четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Prosecutors Suggest 7 Years for Nacchio

DENVER - Prosecutors recommended Friday that former Qwest chief executive Joe Nacchio serve a maximum of seven years and three months in prison for completing $52 million in illegal stock sales when his telecommunications company was at financial risk.

In a brief filed late Friday, government attorneys also recommended Nacchio serve three years probation and be fined a maximum of $19 million.

"Any less severe sentence would fail to provide just punishment, to promote respect for the law, and to protect the public," prosecutor James Hearty wrote on behalf of the legal team.

In a separate brief, defense attorney Herbert Stern asked U.S. District Judge Edward …

Schwarzenegger's 3rd budget reform attempt flops

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wanted to permanently fix California's "broken budget system." But three times now he has tried and failed to smooth out the state's roller coaster revenues.

Voters on Tuesday resoundingly rejected his latest effort, a package of budget-balancing measures that he promised would provide a short-term patch for the current financial crisis and prevent further catastrophe in the future.

Instead, he now faces a $21.3 billion budget deficit and a budget system that has not changed a bit since he took office nearly six years ago.

"I think he's discovered that this job is a lot harder than he anticipated in a …

Atlantis Going Fishing On Electrical Experiment

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. The shuttle Atlantis thundered into orbitFriday on an international mission to test a satellite-on-a-ropetechnique that engineers say could revolutionize space flight.

The mission is a joint venture of NASA and the Italian SpaceAgency, and includes Swiss, Italian and Costa Rican-born astronauts,as well as four U.S.-born crew members.

The main goal of the seven-day mission is to demonstrate anotion developed by Italian scientists: the concept of tyingspacecraft together with an electrical cord.

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

11 Afghans injured in anti-Quran-burning protests

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Thousands of Afghans are protesting a small American church's plan to burn the Muslim holy book. At least 11 people have been injured.

Police in the northern province of Badakhshan say several hundred demonstrators ran toward a NATO compound where four attackers and five police were injured in clashes. Protesters also burned an American flag at a mosque after Friday …

UN prosecutor praises Serbia for Karadzic arrest

The U.N. war crimes prosecutor for the former Yugoslavia says Serbia authorities "deserve full credit" for arresting longtime fugitive Radovan Karadzic.

Serge Brammertz also says it will take months before the prosecution and defense are ready for the trial of the former Bosnian Serb leader.

Karadzic was arrested last week in …

There's hope for a new American elm tree

The majestic American elm (Ulmus Americana) was down, but it wasnever out. And today, rising like a phoenix from the ashes of Dutchelm disease, elms are beginning to appear in nurseries, on landscapeplans and in streetscapes once again.

Dutch elm disease entered the United States around 1930 on ashipment of elm logs from Europe. By the 1950s the fungus wasspreading rapidly; by the 1970s American elms were on their way tobecoming a bittersweet memory.

So prevalent is the disease that the tree is now inextricablylinked to its nemesis. It's not uncommon to hear someone refer to anAmerican elm as a "Dutch elm," so accustomed are we to hearing thetree and the disease …

DSNI hears plans for green house

DSNI hears plans for green house

A plan to build a 10,000-foot greenhouse over a former garage at 11 Brook Avenue in Roxbury took center stage during the Dudley Street Neighborhood initiative annual meeting last week.

DSNI members hope to have the garage demolished, the land cleansed of oil and gasoline spills, and have the project completed by the end of this year. Greg Watson, executive director of DSNI, could hardly contain himself as he explained the unlimited opportunities that would arise from the project.

We have a vision. We'd like to see a formal visiting center," said Watson. "We even see it as a restaurant."

Watson emphasized that the …

US PGA Tour goes dark at just the right time

For the first time in nearly 20 years, the U.S. PGA Tour is taking a week off in the middle of the season.

The timing couldn't be better.

Tour commissioner Tim Finchem built this break into the schedule last November so players would not have to compete for four straight weeks in the tour playoffs for the FedEx Cup and then head straight to Valhalla club for the Ryder Cup.

Little did he know that the FedEx Cup would be over by now, assuming Vijay Singh doesn't get lost on his way to Atlanta for the U.S. Tour Championship in two weeks. Nor could Finchem have anticipated such negative vibes about the playoffs. Best anyone can tell, only one player …

New dawn for dinners ; As the new decade gets going, Sarah O'Meara asks food professionals which trends are set to become more popular, and which products the public are likely to leave behind

As we enter a new decade, expect to be eating roast grouse forlunch, followed by a helping of ripe mangosteen. At least, that'swhat the experts say.

At the start of the 'teens', all the big food brands areclamouring to be an authority on the future.

But can we trust the words of supermarkets who may have a vestedinterest in deciding what we'll all be having for dinner? Accordingto Judith Kleine Holthaus, account director at the FutureFoundation, her company's predictions for Waitrose are based on avariety of factors.

"On the one hand, we're studying the macro trends, which impacthow people consume food, so things like economics, health, travel,Government …

Three-Dimensional Visualization of FKBP12.6 Binding to an Open Conformation of Cardiac Ryanodine Receptor

ABSTRACT

The cardiac isoform of the ryanodine receptor (RyR2) from dog binds predominantly a 12.6-kDa isoform of the FK506-binding protein (FKBP12.6), whereas RyR2 from other species binds both FKBP12.6 and the closely related isoform FKBP12. The role played by FKBP12.6 in modulating calcium release by RyR2 is unclear at present. We have used cryoelectron microscopy and three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction techniques to determine the binding position of FKBP12.6 on the surface of canine RyR2. Buffer conditions that should favor the "open" state of RyR2 were used. Quantitative comparison of 3D reconstructions of RyR2 in the presence and absence of FKBP12.6 reveals that FKBP12.6 …

Rider beats Fairfield 66-49

Novar Gadson scored 23 points and Justin Robinson added 15 as Rider defeated Fairfield 66-49 in a Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference game Friday night.

Harris Mansell added 13 for Rider (10-8, 5-3), who won for just the second time in its last five games while the Stags (12-8, 5-4) lost for the second straight time.

Anthony Johnson led Fairfield with 11 points.

Gadson, a 6-foot-7 freshman, had …

Old theatre opens for a theatrical fundraiser

Stars return to the home of the original Theatre Royal in Bath torecreate a landmark event in theatre history and raise funds for theegg theatre at the same time.

