Thursday, March 15, 2012

Britain's Cavendish wins 8th Tour de France stage

One day after doping hit cycling yet again, a team that knows the perils of drug scandals all too well sped to victory Saturday as the daunting climbs of the Pyrenees awaited Tour de France riders.

Britain's Mark Cavendish captured the eighth stage in a rain-soaked finish, his second stage victory in the three-week race.

That was only part of the story for Team Columbia. Germany's Gerald Ciolek took second place and Luxembourg's Kim Kirchen held the leader's yellow jersey. The white jersey for the race's best young rider belonged to a Columbia rider, Sweden's Thomas Lovqvist.

"To finish with a 1-2 and have Kim in yellow, you can't do better than …

Daily Mail movie guide

Listing includes title, rating, genre, length, our score and whostars:

- Summer of Sam (PG-13, drama, 2:22) - John Leguizamo, AdrienBrody

- South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut (R, animated comedy, 1:23)- voices of Trey Parker, Matt Stone- Wild Wild West (PG-13, comedy, 1:46) HH 1/2 - Will Smith, KevinKline- Big Daddy (PG-13, comedy, 1:31) HHH - Adam Sandler, Joey LaurenAdams- Tarzan (G, family, 1:28) HHH - voices of Tony Goldwyn, MinnieDriver- The General's Daughter (R, thriller, 2:00) H 1/2 - JohnTravolta, Madeline Stowe- Austin …

FBI spying on environmentalists

Ever get the creepy feeling somebody's watching you? Well, if you're an environmental activist, it's not an illusion. The FBI has been spying on U.S. [and probably Canadian] environmental, animal-rights, and other groups, including Greenpeace and PETA. This was revealed in the thousands of pages of heavily censored documents the American Civil Liberties Union recently obtained from a Freedom of Information request.

The FBI not only monitored the protests and websites …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Miller's legs amputated below knees

Longtime Utah Jazz owner Larry H. Miller's legs were amputated 6 inches below the knee on Friday.

Jazz spokesman Jonathan Rinehart said Friday's surgery was the result of complications from Type 2 diabetes.

Rinehart said the 64-year-old Miller is recovering in a hospital.

"Larry is doing well and is expected to continue to recover in the coming weeks and months," Greg Miller, Larry Miller's son, said in a statement. The statement said Miller's family would not be releasing any details.

Rinehart said Miller was already using a wheelchair before the surgery.

On Thursday, Gov. Jon Huntsman chose Miller to chair a new …

Hernandez, Saunders lead Mariners past Reds 5-1

Felix Hernandez threw a five-hitter and Michael Saunders backed the right-hander with a hit a three-run homer to give the Seattle Mariners a 5-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday night.

The Mariners won their third consecutive game and shut down the Reds for a second straight night.

The Reds lost for the fifth time in six games and dropped 1 1/2 games behind first-place St. Louis in the NL Central.

Hernandez (5-5) won his second consecutive start. He struck out nine and walked one in his second complete game of the season and ninth of his career. The Mariners beat the Reds 1-0 on a six-hitter by Cliff Lee on Friday.

Saunders hit a …

State study shows racial profiling down slightly in 2005

The second year of traffic stop reporting by Illinois police departments showed fewer minorities were stopped in 2005 than in 2004, but minority drivers were more likely to be subjected to consent searches.

The report is the second released since state lawmakers agreed to chart traffic stops statewide and record racial and ethnic data as part of a multi-year study.

Mark Donahue, president of Chicago's Fraternal Order of Police Lodge No. 7, said the 2005 results show racial profiling is not a problem in Chicago and is not as rampant as some might believe.

"The statistics are coming back in our favor. We never said it doesn't exist, but the perception is much more …

(null)

A pro-opposition TV station in Georgia goes …

Niangua Darter

Niangua Darter

Etheostoma nianguae

Status Threatened
Listed June 12, 1985
Family Percidae (Perch)
Description Slender fish with a long head that tapers into a slender, pointed snout; its basic color is yellowish-olive with seven or eight dark saddle bars on its back, and orange spots scattered on the upper sides.
Habitat Shallow pools with silt-free bottoms.
Food Aquatic insects.
Reproduction Spawns in the spring.

MOUNTAIN SOCIALISM: Part III

(In Partsi I and II, I go to Badger Bob for advice on bow to proceed with a column promoting socialized health care, but only succeed in starting a heated argument between Bob and his panner in horseshoes, Hoot - an ardent libertarian and member of MOBBS. Actually, it would be easier for you just to go back and read Pans I and II than for me to try and explain it all. Suffice it to say, I'm having doubts as to whether I'll ever get a column promoting socialized health care out of all this, and I'm starting to wish I'd stayed home and written a nice little tribute to Karl Maiden or Ed McMahon or somebody. But it's too late now. We rejoin the story as Hoot adamantly defends the competitive …

Bradley Dredge shoots 66 to take 3rd-round lead at Irish Open

Bradley Dredge had seven birdies for a 6-under 66 Saturday to take a one-stroke lead after the third round of the Irish Open.

Dredge, who lost to Padraig Harrington in a playoff here last year, overcame a slow start by making six birdies over the last 10 holes to sit at 9-under 207. Richard Finch, who won the New Zealand Open in December, is one shot back after a 65.

Lee Westwood had a tournament-best 64 and held third place, one clear of David Frost (66), Felipe Aguilar (67) and Robert Karlsson (69).

Darren Clarke looked to be putting himself in contention by making four birdies in five holes on the back nine, leaving him two off the lead, but …

Woman bought drugs to ease pain

A Grieving woman was caught when she bought drugs for the firsttime to ease the pain of a workplace accident.

Linda McKenzie broke down in the dock as her solicitor told thecourt how police spotted her buying cocaine in a city park.

The 42-year-old admitted buying pounds100 of the class A drugswhen she appeared at Aberdeen Sheriff Court.

Defence agent Karen Merry said McKenzie was "full of remorse" forthe out-of-character behaviour when she was riddled with pain andracked with …

Co-operative Group purchases Somerfield

The Co-operative Group said Wednesday it had struck a deal to acquire British supermarket Somerfield for 1.56 billion pounds (US$3.12 billion).

The deal would secure the Co-op's place as Britain's fifth-biggest food retailer.

The Manchester, England-based Co-operative Group Ltd. is the world's largest consumer cooperative. It already has some 2,200 stores, part of its empire of food, drug, travel, financial and funeral services. The Somerfield Group operates about 900 stores, including 140 gas stations.

