Thursday, March 15, 2012

Stafford-led Lions rally to beat Panthers 49-35

DETROIT (AP) — Matthew Stafford shook off a couple of early interceptions, then went about leading the Detroit Lions to yet another memorable comeback.

The Lions quarterback matched a career-best with five touchdown passes, the final one a 7-yarder to Brandon Pettigrew with 2:32 left, and the Lions rallied for a 49-35 win over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.

"We were killing ourselves with turnovers," he said. "We knew that we'd be able to score in the second half if we could just keep our hands on the ball."

The Lions (7-3) scored five second-half touchdowns and became the first NFL team to win three games in a season after trailing by at least 17 points.

"We can …

Union activists occupy finance ministry in Athens

Members of a labor union occupied Greece's finance ministry building in central Athens early Thursday, hanging a massive banner from the top to protest harsh new austerity measures designed to pull the country out of its financial crisis.

Dozens of union activists holding flags and chanting slogans blocked the entrance to the building, which stands on the capital's central Syntagma Square, preventing employees from entering. They unfurled banners reading: "Rise up - everyone in the streets against the anti-popular measures."

The union, the communist party-linked PAME, planned a demonstration in Athens later in the day. Separately, former Olympic …

Firms may make cloth off the cob Corn starch fiber studied

A Decatur company has a deal with Du Pont Co. to study thepossibility of making clothes from corn starch.

Tate & Lyle Citric Acid, a sister company to locally based foodprocessor A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co., hopes to develop a cornstarch-based fiber to be woven into a new synthetic material calledSorona.

"This will be a product produced from a renewable resource, whichis always better than petroleum-based," said Mary Matiya, Tate & Lylespokeswoman. "This is really an excellent fit with our strategy andcore business."

The deal could mean more jobs and business for Tate & Lyle, butnot in the first few years. Scientists for Tate & Lyle and Du Pontwill do their …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Radio journalist killed in Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — Authorities in Honduras say gunmen shot to death a radio reporter who supported ousted former president Manuel Zelaya, the second such killing in as many months.

Prosecutors' spokesman Elvis Guzman said Friday that Radio Uno journalist Medardo Flores was killed in his home in northern Honduras Thursday.

Flores also served as the regional …

Afghan gov't: No breakthroughs in Taliban talks

The Afghan government has held "good discussions" with Taliban militants as it seeks a way to end an increasingly the bloody insurgency against Afghan, U.S. and NATO forces, the president's spokesman said Tuesday.

The spokesman for President Hamid Karzai said there have been "some developments" in the talks, giving the government hope they could lead toward peace. However, he cautioned there would not be a quick agreement.

"We have had some talks," Humayun Hamidzada told a news conference. "We shouldn't expect a quick outcome, but there has been some developments. There are some contacts at different levels."

Aces card first victory despite town's second-half salvo

Potts Minis Division Two U12s

South Moorlands Aces 4 Cheadle Town Blacks 3

SOUTH Moorlands Aces claimed their first league win of the seasonafter overcoming local rivals Cheadle Town Blacks in a seven-goalthriller on Sunday.

Aces threatened immediately from the kick-off. Joe Mandermistimed his shot from Jordan Taylor's cross before Brandon Reynoldsopened the scoring with Aces' next opportunity.

Moorlands continued to press forward with Taylor and Ben Hackneyboth trying their luck. And it was Taylor who doubled Aces'advantage after …

Ruins Await Residents' Return in Kansas

GREENSBURG, Kan. - Rescue crews have twice searched the debris-strewn yards and splintered homes that once held Greensburg's 1,500 residents. They began a third sweep Monday to secure the area before families who lost almost everything were to be allowed back in.

Not much remained in Greenburg to go back to.

The F5 tornado, the most powerful to hit the U.S. in eight years, demolished every business on the main street. Churches lost their steeples, trees were stripped of their branches, and neighborhoods were left unrecognizable. Officials estimate as much as 95 percent of the town was destroyed. At least 10 people died in the storms.

"We've been over the town …

Imprisoned journalist's father says she's upset

The father of imprisoned Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi says she is upset and frustrated that she is still being held in Iran, where she may be in prison for at least two more weeks while the government shut downs for the Iranian New Year.

"Roxana doesn't feel very well," Saberi's father, Reza, said Wednesday from his home in Fargo. "She's very upset, frustrated and disappointed."

Reza Saberi said he is worried the ordeal is taking a toll on his daughter's health. He said he plans to write a letter to Iran's supreme leader and work with members of the Japanese Embassy.

"Her mother is Japanese and the Japanese …

To Census Bureau, she doesn't count

Any time some worthy government project starts off with a coupleof dozen people threatening to sue if it moves, you have to feelsorry for those running the show. Thus it was with our census.

Even before it started, the mayors and chief executives andcorporation counsels of several big U.S. cities said they were goingto sue the Census Bureau because the latter was not going to findenough people within their borders. No sense waiting for the count.Sue.

The Census Bureau has a problem. It can't blame the post officefor snafus, because postmen would get angry and stop delivering theforms altogether. It can't blame the people for not sending theirforms in or the …

Unchildish problems of our kids


It often happens that parents do not understand their children, and this misunderstanding can start from a very early age. What should I do if my child does not want to gather their toys, how to respond to his harsh words?
There is a famous child psychologist Mark Traisman who answers these questions.
"Even the most caring moms and dads sometimes make mistakes and incorrectly assess the child's behavior. As a result, children get nervous, and adults get upset. It is not always possible to solve the problem by yourselves. The advisory office "Aistenok" is opened especially in order to help parents and kids to solve all the difficult situations.
Professional psychologists, speech therapists and teachers will answer many questions, worrying moms and dads. They will introduce parents to the age peculiarities of preschool children. Here you can be obtained a piece of advice concerning education, training and development of children, difficulties in their behavior and language development. Specialists will help to raise the teaching status of adults, and to conduct a comprehensive psychological and pedagogical examination of the child. According to child psychologist Mark Traisman, "the main task of the center is to create equal conditions for children brought up at home or attending preschool institutions." The problems of a small child can be resolved if there is a desire and a professional psychological support.
In addition, here the parents club is opened for adults, and a group named "Development" for children. All services are free.

Man in Australian $1M suitcase mystery charged

SYDNEY (AP) — A man questioned by Australian police about an abandoned suitcase stuffed with nearly 1 million Australian dollars ($970,000) has been charged with assault and dealing in the proceeds of the crime.

New South Wales police announced the charges Friday, but they haven't said where they think the money came from.

Workers at a Sydney eatery say the suitcase was left there …

Obama welcomes Karzai's decision on vote

President Barack Obama says he called Afghan President Karzai to applaud his agreement to a second round vote.

Karzai's announcement on Tuesday came after a U.N. commission threw out nearly a third of the ballots cast for Karzai in Afghanistan's Aug. 20 presidential election.

Karzai came under heavy U.S. pressure to accept the U.N. findings, and Obama said he wanted to express his congratulations personally. Obama spoke to reporters about the Afghanistan situation after meeting in the Oval Office with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

Motorcycle chic // Fonz meets Anne Klein

You don't have to head for the open road to wear a motorcyclejacket this season.

With its asymmetric zippers and jaunty cropped silhouette, therevved-up biker's mainstay has gone legit, topping everything fromleggings and pleated skirts to chiffon evening gowns.

Time was when black leather conjured up images of 1950s bad boyson Harleys - those fatally attractive enfants terribles who swaggeredpast, with a Marlboro dangling from the lips. There was James Dean.And Brando.

So sinister was the connotation that the Fonz early on wasn'tallowed to wear black leather on "Happy Days." Instead, ABC-TVsentenced him to a light blue windbreaker.

Then came …

EUROPE NEWS AT 1800 GMT

STORIES PLANNED FOR THURSDAY, JAN. 26:

DAVOS FORUM

DAVOS, Switzerland — Haunted by Europe's debt crisis, global business and political leaders turn their attention to China's successes and Africa's challenges at the World Economic Forum.