On Sunday February 22 Stephanie Cole, Tim Pigott-Smith, PamelaMiles and Leonard Pearcey present The First Night of Pygmalion atThe Masonic Hall, Old Orchard Street, Bath, home of the originalTheatre Royal.

In this fascinating and hilarious account, Richard Huggettreconstructs the witticisms, temperaments, clashes and delays thatattended the first production of Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion in 1914which starred Mrs Patrick Campbell and Herbert Beerbohm Tree.

He draws on letters, diaries, contemporary press …

ON HEALTH INSURANCE

I received a call from a client who had been diagnosed withParkinson's disease about a year ago. She told me she was havingproblems driving and had heard that a medical center near her homewould perform an assessment to determine whether she had to give updriving or if there would be some sort of equipment that would enableher to continue driving.

I contacted her insurance company and found that, in thisparticular case, the initial assessment would be covered because thetesting revealed the patient could be helped by additional therapysessions. Her next step would be three sessions with a physicaltherapist performed in her car to determine what special equipmentwould be needed to assist her in her driving. These sessions wouldcost $130 each.

I again contacted the insurance company and was told that becauseshe could be helped, the subsequent visits would be covered under herplan and should be submitted with an evaluation and treatment plan.Regarding equipment needed in the car, this could be processed underthe durable equipment benefit of her policy. If any item would runover $500, the equipment must be pre-certified through the insurancecompany.

My client was thrilled that these charges would be taken care ofby her insurance plan and that even though she has a debilitatingcondition, with the correct equipment installed in her car, she willnot have to give up the independence of driving.

The lesson in this for all of my readers is to be aware of thebenefits provided to you in your policy. Do not assume these types ofevaluations and treatments will not be covered. When you call yourinsurance company for information regarding these types ofsituations, take down all of the information given to you over thephone as well as the name of person you spoke with.

The treatment must be deemed by the company as medicallynecessary, which in this case it certainly was, and my client did nothave to limit her activity because she could not afford to have theproper evaluations performed.

Barbara Melman is president of Claim Relief, a Chicago companythat helps people with health insurance problems. Write her at theChicago Sun-Times, 401 N. Wabash, Chicago 60611.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Lions give 74-point warning to South Africa

Maybe it was the thought of Gordon D'Arcy being summoned from his vacation in America to join the squad, but the British and Irish Lions produced the performance they had been waiting for with a 74-10 victory over a Super 14 team.

Scoring five tries in each half, the Lions outplayed the Golden Lions at Ellis Park _ venue for the third of the three tests against world champion South Africa. They charged to a 39-10 halftime lead and then scored 35 unanswered points in the second half.

"Hopefully it's the start of things to come," said team captain Brian O'Driscoll, who led the team with lock forward Paul O'Connell rested.

"To score 70 points against a Super 14 team, somebody has got to take some note about it and we have got to keep working away. The most pleasing thing was that we didn't concede in the second half. We said at half time that we would go on and keep them scoreless (in the second half)."

O'Driscoll was one of the tryscorers with Jamie Roberts, Tommy Bowe and Ugo Monye helping themselves to two each and Tom Croft, Stephen Ferris and James Hook also crossing the Golden Lions line. Flyhalf Stephen Jones kicked 18 points and Hook six.

It was a big difference from the shaky performance in their first tour game, a 37-25 victory over the Royal XV at Rustenburg where the Lions had to come from 12 points down with three late tries.

"Last weekend the boys felt a little bit constricted when they played on a smaller pitch," O'Driscoll said. "We managed to hold the ball in the phases.

"I think people expect us to click together because it's a group of good individuals and they automatically expect us to be a team. We will need a little time to gel together. It's far from the finished article but a good start for these guys in their first Lions game."

Head coach Ian McGeechan, who is making his fifth Lions tour, said he hoped the result at Ellis Park would give the side a springboard towards the sort of performances he wants when they take on the Springboks at Durban (June 20), Pretoria (June 27) and back here July 4.

"I thought there was a lot of accuracy and good tactical decisions when we created the space and finished it well. It showed our thinking on the field was first class," McGeechan said.

"It's given us a sighter about what's possible but we still have to go up another level or two in the next few weeks. That's what we wanted and we will feed off each performance."

The Lions have called up experienced Ireland center D'Arcy to their squad with Keith Earls and Riki Flutey carrying injuries from Saturday's victory over the Royal XV. Both are doubtful for Saturday's game against the Cheetahs in Bloemfontein.

Neymar, Pato lead Brazil to 2-0 win over US

Neymar scored on debut and Alexandre Pato added a goal late in the first half as Brazil beat the United States 2-0 in an international friendly Tuesday, the first match for both nations since their disappointing World Cup exits.

Neymar, the 18-year-old Santos sensation, had just switched with Robinho and moved from the left flank to the center. He beat Johnathan Bornstein to an Andre Santos' cross and angled a header inside Tim Howard's left post in the 29th minute.

Pato doubled the lead in first-half stoppage time when Ramires' through ball split Bornstein and Carlos Bocanegra, and the 20-year-old AC Milan forward shot past Howard. It was his second in nine appearances and first since his debut against Sweden in March 2008.

"They put you in such difficult spots defensively," Bocanegra said. "I made the decision to step, and probably should have went the other way and maybe tried to run back."

Both Pato and Neymar were overlooked by Dunga for his World Cup roster despite public clamor for their selection in Brazil. Dunga was fired after the 2-1 World Cup quarterfinal loss to the Netherlands last month and replaced by Mano Menezes, who promised to restore "Jogo Bonito" _ beautiful Game _ as Brazil prepares to host the World Cup in 2014.

Menezes replaced the dour defensive tactics of Dunga with an attack-minded 4-3-3 formation with Pato between Neymar on the left and new Brazil captain Robinho on the right.

"That's the line that we will establish from now on," Menezes said through a translator.

A near-sellout crowd of 77,223 attended the high-profile homecoming for a U.S. team that drew record television ratings during the World Cup.

With young, swift players, Brazil showed glimpses of the renowned ball movement that took a back seat in South Africa to a more defensive game. Brazil won for the 15th time in 16 matches against the U.S. and has outscored the Americans 31-10.

"If we're going to get to the next level, we've still got to be a lot better," American star Landon Donovan said.

