Called the "Ambassador of the Blues," B.B. King has recorded manyhits since "The Thrill Is Gone" reached No. 15 on the charts in 1970.He's received seven Grammy awards plus the Lifetime Achievement Awardin 1987. To know the King listen to:

"Sweet Little Angel"

"Rock Me Baby"

"Everyday I Have the …

The Angry Black Woman's Guide to Life

If We Ruled the World... The Angry Black Woman's Guide to Life by Denene Millner, Angela Burt-Murray and Mitzi Miller Plume, April 2004 $12.00, ISBN 0-452-28512-7

The more I read, the more I realized that I am an ABW (Angry Black Woman) and proud of it! The title is a little mis-leading but The Strong Black Woman's Guide to Life or The Irrepressible Black Woman's Guide to Life isn't nearly as catchy. The authors have written a fun book filled with facts about the strong, proud, confident black women who have shaped our history and have helped to mold many of us. Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Anita Hill, Aretha Franklin, Serena Williams, Mary J. Blige, Clare Huxtable and even …

Schwarzenegger: No budget without tougher reforms

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says he will not sign the compromise budget proposal California lawmakers are considering unless they make more changes.

His letter to the four legislative leaders says he wants more money put in a rainy day fund and tighter controls on when that money could be spent.

The letter was …

Weather Almanac

Yesterday's high 73

Record high 95, 1919

Normal high 72

Yesterday's low 43

Record low 30, 1974

Normal …

Alaskan Thanksgiving Feast: Whale Meat

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - David Smith was a new arrival to the North Slope village of Nuiqsut last year when the former resident of upstate New York cooked up a few turkeys and vat of chili for the Eskimo community's Thanksgiving dinner. He was completely unprepared for another dish on the menu: hundreds of pounds of gleaming red, raw whale meat, served frozen solid in bite-size pieces.

"I thought we were going to have a feast. I never assumed it would be a feast of whale meat," said Smith, 76, the village administrator.

In Alaska's native villages, many Thanksgiving tables this year will be set with store-bought turkey and all the trimmings. But alongside will be delicacies …

Retired media executive Roger Nicholson dies

Roger Nicholson, former managing director of Thomson Regional Newspapers in Britain and European director for Ingersoll Publications, has died of cancer. He was 77.

Nicholson died Tuesday in a hospital in Crieff, Scotland.

As managing director for Thomson from 1984 to 1988, Nicholson drove the transition to computer technology at the company's papers _ including The Scotsman in Edinburgh, The Belfast Telegraph and the Western Mail in Cardiff.

He then worked five years as European director for Ingersoll, supervising the company's two newspapers in Ireland.

Born in Dundee, Scotland, Nicholson studied economics at the University of St. …

The electronic window allows us to see it now

As a window to the world, no other medium captures theintensity, the passion, the emotion, the immediacy of stunninghistorical events more profoundly than television.

Over the years, Americans have been front-row witnesses tohistory in the making all by virture of a screen in the corner of theliving room.

The following is a list of the Top 10 events that have not onlyshaped our own lives, but also have contributed to the evolution oftelevision as the dominant source of news and information for theAmerican people.

1. The assassination of President John F. Kennedy (Nov. 22,1963).

With stunning swiftness, Camelot crumbled as televisioninterrupted …

Defense rests in Conn. home invasion trial

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Attorneys for a Connecticut man charged with killing a woman and her two daughters in a brutal home invasion have finished their defense.

The defense of Joshua Komisarjevsky (koh-mih-sar-JEV'-skee) ended Thursday with a psychologist who said Komisarjevsky told him he was sexually abused as a child and later extensively used drugs. He says medical records showed he had multiple concussions.

Dr. Leo …

Tuesday's Olympic Gymnastics Results

1. Li Xiaopeng, China, 16.450.

2. Yoo Wonchul, South Korea, 16.250.

3. Anton Fokin, Uzbekistan, 16.200.

4. Fabian Hambuechen, Germany, 15.975.

5. Mitja Petkovsek, Slovenia, 15.725.

6. Huang Xu, China, 15.700.

7. Yang Taeyoung, South Korea, 15.650.

8. Nikolay Kryukov, Russia, 15.150.

Horizontal Bar

Final

1. Zou Kai, China, 16.200.

2. Jonathan Horton, Houston, 16.175.

3. Fabian Hambuechen, Germany, 15.875.

4. Igor Cassina, Italy, 15.675.

5. …

Step in Right Direction // Getting Over The Paralyzing Fear of Dance

Phil Collins isn't the only one who can't dance.

Neither can I. So when the music cranks and bodies startgrinding, I tuck myself as far as possible into a corner and hope noone will notice me.

The thing is, I want to dance. I really do. I'm just notgood at it. With that in mind, WeekendPlus sent me on a mission:Help people, like myself, get over fear of dancing.

It was a beautiful thing.

Step 1: Learn the basics

Few dance studios teach freestyle nightclub dancing. Our panel ofexperts suggests readers take the hands-on approach: go to the clubsand just do it. But plenty of schools offer sessions in linedancing, ballroom, salsa, folk, etc. Don't get frustrated if youdon't master the dance in one session. Remember, it's a professionaldancer's job to make difficult steps look easy.

"Structured dances are difficult to learn because there's a lotto remember," says John Pearce, a stuntman/country dance instructorwith the Chicago Stunt Team & the Windy City Two-Steppers. "Forinstance, the `Achy Breaky' (popularized by singer Billy Ray Cyrus)is very difficult - it's about at advanced intermediate level. Buteveryone wants to do it because they know the song. That will takea little more time to learn than something like the Electric Slide,which is a very easy line dance."

Step 2: Educate your body

Don't be mad at your legs and hips because they aren't carryingout your brain's order to look like a swan. "You have to becomfortable with your body to be a good dancer," says Jan Erkert,artistic director of Jan Erkert & Dancers. "For people who want tofit in at clubs, I would suggest they take modern dance classes.The instructors teach how to move rhythmically and creatively. Andclub dancing basically is improvising."

Step 3: Wear something appropriate

I went to a street-funk dance class dressed in what I'd wear to aclub: jeans and nasty ol' clunky shoes. Big mistake. The shoeswere rigid and hard to move in. And the jeans - well they cut offthe circulation in my thighs for a few days. The students who woresweats looked the most comfortable and moved the most freely.

Step 4: Lose your inhibition

No one's looking at you. Really.

But if they are, it's because you look so good out there. Really.

"The best thing is to go to big clubs where there are a lot ofpeople doing a lot of different dances," says Lesli Manning, aChicago-based dancer/actress. "Watch them, and then jump in and dowhat they're doing. No one's going to laugh at you."

That's what her fiance Alan Jaworski, bassist for Jesus Jones,did. He has no rhythm, Manning said, and can't compete with her onthe dance floor. So he created his own style, flinging hisdreadlocked head of hair around and jerking his body to the beat.Few could pull it off, but Jaworski looks incredibly cool doing it.

Step 5: Practice the moves

"Everyone can dance," club kid Felicia Stanley, 22, says, evenafter watching my pathetic attempts to imitate her at Shelter.