DAVOS FORUM-DEMOCRACY

DAVOS, Switzerland — Leading world figures debate whether 20th century democratic institutions are fit for the 21st century in a panel moderated by AP at the World Economic Forum.

DAVOS FORUM-TRADE

DAVOS, Switzerland — The head of the World Trade Organization, facing the reality that 11-year-old Doha Round has failed, addresses countries' options in a round-table at the World Economic Forum.

GREECE-FINANCIAL CRISIS

ATHENS, Greece — Senior bank negotiators are due back in Athens to resume talks with the Greek government, aimed at clinching a €100 billion debt reduction deal, seen as key for stability in the crisis-hit country and the eurozone.

ITALY-CRUISE AGROUND

ROME — Following developments of cruise ship that ran aground in Italy.

EU-FOREIGN MINISTERS

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Informal meeting of EU's justice and home affairs ministers. Through Jan. 27

GERMANY-SPAIN

BERLIN — New Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy meets German Chancellor Angela Merkel. News conference at about 1300 GMT.

EU-BULGARIA

BRUSSELS— European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso meet Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev. Photos.

NATO-AFGHANISTAN

BRUSSELS— NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen news conference.

BELGIUM-DENMARK-ROYALS

BRUSSELS — Belgium's Crown Prince Philippe and Princess Mathilde welcome Danish Prince Frederik and Princess Mary to a concert to mark the beginning of the Danish EU Presidency. Photos.

BRITAIN-THE SHARD

LONDON — Passengers stepping out of London Bridge tube station cannot help but crane their necks to gaze at the jagged tower under construction: The Shard is the tallest building in the European Union and looks like a slice of glass balanced on the edge of the city's financial district. When the tower opens next year, visitors to the observation deck will see helicopters fly by at eye level and take in the metropolis all the way to the distant north Downs Hills.

BRITAIN-HACKING

LONDON — Four men tied to the loosely-organized Anonymous network plead to charges of computer hacking.

FRANCE-AREVA

PARIS — French nuclear company Areva reports its 2011 revenue figures after a bruising year with a management tussle and boondoggle investment.

CZECH-EU-SATELLITE NAVIGATION

PRAGUE — An official signing of a deal between the Czech Republic and the GSA agency that is in charge of the European Union's Galileo navigation system to host its headquarters in Prague. The signing scheduled to take place around noon (1100 GMT).

ITALY-AFGHANISTAN

ROME — Afghan President H. Karzai meets Italian Lower Chamber President Gianfranco Fini and Italian Premier Mario Monti to sign an agreement on security and cooperation. Photos.

ITALY-FINANCIAL CRISIS

ROME — Italy goes to the markets with a bond sale.

FINLAND-EARNS-NOKIA

HELSINKI — Nokia Corp. releases Q4 earnings. After 1100 GMT.

SWEDEN-EARNS-HM

STOCKHOLM — Cheap n' chic clothing retailer H&M reports full-year earnings. Report at 0700 GMT.

TOP STORIES SENT WEDNESDAY:

RUSSIA-SYRIA

MOSCOW — Russia is standing firm on blocking any U.N. sanctions against Syria, its longtime ally and a significant arms customer, saying that any resolution by the world body must exclude the possibility of international military involvement such as in Libya. By Vladimir Isachenkov. AP Photos.

DAVOS FORUM

DAVOS, Switzerland — German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed determination to solve Europe's debt crisis through greater political unity, but dashed hopes of a big injection of money for the region's bailout fund. AP Photos.

RUSSIA-ELECTION

MOSCOW — Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov was officially registered as a presidential candidate, the only political newcomer allowed to challenge Prime Minister Vladimir Putin for the Kremlin job. By Lynn Berry. AP Photos.

EU-DATA PROTECTION

BRUSSELS — The European Commission proposed sweeping reforms to protect the confidentiality of personal data online including a "right to be forgotten," which would let people have information about themselves deleted if there was no legitimate reason to retain it. By Don Melvin.

OLY--LONDON 2012-SECURITY

LONDON — Nearly 100 people have been arrested for selling fake tickets and bogus hotel rooms before the London Olympics. With some six months to go before Britain's largest-ever planned security operation, Home Secretary Theresa May said police had arrested 97 people in scams involving tickets, fake Olympic websites and nonexistent hotel rooms. By Paisley Dodds. AP Photos.

BUSINESS & FINANCE:

EUROPE-FINANCIAL CRISIS

ATHENS — Greece is aiming to complete negotiations on its debt swap deal by the end of the week, the government's spokesman said, adding that the talks were at their "most delicate phase." By Nicholas Paphitis and Gabriele Steinhauser. AP Photos.

IRELAND-FINANCIAL CRISIS

DUBLIN — Ireland tapped the bond markets for the first time since its humiliating bailout and swapped more than €3.5 billion ($4.6 billion) in treasuries, in an unexpectedly strong test of investor sentiment toward the debt-struck nation. By Shawn Pogatchnik.

DAVOS FORUM-LATIN AMERICA

DAVOS, Switzerland — When the developed world sneezes, the old saying goes, Latin America catches a cold. But now, after decades of austerity and reforms, the region's leaders say their immune systems are in pretty good shape. By Niko Price.

___

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

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Pittsburgh and football: a mystical connection

He sits in his basement on a hill south of Pittsburgh, encircled by lovingly framed portraits of those who mean the most to him. His wife. His children. His grandchildren. Franco Harris and Mean Joe Greene.

And when lifelong steelworker Bill Kramer talks of football and his beloved Steelers, he is talking about far more. He is talking about how western Pennsylvania's people have long seen their community _ and the ideas and traditions that help shape who they are.

"People associate working hard with the Steelers," says Kramer, a 60-year-old welder for Union Electric Steel in Carnegie, an industrial town at Pittsburgh's edge. "The atmosphere in the mill, it's not one man who gets the job done. It's a team attitude ... and football's the ultimate team game."

Ever since Nov. 12, 1892, when Pudge Heffelfinger pocketed $500 cash from Pittsburgh's Allegheny Athletic Association and returned a fumble for a touchdown to become history's first pro football player, the gridiron has occupied a unique spot in this region's imagination.

More than baseball, more than hockey, western Pennsylvania is about football. This is the cradle of quarterbacks whose hillside and valley towns belched forth the likes of Joe Namath, Johnny Unitas and Joe Montana. It was here, not Texas, and certainly not Arizona, that formed the backdrop for the iconic high-school football movie "All the Right Moves."

When the Steelers take the field Sunday for the Super Bowl, they will be watched rabidly by a far-flung following like no other _ a stalwart lot that ESPN.com last year pronounced professional football's most faithful fan base. In Pittsburgh, even lawyers can be spotted wearing jerseys over their business suits on game-week Fridays.

"I've been in lots of communities that have football teams. They have fans. But here, it's visceral," says Leo Gerard, president of the United Steelworkers. He grew up in a Canadian industrial town and was, like many around him, a Steelers fan.

"Steeler Nation," folks here call it, though it might as well be "Steeler Planet." There are Steeler bars as distant as Shanghai and as near as the nearest enemy territory _ Cleveland. Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl, faced with an AFC championship against the Baltimore Ravens, temporarily changed his surname to "Steelerstahl." And marketers have called the cradle-to-grave Steeler loyalty a potent template for strengthening the NFL's brand.

"In other cities, football is a tradable commodity _ it's an asset," says Andrew Masich, president and CEO of Pittsburgh's Heinz History Center and a co-author of Steelers chairman Dan Rooney's memoirs. "Here," he says, "it's a family business."

That's certainly part of it. It's also about the strands of memory that connect Pittsburgh's heritage of solidity, solidarity and sweat to the football tradition. It's about a collective unconscious that contains the days when men mined minerals and forged metal, when the only respites to a grueling week were church, a good Sunday dinner and a rough-and-tumble game of football.