Somerfield was purchased by a consortium of investors in 2005 for 1.1 billion pounds (then about US$1.9 billion). The consortium, which includes property tycoon Robert Tchenguiz, private equity firm Apax Partners and investment bank Barclays Capital, was reportedly seeking about 2 billion pounds (US$4 billion) for the supermarket chain.

The Co-op, a mutual company owned by 2.5 million members, recently announced plans to double its profits and invest 1.5 billion (US$3 billion) in its real estate holdings.

Co-op Chief Executive Peter Marks said Somerfield's acquisition would provide "rocket fuel" for his group's growth plans.

The deal is still subject to regulatory approval.

Stocks head to a mixed open ahead of data

Wall Street headed for a narrowly mixed open Friday ahead of economic reports on durable goods, new home sales, and consumer sentiment.

Investors might be hesitant to jump back into equities, as major indexes fell about 2 percent on Thursday after a steeper-than-expected decline in existing home sales and concerns about financial services companies. The Dow Jones industrial gave up more than 280 points.

On Friday, investors are awaiting a government report expected to show new home sales in June fell for the seventh time in the past eight months. The Commerce Department's report is scheduled for release at 10 a.m. EDT.

Sales are expected to have declined by 1.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 505,000, down from a rate of 512,000 in May, according to the consensus forecast of Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR.

A revised report on July consumer sentiment is expected to show that Americans remain downbeat about the economy. Wall Street expects the Reuters/University of Michigan monthly index of consumer sentiment to come in at 56.4, according to estimates. That would be down slightly from the preliminary reading of 56.6, and unchanged from the June index of 56.4, which was the lowest level in 28 years. The final July report will be released at 9:55 a.m. EDT.

Investors will also pore over data that is expected to show that demand for costly manufactured goods fell in June, another sign of the economy's weakness. The Commerce Department's index of orders placed at U.S. factories for big-ticket goods, such as cars, appliances and machinery, will drop by 0.4 percent in June from the previous month, according to the consensus estimate of Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR. The data will be released at 8:30 a.m. EDT.

Dow Jones industrial average futures fell 9, or 0.03 percent, to 11,342.

Standard & Poor's 500 index futures rose 1.25, or 0.07 percent, to 1,254.50. Nasdaq 100 index futures rose 1.75, or 0.10 percent, to 1,821.25.

Bond prices edged higher Friday. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.99 percent from 4.00 percent from late Thursday.

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

Oil extended a small rebound after sharp declines over the past two weeks. The market remained weighed down by the belief that flagging fuel demand did not justify the recent high prices. A barrel of light sweet crude rose 63 cents to $126.12 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

In corporate news, chemicals maker Huntsman Corp. said it was approached by investors offering funding to help complete its $6.5 billion takeover by Apollo Management.

Juniper Networks Inc., the maker of networking equipment, reported a 40 percent increase in earnings for the second quarter, helped by a new product line. Results narrowly surpassed Wall Street projections.

Shares of DaVita Inc. could jump after Standard & Poor's said the provider of dialysis services will replace Clear Channel Communications Inc. in its flagship S&P 500 index. The change will happen after the close of trading July 30.

Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 1.97 percent. In morning trading, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.81 percent, Germany's DAX index dropped 1.26 percent, and France's CAC-40 shed 0.64 percent.

___

On the Net:

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

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

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

China labor activist free after 7 years jail

A labor leader who led some of the largest protests in communist Chinese history and was released from jail this week after serving a seven-year sentence said Tuesday he has no regrets about the activism that led to his arrest.

Yao Fuxin, 59, was released Monday from Lingyuan No. 2 Prison in Liaoning, a province in China's industrial northeast, after serving seven years for subversion of state power.

Yao and another laid-off factory worker, Xiao Yunliang, were arrested in 2002 after tens of thousands of fired workers demanded better benefits from bankrupt state-owned factories in protests in Liaoyang, an industrial base in Liaoning.

They were among the largest protests reported since China's 1949 communist revolution.

"There's nothing wrong in what I did," Yao said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "I was just exercising my rights, which are given by the constitution. What did I do wrong as a citizen? It was worth it. I feel no regret at all."

State media said after their trial that the men were convicted of subversion for trying to set up a Liaoyang branch of the would-be opposition China Democratic Party that hoped to challenge the Communist Party's monopoly on political power.

The China Democratic Party was suppressed and its leaders arrested soon after they announced its formation in 1998. Relatives of Xiao and Yao have denied they had tried to set up a party branch and said they had only passing contact with the group.

Yao said Tuesday he had connections with the group but declined to elaborate. He insisted he was not guilty of subversion.

"What I did was protect the interests of the country and the interests of the people, the law-given rights and interests of the workers," Yao said. "I had a responsibility to do it. If I didn't, who was going to?"

Xiao was freed in 2006, 24 days before serving his full 4-year prison sentence.

Yao confirmed reports by human rights groups that he had suffered abuse in prison and said he planned to take legal action against prison authorities.

"In the coldest weather, they put me under the window, which they left open," he said. "My legs were twitching. My lower body was numb with cold."

The European Union had pressed for Yao's early release, citing concerns about his treatment.

Ten years ago, protests by laid-off workers were relatively common amid mass layoffs and closures of state industries across China. Rising unemployment is again a major concern of the government as a drop in worldwide demand for Chinese products has forced thousands of factories to close.

BOOK MARKS

WITH COMICS HAVING EXPANDED OUT of the funnies section of the newspaper and into a genre that has become known as the graphic novel, the assumption that comic books are for kids has been discarded.

Art Spiegelman's Maus, his cartoon story of the Holocaust, and In the Shadow of No Towers, his depiction of 9/11 (Jewish Star review, Sept. 10, 2004), and Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis, her comic-character memoir of growing up in Iran, are all within the mainstream of contemporary publishing.

Well before them, however, there was Will Eisner.

In 1978, when comic-strip and comic book author Eisner created what he called a "graphic novel", no major publisher was interested in it. Eisner did have it published, and it became one of those "alternative" works that stayed in print outside the mainstream publishing world, until it eventually gained acceptance.

Eisner, who died last year at the age of 87, lived to write a preface and to create 12 new illustrations for The Contract with God Trilogy (W.W. Norton, 2006, 498 pp., $29.95). The three re-issued works that comprise the trilogy are A Contract With God, his first graphic novel, A Life Force and Dropsie Avenue.

Before he died, Eisner also tackled anti-Semitism in The Plot (Jewish Star review, July 15, 2005), the story of the infamous Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

THE CREATOR IN THE 1940s of the comic strip "The Spirit", Eisner wanted to break out of the confines of the newspaper comic strip, and to have his art form taken seriously. He also had more to say than the standard comic strip would permit.