"Technically, I'm not a good dancer, but I think I look gooddancing because I enjoy moving to the beat. I dance a lot at homeor in private with my friends and we cop moves off of each other.Some of (the moves) look really stupid when we start, but once we getused to them, they're definite keepers. Just remember, anyone candance. Especially anyone who's exposed to music a lot."

Not anyone. Ever watch a rock critic dance?

Step 6: Watch yourself

Professional dancers practice in front of mirrors all the time.(And you thought it was because they were so in love with theirbodies.) "It's important to see what's comfortable for you," saysNana Shineflug, founder and artistic director of the Chicago MovingCompany. "You may have seen a guy doing a killer move, but if youdon't feel right doing it, you're not going to enjoy doing it."

For instance, at 950 Club, a regular crew of quasi-punks circlethe dance floor during Ministry songs doing the mosh walk - the dancepreamble to slam dancing. Even though the slow, panther-like moveslook great on them, it doesn't work for me.

Step 7: Don't believe everything you see Paula Abdul once saidmen were afraid to ask her to dance because they thought she wouldtap and spin all over the dance floor like she does in her musicvideos. Don't worry. She doesn't and most people don't do thatfor real either.

"Real people get intimidated by what they see in movies and onTV," says Tito Rodriguez, an instructor at the Ruiz Belviz CulturalCenter who teaches Afro-Puerto Rican dancing.

"Those lambada movies and that `Salsa' film were so fake. Wedon't throw ourselves on the floor and lift the girls' skirts up.That's bad manners. Hollywood distorts reality to make what theythink will sell."

Step 8: Join a group

Find other people who are shy dancers and make a point of gettingtogether regularly. Folk dance instructor Paul Collins says thereare about 15 folk dance groups in the Chicago area that meet everyweek to learn new steps and enjoy dancing.

"We always devote the first hour to the basic steps," he says."Then as the evening progresses, the steps get more intricate. It'sreally a fun way for the more experienced people to pass on theirknowledge to the newer dancers."

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

US gov't announces new loan aid effort

The government and the mortgage industry are launching the most sweeping effort yet to help troubled homeowners by speeding up the process for renegotiating hundreds of thousands of delinquent loans held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which seized control of the two mortgage finance companies in September, announced the plan Tuesday along with officials from the Treasury Department, Wells Fargo & Co., the Department of Housing and Urban Development and Hope Now, an alliance of mortgage companies organized by the Bush administration last year.

It likely will have tremendous importance because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own or guarantee about half of U.S. home loans.

The approach, which goes into effect Dec. 15., "will be a standard for the industry to quickly move homeowners into long-term sustainable mortgages," said Neel Kashkari, the Treasury Department's assistant secretary for financial stability in prepared remarks.

To qualify, borrowers would have to be at least three months behind on their home loans, and would need to owe 90 percent or more than the home is currently worth. The interest rate would be reduced so that borrowers would not pay more than 38 percent of their income on housing expenses.

Another option is for loans to be extended from 30 years to 40 years, and for some of the principal amount to be deferred interest-free.

While lenders have beefed up their efforts to aid borrowers over the past year, their earlier efforts have not kept up with the worst housing recession in decades.

More than 4 million American homeowners, or 9 percent of borrowers with a mortgage were either behind on their payments or in foreclosure at the end of June, according to the most recent data from the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Indeed, Tuesday's announcement comes too late for Troy Courtney, a 44-year-old San Francisco police officer.

He moved out of his home in Mill Valley, California, at the start of this month _ taking his children, three dogs and one cat with him _ after failing at several to attempts to get a loan modification or a short sale _ where the lender agrees to receive less than the loan is worth.

Courtney worked overtime and tapped into his retirement account to try to catch up with two loans on his home. But in the end he couldn't convince Countrywide Financial, which managed the loan for Wells Fargo, to modify the loan.

"I feel like I missed the boat," he said of the new efforts to help more homeowners. "I'm just mad at the whole system."

One reason the problem has been so tough to solve for borrowers like Courtney is that the vast majority of troubled loans were packaged into complicated investments that have proven extremely difficult to unwind.

Deutsche Bank estimates more than 80 percent of the $1.8 trillion in outstanding troubled loans have been packaged and sold in slices to investors around the world.

The remaining 20 percent are "whole loans," which are easier to modify because they have only one owner.

Nevertheless, Tuesday's announcement coupled with recent and more aggressive strategies from the major retail banks are important steps to fix the housing crisis. After more than a year of slow and weak initiatives, there appears to be a serious effort to get at the heart of the credit crisis: falling U.S. home prices and record foreclosures.

Citigroup announced late Monday it is halting foreclosures for borrowers who live in their own homes, have decent incomes and stand a good chance of making lowered mortgage payments. The New York-based banking giant also said it is also working to expand the program to include mortgages for which the bank collects payments but does not own.

Additionally, over the next six months, Citi plans to reach out to 500,000 homeowners who are not currently behind on their mortgage payments, but who are on the verge of falling behind. This represents about one-third of all the mortgages that Citigroup owns, the bank said.

Citi plans to devote a team of 600 salespeople to assist the targeted borrowers by adjusting their rates, reducing principal or increasing the term of the loan.

Late last month, JPMorgan Chase & Co expanded its mortgage modification program to an estimated $70 billion in loans, which could aid as many as 400,000 customers. The New York-based bank has already modified about $40 billion in mortgages, helping 250,000 customers since early 2007.

Bank of America, meanwhile, has said that starting Dec. 1, it will modify an estimated 400,000 loans held by newly acquired Countrywide Financial Corp. as part of an $8.4 billion legal settlement reached with 11 states in early October.

____

Associated Press Writers Deb Riechmann and Sara Lepro contributed to this report.

Bi, 'L Word.' Hi, future

As lesbian soap comes to an end, star Leisha Hailey rocks out with spin-off project and debut album

Leisha Hailey, the sweet-as-sugar actress on "The L Word," can pretty much do it all - act, play guitar, sing, sell breakfast food and be hot. She's also a journalist, albeit on a lesbian soap opera, so what reporter wouldn't have shaky knees and enough forehead sweat to put out a forest fire? When we found out how we did, we were relieved.

"You have a nice approach to how you ask questions," the 37-year-old flatters. "I think the trick with the person doing the interview should be just making it feel like a conversation, which you do very well."

Alice Pieszecki, the cute-as-a-kitten character Hailey portrays on the Showtime hit (which will begin its sixth and final season in January), would know best. Fans familiar with the show, about a les- bian, bi and trans- gender clique living in West Hollywood, know quirky Alice for "The Chart" - a graph document- ing affairs among her friends and ac- quaintances, which she began on the back of a napkin during season one. Most illuminating about her character is that she is - or was, rather - bisexual.

"Oh my god, I've been blessed just getting the opportunity to play that part," gushes Hailey, who's openly lesbian. "I don't think the bisexuality aspect of it really got explored too much. I think I called myself bisexual for a season and then we really didn't get to see it played out. I've pretty much dated women the whole time. In a sense, I think it was a lost opportunity to really dive deeper into that whole sexuality but, you know, Fm just an actor and I just play my lines."

After this season's series finale, Hailey will carry the lesbian torch into a yet- to- be- named spin-off she's shooting in December. No air date - and no network - has been announced, and she can't say much: "It's top secret," she insists.