And at the tail end of a generation-long transition between a manufacturing economy and its service-based replacement, it's about pride that, as heavy industry collapsed in Pittsburgh during the 1970s, a football dynasty arose as a counterbalance.

"This town got the image of a loser _ a dirty city when steel was big, and when it started to die, we got the 'rust-belt' concept," says longtime Pittsburgh broadcaster Bill Hillgrove, the Steelers' play-by-play man since 1994. The four championships in the second half of the 1970s, he says, "allowed people to identify with something positive _ a winner."

A winner, of course, produces loyalty _ and big names. Ask younger Pittsburghers about the Steelers and you'll hear enthusiasm about the Roethlisbergers, the Polamalus, the Hines Wards. But even among fans who never experienced the region's lean years _ and the team's _ talk eventually veers toward community.

Eric Ubinger, a 41-year-old physical therapist, personifies Pittsburgh's newer service economy as much as Kramer represents manufacturing. Ubinger sits in his own memorabilia-stocked basement in the northern suburb of McCandless and looks up at a black-and-white 1979 photo of his younger self with Terry Bradshaw.

In those days, Ubinger says, the players, following the Rooney family's example, went out into the community and made themselves a part of it. That traditionalist spirit endures today, he says, even in the face of a celebrity culture that has elevated football stars into national demigods.

He voices what is eminently clear: Pittsburghers have scant room in their hearts for the hot-dogging of a Terrell Owens or a Pacman Jones. And a bare-bones win built on a 1-yard touchdown run or a safety is just fine, thank you.

"A lot of these teams, they'd rather be flashy, score 40 points, get in the limelight. Here, it's not 'Let's see who can score more points,'" Ubinger says.

"Everything seems to come here last _ music, fashion, trends. We're outdated, and we like it that way," he says. "It's the same thing with football. The '60s, '70s, it was all about defense. And we've never changed. We've never been a high-scoring offense. You want to feel part of a sport, and what's better than if your team shares the same values?"

Those values, for many, have gone elsewhere but not changed. Part of the history of Steeler Nation has little to do with football and everything to do with economics.

When the mills began to shutter in the 1970s, one generation and then another left western Pennsylvania looking for work. These expats put down roots elsewhere but kept looking homeward. Now they turn up just about anywhere, ready to get their Pittsburgh on.

Kramer's children are a good example. One moved to Dallas _ the belly of the beast _ and managed to sniff out not one but two Steeler bars there. The other seems, as she points out, to have babies in years when the Steelers end up in the Super Bowl.

Then there's Kramer's wife, Bonnie. Is she as diehard a fan as her husband? Judge for yourself. Discussing a recent vacation on a beach in Yucatan, she starts a sentence like this: "They'll see you in your Steeler bathing suit and they'll say ..."

On Sunday, the Kramers will gather around their flat-panel Samsung and a roaring artificial fire and, like so many others, they'll watch a football game in Florida and hope for the best.

That day, outside the Heinz History Center, the special 30-second parking will remain in effect so passers-by can pull up, hop out and kiss the old Steelers goal post. On Pittsburgh's South Side, the Breathe Yoga studio's "yin yoga" classes will be scrapped for the day; even meditation, apparently, must make way for football.

And in black-and-gold-festooned basements across western Pennsylvania and bars across the world, fingernails will be bitten _ and, heaven help us, probably a few toenails as well. Iron City beers will be consumed. Terrible Towels will be waved.

People won't be thinking about community or industrial roots or history. They'll be thinking about the western Pennsylvania football tradition that everybody cares about most of all: winning.

___

AP National Writer Ted Anthony grew up in Pittsburgh during the Steelers' 1970s dynasty and recently moved back after a 20-year absence.

Yao, McGrady Lead Rockets Over Blazers

Yao Ming had 21 points and 12 rebounds and Tracy McGrady added 20 points and six assists as the Houston Rockets improved to 3-0 for the first time since the 1996-97 season with an 89-80 win over Portland on Saturday night.

Yao scored only eight points and McGrady only five the second half, but the Rockets stayed in control with their defense, forcing 18 turnovers and holding the Blazers to 41 percent shooting (31 of 76) for the game.

Brandon Roy scored 23 and former Texas star LaMarcus Aldridge added 20 for Portland, off to its first 0-3 start since the 1986-87 season.

Following a 47-point effort at Utah on Thursday, McGrady started 4-for-8 on Saturday night, then went 4-for-15 the rest of the way. Yao went 2-for-7 in the second half and even missed a dunk.

The Rockets never needed big games from either All-Star because the Blazers were off-target from the start.

Houston opened with an 18-4 run as Portland missed 14 of their first 17 shots. Yao and McGrady scored 20 points together in the first quarter as Houston built a 25-12 lead.

Yao flipped in a turnaround jumper to start a 9-0 burst that pushed the lead over 20 early in the second quarter. Yao hit six of his first eight shots.

The Blazers cut Houston's lead to 15 before McGrady returned after a long rest. He promptly sank two long jumpers, then drove through traffic for another basket to stretch the lead to 42-23.

Portland trailed 46-31 at the break after shooting 29.7 percent (11 of 37) and committing 13 turnovers.

Channing Frye and Aldridge scored inside in the first minute of the third quarter as Portland closed the deficit to 11. The Rockets missed their first five shots before Chuck Hayes made a layup off an assist from McGrady.

The Blazers hit 7 of their first 9 shots after the break and Roy's pull-up jumper with 6:03 left in the third quarter pulled Portland to within eight, at 54-46. Out of a time out, McGrady found Luis Scola for an easy layup to restore the double-digit lead.

Portland missed its last eight shots of the third quarter and Houston led 62-46 heading to the fourth.

Roy scored to end the Blazers' drought, but Mike James answered with a long jumper from the wing. James was 3-for-7 from 3-point range and scored 17 for Houston

The teams virtually traded baskets until Aldridge scored twice to cut the deficit to eight in the final two minutes. McGrady finished off Portland with a 3-pointer from the wing with 1:25 left that put the Rockets up 83-72.

Notes:@ The only real suspense in the fourth quarter came when the fans started chanting, "We want Steve!" hoping Steve Francis would check in. Coach Rick Adelman never appeased them. The Rockets signed Francis over the summer, but he has yet to enter the game. ... Martell Webster had 15 points and eight rebounds for the Blazers. ... Portland plays its home opener on Wednesday against New Orleans. The Blazers started the season with three straight road games for just the second time in franchise history.

Hubbard Street spins pure gold

Snowflakes and foul weather aside, Wednesday was a blazing,golden night for the Hubbard Street Dance Company, which unveiled itsversion of Twyla Tharp's "The Golden Section" for Chicago audiences.

Tharp herself has called her vibrant "The Golden Section"perfect for the athletic and buoyant Hubbard Streeters. Obviouslythe choreographer knows her stuff, for on Wednesday Hubbard Streetmade "The Golden Section" its own. While retaining Tharp's tricky,dangerous choreography, the Hubbard Street company gave the dance itspersonalized stamp at the Civic Opera House, 20 N. Wacker.

"The Golden Section" was first performed on Broadway in 1981(and then on PBS) as part of "The Catherine Wheel," a collaborationbetween Tharp and pop composer David Byrne.

Although Tharp has since dismissed the artistic worth of "TheCatherine Wheel," "The Golden Section" (named for its golden costumesby Santo Loquasto) stands as a dazzling work of terpischorean art.

Propelled by turns seemingly fueled by cosmic energy, thedancers swirl, change directions, throw themselves into the air andland new, convoluted turns. Dancers throw each other into the wings.Lifts turn into treacherous drops. The theatrics are accomplishedwith split-second timing.

Aptly coached by Tharp's ballet mistress Shelley Washington, theHubbard Street Dance Company was up to every challenge Wednesday (ifone can dismiss one missed lift). The sizzle, the excitement and theexuberant joy of dance that "The Golden Section" embodies all were ondisplay on the Opera House stage.