He used his own background as a child of Jewish immigrants growing up in New York to create a world peopled by families like his, who struggled, laughed and loved, experienced pain and heartache, had successes and failures, all played out in a crowded neighborhood in New York.

Some were honest; some were not. Some were kind; some were cruel. Most were poor. All were striving for at least a small measure of economic and social advancement, and they reached to grab hold of the American dream.

The Depression and war got in the way, as did daily life, but still they tried.

Much as Isaac Bashevis Singer told tales of shtetl life in Europe, Will Eisner told his own type of shtetl stories, these ones of immigrant life in New York.

His equivalent of the shtetl was the Bronx, specifically, his mythical Dropsie Avenue and the tenement building at number 55. He calls himself "a graphic witness" to life there.

In "A Contract With God" he tells the story of Frimme Hersh, a religious Jew who makes himself a contract with God. He studies, does good works and lives a pious life, thereby keeping his part of the contract.

Then Hersh's daughter dies -- God has violated the contract. There is now no reason for Hersh to continue to adhere to it.

He leaves the religious life, purchases tenement buildings and becomes rich as a slum landlord, but remains tormented by his loss.

Like his character Frimme Hersh, Eisner, too, lost a daughter, and he used his creation in this first part of his novella to write about his pain. It was, Eisner wrote in his Preface, "an exercise in personal agony". Hersh's "anguish was mine. His argument with God was also mine."

"The Street Singer", the second part of A Contract With God, is set during the Depression, when singers would go into the alley-ways of the tenements, hoping to earn a few pennies for their songs.

A former opera singer, hearing one of them, offers him the chance at a career. The street singer, however, mired in the poverty, drink and hopelessness of his life, squanders the opportunity.

In A Life Force, Eisner introduces his character, Jacob Shtarkah -- "me in disguise", he acknowledges.

(In Yiddish, the word shtarker denotes strength, or alternatively, a non-hero.)

It is just after the Depression and Jacob, a carpenter, finishes the synagogue study hall he has been building and is told his work there is over.

It is, for him, a crisis that causes him to question the meaning of life.

Through Jacob and his family, Eisner grapples with this existential struggle, and presents historical and social themes that include anti-Semitism, inter-marriage, war, left-wing politics, along with personal ones of family life and responsibilities.

Jacob is a truly marvellous creation, as he yearns for meaning in his life, a measure of happiness and, unlike a cockroach, more than mere existence.

"What do I want?" he asks rhetorically. "I want back my dream. ... I don't want to be a cockroach!"

As he articulates his search for meaning in one heart-rending scene, "Since the beginning, priests, rabbis, gurus or gonifs, everyone makes a business out of trying to figure it out!

"They write books and bibles, make up prayers hoping, maybe, to get one small answer from which they can get a clear understanding.

"And in the meantime -- man and cockroach just live from day to day! When I find the answer, I'll let you know."

In Dropsie Avenue, which he characterizes as "the biography of the street itself", Eisner gives us the history of the area, from the first Dutch settlers of the farmland that was the Bronx, through its development, as wave after wave of immigrants came to the area -- English, Irish, Germans, Italians and, of course, Jews.

One group displaced another, with each one influencing the area's development, character and way of life, and the neighborhood, in turn, exerting its own influence on its residents.

In this trilogy, Eisner has offered a visual and literary recreation of time and place that resonates with the pain and struggles that comprised daily life.

It all plays out on Dropsie Avenue, Eisner's "fictitious stage where my past and my imagination collided", but which "has a history similar to real streets in the Bronx."

"Like its inhabitants, [Dropsie Avenue] has a turbulent existence but an unquenchable instinct for survival."

THERE ARE NO COMIC-BOOK superheroes here; there are hardly even heroes.

Eisner instead writes of the downtrodden, for whom daily life was often about survival, people who were buffeted by the times and the places in which they found themselves, moved this way and that by the ideas that swirled around them and by circumstances they could not control.

With line drawings that wonderfully and brilliantly capture his characters and his street, Eisner has composed a poignant and touching portrait, not altogether gloomy, but often heart-wrenching.

As Eisner himself said of his stories, "Some are true. Some could be true." And all offer truths.

Article copyright Star Media Group, Inc.

Sharpton joins call for school boycott

The Rev. Al Sharpton joined the growing movement to hold students out of class Sept. 2 in an effort to bring attention to funding inequalities for Chicago Public Schools.

Sharpton spoke at the New Landmark Missionary Baptist Church on Sunday morning, saying too much inequality still exists.

"Whether it be funding and whether it be graduation rates, we are still separated and unequal," Sharpton said.

"Well maybe if it wasn't unfair, they [ministers] wouldn't be talking about a boycott."

Gov. Blagojevich said he is calling legislators back to Springfield to try to fix the problem. "I have called the legislators back into special session on Tuesday to focus specifically on school funding," he told Channel 2 News. "But I think it's wrong to encourage kids to miss school."

Towy ladies' darts results

WHITE Lion v Bizz B 2-0 2-1 3-3; Mansel v Inn on the Hill 2-1 2-1 6-0; Bizz A v Boars Head 0-2 2-1 4-2; Black Lion v Plough & Harrow1-2 2-1 3-3; Wheatsheaf v Fox & Hounds 1-2 1-2 2-4; Gremlin B vGremlin A 2-0 2-1 4-2. Two doubles out -- Allison Evans, Anne Rice,Chris Groom, Ray Gibbs, Mel Evans, Maggie Phillips, Flo Cobain,Kelly Jones, Pat Freear, Angela Rees, Jill Carmody, Mair Jones,Leanne Race, Nicky Coventry, Debbie Evans, Liz Davies.

Three doubles out -- Rhian Griffiths, Joan Goldsmith, MarciaJackson, Gwyneth Griffiths.

High score -- Rhian Griffiths 111, Sue M Phillips 125, 113,Andrea Webster 113, 120, Kay Bassett 140, Mel Reeve 127, Sally Smith119, Jan Francis 127, Jo Rayner 112, Amy Williams 113.

High average -- Rhian Edwards 61.9, Sue M Phillips 73.2, Sue APhillips 61.5, Jan Francis 61.6, Amy Price 70.0.

High out -- Joan Goldsmith 60.

Dave Hollister and Patti LaBelle not the best musical combination

Dave Hollister and Patti LaBelle not the best musical combination

DreamWorks recording entertainer Dave Hollister, whose album "Chicago `85..The Movie" which is now certified gold, joined Patti LaBelle in a revue at the Arie Crown Theatre recently.

Both have absolutely great voices, however, the combination was not as effective as it could have been. Yes, the entertainers definitely were different, but their styles just didn't click. That doesn't mean that Hollister was not good. He was great. His voice projects uninhibited passions from his being. There is evidence of a robust power without forcing his tones.