Until the pilot films, Hailey will keep herself busy with singer-producer Camila Grey, her Uh Huh Her bandmate. On a month-long tour, which stops at 8 p.m. Nov. 2 at the Magic Bag in Ferndale, the indie electro-pop duo just pulled into a San Diego venue, the first stop on their trek.

They're out supporting their August debut, "Common Reaction," which boasts new wave-inspired dancy nuggets dressed in synth sheen. It's a definite departure from the sound of The Murmurs, Hailey's first - and only other - band. She was never part of ones in school: "I wish I was that cool. I envy people who had that early on. I was a bit nerdier than that."

Now part of the in-crowd, Hailey is also yummy, according to AfterEllen.com, who put her atop their Hot 100 List last year. "Leisha gets more beautiful every season, and her acting skills have flourished too. ... She became our Sunday-night crush," the lesbiangeared media site wrote.

"I'm not hot at all," she says, coyly. "I'm like the most - I don't know - boring, down-to-earth person. There's really nothing sex symbol-y about me. That was a big joke, but it was very, very flattering."

Shockingly, she's not good at everything. Math isn't her forte. And it's a good thing she wasn't driving to the venue: "I never know which way is up or down or east or west."

Outside of acting, looking fine - and sucking at math - the actress, who was born in Japan while her father was in the Air Force and moved to America at age 4, is known for dating k.d. lang (the two were in a serious relationship) and hyping a dairy product. Hailey's starred in several commercials for Yoplait yogurt, but she's not really into the fruit-on-the-bottom type.

"I usually skip over the fruit," she says. "I'll eat all the way down to the fruit, and then I don't eat that part. Too sugary."

Not like she's short on "sweet," anyhow.

[Sidebar]

TICKET GIVEAWAY

Wanna see Uh Huh Her at 8 p.m. Nov. 2 at the Magic Bag in Ferndale? Send an e-mail to chris@pridesource.com with "Uh Huh" in the subject line, your name and phone number. Submissions must be received by 9 a.m. Friday, Oct. 1.

[Sidebar]

"I'm not hot at all. I'm like the most - I don't know - boring, downto-earth person. There's really nothing sex symbol-y about me."

-Leisha Hailey

[Sidebar]

Camila Grey and Leisha Hailey (right) of Uh Huh Her released their debut album, "Common Reaction," In August.

[Author Affiliation]

Chris Azzopardi is the entertainment editor of Between The Lines. To reach him, send an e-mail to chris@pridesource.com.

Ex-Punter Charged With Attempted Murder

DENVER - Prosecutors filed a charge of attempted first-degree murder Thursday against a former University of Northern Colorado backup punter accused of stabbing the starter in his kicking leg in a case that drew comparisons to the Tonya Harding-Nancy Kerrigan rivalry.

Mitchell Cozad, 21, is accused of stabbing Rafael Mendoza on Sept. 11 outside Mendoza's apartment.

Cozad, of Wheatland, Wyo., also faces one count of second-degree assault. Prosecutors said he could face up to 48 years in prison if convicted.

Weld County district attorney's spokeswoman Jennifer Finch said a warrant was issued for Cozad's arrest, and bail would be set at $500,000. She said he was not yet in custody, and she did not know where he was.

Cozad's attorney, Joseph A. Gavaldon, did not immediately return a call. A man who answered Cozad's mobile phone number hung up without commenting.

Mendoza was treated for a 3- to 5-inch deep puncture wound in his right thigh and released. He has returned to the team.

Cozad was suspended from the team and the university.

Evans Police Lt. Gary Kessler has said the motive appeared to be competition for the starting job. The attack prompted comparisons to an attack by figure skater Harding's hit man on Kerrigan.

The severity of the charge surprised some.

"Based on the facts we've heard, it does sound a little over the top," said Scott Robinson, a Denver defense attorney and legal analyst.

Finch said that after their investigation, prosecutors felt the attempted murder and assault counts "were the appropriate charges." She did not elaborate.

Robinson added that prosecutors might be trying to pressure Cozad to identify an accomplice or intimidate him into accepting a plea bargain.

In mid-September, Kessler said witnesses saw an alleged accomplice standing near the getaway car just after Mendoza was stabbed.

"He didn't play a role in the assault, but he played a role in the crime," Kessler said at the time. "He was dressed in black clothing. He was involved in the aftermath of the incident."

Police also have said a liquor store employee called police not long after the attack to report two men were removing tape from the license plates of a nearby car. Once removed, the employee saw the license plate number read "8-KIKR," helping lead police to Cozad's family.

Police did not immediately return a call Thursday.

Northern Colorado spokesman Eric Scott said he could not comment. Mendoza did not immediately return a message.

Last month, Weld County District Attorney Kenneth R. Buck delayed filing charges in the case, saying he needed more information.

Mendoza told The Associated Press this month he is struggling with flashbacks from the attack.

"It's been tough and scary," he said. "It's hard for (my family), it's hard for me, it's hard for them wondering what's going to happen. But I know they (authorities) are doing their job. They're doing everything they possibly can to let justice run its course."

EUROPE NEWS AT 1900 GMT

UPCOMING EVENTS FOR THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 2011

EUROPE-INTEREST RATES

FRANKFURT, Germany — European Central Bank's governing council meets to set interest rates for the 17-nation eurozone.

INTERNATIONAL COURT-LIBYA

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo announces details of his investigation into possible crimes against humanity in Libya, including the identities of possible suspects. News conference to start at 1200 GMT.

EU-EASTERN EUROPE

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle join the foreign ministers of four central European countries who meet their counterparts and other senior government officials from Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine and Belarus as part the EU Eastern Partnership program. News conference at 1340 GMT.

FRANCE-FASHION

PARIS - Paris fall-winter 2011-2012 ready-to-wear fashion shows.

GERMANY-DEMJANJUK

MUNICH — Court session scheduled in the trial of John Demjanjuk.

TOP STORIES

GERMANY-US-AIRPORT SHOOTING

FRANKFURT, Germany — A man armed with a handgun shoots at U.S. Air Force personnel on a bus outside Frankfurt airport, killing two airmen and wounding two others before being taken into custody. A German security official identifies the shooter as a 21-year-old from Kosovo. In Washington, President Barack Obama promises to "spare no effort" in investigating the attack. By David McHugh and Juergen Baetz. AP Photos.

LIBYA-REFUGEES

GENEVA — More than 180,000 hungry, anxious people have fled to the border to escape Libya's burgeoning civil war, a U.N. official says, as European nations and Egypt launch emergency airlifts and send ships to handle the chaotic exodus. By John Heilprin. AP Photos.

With EU-NATO-LIBYA: Some NATO countries are drawing up contingency plans modeled on the no-fly zones over the Balkans in the 1990s in case the international community decides to impose an air embargo over Libya, diplomats say.

FRANCE-GALLIANO

PARIS — John Galliano apologizes for his behavior after fashion house Christian Dior fires him for anti-Semitic comments, while Paris prosecutors order the famous designer to stand trial on charges of making racial insults against three people — a scandal that has upended Paris Fashion Week. By Jenny Barchfield. AP Photos.