Ganso, Victor and defender David Luiz also made their international debuts for Brazil, along with substitutes Andre, Ederson and Jucilei.

"Everyone was very comfortable playing together," Neymar told Brazilian media. "Mano gave us a lot of freedom to do what we always do on the field, and that helped a lot. That's why we were able to play so well."

U.S. coach Bob Bradley had nothing but praise for Neymar.

"His ability to go at people and create on the dribble is something that I think is special," he said. "I think everyone knows the talent that Brazil possesses."

For both nations, rebuilding began in New Jersey, in a gleaming $1.6 billion stadium set for its first official NFL games next month.

Criticized for some of his lineups during the 2-1 overtime loss to Ghana in the World Cup's second round, he made six changes from that starting 11.

Bradley used Maurice Edu in midfield in place of Ricardo Clark, and started Benny Feilhaber and 23-year-old Alejandro Bedoya in the midfield instead of Landon Donovan, who moved up to forward, and Clint Dempsey, who remained in England with Fulham ahead of the Premier League opener.

"A very young team we had tonight as well as them," Donovan said, "but from an experience standpoint, they had a lot of guys that have played in a lot of big games and we haven't and I think that showed through."

MLS scoring leader Edson Buddle started up front in place of Robbie Findley, who was ineffective in South Africa.

Omar Gonzalez made his international debut at central defender in place of Oguchi Onyewu.

Bradley may have been coaching his last match as U.S. coach _ his contract expires in December and it's not certain whether the U.S. Soccer Federation wants to retain him. Before he was hired four years ago, former Germany coach Juergen Klinsmann withdrew from consideration.

"It was agreed after this game there would be some more discussions and we will see where those discussions go," Bradley said.

___

Lineups

Brazil_Victor; Daniel Alves, Thiago Silva, David Luiz, Andre Santos; Lucas Leiva, Ramires (Hernanes, 60th), Paulo Henrique Ganso (Jucilei, 89th); Robinho (Diego Tardelli, 81st), Alexandre Pato (Andre, 67th), Neymar (Ederson, 72nd, Carlos Eduardo, 75th)

United States_Tim Howard (Brad Guzan, 46th); Jonathan Spector, Omar Gonzalez, Carlos Bocanegra (Clarence Goodson, 61st), Jonathan Bornstein; Alejandro Bedoya (Herculez Gomez, 67th), Maurice Edu, Michael Bradley, Benny Feilhaber (Sacha Kljestan, 46th); Landon Donovan (Robbie Findley, 61st), Edson Buddle (Jozy Altidore, 46th)

Bettis Gets Better and Better // Rookie's Actions Speak for Him

ANAHEIM, Calif. He's a snorting, smiling, 240-pound road hog wholikes to hear his victims grunt and groan as they crumble.

And then, as the opposition takes inventory of bumps andbruises, Los Angeles Rams running back Jerome Bettis delivers thereally bad news.

"I'll be back," he says with a grin.

"Bettis was talking a lot of trash out there," New Orleanslinebacker Rickey Jackson said of last Sunday's game in theSuperdome. "He was having fun, like a kid in a candy store. He keptgetting up and telling us he'd be back.

"I really think what happened is that we had guys trying toover-hit him because he was talking so much trash."

Bettis also yells. What he yells is often unintelligible, butno matter, he simply keeps yelling.

"On occasion I'll look up and see him shaking his head, lookingat the defenders with this, like, crazed stare," said Rams tackleJackie Slater. "You got defenders seeing that and they're justsaying, `This big son of a gun is crazy.' "

Bettis has gone helmet to helmet with some of the game's toplinebackers and popped up screaming, "Is that all you got?"

When linebacker Sam Mills ripped the ball out of Bettis' handsSunday on the Rams' first possession and returned it 30 yards for atouchdown, Bettis got irritated.

"Somebody was going to have to pay for that," he said, and therecord books now show that Bettis ran for more yards in the Superdomethan any other player ever.

"There's no stopping me," Bettis told the Saints. "No, no, no."

The San Francisco 49ers couldn't control him three weeks ago,when he gained 133 yards in 18 carries. He stung the PhoenixCardinals, who had been tremendously successful against the run, for115 yards in 16 carries.

The Saints were gunning for the playoffs but were trampled byBettis, who ran 28 times for 212 yards.

"Running for 212 yards is a feeling of dominance," Bettis said."I'm pounding at them. I'm pounding at them and there's nothing easyabout it, but it's like, dang, whew, you can just hear it. It's likeyou can hear it after every play, the sighs, `Oh, man,' and thatdrives you even more to get that feeling of dominance.

"They get frustrated, and I like to think I get to them. Youjust want to dominate a defense and take their whole football teamout of the game."

Bettis said he could not keep track of the yards.

"They were coming so quick I couldn't add that quickly," hesaid, laughing. "You know what I am saying? It was like 70, 80,100, they were piling up so quickly."

On his 71-yard touchdown run, Bettis outran four defenders.

"That was the highlight of my year," Bettis said. "It was longenough that people can no longer doubt that I have good speed. Therehave been a lot of people, especially with the media here, saying Ididn't really have the speed to get outside.

"Once they realized, `Hey, he can break a long one,' that letthem know I can be a complete tailback. I wasn't just the bruisingbattering fullback-type of runner that everybody thought I was."

After fullback Tim Lester and guard Leo Goeas had cleared apath, Bettis broke free from defensive lineman Les Miller and simplyoutran the Saints' secondary.

"I saw the gang start to chase him, and I saw that they weren'tgaining on him," Coach Chuck Knox said. "Then I said, `Just hangon.' Now they have some people in their secondary that can run.

"I'll tell you, it's a lot more fun to see some of their guystail-lighting one of mine than it is the other way around."

Bettis will probably be given every opportunity to romp andstomp the Bengals at Cincinnati on Sunday. Cincinnati has the NFL'sthird-worst defense at stopping the run.

"I'll say this, the big guy, when he's running up in there, boy,that's a force to be reckoned with," Knox said.