Currently, Hollister's debut album, "Ghetto Hymns" is still selling and remains in top echelon of the Top 10 R&B hits. It made gold his "One Woman Man" that remains on the charts, as well as the single "Take Care Of Home."

Hollister was formerly a member of the multi-platinum-selling ensemble Blackstreet. Check out his featured song on the soundtrack of the forthcoming movie, "The Brothers," starring D.L. Hughley, Shemar Moore and Bill Bellamy. He is set to have a movie role with Lisa Raye ("Players Club", "Source All Access") for the film titled "Civil Brand."

He delivered on the Arie Crown Theatre, "One Woman Man," "Take Care Of Home" and "I'm Not Complete."

Patti is returning to Star Plaza Theatre's center stage Friday, April at 8 p.m. She has been hailed as "The high priestess of good vibrations," according to the New York Times.

Her career began before the 1960s, but she hit the charts in the `60s with "I Sold My Heart to the Junkman" and during the `70s she made popular the disco anthem "Lady Marmalade."

Hits came easy for LaBelle because she has within her body a phenomenal voice whose range reaches new heights in the stratosphere of the heavens and can descend into the abyss of a rich, glowing texture.

During her more than four decades in the music business, she has collected two Grammys, two American Music Awards, seven NAACP Image Awards and a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (Dave Hollister)

Judge dismisses lawsuit against Detroit, ex-Mayor Kilpatrick by family of slain stripper

DETROIT (AP) — Judge dismisses lawsuit against Detroit, ex-Mayor Kilpatrick by family of slain stripper

Austrian parliament passes toughened anti-doping law

Austria's parliament passed a toughened anti-doping law, the latest in a series of steps to crack down on banned substances in sports.

The law makes it a crime to dope someone else and to circulate and store banned substances above the legal limit.

Among other things, it gives the country's new anti-doping agency the right to publish the names of athletes banned from their sport due to doping proceedings. Manipulating blood or genetic material is also illegal under the measure passed late Tuesday.

Those involved in the doping of minors could face up to five years in prison under the law, which symbolically takes effect next month before the start of the Beijing Olympics.

Earlier this month, Austria launched the National Anti-Doping Agency to handle all doping cases involving the country's athletes. It can charge and convict athletes who have tested positive, a task that was previously handled by the various national sport federations.

Austria stepped up its efforts to eradicate doping after the 2006 Turin Olympics scandal, when Italian police raided the Austrian cross-country and biathlon team lodgings, seizing a large amount of doping products and equipment.

The raid triggered an investigation that led the International Olympic Committee to impose lifetime bans on four athletes. One of the penalties was reduced to a four-year ban by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The IOC also fined the Austrian Olympic Committee US$1 million for failing to prevent the blood-doping violations.

"This amendment is a further important step in the anti-doping fight," Austrian Sports Secretary Reinhold Lopatka said about the revised law in a statement Wednesday.

Perot Says U.S. Is Hiding News on Vietnam POWs

WASHINGTON Former presidential contender Ross Perot told a Senatepanel Tuesday he believes there are live prisoners of war being heldin Vietnam and suggested the U.S. government has covered up thematter.

Perot, during several hours of testimony, offered little newevidence to support the claim. However, a declassified documentreleased Tuesday by the committee spoke of the possibility ofprisoners being held in Laos in 1973.

The committee's ranking Republican asserted that the Vietnamesegovernment may have made an aid-for-POWs offer to the Reaganadministration in 1981.

"We have people left behind in captivity," Perot, a Texasbillionaire, told the Senate Select Committee on POW-MIA Affairs.Based on a number of personal experiences, he said he believes thereare U.S. prisoners of war - dead or alive - in Vietnam, Laos and theformer Soviet Union.

"My purpose here is to provide a black-and-white statement thatwe left men behind and some could still be alive," he said. "Let'sstop covering it up, let's expose it."

Perot, who abruptly ended his presidential campaign in July,later refused to say there has been a conspiracy to keep secret thestatus of the POWs. But he repeatedly charged that U.S. officialsattempted to "rewrite history."

Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-Mass.) became agitated whenPerot could not offer evidence to support his claims.

"Every member of the committee believes there are some generalquestions" about where there are live POWs in Vietnam, said Kerry."But we need evidence."

Perot said his statements are based on meetings with past andpresent U.S. officials, representatives of the Vietnamese governmentand hundreds of recently declassified "live-sighting" reports inwhich sources tell of seeing POWs.

Kerry countered that most of the sighting reports had beeninvestigated and that POWs were never found.

But Perot called into question the method in which the reportswere investigated. He said POWs would never be found under thecurrent method of making announced visits to places in which POWs arereported held.

"If you try to find one specific person in a one-block radiusand let me move them around, you won't find him," he said.

In the declassified March, 1973, document, Deputy Secretary ofState Lawrence S. Eagleburger, former acting assistant defensesecretary, wrote that the Laotian government was likely holding POWs.

"The LPF (Lao Patriotic Front) may hold a number of unidentifiedU.S. POWs although we cannot accurately judge how many," Eagleburgersaid in a memo to the secretary of defense. "The American Embassy,Vientiane, agrees with this judgment. . . . We still have the LaosMIA question unresolved."

Also Tuesday, Sen. Robert Smith (R-N.H.), the committee'sleading Republican, said the Vietnamese government may have made anoffer to the Reagan administration in January, 1981, to trade POWs for $4 billionin aid.

Smith based his statement on Senate investigators' interviewswith former Reagan aides. There have also been recent press reportsof a possible prisoner exchange in return for the aid.

"You don't ask for $4 billion unless you have something totrade," said Perot, when questioned about his knowledge of thepossible exchange.

Although Perot did not have direct knowledge of the proposedaid-for-prisoners swap, he said he had heard of a Secret Serviceagent who was familiar with details of the offer. Again, Perot wasevasive about details.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Report: Developer duped 19 NHL players out of $25M

A golf resort developer duped nearly two dozen NHL players out of $25 million, blowing the money on gratuitous parties that were attended by former Yankees players Roger Clemens and Reggie Jackson, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday.

The New York Post reported in Friday's edition that 19 former and current NHL players filed suit against Ken Jowdy, alleging they invested the money with the Las Vegas-based golf-course mogul to develop two luxury resorts in Mexico _ a project they say is seven years behind schedule.

Instead, according to the players, Jowdy squandered the money on "lavish parties" to impress the likes of Clemens, Jackson and banned hits king Pete Rose, among others, who Jowdy hoped would eventually buy real estate in the planned resorts.