The rest of the Hubbard Street program was packed withentertaining selections. Another Tharp piece, "Baker's Dozen," wasdanced with the loose, silky style that's become a Tharp trademark.

This was a vast improvement over a overly rigid version thatHubbard Street presented at the Ravinia Festival last August. Itseems the longer this piece is in the repertoire, the better it willbecome.

"SUPER STRAIGHT is coming down," by Daniel Ezralow, is anaggressive, sexy pressure cooker of a dance, full of somersaults,barrel rolls and other pyrotechnics.

"Cobras in the Moonlight," by Margo Sappington, is a hot Latinforay into the world of tangos. The dance, which is supposed totrace the loss of the feminine principle in the human experience,features tangos that become progressively more male-oriented, untilFrank Chaves and Claire Bataille (dressed as a man) tango in anemotionally detached, completely egalitarian style.

Hubbard Street's electric and satisfying program will berepeated at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday (312-902-1500).

Irwin Shoots 62 to Take MasterCard Lead

KAUPULEHU-KONA, Hawaii - Hale Irwin really wanted to shoot his age. He wants a win even more.

The 61-year-old Irwin moved into contention for his first victory since October 2005 on Saturday, shooting a 10-under 62 to take a three-stroke lead into the final round of the Champions Tour's season-opening MasterCard Championship.

Irwin, coming off his first winless season in 12 years, had 10 birdies in his bogey-free round for a 16-under 128 total. He just missed shooting his age when a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 18 came up just short and to the right.

"I can still do this," he said. "It's not like I've lost it and it's gone. It's back. Just what will I do with it now?"

Tom Kite and Brad Bryant were tied for second. Kite shot a 64, and Bryant, the first-round leader, had a 68. Jim Thorpe had a 63 to join defending champion Loren Roberts (67) at 12 under, and Allen Doyle (67), Jerry Pate (67) and Ben Crenshaw (68) followed at 11 under.

Irwin, who has a record 44 wins on the Champions Tour, is seeking his first win since the 2005 SAS Championship. He missed winning in 2006 for the first time since joining the Champions Tour in 1995.

"I just probably lost a step here and half a step there and that's all it takes," he said. "All in all, it wasn't a terrible year, but I just didn't play the kind of golf I'm capable of playing, which I've shown the last two days."

Irwin has been working out more and trying to fix the kinks in his game.

He birdied four straight holes twice, once each on the front and back nines. His tap-in birdie on the par-4 15th, gave him his first lead at 15 under.

Irwin has owned Hawaii like no other golfer, winning eight times on the senior tour including the 1997 MasterCard, and the 1981 Hawaiian Open on the PGA Tour. He has $3.9 million in winnings, including unofficial money, in the state.

After missing the putt on 18, Irwin hunched over, flipping his cap backward.

Irwin said he'll need to stay aggressive and probably needs a 65 or 66 to force this rivals to shoot an amazing round Sunday to win.

"If you just try to sit on a lead, you'll probably end up doing what I did on the last hole," he said. "You get too careful. You'll get too anxious and not succeed."

Kite had seven birdies and made a 39-foot eagle putt on the par-5 10th. His only mistake was a bogey on the par-3 17th when his 8-iron fell short of the green and he missed a 4 1/2-footer for par.

Kite said he realizes Irwin is hungry for a win.

"He's not the only one hungry, though," he said. "It's going to take some good golf tomorrow to catch Hale."

Irwin is almost unbeatable when he leads or share the lead heading into Sunday, winning 29 of 40 times.

With a cigar in mouth and a brand new Callaway putter in hand, Thorpe had a personal-best 22 putts in a round that included seven birdies and an eagle on the 566-yard 10th, the longest hole at Hualalai.

His four birdie putts on the final six holes were all within 4 feet.

"I found a way to keep your putting strokes low - miss more greens," he said. "It builds your confidence when you make those 4- or 5-footers. ... So if things don't good tomorrow, I might just miss a green on purpose and chip it and go up-and-down to get some confidence."

Only Gil Morgan (73) and Bob Gilder (77) were over par Saturday.

"How would you like to shoot a 13-under par and be three behind?" Irwin said.

A day after celebrating his 50th wedding anniversary, 71-year-old Gary Player was 6 under after his second 69, again beating his age by two strokes.

Player moved into contention at 9 under with a birdie on the par-4 16th, but triple-bogeyed No. 18 after hooking his drive into the lava fields and dropping his approach in the sand.

"Anytime you end up with a 7, it's a lousy bit of medicine," he said. "I got a little greedy. I tried to hit it hard and hooked it around the corner and I just hit a terrible shot."

The Hall of Famer is one of four invited players at Hualalai, along with Crenshaw, Raymond Floyd and Lanny Wadkins.

Last year, Roberts had a 25-under 191 total to break the tour record for relation to par in a 54-hole event and tie the stroke mark. He also broke the record for birdies in a three-round tournament with 26.

The shot of the day went to Eduardo Romero, who holed his second shot from 85 yards on the 440-yard 18th. The ball dropped straight into the cup on the fly.

The eagle gave Romero a 68 for a two-round total of 9-under 135.

CWRT initiates inherent safety and pollution prevention project

AIChE's Center for Waste Reduction Technologies (CWRT) and Center for Chemical Process Safety (CCPS), in tandem with some of the most innovative thinkers in industry and consulting, has launched the Inherent Safety and Pollution Prevention Project.

This project will be of keen interest not only to the pollution-prevention specialist but also anyone involved in manufacturing processes, conceptual process design, and plant management. It will help create a framework to bolster the skills of chemical engineers in the field of pollution prevention and designing of environmentally sound process systems. Its main purpose is to develop a methodology for evaluating manufacturing processes that can reconcile conflicts between pollution prevention and greater production. The project's first goal is to put together a concept book that will help chemical engineers reduce the pollution in their processes. Every aspect of plant design will be discussed.

The applicability of this project reaches far beyond those who specialize in pollution prevention; anyone who is interested in operating a "greener" and more economical process can learn from it. Some of the private firms that are participating include Novartis, Merck, 3M, General Electric, SmithKline Beecham, DuPont, and Rohm and Haas. If you would like additional information, please contact Jo Rogers of CWRT at 212/591-7727; email jorogers@aiche.org; or Gregory Keeports of Rohm and Haas at 215/785-7517.

Field Assessment of Biological Reactor Monitors Begins

CWRT has also embarked upon a collaboration with SmithKline Beecham and Rohm and Haas to lead the field assessment of two commercially available instruments for the monitoring of oxygen uptake in aerobic biological reactors. This effort is extremely important, as oxygen uptake is an excellent indicator of the operating health of a biological reactor. Operators have been searching for a means to track the wellbeing of their units. In the worst-case scenario, catastrophic failures can occur when assessment of the health of biological reactors is inaccurate.

AIChE is enthusiastic about supporting this project, which will be launched early in 1999 and will take approximately six months. Companies who are interested in more information about this project are encouraged to contact Katherine Romano at 212/591-7424; e-mail kathr@aiche.org.

13-year-old boy inflates 213 balloons with his nose in attempt to break record

A 13-year-old U.S. boy hopes to win a balloon-blowing record by a nose.

Blowing through one nostril at a time, Andrew Dahl inflated 213 balloons within an hour Friday _ a feat that has been submitted for review by Guinness World Records.

His father, Doug Dahl, measured the balloons to make sure each was at least 20 centimeters, the minimum diameter, and his mother, Wendy Dahl, kept the tally.

At one point he asked, "Does this count as practicing my trumpet?" His mother replied, "Only if you can play that with your nose."

Andrew's first attempt _ 184 balloons in February _ was rejected because his father tied the balloons. This time he tied them off himself.

6 Haitian orphans resume trip to US homes

Six Haitian orphans boarded an airplane to the United States on Wednesday, four days after Haitian police seized them out of fear they were being kidnapped.