Said Bettis: "I always look at stats to stay up on everythingand to keep the guys motivated. For a while, (the goal) was get to1,000 (yards). I told the guys, `Get to a thousand, get to athousand.' Now I'm over a thousand, so we need to get another push.`Hey, let's try to lead the league in rushing.' "

Detroit's Barry Sanders is the NFL leader with 1,115 yards in243 carries but is sidelined because of an injured knee. Bettis isNo. 2 with 1,103 yards in 215 carries. Buffalo's Thurman Thomas has1,092 in 280 carries, and Dallas' Emmitt Smith has 1,074 in 210.

"You see a guy like this run with the excitement he shows andit's contagious," Slater said of Bettis. "It's been amazing to meover my career how much a great runner can energize people aroundhim.

"I was on the field the first time he gained 100 yards, whichwas the first time he played the Saints, and I remember how excitedhe was in the huddle. I mean the guy's tenacious, and it justignites everybody."

Slater cleared the way for Eric Dickerson, the last Rams rookieto go over the 1,000-yard mark. Dickerson ran for more than 100yards 41 times with the Rams, including nine times his rookie season.Bettis has done it five times this year.

"They are different style backs with different physical makeups,but there's something about that special runner when he's on a roll,"Slater said. "You can see it with both of these guys.

"It gives you an awful lot of incentive to continue playing aswe are when a guy like this has a chance for the rushing title. Ifhe gets it, it belongs to everybody on that field. I mean you haveto build on something, and this is someone special."

"It would be a great honor to be the rushing champion and therookie of the year," Bettis said. "I think all the success I'mhaving individually is going to help the team."

Rebels beaten

SPEEDWAY: Mario Jirout top scored with 13 points as SomersetRebels were beaten 58-32 in the Premier Trophy by Trelawny Tigers inCornwall last night.

Australia-New Zealand one-day scoreboard

Scoreboard on Thursday from the third Chappell-Hadlee limited overs cricket match between Australia and New Zealand at Bellerive Oval:

Australia Innings

Matthew Hayden c Mills b Oram 29

Michael Clarke c and b Gillespie 7

Ricky Ponting not out 134

Michael Hussey c How b Oram 9

Andrew Symonds lbw b Mills 52

Brad Haddin run out 26

James Hopes run out 20

Brett Lee not out 0

Extras (3lb, 2w) 5

TOTAL (for six wickets) 282

Overs: 50. Batting time: 212 minutes.

Did not bat: Brad Hogg, Nathan Bracken.

Fall of wickets: 1-16, 2-56, 3-87, 4-201, 5-246, 6-280.

Bowling: Kyle Mills 10-0-59-1, Mark Gillespie 8-0-68-1, Jacob Oram 10-1-34-2 (1w), Daniel Vettori 10-0-42-0, Jeetan Patel 8-0-57-0 (1w), Scott Styris 4-0-19-0.

Umpires: Mark Benson, England, and Peter Parker, Australia.

TV Umpire: Bruce Oxenford, Australia. Match Referee: Roshan Mahanama, Sri Lanka.

Toss: won by New Zealand.

Series: Australia leads three-match series 1-0.

Dells balloon rally

The 12th annual Great Wisconsin Dells Balloon Rally will be heldMay 30-31, with more than 75 balloonists from around the countryexpected to compete. This year's rally will feature the secondannual Taste of Wisconsin food fair. For details, call (608)254-4321.

Writers still are trying to out-imagine 9/11

NEW YORK (AP) — Ten years later, and Americans' imaginations still are catching up to Sept. 11, 2001.

"I don't think art can 'compete' with something like 9/11," says Jess Walter, whose post 9/11 novel "The Zero" was a National Book Award finalist in 2006. "What could be sharper than our images of that day, whether we saw it in person or witnessed it on TV? Who could make a movie as vivid as the picture we get when we close our eyes — the smoking tower, the clear sky, the second jet banking toward the other tower?"

Scores of books, films and plays have narrated and analyzed the terror attacks, their causes and the emotional, cultural and political effects. The responses have evolved from the quiet grief of Anne Nelson's play "The Guys" to such international thrillers as the film "Babel" to Joseph O'Neill's reflective novel "Netherland." But no fictional character or invented story has forced itself into our minds like the events themselves. No movie has matched the power, and the horror, of the snufflike footage of the plane hitting the World Trade Center's south tower, or the iconic Associated Press photograph of a man falling from the north tower.

Sept. 11 was a new way to fear. Since the days of Puritan sermons, the American mind has summoned a wrathful god, ghosts of sins past, nuclear Armageddon, Cold War spies, lone assassins and invasions from outer space. The attacks were a different kind of nightmare: plotted from thousands of miles away; masterminded not by a head of state but by an exiled fanatic and carried out not by a professional army but by a disparate band of suicidal volunteers.

Our terrors are now global, as in Salman Rushdie's "Shalimar the Clown," a novel about a tightrope walker-turned-killer set everywhere from California to Kashmir. In "Syriana," starring George Clooney and Matt Damon, parallel story lines include an energy consultant in Geneva, a CIA officer in Iran and unemployed migrant workers in Pakistan. "Babel," with a cast featuring Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett, joins the fates of a goatherd in the Moroccan desert to an American woman from San Diego, California.

"Since 9/11, there's been this free-floating paranoia about danger coming from anywhere, anyplace," says performance artist Karen Finley, who is reviving "Make Love," a riff on post 9/11 New York featuring Finley as Liza Minnelli. "It brings the mind back to that stage of childhood where you're afraid of the dark; of the monsters under your bed."

"Americans have this long sense of isolation and impregnability and 9/11 was the end of the blind American sense they had won the Cold War," says Jonathan Galassi, president and publisher of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, which just released Amy Waldman's "The Submission," a novel about a Pakistani-American winning a contest for designing a Sept. 11-like memorial. "And all of a sudden we had different kinds of enemies, different kinds of problems that were worse in a way, much worse."

Entering the mind of another is a feat for any fiction writer, but some have attempted to dwell in the thoughts of an extremist. Martin Amis' "The Last Days of Mohammed Atta" tracks the end of one of the 9/11 hijackers. John Updike's "Terrorist" begins with a teen Muslim taking in the temptations of the West, "These devils seek to take away my God. All day long, at Central High School, girls sway and sneer and expose their soft bodies and alluring hair."

Waldman's "The Submission" is the story of architect Mohammad Khan, a nonobservant Muslim subjected to harsh accusations that he is a terrorist sympathizer with a secret plan to build a religious shrine. Waldman said she had read some novels about terrorists, including a few pages of Updike's book, and took a different approach.