PIRACY

NAIROBI, Kenya — A Danish family kidnapped by pirates has reached Somalia's coastline, officials and a pirate say, likely meaning a long hostage ordeal for the couple and their three teenage children who were abducted while yachting around the world. By Malkhadir M. Muhumed. AP Graphic.

VATICAN-JEWS

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI has made a sweeping exoneration of the Jewish people for the death of Jesus Christ, tackling one of the most controversial issues in Christianity in a new book. By Nicole Winfield. AP Photos.

RUSSIA-GORBACHEV TURNS 80

MOSCOW — Mikhail Gorbachev is awarded Russia's highest medal on his 80th birthday, a belated tribute from the homeland where many blame him for the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. By Vladimir Isachenkov. AP Photos.

BERLUSCONI SCANDAL

VIENNA — An 18-year-old at the center of the scandal plaguing Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi says she hopes his upcoming trial will "bring the truth to light." By Veronika Oleksyn. AP Photos.

BUSINESS & FINANCIAL

EUROPE-FINANCIAL CRISIS

LONDON — Both Portugal and Greece could see their debts further downgraded in the next two months, ratings agency Standard & Poor's warns, depending on what happens at a crucial European leaders' summit later this month. By Pan Pylas and Barry Hatton.

WORLD MARKETS

LONDON — Upbeat U.S. jobs figures help stock markets recover their poise, despite further oil price rises amid concerns that Libya's crisis will keep its crude production in disarray. By Business Writer Pan Pylas. AP Photo.

GENEVA AUTO SHOW

GENEVA — Fast-growing Hyundai may be best known for its small cars, but plans to break into the premium market with a new sedan has the big guys looking over their shoulders. By Colleen Barry. AP Photo.

___

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

Fuzzwords of '90s Got You Puzzled?

Ripley's Jaw-Popping Curiosity + Jacqueline Terry of Montgomery, Ala., is among the "Dislocationists,Contortionists, and Elastic People" appearing in Dear Mr. Ripley: ACompendium of Curioddities from the Believe It or Not! Archives, byMark Sloan, Roger Manley and Michelle Van Parys (Bulfinch/LittleBrown, $19.95). Terry, rumored to be the daughter of anorthodontist, balanced on her upper teeth in this 1948 photographsent to Robert Ripley to document her application for inclusion inhis syndicated cartoon feature, "Believe It or Not!" The bookincludes 226 black and white photos and a short biography of Ripley,who was born 100 years ago.D. & R. F.

If the fuzzwords of the '90s have left you feeling differentlyabled, The Oxford Dictionary of New Words (Oxford, $10.95) may be thehelpline you need.

"Differently abled" is one of three variants frankly defined as"euphemistic ways of saying `disabled' " under the dictionary's"abled" entry, with a passing reference to the similar use of"challenged." Like the next entry, the related "ableism"("discrimination in favor of the able-bodied"), "abled" isgraphically coded as a "people and society" word, invented todescribe people with particular characteristics.

But the fun isn't limited to the language of the politicallycorrect, although their "wimmin" and "womyn" (respellings of "women"aimed at removing the root "men"), "animalist" (meaning both ananimal rights campaigner and one who discriminates against animals)and "chair" (as a neuter replacement for "chairman" or "chairwoman"rather than as a piece of furniture) are all included.

Some new terms might be seen as retrocorrect, such as"handbagging," "a forthright verbal attack or volley of stridentcriticism, usually delivered by a female politician." Entries mayfall into a subject area not directly covered by concepts ofcorrectness, though there is overlap. Categories include: drugs,environment, business, health and fitness, lifestyle and leisure,music, politics, science and technology, war and weaponry and youthculture.

Humor plays a dominant role in many new coinages, even in thesober world of business, which seems to have infinite variations on"golden parachute" (a fired executive's payoff for leaving quietly)."Golden handcuffs" are benefits that make it difficult to leave acompany, a "golden hello" is a hiring bonus and a "golden retriever"is money used to lure back a former employee.

Perhaps because of their freshness to American ears, some ofthe most entertaining neologisms are British. Take for example"Taffia," a supposed network of Welsh movers and shakers, "formed bytelescoping Taffy (a nickname for a Welshman) and Mafia."

This kind of detail, contained in the extended sections onhistory and usage accompanying each definition, will delight wordnerds eager to access the infosphere with such factoids.

Coming into the End Zone, by Doris Grumbach (Norton, $9.95).In this autobiography, a novelist and critic reflects on the changesbrought about by her retirement move from Washington D.C. to a smalltown in Maine and ponders the impact reading and writing have had onshaping her life. Norton has also reissued two of Grumbach's novels,Chamber Music ($9.95), about the 90-year-old widow of a famouscomposer, and The Missing Person ($9.95), the story of a glamorousmovie star whose life resembles that of Marilyn Monroe.

Jazz, by Toni Morrison (Plume, $10). Harlem early in the 20thcentury is the setting for this novel about the violence thatovertakes the lives of a cosmetics salesman, his wife and theseductive teenager who comes between them.

Very Old Bones, by William Kennedy (Penguin, $10). The Phelanfamily of Albany, known to readers of Ironweed and Quinn's Book,takes up its tragi-comic pursuit of life again in this novel aboutOrson Purcell, unacknowledged bastard son of the artistic member ofthe family, Peter Phelan. The plot centers on a 1958 family reunionstaged to help unburden family members of their secrets.

Inside the New Temple: The High Cost of Mistaking Medicine forReligion, by James Stacey (Conversation Press, $12.95). In thisreview of the health care crisis, a Chicago area medical writer looksto consumers to halt soaring costs, primarily by lowering theirexpectations. "Once we understand, in a visceral way, that medicinecannot buy immortality, our expectations will moderate," he writes.

Artspoke: A Guide to Modern Ideas, Movements, and Buzzwords,1848-1944, by Robert Atkins (Abbeville, $17.95). Art history indictionary form, this illustrated volume is a companion for theauthor's earlier Artspeak: A Guide to Contemporary Ideas, Movementsand Buzzwords. Alphabetically arranged definitions of art terms arepreceded by two introductory features. An "Artchart" places 55movements in chronological order on a bar graph and a "Timeline"section offers thumbnail summaries of world events and artdevelopments during each year between 1848 and 1944.

New on the mass market racks: Fatherland, by Robert Harris(Harper, $6.50), a thriller set in an imaginary 1964 Berlin ruled bya triumphant Nazi regime preparing to celebrate the 75th birthday ofAdolf Hitler; A Lingering Doubt, by Warwick Downing (Pocket, $4.99),a mystery about a lawyer's struggle to save an innocent youth fromthe death penalty; Burden of Desire, by Robert MacNeil (Dell,$5.99), a romantic suspense novel set in Nova Scotia during World WarI, by the co-host of PBS's "MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour"; A Murder inWartime, by Jeff Stein (St. Martin's, $6.99), a nonfiction account ofthe 1969 execution of a suspected Vietnamese double agent.

Obama issues low-key order on abortions

Anything but jubilant, President Barack Obama awkwardly kept a promise Wednesday he made to ensure passage of historic health care legislation, pledging the administration would not allow federal funds to pay for elective abortions covered by private insurance.