The lawsuit seeks the return of the $25 million they invested and $15 million in damages.

Former New York Rangers and Islanders defensman Bryan Berard and one-time Islanders captain Michael Peca were hit the hardest, each losing $700,000 in the deal, according to the filing in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

"It's particularly uncomfortable for all," Berard told the Post. "He's taken our money without telling us, and it's supposedly all gone."

Other players involved in the alleged scam include: Chris Simon, who played for both the Rangers and Islanders; former Rangers Greg deVries, Steve Rucchin and Rem Murray; former New Jersey Devil Turner Stevenson; and Sergei Gonchar of the Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins.

2 seeds lose in Monterrey

MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) — Fourth-seeded Alexandra Dulgheru of Romania and No. 7-seeded Mathilde Johansson of France were knocked out of the first round of the Monterrery Open on Tuesday.

Dulgheru was beaten by Silvia Soler-Espinosa of Spain 6-3, 6-3, while Mathilde Jonansson lost to Mandy Minella of Luxembourg 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 (5).

Other seeded players fared better in the outdoor, hard-court event.

No. 6-seeded Greta Arn of Hungary beat Zhang Shuai of China 6-1, 6-4, and eighth-seeded Lourdes Dominguez Lino of Spain defeated Monica Puig of Puerto Rico 6-3, 6-3.

Other first-round winners included Frenchwoman Alize Cornet, Maria Abramovic of Croatia, Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan, Valeria Savinykh of Russia and Hungary's Timea Babos.

'Big Monday' game against Pitt is super-sized for Mountaineers

IT'S Big Monday in Morgantown ... for a lot of reasons.

Tonight's soldout basketball game at the WVU Coliseum is part theESPN headline series, but it's become about much more than thechance to catch the riff among "Raft" and Co.

It's become about more than just the 175th date with rival Pitt,too, and Senior Night for Darris Nichols, Jamie Smalligan and TedTalkington, from that same New Martinsville pipeline as "Fiesta"Billy Stewart.

There are several reasons West Virginia really, really needs towin this one.

It's about coming as close as reasonably possible to nailing downan NCAA berth 13 days before Selection Sunday. It's about needing aquality win. It's about positively affecting a seed for next week'sBig East Conference Tournament.

Pitt's astounding comeback win Saturday over Syracuse at astunned Carrier Dome was mostly a positive for WVU (20-9, 9-7). Ithelps the Mountaineers, however, only if they upend the Panthers (21-8, 9-7) tonight.

The Pitt-Syracuse game cost WVU a bit, too. Besides theMountaineers' loss at Connecticut on Saturday, the Pitt win droppedthe Orange from the Ratings Percentage top 50. That diminished WVU'searlier win over SU.

It means WVU's top 50 record is only 1-7, and Coach Bob Huggins'club fell to 41st in the RPI - which, if history of the past decadeis any indication, is just about as low as you can go without moretop 50 success and still hope to land one of the 34 at-large NCAATournament berths.

When Georgetown's Jonathan Wallace was fouled at the end ofregulation and made three straight free throws at Marquette and thenhis Hoyas won it overtime, it hurt WVU - because the Mountaineers'lone top 50 win (and best conference victory) is over the GoldenEagles.

See, with the RPI, it's as much about who the foes you beatdefeated as it is who you defeated yourself. Get that?

WVU was picked to finish 10th in the Big East this season, and sothe Mountaineers have played a softer schedule (home-and-home withPitt, Providence and St. John's) than contenders above and aroundthem. That helps and hurts when you're sitting on the NCAA bubble.

Comparing this NCAA waiting game for WVU to last year's MarchMadness disappointment - OK, winning an NIT title was a really nicebalm - is an apples-oranges deal.

WVU had a much worse non-conference schedule strength (271 of336) last season than now (147). The only at-large team that gotinto the Large Lambada with a worse non-league schedule was NotreDame (309), but the Irish had 24 wins and were 11-5 in the Big East.

West Virginia also was No. 57 in the RPI on the last SelectionSunday. One team below that got an at-large bid, and (No. 65)Stanford had nine top 100 wins. No. 55 Virginia had 11.

The opinion here is that if WVU beats Pitt tonight and wins overSt. John's on Saturday in Madison Square Garden, Huggins will makehis 16th NCAA coaching trip - no matter what happens to the 'Eers inthe first round of the Big East tourney a week from this Wednesday.

If WVU wins the two this week, it finishes 11-7 in the Big Eastand likely in sixth place by itself (look at the other schedules) -or maybe even in a tie for fifth with Marquette (if it loses atSyracuse, playing with a great, great urgency, on Saturday). WestVirginia would have the head-to-head tiebreaker on the GoldenEagles.

That sets up a game for the Mountaineers that appears morewinnable in the first round (against DePaul or Seton Hall, ratherthan Syracuse or Villanova).

What else does Huggins first WVU team have going for it?

Well, a lot of teams that have a similar RPI profile to theMountaineers are playing no better or worse down the stretch. (SeeKansas State, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, Creighton, Ohio State, VirginiaTech, Rhode Island).

Another positive is that West Virginia has no "bad RPI" losses. Idon't mean losing to Cincinnati 62-39 at home and shooting 20percent. Yes, that is bad. However, WVU hasn't fallen to a teamranked lower than those Bearcats' No. 78 in the RPI. The selectioncommittee crunches those type of things.

A victory over Pitt would vault WVU back into the RPI top 40 andhelps in another way, too. The Panthers are 9-7 against RPI top 100teams. It's who the foes you beat have beaten, remember?

Pitt is 23rd in the RPI and has wins over Duke (neutral site),Georgetown, WVU, Villanova and at Syracuse.

A former NCAA Basketball Committee chairman told me years agothat when he was in "the room," one thing he always asked fellowmembers in evaluating teams for the last few spots and trying todiscern the differences was this question:

"Would you want to play that team?"

West Virginia is noticeably improved defensively and rarely turnsit over (10.6 per game). The Mountaineers may lose early in thetournament, but they wouldn't be an easy out.

If tonight is the kind of Big Monday the Mountaineers need,they'll have a bigger Sunday on March 16.

Couple's garden pride goeth before a bulldozer

A Highland Park couple who have spent 25 years landscaping theirbackyard soon will lose one-third of it because all along it was parkdistrict property.

After losing a lawsuit to the suburb's park district last year,Charles Sherrell II and his wife, Trutie, must remove a concretepatio, underground lighting, a frame shed, a Japanese fountain, astone walkway and two fences by July 1.