"In some ways, I felt like I was writing a little bit in response to books like Updike's. There was a lot of interest in getting inside the minds of terrorists and much less interest in getting inside the minds of Muslims who were not terrorists," Waldman says. "I wanted to write about someone like Mohammad Khan, an American born and raised here, secular."

Waldman, a former New York Times reporter, said she first thought of the book in 2003 and began working on it four years later. Reality scooped her in 2010 when plans for an Islamic community center near the World Trade Center — the so-called "ground zero mosque" — led to the kind of public argument she had been thinking up in private.

"It was very strange," she says. "Lines I had written in the book suddenly were in the newspapers, even though the circumstances were not quite the same. It felt like my novel had come to life."

Novels such as "Netherland" and Walter's "The Zero" have received strong reviews, but critics debate how well writers have responded. Michael Rothberg, writing in 2009 for the journal American Literary History, titled his essay "A Failure of the Imagination" and faulted American authors for being too self-absorbed. In a 2007 essay in Esquire, Tom Junod reviewed Don DeLillo's "Falling Man" and concluded that the author had done a better job capturing the post-9/11 world in such pre-9/11 novels as "White Noise" and "Mao II."

"Falling Man," Junod wrote, "offers the best test case yet for the idea that when the planes hit and the buildings went down, we entered the 'age of nonfiction,' when journalism ... is able to grasp what has happened, and, more to the point, what is happening, to us more than fiction can, even fiction by our most accomplished and ambitious writers."

John Freeman, editor of the literary journal "Granta," believes "there is no art form which can compress a dynamic so complex into a single narrative or a form." Like Junod, he credits nonfiction writers for "beginning to grasp the long context of these events, and how it is so much bigger than New York City or Osama bin Laden." But he also defends "Falling Man," DeLillo's brief novel set in part at ground zero on the very day, as the "one book which captures the eye of the storm."

"Everything else I've read or seen looks for redemption, or sense," Freeman wrote in an email. "With its eerie, disembodied style, that sad tale of people trying, and failing, to get home in the aftermath, 'Falling Man' is the only book brave enough to remind us there is no making sense to that kind of trauma."

John Duvall, a professor of English at Purdue University, is another admirer of 'Falling Man." Duvall is compiling the new edition of "The Cambridge Companion to American Fiction After 1945," due in December. He praises "Falling Man" and "The Zero" as politically and socially relevant and believes that 9/11 affected so many people in so many ways that it is impossible for any book to capture everything.

"It's a little like asking, 'Which writer today best sums up the African American experience?'" he wrote in an email to the AP. "There is no such thing as a monolithic African American experience and I don't think there's a monolithic American mood regarding 9/11. And even if there were one today, it's not the same as the mood in 2002."

The books are numerous and diverse, a metropolis of responses. Walter's "Zero" is a street-level, streetwise take about a police officer just after a terrorist attack. O'Neill's "Netherland" pictures post-9/11 New York through the eyes of a cricket-playing Dutch immigrant. The inventive 9-year-old son of a 9/11 victim narrates Jonathan Safran Foer's "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close."

Some "9/11" stories predate the events, or never mention them directly, such as DeLillo's 1985 novel of disaster, "White Noise," and Philip Roth's "The Plot Against America," a Dystopian historical novel set during the 1940s, but widely seen as a warning about the post 9/11 era. The attacks are a given in Jonathan Franzen's contemporary epic, "Freedom." Walter mentioned the post-apocalypse of Cormac McCarthy's "The Road." Mohsin Hamid, whose novel "The Reluctant Fundamentalist" tells of a Pakistani immigrant and his ruined American dream, believes "Charlotte's Web" is ideal for contemporary readers.

"It's entirely made up, yet provides an incredibly honest account of the inevitability of death, its cyclical nature, the fact that it's sad and the fact that it's accepted," he says of E.B. White's children's classic.

"If I had to prescribe a book about Sept. 11, certainly 'Charlotte's Web' would be high on the list. Because in secular societies in the West, the discourse about death has been marginalized as something for religion to deal with. I think we should plop 'Charlotte's Web' in the middle of that and say, 'Look, we have to accept we are going to die, and that a certain amount of courage is required.'"

Court for man accused in Craigslist masseuse death

A Boston University medical student accused of killing a 25-year-old New York City masseuse he met through Craigslist will be back in court this week for a pretrial hearing.

Philip Markoff is scheduled to appear in Boston Municipal Court on Thursday in connection with the fatal shooting of Julissa Brisman and the armed robbery of another woman four days earlier, both at posh Boston hotels.

Police say both women had advertised erotic services on Craigslist. Markoff has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The 23-year-old Markoff also is charged in an arrest warrant in the attempted robbery of another woman in Rhode Island on April 16. Police say she was bound with cord and held at gunpoint at a hotel in Warwick, but her assailant fled when her husband came into the room.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Stocks extend gains to 4th day; Banks falter

Investors slowed their move into the market from a sprint to a walk.

Stocks tacked on modest gains Tuesday to extend a rally to a fourth day following a strong rise in pending home sales, the latest encouraging signal for the troubled housing market.

The Dow Jones industrial average briefly pushed into the black for 2009 but ended 35.5 points below the break-even mark. In March, the blue chips were down 25.4 percent for the year.

A slump in financial shares kept overall buying in check as several big banks said they would sell more stock to repay federal bailout money. The modest moves followed huge gains on Monday, when indicators jumped more than 2 percent on positive signs for manufacturing and other good economic signals.

The main driver of stock gains was a report showing the biggest jump in nearly eight years in pending home sales for April, however some market watchers worried that the sudden gains since last week may be overdone.

"The fear is that we're unable to tell whether we have green shoots sprouting or weeds popping up through cracks in the concrete," said Lawrence Creatura, portfolio manager at Federated Investors in Rochester, N.Y. He was referring to early positive signs in the economy that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has called "green shoots."

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow rose 19.43, or 0.2 percent, to 8,740.87. The Dow at times traded above 8,776.39, its finish for 2008. While it remains down moderately for the year, the Dow is up 5.3 percent in four days, a gain that could otherwise take months to achieve.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 1.87, or 0.2 percent, to 944.74, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 8.12, or 0.4 percent, to 1,836.80. Both indexes are up for 2009.