Unlike Tuesday, when a beaming Obama signed the health care law in a nationally televised ceremony interrupted repeatedly by applause, the White House refused to permit coverage of the event. It occurred in the Oval Office in the presence of a small group of anti-abortion Democratic lawmakers who had extracted the commitment over the weekend. The president supports abortion rights.

The political maneuvering occurred as the FBI announced it was investigating threats received by about 10 Democratic lawmakers in recent days in apparent connection with the intensely controversial health care law.

"All threats and incidents directed against members of Congress are taken seriously and are being investigated," the bureau's Washington field office said in a statement.

At the same time, Senate Democrats drove toward final passage of a second health care bill, drafted to supplement the first by sweetening benefits for seniors with high prescription drug costs and for lower-to-middle income families who cannot afford the cost of insurance.

Lacking the votes to stop it, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, vowed, "We'll continue to fight until this bill is repealed and replaced with commonsense ideas that solve our problems without dismantling the health care system we have and without burying the American dream under a mountain of debt."

That drew a swift rebuttal from Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who said the legislation Obama signed on Tuesday was a "wonderful bill" that would help millions with inadequate coverage or none at all.

The follow-up bill before the Senate included a second triumph for the administration on domestic policy. It generally strips banks and other private insurers of their ability to originate loans to students, in favor of direct government lending.

The government's savings would raise the maximum amount needy students could receive in Pell Grants, and pump about $2.6 billion over a decade into historically black and Hispanic colleges. The changes would mean the loss of billions of dollars for student lending giant Sallie Mae as well as large financial institutions such as Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.

The bill passed the House on Sunday and it appeared Reid had as many as 57 votes in hand for its approval, far more than needed. Among 59 Senate Democrats, only Sens. Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas and Ben Nelson of Nebraska announced in advance they would oppose it.

Far outnumbered, Senate Republicans sought votes on politically-charged proposals that, while potentially troublesome for Democrats, were doomed to defeat. The first, to roll back the bill's Medicare cuts, was jettisoned on a vote of 56-42; the second, to strip out special projects, by 54-43.

Another proposal was a call by Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, to make sure none of the bill's tax increases would fall on an individual with annual income of less than $200,000 or a couple with wages of less than $250,000 combined _ taxpayers whom the president has vowed to shield. It failed 56-43.

By that same 56-43 margin, the Senate rejected an amendment by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, to force Obama and others in the government to obtain insurance coverage through new purchasing exchanges the law will create in 2014, as members of Congress and some staff would. The White House said the move was unnecessary because the president would do so voluntarily, but it was unclear whether the day-old law permitted him to.

Taken together, the day's events amounted to mop-up actions by the White House and Senate Democrats, one day after Obama signed into law far-reaching changes in the nation's health care system that had eluded presidents and lawmakers for a century.

At its core, the new law would expand health care to 32 million who lack it while cracking down on the insurance industry and cutting federal deficits by an estimated $143 billion over a decade. Most of the bill's estimated $938 billion cost for coverage would pay for assistance to help families with annual incomes of up to $88,000 pay for insurance, although small businesses also would receive subsidies as in incentive to cover their employees.

The two bills combined call for nearly $1 trillion in higher taxes and Medicare cuts over 10 years, provisions that sparked strong opposition from congressional Republicans, all of whom voted against the bill's passage.

For the first time, millions of Americans would be required to purchase insurance, and face penalties if they refused.

That requirement was at the heart of much of the opposition to the legislation by Republicans, conservatives activists and others, and 13 attorneys generals have already filed suit to try to invalidate the law.

The Democrats' drive to enact sweeping health care changes had appeared doomed as recently as two months ago, when Obama took personal command of a revival effort, working in concert with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Reid.

Passage wasn't assured until Sunday, a few hours before the final vote, when Obama agreed to issue an executive order specifying that he would not permit the use of federal funds to pay for abortions except in the cases of rape, incest or if the life of the mother was in danger.

The commitment, backed up by a draft of the order that circulated, was enough to secure the votes of Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich. and a few other holdouts.

As signed into law, the health care bill says individuals who receive federal subsidies to purchase insurance may purchase abortion coverage, but must do so by writing a separate check from personal funds. Obama's executive order commits the administration to issuing regulations making sure that personal and federal funds are kept separate.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Feller, Jim Kuhnhenn and Erica Werner contributed to this report.

Oil prices build on previous session's steep rise

Oil prices rose Friday on the previous day's gain of more than US$2 a barrel as new U.S. trade deficit figures spurred hopes that the U.S. economy might escape a serious downturn. Gasoline surged by more than 4 cents.

The March contract opened lower before gaining 99 cents to fetch US$96.45 a barrel by afternoon in European electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Brent crude futures were up 6 cents to US$95.22 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

The U.S. Commerce Department said Thursday the trade deficit fell in December and for 2007 as a whole _ an indication the U.S. is exporting more goods. This led investors to think U.S. energy demand would not be as weak as feared.

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's suggestion that the central bank is prepared to again cut interest rates also helped boost light, sweet crude to settle at US$95.46 a barrel Thursday, an increase of US$2.19 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

That was its highest close since Jan. 9. The contract has risen in 4 of the past 5 sessions, adding more than US$6 in a little over a week.

"Energy prices are strong," proclaimed the Schork Report, edited by energy analyst Stephen Schork, saying that benchmark crude "despite Bernanke's 'sluggish' view of the U.S. economy appears primed for another run at US$100."

Bernanke said the Fed is ready to act again in response to deteriorating economic conditions. Interest rate cuts support oil prices because they tend to weaken the dollar. Crude futures offer a hedge against a falling dollar, and oil futures bought and sold in dollars are more attractive to foreign investors when the greenback is falling.

Energy investors were also buying after a federal judge's decision Wednesday to confirm an earlier ruling freezing US$300 million (euro205 million) in a bank account owned by the Venezuelan state oil company.

Exxon Mobil is challenging Venezuela's nationalization of an oil project. A British court's earlier decision to temporarily freeze up to US$12 billion (euro8.2 billion) in Venezuelan oil assets drew threats from President Hugo Chavez to cut off all oil sales to the U.S.

Prices gained despite forecasts this week from the Energy Department and the International Energy Agency, an energy policy adviser to the industrialized world, that call for slower demand growth this year due to weakening economies.

That sentiment was echoed by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. It said Friday that weakening world economic growth and demand prospects and ongoing increases in U.S. and European crude and gasoline inventories may lead it to reduce output in efforts to avoid a steep fall in prices.

In its monthly report, OPEC, responsible for about 40 percent of global oil production, cut its 2008 global oil demand growth forecast by 100,000 barrels a day to 1.2 million barrels a day _ an increase of about 1.4 percent from this year.

OPEC is scheduled to meet March 5 in Vienna to review its production policy.

Heating oil futures were up 1.39 cents to sell for US$2.6805 a gallon (3.8 liters) while gasoline price surged over 4 cents, going for US$2.5179 a gallon.

Natural gas futures were basically flat at US$8.777 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Correction: Gay Marriage-New York

NIAGARA FALLS, New York (AP) — In a June 27 story about gay marriage, The Associated Press erroneously reported the name of the spokeswoman at Bloomingdale's. The spokeswoman is Anne Keating.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Back on top of the charts ; PIXIE LOTT INTERVIEW

Pixie Lott is back with a bang as her new single, All AboutTonight, hit the number one spot in the singles chart on Sunday.