"They were unbelievably excited to be going home," said Maria O'Donovan, field director of the orphanage in northern Haiti. She said the children were singing songs _ including "Wheels on the Bus" and "B-I-N-G-O" _ on the way to the airport.

"I was just so relieved to see the plane take off," she said. "I'm so excited for their parents."

The waiting new families can take the children home on Thursday, according to Jan Bonnema, the Minnesota-based founder of the Children of The Promise orphanage.

Sara Vanzee and her husband, Tim, waited for their 13-month-old son Albert to arrive. They understand the suspicions in Haiti given recent cases, but said their ordeal has been stressful.

"Our hope is that they're OK with it, that they can see that we absolutely love these children and that we want to provide for them," said Vanzee, who is from the U.S. Midwest.

On Saturday, a group of 20 men blocked four women accompanying the orphans to the airport, shouting: "You can't take our children!" Police briefly detained the women and the orphans _ ages 1-5 _ spent three night sleeping on the ground in a tent city. The U.S. Embassy official carrying the documents needed to take them through immigration had been running late.

At the very moment when Haiti's impoverished children are in greatest need _ and well-meaning foreigners are most willing to help _ fears of child trafficking are making it harder than ever for them to leave the Western Hemisphere's poorest land.

Those concerns have been fueled by the arrest last month of 10 U.S. missionaries trying to take a busload of 33 children to the Dominican Republic without proper documentation. It turned out none of the children were orphans, and the Americans were arrested; two remain in jail in Port-au-Prince.

Thousands of desperate Haitian parents, unable to care for their own children, have eagerly given the youngsters away in hopes of giving them a better life. At the same time, they are terrified they will be tricked by predators who will enslave or sexually abuse the children.

Haiti's government immediately halted new adoptions in the chaos that followed the Jan. 12 quake, allowing only those already approved to move forward.

That chill hardened into a freeze after Saturday's incident. A U.S. State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the matter's sensitivity, said the latest drama held up the departure of 50 orphans approved for U.S. adoption.

It took the U.S. ambassador and Haiti's prime minister to iron out on Tuesday what turned out to be an ugly misunderstanding, and the children were handed over to the Embassy.

"They just kept singing and playing," O'Donovan said. "They were so happy."

___

Associated Press writers Niko Price in Haiti and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

Poland's workers demand anti-crisis policy

Some 500 miners, steel workers and medical rescuers are demanding the Polish government take action against the economic crisis and guarantee their jobs.

The protesters have been marching through Warsaw while blowing whistles, burning tires and chanting "Thieves, Thieves" in front of the ministries of health and economy.

Leaders of various trade groups say Prime Minister Donald Tusk's government must take measures to prevent massive layoffs that unionists fear could result from the financial crisis.

Poland has been spared so far from dramatic job cuts, but work stoppages are taking place and unemployment climbed to 10.9 percent in February.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Loach date at Bath City

Film director Ken Loach will be at Bath City Football Club nextweek presenting a screening of his controversial thriller HiddenAgenda.

The Bath City fan, who lives in the city, will be introducing thefilm at Twerton Park as part of a pre-season event in connectionwith the Bath Film Festival. Hidden Agenda follows an investigationinto the murder of an American civil rights activist in NorthernIreland by the police while he was driving in the company of aProvisional IRA sympathiser. And although it is fictional, the filmis based on some known facts.

It will be shown on Friday, July 15 in the clubhouse.

It won the jury prize at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival but onlyreceived a limited release in the UK.

After the screening Mr Loach, pictured, will host a question andanswer session.

Tickets for the event will cost Pounds 12 for adults and Pounds10 concessions and are available at bathboxoffice.org.uk, bathfilmfestival.org.uk, bathcityfc.com or by ringing 01225 463362.

Anyone joining or renewing membership of Goodfellas, the BathFilm Festival Friends scheme, will have their ticket costreimbursed.

Dalla Viola, Alfonso

Dalla Viola, Alfonso

Dalla Viola, Alfonso , Italian instrumentalist and composer; b. Ferrara, c. 1508; d. there, c. 1573. He was in the service of the Este family in Ferrara from 1528. He acquired a fine reputation as an instrumentalist and composer. He was also maestro di cappella at Ferrara Cathedral (c. 1563–72). Among his extant works are the vols. Primo libro di madrigali for 4 Voices (Ferrara, 1539) and II secondo libro di madrigali for 4 Voices (Ferrara, 1540).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

Coalition fighting Bush nominations

Coalition fighting Bush nominations

All indications are that president-elect George W. Bush's selection of John Ashcroft as US attorney general is sure to face stiff opposition in the US Senate.

But a coalition of Massachusetts civil rights activists and elected officials is leaving nothing to chance. Staging a press conference at the State House last week, the activists, calling themselves the Coalition for Justice, called on the Massachusetts congressional delegation to strenuously oppose Ashcroft and other ultra-conservative nominees for the Bush cabinet.

"We are committed to doing everything in our power to fight the confirmation of John Ashcroft," said state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson. "Our delegation will not be able to chose congeniality over civil rights."

Wilkerson also cited Bush's choice of New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman, who has been nominated to head the Environmental Protection Agency. Whitman is currently being sued for personally participating in a pat-down of an unarmed black motorist.

Joining the coalition were progressive organizations including the NAACP, the National Organization for Women, the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law as well as progressive Massachusetts lawmakers.

In a letter addressed to Sen. Edward Kennedy, a ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, the coalition cites Ashcroft's record of opposing affirmative action, gun control, workers' rights to organize, hate crime laws and collecting data on racial profiling.

"We stand ready to support you in defending the rights of your constituents in Massachusetts and those across America," the letter reads. "These nominations must be defeated."

Kennedy is already taking a hard line on the Ashcroft nomination. Before hearings began Tuesday, Kennedy expressed concerns about Ashcroft's record on civil rights and women's issues in a statement to the press.

The Massachusetts coalition is one of numerous efforts by progressives across the country to oppose Bush's more conservative nominations to top secretarial posts. Ashcroft, more than any other nominee, has drawn fire.

In the Senate, Ashcroft has left a record of conservative votes on issues ranging from hate crime laws to affirmative action laws. While courting presidential votes in South Carolina in 1998, he hailed Confederate war heroes as "patriots" and called it "revisionist nonsense" to depict slave-owning early Americans as racists.

"We have someone who is hostile to every single civil rights law that the the attorney general of our country is mandated to uphold," said Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights interim director Nadine Cohen.

While Ashcroft's nomination may prove untenable for Bush, coalition members say they plan to keep pressure on the Bush administration.

"We oppose any candidate for any office who is shown to be against basic human rights," said State Rep. Gloria Fox. "We are here, we are organized and we will remain organized. We're here for the long haul."

Brazil bans smoking in enclosed spaces

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Brazil's president has signed a law that bans smoking in enclosed public places nationwide.

The U.S.-based anti-smoking group Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids calls it a historic measure. The groups says Brazil, with its 190 million people, is now the largest nation to go completely smoke free for enclosed public and work spaces.

Smoking bans were already in place in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and other big Brazilian cities.

The law signed Thursday by President Dilma Rousseff goes one step further. It outlaws designated smoking rooms in airports and bars that were allowed in cities with bans already in place.

The law also raises taxes on tobacco products, increasing costs for smokers by up to 55 percent within four years.

Obama promises recovery plan as job losses mount

President-elect Barack Obama said Saturday that he has asked his economic team for a recovery plan that saves or creates 2.2 million jobs, a day after the Labor Department announced the U.S. economy is losing jobs at an alarming rate.

"We won't just throw money at the problem," Obama said in his weekly radio address and Internet video. "We'll measure progress by the reforms we make and the results we achieve _ by the jobs we create, by the energy we save, by whether America is more competitive in the world."