Financial stocks mostly lost ground as several banks said they would sell shares to raise capital. Adding to their share base can dilute the value of existing shares.

Morgan Stanley said it will raise $2.2 billion in common stock offering, after JPMorgan Chase & Co. and American Express Co. announced similar plans late Monday. JPMorgan will offer $5 billion of common stock, while American Express is seeking to raise $500 million.

Morgan Stanley rose 20 cents to $30.09, while JPMorgan fell $1.61, or 4.5 percent, to $34.50. American Express slid $1.28, or 4.9 percent, to $24.71.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has sold part of its stake in Industrial & Commercial Bank of China to raise more than $1.9 billion to help repay bailout money. Goldman fell $1.20 to $143.13.

"We've seen a drumbeat of new issuance in the banking sector. So far, the market has been able to absorb the supply pretty well. It's going to be yet another test," said Craig Peckham an analyst at Jefferies & Co.

Banks that want to repay bailout funds but weren't required by the government to raise additional capital must first prove they can raise money without relying on guarantees against losses provided by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Investors drew some confidence from auto sales reports following the bankruptcies by Chrysler LLC and General Motors Corp. after GM formally filed for Chapter 11 protection Monday.

GM said its U.S. sales fell 30 percent in May from a year ago but were 11 percent better than in April. Ford said its U.S. sales fell 24 percent from a year earlier but were up 20 percent from April. Chrysler LLC's U.S. sales fell 46.9 percent, as the company wrapped up its first month under bankruptcy protection.

Ford shares rose 28 cents, or 4.6 percent, to $6.41. GM shares no longer trade on the New York Stock Exchange and Chrysler isn't public.

Investors have been encouraged this spring by data suggesting the economy's slide is slowing, sending major stock indicators up 30 to 40 percent from the 12-year lows they hit in early March. The market has been able to look past unsettling but widely expected events such as the bankruptcies of Chrysler and GM, as well as dismal reports on the labor market.

Market analysts warn that some pullback is likely in order for the market to maintain solid, sustainable gains. Straight-line advances tend to worry stock watchers as signs of indiscriminate buying that could quickly evaporate at the first sign of trouble.

William Rutherford, president of Rutherford Investment Management LLC in Portland, Ore., said the report on pending home sales is encouraging because a rebound in home prices is necessary for the economy to recover. But he also thinks investors are reading too much into modest signs of improvement.

"The economy has to recover nicely to justify the recent run-up and I don't know whether it's got that much momentum in it," he said.

This week investors will be closely watching a stream of economic reports _ particularly the monthly jobs data on Friday _ for more signals on where to take the market next.

In technology news, data storage company EMC Corp. offered late Monday to buy Data Domain Inc. for $1.8 billion, or $30 per share. The all-cash offer came less than two weeks after NetApp Inc. made its own bid for the company at $25 a share.

Data Domain jumped $5.23, or 19.9 percent, to $31.58, while EMC rose 43 cents, or 3.5 percent, to $12.85. NetApp fell $1.35, or 6.5 percent, to $19.34.

The report on pending home sales lifted home builder stocks. Beazer Homes USA Inc. rose 24 cents, or 9.1 percent, to $2.87, while Toll Brothers Inc. rose 73 cents, or 3.9 percent, to $19.53.

About three stocks rose for every two that fell on the NYSE, where volume came to a light 1.41 billion shares compared with 1.5 billion shares Monday.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 5.30, or 1 percent, to 526.63.

Interest rates on long-term Treasurys fell after jumping back and approaching last week's highs on Monday.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which is used as a benchmark for home mortgages and other consumer loans, fell to 3.62 percent from 3.68 percent late Monday. Investors have been mindful in recent weeks of how rising yields could hamper an economic recovery by driving up interest rates.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Light, sweet crude fell 3 cents to settle at $68.55 on the New York Mercantile Exchange after finishing at its highest level of the year on Monday. Oil briefly rose to $69.05 Tuesday afternoon, a price not seen since early November.

Overseas, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.7 percent, Germany's DAX index rose less than 0.1 percent, and France's CAC-40 slipped less than 0.1 percent. Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 0.3 percent.

Japanese shares fall after US rate cut; Nikkei drops 0.6 percent

Japanese shares fell Thursday as investors sold banking stocks after the U.S. Federal Reserve cuts its key interest rate.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average index shed 83.13 points, or 0.6 percent, to 13,766.86.

"Banks had posted strong gains in the run-up to the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) meeting. But once the meeting was over, they took a pause," said Masayoshi Okamoto, general manager at Jujiya Securities.

The U.S. central bank, as expected, cut its key federal funds rate by a quarter-point Wednesday, a smaller move than the aggressive easing it undertook earlier this year. The Fed action pushed the rate down to 2 percent, the lowest level since late 2004. It was the seventh rate cut by the bank since it began easing credit conditions last September to combat the threat of a recession brought on by the housing slump and credit crisis.

Sentiment was also sluggish after Japan's central bank said in a report Wednesday the world's second largest economy was slowing, with "downside risks" in the U.S. economy a potential threat to Japan.

The Topix index of all the Tokyo Stock Exchange First Section issues declined 12.55 points, or 0.9 percent, to 1,346.10.

Shares in banking giant Mitsubishi UFJ Financial fell 3.8 percent to 1,101 yen. Mizuho Financial dropped 5.0 percent to 513,000 yen.

Real estate giant Mitsubishi Estate lost 5.1 percent to 2,865 yen, and Sumitomo Realty & Development fell 3.7 percent to 2,505 yen.

In currencies, the dollar was quoted at 103.72 yen midafternoon in Tokyo trade, down from 104.17 yen late Wednesday in New York. The euro was quoted at US$1.5634, down from US$1.5642.

Diskette Has Tabs On Videos

It's a video guide for the computer age.

Movie Recall ($9.95, Trade Service Corp.) delivers the basics -titles, release dates, stars - on nearly every movie available oncassettes and discs. But this isn't just another pretender to thevideo-reference throne long owned by Leonard Maltin's annual TVMovies and Video Guide. Movie Recall is an original, staking its ownterritorial claim: It is not a book, but a bargain-priced diskettefor IBM and compatible PCs. Because of the computer connection, itsports some high-tech features that no printed book can offer.