The Brentwood popstar shot to fame a couple of years ago when herdebut single Mamma Do was a number one, duly followed by her debutalbum, Turn It Up, which has now chalked up the triple platinum markin record sales.

After spending much of the year recording new material, Pixie isnow back at the top of the charts and she tells us about her newalbum, what it's like to be back in the limelight and why she's hada change of image.

Read our Pixie Lott interview on page 8.

Colombia TV network cancels Escobar documentary

A Colombian TV network on Friday announced its decision not to air a documentary about a Colombian soccer player murdered after accidentally scoring an own-goal in the 1994 World Cup.

The announcement came the same day the slain player's family held a news conference to say it was deceived by the U.S. makers of the film "The Two Escobars" _ an accusation the filmmakers denied.

The family held a news conference in Medellin to complain that brothers Jeff and Michael Zimbalist never told the family they intended to pair the story of Andres Escobar with that of slain drug lord Pablo Escobar.

The two Escobars were unrelated but both hailed from Medellin, which in the early '90s was a hub of the cocaine trade and the world's most violent city when measured by its murder rate.

The slain athlete's brother Santiago Escobar told The Associated Press that the Zimbalist brothers "deceived my family and also deceived the memory of Andres Escobar."

He read a statement saying that relatives and friends of his brother "feel assaulted in our good faith by the makers of this documentary, who sought our testimony to make a report in homage to the footballer."

"They never told us that it would be parallel with the drug trafficker Pablo Escobar."

The Zimbalist brothers, who wrote and directed the film, told the AP by telephone from the United States that the family's statement was a misrepresentation of their behavior as filmmakers.

They said they were open with the family and friends of Andres Escobar when they told them they wanted to tell the story of the "gentleman of the soccer pitch" in a context appropriate for an international audience.

Andres Escobar was outspoken in his rejection of the poisoning influence of drug money on the sport and the film sensitively reflects that, Michael Zimbalist said.

"We have a lot of respect for Andres Escobar and for his family and it's always been our intention to be as sensitive as possible," added Jeff Zimbalist. He said he and his brother "don't pretend to have any idea how much pain and trauma they've been through."

Pablo Escobar, a soccer aficionado who built playing fields in poor neighborhoods of Medellin, bought politicians while holding the Colombian state hostage as he used terror to fight extradition to the United States. He was killed by police in December 1993.

Andres Escobar, the 27-year-old national team captain, was killed the following July, just 10 days after the own-goal against the United States that eliminated Colombia from the tournament.

"Through the glory and the tragedy, 'The Two Escobars' daringly investigates the secret marriage of crime and sport, and uncovers the surprising connections between the murders of Andres and Pablo," says a description of the film on the website of ESPN, which broadcast it on June 21 in the United States.

The Zimbalists, who grew up in Northampton, Massachusetts, said ESPN holds international distribution rights to the film.

They said they did not know why the Colombian TV network RCN had decided not to broadcast the documentary on Sunday as scheduled.

Network spokeswoman Yolima Celis would not explain the decision but said it was made Friday morning. She said she did not know if the Escobar family had called RCN to complain beforehand, adding that negotiations with representatives of the filmmakers had not concluded and that the broadcast could have been canceled "for both reasons."

"The Two Escobars" premiered earlier this year at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City.

Michael Zimbalist said he and his brother had been in touch with Andres Escobar's sister Maria Ester, who appears in the film, in recent months over concerns the family expressed about it.

"Ultimately this wasn't a story about Andres Escobar and it wasn't a story about Pablo Escobar," he said. "It was the story of the Colombian people during a slice of history and it was a universal tale."

Success has dropped on Marky Mark

If he were a businessman instead of a muscle-bound street kidfrom Boston, you'd think Marky Mark had a marketing plan behind hiscurrent success.

Life has not been easy for white rappers since the meltdown ofVanilla Ice, who went from No. 1 album to "Circus of the Stars" inless than a year. And having a brother in New Kids on the Block whoproduced Marky Mark's debut album was another barricade to streetcredibility.

Yet Marky Mark Wahlberg's resume has the enviable entry ofhaving been in New Kids in its earliest incarnation and being hipenough to quit.

Musically, Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch have stayed afloat byusing a strong soul singer, Loletta Holoway, in their first single,"Good Vibrations," and tried and true samples in subsequent hits:"Wildside" borrowed Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side" samplepreviously used by A Tribe Called Quest (on "Can I Kick It?"), and"I Need Money" used part of the O'Jays' "For the Love of Money,"which everybody seemed to use last year, including Queen Latifah onthe "New Jack City" soundtrack.

But the key to Marky Mark's lasting appeal might be his penchantfor showing his shorts.

Let other rappers talk about dropping the beat; Marky's made hismark by dropping his pants to reveal his skivvies - in videos oronstage.

It's only the latest and least subtle development in popularentertainment since Elvis Presley wagged his pelvis on national TV.

Certainly it's not the first time in pop music that underwearhas been brought to the forefront by our esteemed entertainers.Madonna has practically made a career out of lounging around inlingerie.

Wearing boxers high and jeans low is a hip hop trend that allowsyour pals to see the colorful fabric you paid $12 for under thetrousers. Luther Campbell, back when he was known as LukeSkyywalker, showed this style to the extreme on the cover of the 2Live Crew "Banned in the U.S.A." album. At the time, the album'slyrics were more of an issue.

Just as rappers continue to steal the '70s funk sounds of GeorgeClinton's Parliament-Funkadelic bands, so perhaps are they stealinghis fashion ideas.

Bootsy Collins, bassist for Clinton, made his name with astar-shaped guitar and the huge diapers he'd wear onstage.

Marky Mark has bettered all of the above B.V.D.-bearers,however, by not only nonchalantly wearing them onstage but actuallygoing through the striptease by dropping his drawers to show theunfashionable white jockeys.

In the 1971 Woody Allen movie "Bananas," one of the edicts of arevolutionary turned dictator is that everyone wear their underwearon the outside of their clothing.

In such a world, Marky Mark would be minister of music.

Government oil officials probed about illicit sex

Federal investigators say government officials handling billions of dollars in oil royalties engaged in illicit sex with employees of energy companies, and received improper gifts.

The alleged transgressions involve 13 Interior Department employees in Denver and Washington. Alleged improprieties include rigging contracts, working part-time as private oil consultants and having sexual relationships with _ and accepting golf, ski trips and dinners from _ oil company employees, according to three reports released Wednesday by the Interior Department's Inspector General.

The Inspector General also claims the former head of the Denver office _ which markets oil to energy companies _ was having sex and using illegal drugs with subordinates.

Pa. school district turns lawn care over to sheep

CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) — A central Pennsylvania school has a woolly plan to keep its grass neatly trimmed.

The Carlisle Area School District says it can save up to $15,000 a year by turning over some landscaping chores to sheep.

The Patriot-News of Harrisburg reports the district is using the sheep to keep the grass near its solar panels neatly trimmed. The sheep nibble grass in the morning and take refuge in the shade of the panels in the afternoon.