A half-million American jobs disappeared last month, the worst mass layoffs in more than three decades, as the U.S. spiraled downward in what could be the hardest hard times since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Bush administration officials said Friday night that the White House is considering telling Congress as early as next week that it wants to tap the unused $350 billion of the financial industry bailout. It was not immediately clear how the administration might use the money.

Obama said his plan would put millions of people to work by "making the single largest new investment in our national infrastructure since the creation of the federal highway system in the 1950s."

He also wants to install energy-saving light bulbs and replace old heating systems in federal buildings to cut costs and create jobs.

School buildings would get an upgrade, too. "Because to help our children compete in a 21st century economy, we need to send them to 21st century schools," Obama said.

Obama said he would announce other details of the economic recovery plan in the coming weeks. He said he would work with Congress to pass the initiative when lawmakers reconvene in January.

Obama's remarks come after the Labor Department announced Friday that employers cut 533,000 jobs in November, the most in 34 years.

General Motors, one of the Big Three automakers that went to Congress this week for a second time with hat in hand, announced it was cutting even more jobs.

"The economy is in a free fall," said Richard Yamarone of Argus Research. "It is as if someone flicked off the switch on hiring."

Despite the gloom, investors found a silver lining, betting that so much bad news would force fresh government action to revive the foundering economy. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 259 points on Friday.

But economists, staring at 533,000 lost jobs, were anything but hopeful. Since the start of the recession last December, the economy has shed 1.9 million jobs, and the number of unemployed people has increased by 2.7 million _ to 10.3 million now out of work.

Some analysts predict 3 million more jobs will be lost between now and the spring of 2010 _ and that the once-humming U.S. economy could stagger backward at a shocking 6 percent rate for the current three-month quarter.

"It's a mess," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "Businesses, battening down the hatches, are concerned about their survival and are cutting workers."

Economists predicted the unemployment rate, which rose to a 15-year high of 6.7 percent in November, could soar as high as 10 percent before skittish employers begin hiring again.

The jobless rate would have bolted to 7 percent for the month if not for the exodus of 422,000 people from the work force for any number of reasons _ going back to school, retiring or simply abandoning job searches out of frustration. When people stop looking, they're no longer counted in the unemployment rate.

The rate was at 4.7 percent just one year ago, 6.5 percent in October.

Employment shrank in virtually every part of the economy _ factories, construction companies, financial firms, accounting and bookkeeping, architectural and engineering firms, hotels and motels, food services, retailers, temporary help, transportation, publishing, janitorial and building maintenance, and even waste management. The few fields spared included education, health care and government.

The United States _ already in recession for a year, may not be out of it until the spring of 2010 _ making for the longest downturn since the Great Depression, economists are now saying. Recessions in the mid-1970s and early 1980s lasted 16 months.

Unemployment peaked at 10.8 percent in 1982, terrible but still a far cry from the Depression, when roughly one in four Americans were out of work.

That said, more pain is certainly in store. Fresh evidence:

_ A record one in 10 American homeowners with a mortgage was either at least a month behind on payments or in foreclosure at the end of September, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported.

_ General Motors, already pleading with Congress for billions of dollars to survive the month, said it would lay off an additional 2,000 workers as it cuts shifts at three car factories starting in February due to slowing demand for GM cars.

President George W. Bush, who used the word "recession" for the first time to describe the economy's state, pledged Friday to explore more efforts to ease housing, credit and financial stresses.

"There is still more work to do," Bush said. "My administration is committed to ensuring that our economy succeeds."

Employers are slashing costs as they cope with sagging sales in the U.S. and in other countries, which are struggling with their own economic troubles.

In recent days, AT&T Inc., DuPont, JPMorgan Chase & Co., as well as jet engine maker Pratt & Whitney, a subsidiary of United Technologies Corp., and mining company Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. all have announced layoffs.

Tom Solso, chief executive of Columbus, Indiana-based manufacturer Cummins Inc., said Friday the company planned to cut 500 jobs, or about 3.5 percent of its work force despite other cost-cutting moves such as temporarily shutting down plants, shortening work weeks and extending holiday shutdowns.

Fighting for survival, the chiefs of Chrysler LLC, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. returned to Capitol Hill Friday to again ask lawmakers for as much as $34 billion in emergency aid.

Workers with jobs did see modest wage gains in November. Average hourly earnings rose to $18.30, a 0.4 percent increase from the previous month. Over the year, wages have grown 3.7 percent, but paychecks haven't stretched that far because of high prices for energy, food and other items.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is now expected to ratchet down a key interest rate _ near a historic low of 1 percent _ by at least a half-percentage point on Dec. 16 in a bid to breathe life into the moribund economy. Bernanke is exploring other economic revival options and wants the government to step up efforts to curb home foreclosures.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, whose department oversees the $700 billion financial bailout program, also is weighing new initiatives.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has vowed to have a package ready on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, for Obama's signature.

The measure, which could total $500 billion, would bankroll big public works projects to create jobs, provide aid to states to help with health care costs for the poor, and provide money toward renewable energy development.

___

On the Net:

http://www.change.gov

Yobs named and shamed

Two teenage tearaways have been named and shamed in leaflets beingdelivered to homes in Brentry, Henbury and Southmead - in the latestattempt to crack down on anti-social behaviour.

For the first time in Bristol residents have been provided withpamphlets giving them the information they need to tell officials ifthey spot Thomas Jeffrey or Ben Perks - two of Bristol's mostprolific offenders - breaking the terms of their anti-socialbehaviour orders (ASBOs).

Their photos, names, offences and terms of their orders are in thepamphlets, along with phone numbers to report breaches.

Thomas Jeffrey, aged 16, who used to live in Knole Lane, Brentry,but has recently been moved, faces jail if he behaves in an anti-social manner within a one-mile radius of Ellsworth Road and CrowLane, in Henbury.

Jeffrey's entire family was evicted from Knole Lane after policediscovered the house was being used as a drugs den.

Ben Perks, aged 18, of Gosforth Road, is banned from an area ofSouthmead and also faces action if he behaves in an anti-socialmanner anywhere on the estate. He was fined GBP70 on October 4 forbreaking the terms of his order.

Officials from Safer Bristol, the partnership which brings thecity council, police and other agencies together to tackle crime andthe fear of crime, have chosen to alert residents in this way toencourage them to report any breaches. They plan to produce leafletson other offenders given ASBOs.

Anyone who spots either Jeffrey or Perks breaking the terms oftheir orders should contact Southmead police on 0845 456 7000, orring the housing office on 903 8700, or, for people in Henbury, ring903 9702.

THOMAS JEFFREY Aged 16 What he did: Caused criminal damage;verbally abused people; threw stones and bricks; made threats;harassed people; rode on a motocycle around Blaise Castle causing adanger to others; trespassed; assault; attempted burglary; handledstolen goods.

Consequences: ASBO runs until September 26, 2006 It prohibits himfrom:

  • Abusing, threatening or harassing any person within a one-mile radius of Ellsworth Road and Crow Lane;
  • Committing theft orcriminal damage within the same area;
  • Driving any motor vehiclewithout a current driving licence and valid insurance;
  • Enteringthe Co-op in Crow Lane.

    His family have since been moved from their address in Knole Lanewhen their flat was shut up under a drug den closure order. Howeverhis ASBO still stands.

    BEN PERKS Aged 18 What he did: Verbally abused people; madethreats; harassed people; trespassed; assault; shoplifting; causingcriminal damage Consequences: ASBO runs until 2006 It prohibits himfrom:

  • Assaulting, harassing, intimidating, or threatening anyonein the Southmead area;
  • Approaching or harassing any youth workeremployed by Bristol City Council;
  • Inciting or encouraging othersto engage in anti-social behaviour;
  • entering no-go area

  • Wednesday, March 7, 2012

    Pakistani scientist disavows confession

    Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan says he was forced to confess to passing nuclear secrets to North Korea, Libya and Iran, a British newspaper reported Friday.