Say, for instance, you only remember part of a film title; sayyou remember just "Mrs. Muir." Look it up under "M" in most guidesand it will take some time to find what you're seeking. But plug"Mrs. Muir" into Movie Recall and - blip! - there she is: the GeneTierney-Rex Harrison classic "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" (1947, CBS/Foxtapes and discs).

Now, how about ALL of the movies on video with the word "Ghost"in the title? Have Movie Recall do the searching and it will come upwith about 90 entries (as well as films starring comic-actress AliceGhostley!).

Clearly, the computer element gives Movie Recall its uniqueposition in the low-price video-reference marketplace.

At $9.95, Movie Recall is an inexpensive holiday gift for thevideo collector with an IBM PC. For the program to work, those PCsmust have an 80286 or higher CPU, a high-density floppy drive (3.5-or 5.25-inch) and a hard drive.

The debut version of Movie Recall contains some 22,000 titles.

Distribution of Movie Recall is limited to a handful of outlets,including select Blockbuster Video stores. For availability, call(800) 854-1527, Ext. 445, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Hungarian gov't approves new partnership bill

On Feb. 11, Hungary's government signed off on a new registered-partnership bill to replace one that was struck down as unconstitutional just before it was to take effect on Jan. 1.

The Constitutional Court said the previous measure was unconstitutional because it would have given the rights of marriage to opposite-sex couples who are not married, violating the special protection granted to marriage by the constitution.

The new bill proposes registered partnership only for same-sex couples and would grant them the rights of marriage except in the areas of adoption and the taking of one's spouse's last name.

Whether Parliament will pass the new bill is unclear. Hungary has had a minority government since the Liberals left the governing coalition early last year.

"Based on 'parliamentary mathematics,' the bill has a high chance of being passed," said activist Tamas Dombos of the Hatter Society for LGBT People. "Governing parties hardly ever vote against proposals by their own government and the Liberals fully support the new bill. It is, however, very hard to predict how delicate negotiations involved in running a minority government will affect voting on the bill."

Driver in Deadly Motel Crash Is Charged

ANTIGO, Wis. - A man who plowed his sports utility vehicle through a motel, killing a sleeping man, had a blood-alcohol level more than five times the legal limit to drive, authorities said.

Stephen VanVleit, 58, of Antigo was charged with felony homicide by negligent operation of a vehicle, felony homicide by intoxicated use of a vehicle, and drunken driving, according to a criminal complaint filed Thursday.

His blood-alcohol level at the time of the crash was 0.46 percent, the complaint said. The legal limit to drive in Wisconsin is 0.08 percent.

He was convicted of drunken driving in Arizona in 1998 and 2003, the complaint said. The most serious charge filed against him Thursday carries a sentence of up to 25 years in prison if he's convicted.

Jesus Manuel Quirios-Castillo, 26, died in the crash reported around dawn Wednesday at the Good Nite Inn.

VanVleit's GMC Yukon hit a truck in the motel parking lot, accelerated, crashed through a brick wall and the window of Room 28, ran over Quirios-Castillo and then went through another wall in the back of the room, investigators said. The SUV then struck a garage and an auto on a neighbor's property, they said.

VanVleit lived at the motel. Shortly after the crash, his mother told another resident that her son had been at her home at 4 a.m., was very intoxicated and refused to get a ride home from his uncle, the complaint said.

Castillo and his 24-year-old brother, Octavio, were staying in the room because they were scheduled to help dismantle a garden center, sheriff's investigators said.

Octavio Castillo suffered some injuries in the crash, the complaint said.

Motel manager Robert Lindemann said the surviving brother told a motel resident that he and his brother were to leave Saturday for Mexico to see their mother, whom they hadn't seen in six years.

VanVleit was in stable condition at Langlade Memorial Hospital, a hospital spokeswoman said.

Von Finckenstein, Hon. Konrad

VON FINCKENSTEIN, HON. KONRAD

Private Career: Appt'd Judge of the Federal Court , Aug. 14, 2003. Address: Federal Court, Ottawa, Ont., K1A 0H9.

VON FINCKENSTEIN, HON. KONRAD Carri�re priv�e: Nomm� Juge de la Cour f�d�rale le 14 ao�t 2003. Adresse: Cour f�d�rale du Canada, Ottawa, Ont., K1A 0H9.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Montanes reaches second round in Buenos Aires

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Fourth-seeded Albert Montanes beat Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo 6-1, 7-6 (0) in an all-Spanish first-round match at the clay-court Copa Claro on Monday. Montanes reached the semifinals here a year ago.

The two other seeded players in action Monday also advanced.

Sixth-seeded Tommy Robredo of Spain had a 7-5, 6-2 win over Maximo Gonzalez of Argentina, while No. 8 Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina defeated Rui Machado of Portugal 4-6, 6-2, 6-2.

In other first-round matches, Leonardo Mayer of Argentina defeated Federico del Bonis of Argentina 7-6 (1), 7-5, and Italy's Fabio Fognini beat Frederico Gil of Portugal 1-6, 6-2, 6-2.

Top-seeded Nicolas Almagro of Spain, who won the Brazil Open on Saturday, plays Tuesday, as does No. 2 Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland. David Nalbandian of Argentina is seeded third.

5 Afghan deminers killed in roadside bombing.

KABUL, April 11 -- A bus carrying Afghans working for a U.S.-supported demining group was struck by a roadside bomb in Kandahar province Sunday, killing five workers and wounding 13 others.

Also Sunday, NATO said an Afghan soldier shot and lightly wounded a Polish soldier with whom he had been arguing. The Afghan soldier fled after the shooting and was being sought by Afghan and international forces.

Meanwhile, NATO reported a member of the international security force was killed by a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan. No other details were given in keeping with standard procedure.

The bus belonging to the Demining Agency for Afghanistan was struck early Sunday as it traveled through Kandahar province's Daman district, according to Mohammed Ibrahim, chief of medicine at Kandahar Hospital.

Roadside bombs are a signature weapon of the Taliban in their struggle against foreign forces and the Afghan government, but more often kill Afghan civilians. It wasn't clear if the blast was random or specifically targeted the demining agency, known as DAFA, which receives more than half its funding from the U.S. State Department, according to its Web site.