"I've been trying to make the place beautiful, and these guys(park district commissioners) are punishing me for doing so," saidSherrell, owner of WBEE-AM (1570), a Chicago jazz radio station.But Michael Fisher, president of the park district, said it isjust reclaiming its property and protecting Sleepy Hollow Park, apartially wooded area that abuts Sherrell's land."What he's done with the yard is pretty - it's attractive - butit's not his property," Fisher said.Sherrell recently sent a letter to neighbors, telling themtheir property values will be reduced because of the "destruction" ofhis property.An avid gardener, Sherrell said one of the main reasons he andhis wife purchased their house in the 1000 block of North Avenue in1972 was the large wooded yard.Now he estimates he will have to spend $12,000 to $15,000 tobring in workers and a bulldozer to remove the patio, landscaping andother additions. The Sherrells' yard will shrink from about 140 feetby 80 feet to 80 feet by 70 feet, he said.Fisher said the problems between the park district and Sherrellbegan last spring, when Sherrell cut down five trees (two oaks andthree ashes) without park district permission. A city ordinancerequires homeowners to seek permission before cutting down any treesmore than 6 inches in diameter.Fisher, who lives in Sherrell's neighborhood, said he heardchain saws from his house and arrived to see the trees cut down."I realized right away they cut down trees on park districtproperty, and that his yard was encroaching into the park," Fishersaid.Sherrell said he thought the trees were on his property becausethey were on his side of a chain-link fence. Sherrell said the treeswere dead and decaying, but Fisher said they were alive.Sherrell said the park district conducted a survey of SleepyHollow Park, and informed him he had to remove much of hislandscaping because it was on district property. Fisher said fourother homeowners in the area also were informed that they wereencroaching on park district land. Three moved their fences, and thefourth moved a shed to comply, he said.Sherrell offered to purchase the property, but park districtcommissioners refused to sell.He sued the park district last spring, claiming that since hehad lived on the property more than 20 years, he had a right to itstitle under what is called "adverse possession" law.The district countersued, and Lake County Court Judge Emilio B.Santi ruled in December the Sherrells had to give up the land.

ABC sacks `Madigan Men'

HOLLYWOOD ABC is benching another of its freshman comedies,"Madigan Men," in a shakeup that makes room for another reality-based game show, "The Mole."

Beginning Jan. 9, when "The Mole" makes its premiere Tuesdays at 7p.m., the network will move its Tuesday edition of "Who Wants To Be aMillionaire" to Friday at 7 p.m., where it will be followed by thesitcoms "Two Guys and a Girl" at 8 and "Norm" at 8:30.

ABC, which scrapped its young-adult-themed "TGIF" Friday nightformat after last season, had hoped to build an audience there withestablished and new sitcoms this season. But the new series "TheTrouble With Normal," pulled at the beginning of the November sweepsperiod, and "Madigan Men," starring Gabriel Byrne as an Irish-American father, have struggled.

The pedigree of "The Mole," is much like CBS' highly successful"Survivor" and its less successful "Big Brother"-a European import(in this case, Belgium) in which everyday citizens are drafted intoextreme situations and compete for cash. In "The Mole," 10contestants work to complete a set of physical tasks while trying tofigure out who among them is sabotaging their efforts. "The Mole"will run for nine weeks.

ABC executives, meanwhile, have been rigorously disputing thattheir in-house juggernaut, "Millionaire," is wearing down. AlthoughABC commanded the largest viewership during the November sweeps, forinstance, it did so at a reduced margin from recent sweeps periods,and NBC took home first place among the coveted 18- to 49-year-oldviewership.

The reshuffling puts "Millionaire" on Fridays, a less competitivenight for the broadcast networks. Stu Bloomberg, co-chairman of theABC Television Group, said moving "Millionaire" to Friday was donesimply to repair a struggling night.

Angels 4, Mariners 3, 10 innings

Los Angeles @ Seattle @
ab r h bi @ ab r h bi
EAyar ss 5 1 2 0 ISuzuki rf 4 0 2 2
BAreu rf 4 1 1 0 Figgins 2b 3 0 0 0
TrHntr cf 5 0 1 2 Ktchm 1b 4 0 0 0
KMorls 1b 4 1 1 1 FGtrrz cf 3 1 1 0
HMatsu dh 5 0 2 1 JoLopz 3b 4 0 1 0
JRiver lf 4 0 1 0 MSwny dh 5 0 1 1
Willits pr-lf 1 0 0 0 Lngrhn lf 2 1 0 0
HKndrc 2b 4 0 0 0 JoWilsn ss 4 0 1 0
Napoli c 3 0 0 0 RJhnsn c 5 1 1 0
MRyan ph 1 0 1 0
Budde c 0 0 0 0
Frndsn 3b 4 1 3 0
B.Wood 3b 0 0 0 0
Totals @ 40 4 12 4 Totals @ 34 3 7 3
Los Angeles 000 120 000 1_4
Seattle 000 021 000 0_3
E_Frandsen (1). DP_Los Angeles 2, Seattle 1. LOB_Los Angeles 9, Seattle 12. 2B_E.Aybar (7), B.Abreu (11), Jo.Lopez (5), M.Sweeney (1). 3B_I.Suzuki (2). HR_K.Morales (7). SB_F.Gutierrez (3), Jo.Wilson (1). CS_Figgins (3). S_H.Kendrick, Figgins.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
J.Saunders 5 2-3 5 3 1 5 2
Bulger 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2
Jepsen 1 1 0 0 1 2
Rodney W,3-0 1 0 0 0 3 0
Fuentes S,4-5 1 0 0 0 0 2
Seattle
Fister 7 8 3 3 1 2
League 1 0 0 0 0 1
Aardsma L,0-2 1 1-3 4 1 1 1 0
Kelley 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
HBP_by Bulger (Kotchman).
Umpires_Home, Ed RapuanoFirst, Tom HallionSecond, Ron KulpaThird, Lance Barksdale.
T_3:28. A_30,446 (47,878).

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Peru hostages freed in bloody military raid

LIMA Peruvian troops stormed the Japanese ambassador's mansionTuesday, rescued 71 hostages held for four months, and killed all 14rebel captors.

One captive, Supreme Court Justice Carlos Giusti, and twosoldiers also died, President Alberto Fujimori said. Some hostageswere secretly warned just before the raid, one of the freed men said.

Fujimori said 25 other captives were injured by gunfire andexplosions, although only two were seriously hurt - Peruvian ForeignMinister Francisco Tudela and another Supreme Court justice, bothwith gunshot wounds."I didn't waver for a single minute in giving the order for thisrescue operation," said Fujimori, who steadfastly …

Names in the Game

Ronaldinho's work ethic is under attack again.