    Khan was detained in 2004 after admitting to passing on nuclear technology to other countries and has been held under house arrest in Islamabad. But in an interview with The Guardian, Khan was quoted as saying he was forced into making the confession.

    "It was not of my own free will. It was handed into my hand," Khan is quoted as telling the newspaper.

    He did not deny that Pakistan had secretly passed nuclear technology to other nations. But he said he did not profit from the smuggling.

    "I never sold anything and I never got any money. Nobody has proved this and nobody can prove it," he said.

    Experts have said they suspect that Khan was persuaded to make the confession in order to conceal government involvement in the trafficking.

    Though reviled in the West, Khan enjoys national hero status in Pakistan, where he is credited with making the country the world's only Islamic nuclear power.

    He remains under de facto house arrest, though Pakistan's new government has suggested it will relax the restrictions on him. Khan could not be reached for comment Friday.

    The Guardian interview quotes him as saying that he went along with the confession in the "national interest" of Pakistan and because he was promised freedom if he complied.

    "I was hand-tied. I think it was a mistake. At that time things were not so clear and you couldn't see that people could go back on their words and renege their promises," he was quoted as saying.

    Khan accused the West of double standards and suggested the United States had fabricated evidence against him, the paper reported.

    He insisted he would not cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has sought to question him about his nuclear network.

    "Why should I talk to them? I am under no obligation. We are not signatory to NPT (nuclear nonproliferation treaty). I have not violated any international laws. So why should I talk to them?" Khan said.

    The Pakistani government has ruled out letting foreign investigators question Khan.

    Health Watch: On the crest of a cure for cold skin.(Features)

    AN antibiotic commonly in use for the last 20 years is causing excitement in the medical profession as they search for a cure for scleroderma, one of the conditions in Raynaud's syndrome where the blood supply doesn't reach the extremities such as hands or feet, ears and nose. It could bring hope to people like Helen Birch who suffers from the milder form of scleroderma known as crest. Like the 3,000 or so diagnosed with Raynaud's in Northern Ireland she dreads the onset of winter.

    By SANDRA CHAPMAN

    AMERICAN scientists have discovered that the antibiotic minocycline is proving effective against scleroderma, a debilitating auto-immune disease which affects the skin.

    A year-long pilot study has shown that those in the early stages of the condition can get total relief by taking the drug twice a day.

    It's the sort of news that Helen Birch of Bangor pins her hopes on as she views the wintry days ahead with no prospect of her getting back on to the local golf course until temperatures rise above 15 degrees again.

    Raynaud's syndrome is when Raynaud's itself is associated with other diseases and conditions such as crest which Helen suffers from. Scleroderma is when the skin on the hands and feet become stiff, tight and shiny caused when the body produces too much collagen, the major protein of the connective tissue. Crest is the milder form

    The connection between the two conditions is that scleroderma can occur many years after Raynaud's itself. Raynaud's is caused when the blood vessel closes down causing the finger or toe, or nose or ear to lose its blood supply and become numb and white. As the affected area is rewarmed an increased blood supply returns and the affected extremity becomes red and painful.

    It's a condition that can affect all ages, but females suffer most. The youngest Raynaud's sufferer in the UK is believed to be 18-month old Cara Watson who lives with her parents in Orkney where the weather can be cold even in summer.

    Helen was always an extremely fit person and as a teenager regularly did the Pickie to Pier swim. And it was coming in from such a swim that she realised one of her fingers would go numb.

    As is the case with Raynaud's sometimes the condition can then go away for years but return at some later point. And this is what happened to Helen. She was in her mid-forties when she again noticed that cold water affected her fingers.

    She says: "I thought it was something to do with my hormones. Then when I was about 40 I had to go for a barium meal test and this showed up a bad reflux action. A consultant thought I had a hiatus hernia. My nails started going stiff and rigid and my doctor thought I was suffering from low iron levels.

    "I found I had to be fairly careful with my diet. I could eat a scone, but not one heated up. Finally I was diagnosed with crest which is part of the Raynaud's syndrome. I would have little red spots on my skin and deposits of calcium under the skin.

    "Mine isn't too bad; I know of one woman who had lumps of calcium on her elbows which had to be surgically removed. My bone density level is good but I believe these deposits can affect the major organs such as the kidney and lungs."

    Helen would have trouble daily with the reflux and she copes with the Raynaud's in the way most sufferers do, by wearing special gloves, and keeping the central heating on all day in winter. She says: "I daren't let myself get cold for any length of time. I've seen an attack come on while I've tried to get from the front door to the car. I can't go near Tesco's freezer department."

    She tries not to pamper herself too much: "If I have my hand warmers I feel a lot better and it always helps to see nice, warm colours. Wet, cold and windy weather such as this is my worst combination."

    The one drawback is that she cannot play golf in winter. Last year she was Lady Captain at Bangor Club. This week she was forced to put away her clubs. Keeping fit is important to her and she continues to swim - at an indoor pool.

    Doctors at Musgrave Park Hospital in Belfast are conducting research into Raynaud's. One of the theories is that sufferers may have an imbalance in the chemicals the body creates to produce relaxation or spasm in the blood vessels. They want to see if people have an inborn susceptibility to produce these chemicals in an imbalanced way.

    At the moment the only treatment for the condition is drugs. There can be an hereditary factor in Raynaud's. Helen's aunt had it and lived to 97. A niece in her early 30's is showing signs of it.

    She says: "I've had it steadily now for approximately 10 years but mine is stabilised. I have this feeling that five years down the line they'll find the answer to it."

    l Raynaud's & Scleroderma Association telephone 01270 872776. The Northern Ireland Support Group 01232 851210

    Health Watch: On the crest of a cure for cold skin.(Features)

    AN antibiotic commonly in use for the last 20 years is causing excitement in the medical profession as they search for a cure for scleroderma, one of the conditions in Raynaud's syndrome where the blood supply doesn't reach the extremities such as hands or feet, ears and nose. It could bring hope to people like Helen Birch who suffers from the milder form of scleroderma known as crest. Like the 3,000 or so diagnosed with Raynaud's in Northern Ireland she dreads the onset of winter.

    By SANDRA CHAPMAN

    AMERICAN scientists have discovered that the antibiotic minocycline is proving effective against scleroderma, a debilitating auto-immune disease which affects the skin.

    A year-long pilot study has shown that those in the early stages of the condition can get total relief by taking the drug twice a day.

    It's the sort of news that Helen Birch of Bangor pins her hopes on as she views the wintry days ahead with no prospect of her getting back on to the local golf course until temperatures rise above 15 degrees again.

    Raynaud's syndrome is when Raynaud's itself is associated with other diseases and conditions such as crest which Helen suffers from. Scleroderma is when the skin on the hands and feet become stiff, tight and shiny caused when the body produces too much collagen, the major protein of the connective tissue. Crest is the milder form

    The connection between the two conditions is that scleroderma can occur many years after Raynaud's itself. Raynaud's is caused when the blood vessel closes down causing the finger or toe, or nose or ear to lose its blood supply and become numb and white. As the affected area is rewarmed an increased blood supply returns and the affected extremity becomes red and painful.

    It's a condition that can affect all ages, but females suffer most. The youngest Raynaud's sufferer in the UK is believed to be 18-month old Cara Watson who lives with her parents in Orkney where the weather can be cold even in summer.

    Helen was always an extremely fit person and as a teenager regularly did the Pickie to Pier swim. And it was coming in from such a swim that she realised one of her fingers would go numb.

    As is the case with Raynaud's sometimes the condition can then go away for years but return at some later point. And this is what happened to Helen. She was in her mid-forties when she again noticed that cold water affected her fingers.

    She says: "I thought it was something to do with my hormones. Then when I was about 40 I had to go for a barium meal test and this showed up a bad reflux action. A consultant thought I had a hiatus hernia. My nails started going stiff and rigid and my doctor thought I was suffering from low iron levels.