With the food already on hand, the district need only supply the sheep with water.

A middle school assistant principal is providing the sheep. Eric Sands says he's still trying to figure out exactly how many sheep he needs to use to keep the area clear.

___

Information from: The Patriot-News, http://www.pennlive.com/patriotnews

LA Man Sentenced to Die for 10 Murders

LOS ANGELES - A pizza deliveryman was sentenced to death Tuesday for murdering 10 women and a fetus during the 1980s and '90s in Los Angeles neighborhoods plagued by a crack cocaine epidemic. A jury in May recommended the death penalty for Chester Turner, and Superior Court Judge William R. Pounders agreed Tuesday.

"I don't think any jury would arrive at a different conclusion and would, in any court, demand a death penalty," Pounders said.

Turner, 40, showed little emotion when he was sentenced and declined to say anything after several of the victims' relatives spoke. Outside court, Turner's attorney John Tyre said nothing was accomplished by sending his client to death row.

"California spends a lot of money to put someone to death," Tyre said. "That money would be better served educating people (about crime) so things like this could be prevented."

The case will automatically be appealed.

Prosecutors said Turner preyed upon prostitutes and other impoverished women, some with drug problems, who lived primarily in South Los Angeles.

He was convicted April 30 of 10 counts of first-degree murder, plus one count of second-degree murder for the death of one victim's fetus. That victim, Regina Washington, 27, was 6 1/2 months pregnant when Turner strangled her with an electrical cord behind a vacant house in September 1989.

Washington's sister, Elgedine Rudolph, was among eight victims' relatives attending Tuesday's hearing who conveyed the anger and sorrow they've shared. Although Turner looked at each of the speakers, Rudolph said she could not even turn toward him and said she misses Washington deeply.

"I'm trying to get some peace for me and my family, but it's hard," said Rudolph, 43. "I'm glad justice is served so no one else will get hurt."

Turner was already serving an eight-year prison sentence for the 2002 rape of a woman on Skid Row when his DNA linked him to the killings, carried out between 1987 and 1998. His victims were between ages 21 and 45.

Prosecutors believe Turner accosted most of the victims, then raped and strangled them before dumping their bodies. Deputy District Attorney Robert Grace suggested during the trial Turner killed because he wanted control over his victims.

Jerri Johnson-Tripplett, whose 29-year-old pregnant daughter Andrea Tripplett was killed in April 1993, called Turner an "evil, demonic person." She said she has a difficult time believing her daughter is gone.

"We are still in disbelief that her precious life was taken from us," said a tearful Johnson-Tripplett. "The hole punched in our hearts will never close."

Turner wasn't charged with killing Tripplett's fetus because California law specified at the time that a 5 1/2-month-old fetus was not considered viable.

Jurors had agreed with the special circumstance allegations that Turner committed multiple murders and that one of the victims - 38-year-old Paula Vance, killed in downtown Los Angeles on Feb. 3, 1998 - was murdered during the commission of a rape.

There were no witnesses to any of the killings, but a security camera recorded Vance's murder, and the footage was played for jurors.

Turner also is suspected but has not been charged with four other killings. David Allen Jones, a mentally disabled janitor, was convicted of three of them but was freed after DNA evidence cleared him, prosecutors said. Jones, 44, was released in 2004 after 11 years in prison and was awarded $720,000 in compensation.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

En el mes de Información Sobre Energía, PG&E ofrece Consejos para Ahorrar Energía al Llegar la Temporada de Calefacción

SAN FRANCISCO - Un mensaje de cautela recorre el pa�s al acercarse la temporada de calefacci�n durante el invierno. Se estima que los precios del gas natural sean m�s elevados que durante el invierno pasado. Los expertos en energ�a y l�deres de la industria en todo el pais han estimado un aumento en los precios del gas natural debido a varios factores incluyendo el aumento en la demanda de generaci�n el�ctrica, una econom�a reactivada, fuentes que se agotan, y da�os en las instalaciones de producci�n debido a los huracanes

Para los clientes de Pacific Gas and Electric Company, estos factores pueden significar precios m�s altos en el gas natural durante este invierno. …

Sony shows wearable 3-D personal theater

TOKYO (AP) — Sony says it will start selling a head mounted display that provides a 3-D theater of music videos, movies and games, targeting people who prefer solitary entertainment rather than sitting in front of a TV with family or friends.

Sony Corp. said Wednesday that the 60,000 yen ($800) "HMZ personal 3-D viewer" is set to go on sale Nov. 11 in Japan, and is planned for the U.S. and Europe, perhaps in time for Christmas, although dates have not yet been set.

Resembling a futuristic visor, HMZ, which stands for "head mounted display," is worn like chunky goggles-and-earphones in one.

The footage before the viewer — a music video of a Japanese singer in the …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Berndorf Band endless steel belts. (Solids Processing).

BERNDORF BAND endless steel belts have proven themselves exceptionally well in the chemical industry for cooling and drying processes. For many applications the high-quality belts made from stainless steel or other metallic materials such as titanium represent the best possible carrier medium during the continuous cooling or drying process. High-quality features obtained by special manufacturing methods ensure precise run, …

People.

Alan Caslavka

Alan Caslavka was named vice president and general manager of Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence Solutions for Rockwell Collins, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. In this role, Caslavka is responsible for developing solutions, to include advanced communications and mission system applications as well as technologies encompassing electronic warfare, information assurance and networking.

Since joining Rockwell Collins 22 years ago, Caslavka has held various manufacturing operations, engineering and program management positions. He served as director of Navigation Systems, where he was responsible for worldwide GPS solutions for soldiers, weapons systems and aircraft applications. Most recently, Caslavka served as the director of European Sensors and Displays in the United Kingdom. …

SUFFRAGIST VISION GAINS HONORS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Associated Press

SENECA FALLS About 500 strong, they returned to this Finger Lakes town where it all began.

Women and a sprinkling of men marched some in 19th-century period costumes and some in jeans to the Women's National Historical Park on Saturday to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.

Speakers included Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey, 1988 Nobel Prize winner Gertrude Elion and Helen Thomas of United Press International, the longtime dean of White House correspondents.

The speakers praised the vision of suffrage leaders Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia …

Sharapova advances to 4th round at French Open

Maria Sharapova and her injured right shoulder managed to earn yet another three-set win at the French Open.

The unseeded Russian lost the first set Friday but she rebounded to beat Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 and advance to the fourth …

Make the holidays berry merry!

Brighten your traditional holiday table with creative new recipe ideas. Gorgeous, holiday-red, ripe strawberries are available from California all year. Strawberries are a healthy indulgence - naturally sweet, yet low in sugar and calories.

Not just for dessert, strawberries create fresh alternatives to many holiday favorites.

Visit www.calstrawberry.com for hundreds of terrific recipes for all occasions. Family Features

Souffle omelet with balsamic strawberries

Prep time: 10 minutes

Cook time: 5 minutes

Makes: 2 servings

11/2 cups (about 8 ounces) fresh California strawberries, stemmed and quartered

1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint, …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

new products.(Product Information)(Brief Article)

Enamel panels you can't scratch

Ever since discussion of Hong Kong's Mass Transit Railway system first started, vitreous enamelled steel panelling has featured strongly. This has continued as the system has been upgraded and extended.