The Brazilian playmaker, recovering from tendinitis in his left knee, is facing new criticism after As newspaper questioned his diet.

The Spanish daily printed a photo of a sweat-drenched Ronaldinho in training with FC Barcelona, and suggested that the player's inactivity has led to weight gain. It is the second time within a year that the 27-year-old Brazilian's weight has been a topic of discussion in Spain.

"Ronaldinho is recuperating from an injury in the best manner possible and all of these commentaries revolving around a player of his stature should be heard, but I'm also asking that the …

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Airstrike hits Gaza home and kills 8

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- Israel's air force fired a missile at ahouse in Gaza City late Sunday, killing at least eight people,residents and hospital officials said. The strike followed adecision to step up attacks against Islamic militants in response torocket fire from Gaza.

Israeli air attacks on militant targets earlier in the day killedanother three Palestinians.

The attack on the house was the deadliest airstrike since Israelstarted reprisals Tuesday for the rocket barrages.

The house belonged to Hamas lawmaker Khalil al-Haya, who was notat home. He was one of the Hamas representatives in cease-fire talkswith Fatah and was attending an Egyptian-sponsored …

Airstrike hits Gaza home and kills 8

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- Israel's air force fired a missile at ahouse in Gaza City late Sunday, killing at least eight people,residents and hospital officials said. The strike followed adecision to step up attacks against Islamic militants in response torocket fire from Gaza.

Israeli air attacks on militant targets earlier in the day killedanother three Palestinians.

The attack on the house was the deadliest airstrike since Israelstarted reprisals Tuesday for the rocket barrages.

The house belonged to Hamas lawmaker Khalil al-Haya, who was notat home. He was one of the Hamas representatives in cease-fire talkswith Fatah and was attending an Egyptian-sponsored …

Monday, March 5, 2012

The Other Woman

by Eric Jerome Dickey

Dutton, May 2003

$23.95, ISBN-0-525-94724-8

Dickey is back and as dicey as ever in his eighth book. It is a steamy, lascivious and realistically chilling novel about how the extracurricular bedroom antics of a contemporary power couple leads to heartache and heartbreak.

After being told that her husband, Charles, is having an affair, the protagonist in The Other Woman, nicknamed Freckles, eventually drifts into one herself. Oddly, the tryst is with the husband of Jessica, the woman who is sleeping with Charles. This plot leads to complexities that make the book nearly impossible to put down.

Dickey is hands-down one of the best …

Necessity to preserve dominance of law - President Barzani.

DUHUK / Aswat al-Iraq: Kurdistan President Masoud Barzani stressed, from town ofZakho, the necessity to preserve the dominance of law, pointing that the investigations are going on in the last 2-day events.

In a speech before Zakho citizens, he confirmed that "no one or part is permitted to incite the people to commit violent actions inKurdistan."

President Barzani, who arrived in Zakho this morning, confirmed that the investigations are underway.

Sources in the town said that the visit was expected to counter the tense situation there, following last Friday action to …

NFL toughens policy; League makes penalties more harsh for steroids.(Sports)

Byline: Associated Press

NEW YORK - The NFL is going deeper into the wallets of players who get caught using steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs.

After four months of sometimes intense negotiations, the league and union announced Wednesday more extensive testing for performance-enhancing drugs and the addition of the blood-boosting substance EPO to its list of banned substances.

The union also agreed that players suspended after testing positive will, for the first time, forfeit a portion of their signing bonuses in addition to the salary they will lose during their time away. That is significant because the signing bonuses often are the …

POLICE TO REVIEW OPTIONS UNION TALKS STALLED OVER DENTAL PLAN.(Local)

Byline: Gary Sheffer Staff writer

Unionized police officers will meet again Monday

to decide what course to take in their contract standoff with the city.

James Tuffey, president of the Albany Police Officers Union, said the city stood by a dental plan offer Friday that is at the crux of the breakdown in contract talks.

"The city - through its negotiator - told us to take it or leave it," Tuffey said. "They're trying to provoke us. They're putting out a challenge to us and we'll just have to see what happens Monday."

Tuffey said he did not know if the union would take any job action but said it was ready to do "whatever was …

Romania loses a dozen property restitution lawsuits in European human rights court

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled against Romania in a dozen lawsuits relating to the restitution of property confiscated by the Communist regime, the government said Saturday.

Eleven cases related to the unlawful sale or misappropriation of property, depriving the original owners of the property or of material compensation, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. A further case referred to an owner who was prevented from renting his property _ nationalized under communism _ to tenants at a market rent.

Huge amounts of real estate, including houses, private factories, churches and lands were nationalized in 1948 after the communists came to …

Hometown comic Griffin completes a tour of Zanies

You can't go home again, they say. But you sure can visit everyonce and a while.

And Chicago-born Los Angeles-based comic Anthony Griffin will becompleting his "Zanies '91" tour as headliner this weekend at theoriginal Zanies, 1548 N. Wells. He recently worked the St. Charlesand Mount Prospect rooms, and now returns to the site of some of hisearlier triumphs.

A little more than a year ago, Griffin, buoyed by local successand some strong showings in comedy contests (he won a national onesponsored by a liquor company), moved to the land of the pink Lakershats. The relocation reflects a trend in the Witty City: Chicagocomics heading West to be discovered by the …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Study Findings from Edgewood Chemical Biological Center Provide New Insights into Bacillus.(Report)

New research, "Multigeneration cross contamination of mail with Bacillus species spores by tumbling," is the subject of a report. "In 2001, envelopes loaded with Bacillus anthracis spores were mailed to Senators Daschle and Leahy as well as to the New York Post and NBC News buildings. Additional letters may have been mailed to other news agencies because there was confirmed anthrax infection of employees at these locations," scientists in Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland report (see also Bacillus).

"These events heightened the awareness of the lack of understanding of the mechanism(s) by which objects contaminated with a biological agent might spread disease. This …

rensselaer county edition.(Capital Region)

Taste of Troy The Third Annual Taste of Troy benefit cooks up some fun at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Tosca Grill in Troy. Enjoy the Collar City's best with food samples, special offers from local businesses and family fun. Call 272-3506 or 271-9554. St. Patrick's giveaway Don your favorite green garb, visit any local Stewart's Shop on Monday, and get a …

CASON, FRED S. SR.(CAPITAL REGION)

GUILDERLAND -- Fred Stephens Cason Sr., 76, of Guilderland, died Monday, February 7, 2000 at his home. Mr. Cason was born in Montpelier, VT, the son of the late Nona Stephens and Grady Cason. He was raised in Albany and Cookeville, TN and was educated at Albany High School and Hudson Valley Community College. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army. He later owned and operated Cason Jewelers in Albany. He also was employed by the New York State Dept. of Civil Service for 20 years, and later worked as a truck driver for Cason Trucking of Albany. He was a member of the Masonic Temple, and past Master of the James Ten Eyck Lodge. He served as Deputy Director of Albany …

impressive statistics.(Sports)

BYLINE: STEPHEN NELL

JUSTIN MELCK has been deemed fit enough for inclusion on Western Province's bench this week and Pieter Louw is on a mission to ensure that he stays there.