    "I found I had to be fairly careful with my diet. I could eat a scone, but not one heated up. Finally I was diagnosed with crest which is part of the Raynaud's syndrome. I would have little red spots on my skin and deposits of calcium under the skin.

    "Mine isn't too bad; I know of one woman who had lumps of calcium on her elbows which had to be surgically removed. My bone density level is good but I believe these deposits can affect the major organs such as the kidney and lungs."

    Helen would have trouble daily with the reflux and she copes with the Raynaud's in the way most sufferers do, by wearing special gloves, and keeping the central heating on all day in winter. She says: "I daren't let myself get cold for any length of time. I've seen an attack come on while I've tried to get from the front door to the car. I can't go near Tesco's freezer department."

    She tries not to pamper herself too much: "If I have my hand warmers I feel a lot better and it always helps to see nice, warm colours. Wet, cold and windy weather such as this is my worst combination."

    The one drawback is that she cannot play golf in winter. Last year she was Lady Captain at Bangor Club. This week she was forced to put away her clubs. Keeping fit is important to her and she continues to swim - at an indoor pool.

    Doctors at Musgrave Park Hospital in Belfast are conducting research into Raynaud's. One of the theories is that sufferers may have an imbalance in the chemicals the body creates to produce relaxation or spasm in the blood vessels. They want to see if people have an inborn susceptibility to produce these chemicals in an imbalanced way.

    At the moment the only treatment for the condition is drugs. There can be an hereditary factor in Raynaud's. Helen's aunt had it and lived to 97. A niece in her early 30's is showing signs of it.

    She says: "I've had it steadily now for approximately 10 years but mine is stabilised. I have this feeling that five years down the line they'll find the answer to it."

    l Raynaud's & Scleroderma Association telephone 01270 872776. The Northern Ireland Support Group 01232 851210

    Monday, March 5, 2012

    Short-term CDs offer best yields in five years

    Banks are boosting yields on short-term certificates of deposit totheir highest levels in half a decade.

    As the Federal Reserve continues to raise interest rates,consumers looking for places to park cash have benefitted from higherrates on money-market accounts and other bank products. Now, some ofthe best offers are being found on CDs.

    Among the most-aggressive offers are those from online banks suchas NetBank Inc. and E(1)Trade Financial Corp.'s E(1)Trade Bank, whichrecently boosted rates to 5 percent or more on their one-year CDs,the first time since 2001 that rates have hit that level.VirtualBank, an online bank in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., last weekincreased …

    3-year-old boy dies in mobile-home fire.

    CABOT - A 3-year-old boy died in a house fire early Sunday morning, and the child's mother and another woman were hospitalized for burns to their wrists and hands, authorities said …

    REVISE RESTRAINING ORDERS.(PERSPECTIVE)

    Byline: KATHLEEN PARKER

    What's worse than being falsely accused of domestic violence -- locked out of your house, denied contact with your children, disbelieved? Only this: to be a victim of domestic violence without protection, with no place to go but home to the abuser.

    So the story of domestic violence unfolds from both sides. One, usually the man, claims to be the victim of false accusations; the other, usually the woman, claims to be a victim of violence.

    The two sides create a conundrum for lawmakers and judges: How do we protect the innocent without battering the rights of the falsely accused? What is the truth?

    The problem is that …

    Yanks intentional walks backfire in loss to Jays

    NEW YORK (AP) — Yankees manager Joe Girardi likes to play by the numbers. It backfired Monday night.

    Girardi chose to issue two intentional walks to get to the bottom of the Toronto Blue Jays' lineup in the sixth, but No. 8 hitter J.P. Arencibia capped a five-run inning with a three-run double that helped Toronto beat New York 7-3.

    "I went out there and told him what I wanted to do, and he said whatever you want to do is all right with me," Girardi said of his conversation with starter Bartolo Colon. "We've got a groundball pitcher on the mound. The next three guys are 0 for 6 with four strikeouts. We took a shot and it didn't work."

    Colon first intentionally walked Jose …

    Trumpet Kermit Ruffins blows jazz at the Chicago's Symphony Center

    Trumpeter Kermit Ruffins Swings into Chicgo in support of his Basin Street Records release "Big Easy" and will be heard at the Symphony Center Friday, Jan. 10 at 8 p.m.

    Since the release of the 2002 Basin Street Records sophomore effort, "Big Easy", the follow up recording to 1633 St. Philip Street, and Kermit's seventh CD as a leader, trumpeter Ruffins has been serving up more of his claswsic, good-time New Orleans flavor to audiences nationwide.

    Ruffins and his hometown band, The Barbecue Swingers, will swing their way into Chicago with the support of Donald Harrison, Jr. Quintet in the Ameritech Jazz at Symphony Center Series at 220 S. Michigan Ave.

    On "Big Easy" …

    Price of War: U.S. War With Iraq Would Come at High Price, Scholars Say.

    Byline: Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Sept. 17 (AScribe Newswire) -- War with Iraq would be costly - in any number of ways, two historians say. John A. Lynn, a professor of French and military history at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and former Oppenheimer Chair of Warfighting Strategy at the Marine Corps University in Quantico, Va., says the United States probably wouldn't attack Baghdad, but rather surround it.

    "This would save U.S. casualties, but impose hardship and suffering on Iraqis within that city," Lynn said. However, Lynn suspects that "the callousness that Saddam Hussein has shown toward his own people - a …

    Sunday, March 4, 2012

    STATE SEEKS CASH FOR RAIL PROJECTS.(Business)

    The state has applied for $565 million in federal stimulus money for local rail projects, a portion of which would pay for a second main track between the Albany-Rensselaer and Schenectady train stations.

    The state Department of Transportation has applied for the aid through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. It is designed to cover engineering, construction and program improvements on shovel-ready jobs that would completed within two years.

    The Federal Rail Administration will earmark the funds from a pool of $8 billion in stimulus funds, which will be allocated to states through competitive grants. Additionally, President Barack Obama has requested …

    Classroom is a ballroom; Middle schoolers learn new steps as they take part in dancing program.(Capital Region)

    Byline: ANNE MILLER Staff Writer {FACTBOX} YOUNG DANCERS - What: Mont Pleasant Middle School Black History Month celebration, including student performances and refreshments Where: Mont Pleasant Middle School Auditorium, 1121 Forest Road When: 6 to 9 p.m. Feb. 10 Cost: Free and open to the public

    SCHENECTADY - The middle school girls in halter dresses sway their hips to the salsa beat, trying to feel the Latin rhythm as the boys try to lead them through the song.

    Teacher Bernice Rivera bounces from couple to couple, fixing their postures and demonstrating steps. As she watches on a school stage, she can't stop her own feet from moving too.

    This …

    YELTSIN FOE WON'T RUN FOR PRESIDENT.(MAIN)

    Byline: DAVID HOFFMAN Washington Post -

    MOSCOW Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, in what appeared to be an effort to smooth over tensions with President Boris Yeltsin, said Wednesday he has no plans to run for president next year.

    Departing for an official visit to Canada, Chernomyrdin was asked about persistent speculation in recent months that he might run for president or Yeltsin might force him to quit. Chernomyrdin's public standing was boosted when he took command of a hostage crisis in southern Russia in June, and he is viewed as a potential successor to Yeltsin.

    ``I didn't plan, I don't plan, and I'm not going to,'' …

    Either way, Chrysler has a German accent.(News)

    Byline: Peter Brown

    In this town, Dieter Zetsche and Wolfgang Bernhard are simply "Dieter and Wolfgang.''

    That's how other top Chrysler group executives referred to their CEO and COO during a recent press preview here. Not for Americans is the Germans' formal and more customary Herr Zetsche.

    The Germans who came to rescue Chrysler three years ago work hard to be as casually American as they can be, and they've succeeded at being liked and respected within the Chrysler group. But for all the American informality, they also are creating a kind of German automaker in Detroit.

    Witness some of the vehicles they've been showing dealers and the …