The panelling surface, which is made from glass fused to a steel base, can withstand severe abrasion from passengers and baggage. Should the surface become damaged by such physical impact, the surrounding vitreous enamel will not flake or peel, so corrosion will not spread. If special cleaning solutions are required, perhaps for the removal of graffiti, these solvents will not damage the vitreous enamelled surface thanks to the chemically inert nature of the finish.

For more information Fax: +44 (0) 1933 440121

Telecomms inverters

Power Systems International has …

Leftlane News reveals details of Nissan GT-R Spec -V.

Auto Business News-2 December 2008-Leftlane News reveals details of Nissan GT-R Spec -V(C)2008 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Auto Business News - 02 December 2008(c)2005 - Electronic News Publishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk

Leftlane News, an automotive news magazine, has revealed details of the Nissan GT-R Spec -V.

The vehicle is to arrive at Japanese …

AWARDS SHOW SPURS CITY OF URBAN COWBOYS.(MAIN)

Never mind that the distinction between Brooks and Dunn is lost on many New Yorkers, that the city lacks a country music station or that the mayor looks silly in a cowboy hat.

The Country Music Association announced Tuesday that it will hold its annual awards show in New York City next year.

``This is a huge coup for New York,'' said Mayor Michael Bloomberg, wearing an off-white, size 7, Stetson ``Cattleman Crease'' hat.

It is the first time the ceremony will be outside Nashville, where it was first held in 1968. It is scheduled for Madison Square Garden in November 2005.

The announcement at City Hall was attended by Kix Brooks, who is half of the country music duo Brooks & Dunn and president of the CMA's board of directors, and country …

CHURCH ADMITS IT WRONGED GALILEO.(Main)

Byline: ALAN COWELL New York Times

More than 350 years after the Roman Catholic Church condemned Galileo for teaching that the Earth moved around the sun, Pope John Paul II is poised to rectify one of the Inquisition's most infamous wrongs.

With a formal statement at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences today, Vatican officials said the Pope will formally close a 13-year investigation into the church's condemnation of Galileo in 1633.

The condemnation, which forced the astronomer and physicist to recant his discoveries, led to Galileo's house arrest for eight years before his death in 1642 at the age of 77.

The dispute between the church and …

Tropical Storm Alex heads for the Gulf of Mexico

Tropical Storm Alex weakened to a depression Sunday hours after making landfall in this popular tourist destination, but is expected to regain strength in the coming days as it moves out over warmer waters in the Gulf of Mexico.

Although Alex could eventually become a hurricane, it is projected to touch down on the Mexican coastline later this week well away from the area where BP PLC is trying to stop a massive oil leak, the U.S. Hurricane Center in Miami said.

On Saturday, Alex swept through the Yucatan Peninsula, northern Guatemala, and Belize with torrential downpours, forcing hundreds of tourists to flee resort islands. Winds were at 60 mph (95 kph) when …

Sabres place Kotalik, Morrisonn on waivers

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The Buffalo Sabres have placed forward Ales Kotalik and defenseman Shaone Morrisonn on waivers, but haven't written either veteran player out of their plans yet.

The moves announced Saturday enable the Sabres to trim just over $5 million from the salary cap. Buffalo had been about $3 million over the $64.3 million cap.

If the …

CITI PUSHES CHASE OUT OF SHELL OIL FIELD.(Brief Article)

Shell Oil Products U.S. is switching its long-running cobranded card from issuer J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. to Citigroup Inc in January, according to a Shell spokesperson and an announcement in cardholders' November statements from Chase either Chase nor Citi spokespersons would comment on the switch. In January, cardholders will be given the choice of staying with Chase or switching to Citi o rewards will be lost, according to a source close to the negotiations. Chase will hold the receivables on the old card program, according to the source. It isn't clear what options Chase will offer to existing cardholders. Citigroup already runs the Shell private-label card. Chase wouldn't …

GM fought safety, emissions rules - but then invented ways to comply.(SUPP)(General Motors Corp.)

Byline: Harry Stoffer

When Dick Klimisch began working at General Motors in 1967, other GM engineers were trying to cut vehicle tailpipe pollution through mechanical engineering changing the way engines ran. They weren't having much success.

Klimisch was a 29-year-old chemical engineer. At DuPont, he had worked with catalysts substances that trigger chemical reactions.

DuPont used catalysts to help create compounds for synthetic fabrics or as Klimisch likes to say, for making women's underwear. At GM, catalysts would provide the key to cleaning vehicle exhaust.

"I sold myself as one of the world's catalyst experts,'' Klimisch told Automotive News. "I thought, `Wow, what an incredible opportunity, to work for the biggest auto company in the world on this wonderful problem.' "

The mechanical engineers made fun of "Captain Catalyst.'' But eventually he, they and others at GM developed the catalytic converter now found on most vehicles. The device, which …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

EMPIRE STATE COLLEGE GETS $1 MILLION GRANT.(CAPITAL REGION)

The State University's Empire State college was awarded a $1 million legislative grant to support the development of online resources and programs. The money will further extend the capabilities of the college to offer global resources of the Internet to students across the state, nation and around the world.

The latest funds are earmarked for a two-year project, ``Online Resources and Course Development,'' which integrates distance-learning modes into the college's mentor-student framework.

The project will focus on creating the college's second fully online degree program and will also bring resources necessary to begin work on creating online courses in …

Organic chemistry.(Highlights)

Playing with ring size

Synthetic chemists like to work with six-membered rings, but admire target structures with five and seven membered rings. Cephalotaxine (5) is a good example of such a target, with its eye-catching fusion of two five-membered rings on the seven-membered ring, Li and Wang use an approach in which they employ a classic aldol cyclopentenone synthesis, but then exploit the resulting C=C double bond to rearrange the structure to produce the required skeleton. The diketone (1) is converted with base into (2), but the rearrangement conditions to form (4) are unusual. The result is ascribed (see Figure 1) to the reductive interception of an aziridinium …

Cancer coverage in newspapers serving large and small communities in Ontario

Mass media is a common source of health1 and cancer2,3 information. While television is a pervasive news source, newspapers maintain an important role in informing the public. A 1998 NADBank survey found that 60% of Canadian adults had read a daily newspaper the day before, and 83% had read a daily newspaper in the previous week.4 Newspapers have an advantage over television news because they allow more discussion of issues, while television is usually limited to <60 second spots.5 Furthermore, newspaper presentations of a news story are better remembered than radio, television or computer presentations, across three measures of recall.6 An additional advantage of newspapers is that …

Wage parity and skills mix, nurses say!(NEWS)

Addressing the wages gap and skills mix top the list in submissions made by nurses and assistants in nursing to the Productivity Commission following its draft report on aged care reform released in January.

Written submissions to the Commission closed at the end of last month and public hearings were being held at the time the AN] went to print.

Registered nurse Penny Temple, has worked in the aged care sector for 20 years. She wants competitive rates of pay for real reform. "Every year it gets harder to attract and retain staff and in almost every case the reason given by RNs for leaving the sector is the lack of wage parity with the acute care sector."