Province will almost certainly have to beat Griquas at Newlands tomorrow to qualify for the semifinals of the Currie Cup and with competition fierce in the squad there is little chance of complacency against the stubborn Kimberley outfit.

Melck, who impressed until his recent sidelining with a hamstring injury, will no doubt feature some time tomorrow with a view to regaining his place on the flank in the semifinals. However, Louw can swing coach Kobus van der Merwe's vote if …

(null)

It was quite a send-off for Jim Davis, or so the people paying his funeral bills were led to believe.

They were told Davis was laid to rest at Abbey Memorial Park in Compton after being placed in an ornate, top-of-the-line casket lined with elaborate floral arrangements. Altogether, the bill to bury Davis at the palm-lined cemetery came to nearly $31,000.

But there was a problem: There was no Jim Davis. He was dreamed up by a group of scam artists, authorities say.

And prosecutors say the coffin that was lowered into the ground was made out of cheap plywood or cardboard, filled with either rocks or butchered meat and animal bones, apparently to …

Serologic responses to measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine in healthy infants: Failure to respond to measles and mumps components may influence decisions on timing of the second dose of MMR

Leslie Ann Mitchell PhD,1,2 Aubrey J. Tingle, MD, PhD,1 Diane Decarie, BSc,1 Carol Lajeunesse, BScN2

A B S T R A C T

Measles, mumps, and rubella-specific IgG antibodies were evaluated in 134 healthy infants routinely immunized with trivalent live attenuated measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine at one year of age. Blood samples were collected just before, and at 1, 3, and 12 months after MMR. Specific IgG was measured by commercial enzyme immunoassays. Before vaccination, 98.5%, 99.2%, and 98.5% of the infants tested were seronegative for measles, mumps, and rubella, respectively. One year after MMR, 16.4% and 22.4% of vaccinees lacked demonstrable antibody to measles and …

MEASLES IMMUNIZATION CAMPAIGN.

Some 60,000 Barbadian men and women between the ages of 21 and 35 will be immunized against measles/mumps/rubella (MMR) over the next three months by the Ministry of Health, says the Government Information …

Bull merges 4 units, signaling a stronger chip card commitment.(Groupe Bull consolidates chip card operations into CP8 Transac unit)

Groupe Bull, a French computer company that is trying to shake off prolonged financial problems, is making a bigger commitment to smart cards.

One of the big three France-based manufacturers of the advanced cards, Bull announced last week a consolidation of its far-flung chip card and related operations into a unit called CP8 Transac.

Among the four companies coming under the unified structure is Micro Card Technologies Inc. of Vienna, Va., the longest- established chip card maker in the United States.

Micro Card will gradually convert to the CP8 Transac identity while the U.S. unit's management, led by president Arnaud d'Avezac, will remain in place, said …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

WILLIAM DUQUETTE, 46.(CAPITAL REGION)

MILTON William K. Duquette, 46, of Emigh Road, Rock City Falls, died Thursday at home.

He was born in Ballston Spa. He moved to Rock City Falls in 1974. He was a librarian at Martin Marietta at the Kesselring Site in West Milton for 25 years.

Survivors include his parents, Mary Baker of Porter Corners and Lawrence Duquette Sr. of Ballston Spa; two brothers, Franklyn Duquette of Ballston Lake and Lawrence Duquette …

Hundreds attend visitation for slain Iowa coach

Hundreds of people have waited for hours in lines that stretched for blocks to attend the visitation for a slain Iowa high school football coach.

A funeral is planned for Monday for Ed Thomas, following the visitation Sunday. Thomas' sons, Todd and Aaron Thomas, say they mourned their father privately at the football fields where he held practice.

The sons said they …

Track slot machines on table // Edgar, Duchossois to meet this week

Gov. Edgar will listen to a $100 million proposal to allowyear-round slot machines at racetracks, his spokesman said Sunday.

Racetrack owners say they are losing money and need slots, videopoker and other machine games of chance to compete with riverboatcasinos.

The horseracing industry also needs tax relief, said ArlingtonInternational Racecourse owner Dick Duchossois, who is to meet withEdgar on Tuesday.Thoroughbred track owners want to allow as many as 1,200machines at each of three locations: Arlington, Sportsman's Park orHawthorne, and Maywood Park or Balmoral."The governor is willing to listen to such requests," Edgarspokesman Thomas Hardy said.The …

Study results from A. Gohin and colleagues in the area of agricultural economics published.

"The main objective of this article is to examine econometric estimates of price elasticities of food trade functions. We investigate the relevance of the prominent gravity approach," scientists writing in the Journal of Agricultural Economics report.

"This approach is based on the assumptions of symmetric, monotone, homothetic, Constant Elasticity of Substitution (CES) preferences. We test all these assumptions using intra-European trade in cheese. In general, the assumptions made on preferences by the gravity approach are not supported by our dataset," wrote A. Gohin and colleagues.

The researchers concluded: "The bias induced in the estimated price …

KATHLEEN BURNS.(CAPITAL REGION)

NISKAYUNA -- Kathleen Blanchfield Burns, of Hexam Road, died Tuesday, April 22, 1997 at Ellis Hospital after a short illness. She was born in Cohoes and was a lifelong area reisdent. She was a homemaker. Mrs. Burns was a member and past president of the Altar Rosary Society; Eucharistic minister at St. John the Evangelist; and a member of Schenectady Co. Medical Society Auxillary and St. Clare's Hospital Auxillary. She was the widow of Dr. William J. Burns, who died in 1983. Survivors include …

UN raises Pakistani capital security level

The U.N. declared the Pakistani capital unsafe for the children of its international staff Thursday and ordered them out, putting the once tranquil city on a par with Kabul and Somalia.

Pakistan is under intense U.S. pressure to combat militants responsible for rising attacks at home and in neighboring Afghanistan. Its faltering efforts so far have been met with a blur of suicide bombings that have killed nearly 1,200 people since July 2007, according to army statistics released this week.

The U.N., which employs more than 2,000 people in Pakistan, including about 100 foreigners, has not been hit.

However, the truck bombing of Islamabad's Marriott …