The group clears mines across southern Afghanistan that are a legacy of 25 years of near-continuous warfare and continue to kill scores of Afghans each year.

The unidentified Pole shot Saturday night at a joint command center in the eastern province of Ghazni was transferred to a medical facility for treatment, according to a NATO spokesman in Kabul, speaking on routine condition of anonymity.

The Ghazni base is headquarters of the 2,600 Polish troops stationed in Afghanistan as part of the NATO effort to root out Taliban remnants and extend the central government's remit into rural areas.

While rare, Afghan troop attacks on international forces risk damaging the trust between Afghan police and soldiers who work side-by-side with their foreign mentors on training and combat missions. An Afghan soldier killed a U.S. service member and wounded two Italian soldiers in December in the western province of Badghis, about one month after a rogue policeman in Helmand province shot and killed five British soldiers.

Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi said the shooting resulted from an argument between the two men, but details weren't immediately known. He said both had pulled weapons and fired, but only the Polish soldier was wounded. The whereabouts of the Afghan soldier weren't known, and it was possible he was hiding somewhere on the base, Azimi said.

"It seems to have been a fight and the soldier was operating on his own," Azimi said.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said the Afghan soldier had escaped, killing four Afghan soldiers in the process, and was now with the insurgents. The claim could not be verified, and the Taliban has a history of making false and exaggerated claims.

Also Sunday, Interior Ministry spokesman Zemari Bashary said investigators were questioning three Italian medical workers detained the day before as part of an investigation into an alleged plot to kill the governor of Helmand province. They were among nine people held after suicide bomb vests, hand grenades, pistols and explosives were discovered in a hospital storeroom in Helmand's capital Lashkar Gah.

"We need to question a number of people to find out who brought the materials to the hospital and for what purpose," Bashary said.

Emergency, the Milan-based organization that runs the hospital, has denied involvement in any plot.

Bashary said the investigation would proceed cautiously in recognition of the work done by Emergency, which has operated in Afghanistan since 1999 and runs three operating theaters, a maternity hospital and 28 health centers.

Emergency has had a tense relationship with local authorities in violence-wracked Helmand, due in part to its policy of treating all patients, including those who may be Taliban.

Helmand's governor, Gulab Mangul, alleged Saturday that Taliban insurgents had paid hospital authorities $500,000 to kill him, but Bashary said the ministry could not confirm that charge.

Published by HT Syndication with permission from EKantipur.com. For more information on news feed please contact Sarabjit Jagirdar at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Copyright Kathmandu Post brought to you by HT Media Ltd.

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

5 Afghan deminers killed in roadside bombing.

KABUL, April 11 -- A bus carrying Afghans working for a U.S.-supported demining group was struck by a roadside bomb in Kandahar province Sunday, killing five workers and wounding 13 others.

Also Sunday, NATO said an Afghan soldier shot and lightly wounded a Polish soldier with whom he had been arguing. The Afghan soldier fled after the shooting and was being sought by Afghan and international forces.

Meanwhile, NATO reported a member of the international security force was killed by a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan. No other details were given in keeping with standard procedure.

The bus belonging to the Demining Agency for Afghanistan was struck early Sunday as it traveled through Kandahar province's Daman district, according to Mohammed Ibrahim, chief of medicine at Kandahar Hospital.

Roadside bombs are a signature weapon of the Taliban in their struggle against foreign forces and the Afghan government, but more often kill Afghan civilians. It wasn't clear if the blast was random or specifically targeted the demining agency, known as DAFA, which receives more than half its funding from the U.S. State Department, according to its Web site.

The group clears mines across southern Afghanistan that are a legacy of 25 years of near-continuous warfare and continue to kill scores of Afghans each year.

The unidentified Pole shot Saturday night at a joint command center in the eastern province of Ghazni was transferred to a medical facility for treatment, according to a NATO spokesman in Kabul, speaking on routine condition of anonymity.

The Ghazni base is headquarters of the 2,600 Polish troops stationed in Afghanistan as part of the NATO effort to root out Taliban remnants and extend the central government's remit into rural areas.

While rare, Afghan troop attacks on international forces risk damaging the trust between Afghan police and soldiers who work side-by-side with their foreign mentors on training and combat missions. An Afghan soldier killed a U.S. service member and wounded two Italian soldiers in December in the western province of Badghis, about one month after a rogue policeman in Helmand province shot and killed five British soldiers.

Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi said the shooting resulted from an argument between the two men, but details weren't immediately known. He said both had pulled weapons and fired, but only the Polish soldier was wounded. The whereabouts of the Afghan soldier weren't known, and it was possible he was hiding somewhere on the base, Azimi said.

"It seems to have been a fight and the soldier was operating on his own," Azimi said.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said the Afghan soldier had escaped, killing four Afghan soldiers in the process, and was now with the insurgents. The claim could not be verified, and the Taliban has a history of making false and exaggerated claims.

Also Sunday, Interior Ministry spokesman Zemari Bashary said investigators were questioning three Italian medical workers detained the day before as part of an investigation into an alleged plot to kill the governor of Helmand province. They were among nine people held after suicide bomb vests, hand grenades, pistols and explosives were discovered in a hospital storeroom in Helmand's capital Lashkar Gah.

"We need to question a number of people to find out who brought the materials to the hospital and for what purpose," Bashary said.

Emergency, the Milan-based organization that runs the hospital, has denied involvement in any plot.

Bashary said the investigation would proceed cautiously in recognition of the work done by Emergency, which has operated in Afghanistan since 1999 and runs three operating theaters, a maternity hospital and 28 health centers.

Emergency has had a tense relationship with local authorities in violence-wracked Helmand, due in part to its policy of treating all patients, including those who may be Taliban.

Helmand's governor, Gulab Mangul, alleged Saturday that Taliban insurgents had paid hospital authorities $500,000 to kill him, but Bashary said the ministry could not confirm that charge.

Published by HT Syndication with permission from EKantipur.com. For more information on news feed please contact Sarabjit Jagirdar at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Copyright Kathmandu Post brought to you by HT Media Ltd.

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

5 Afghan deminers killed in roadside bombing.

KABUL, April 11 -- A bus carrying Afghans working for a U.S.-supported demining group was struck by a roadside bomb in Kandahar province Sunday, killing five workers and wounding 13 others.

Also Sunday, NATO said an Afghan soldier shot and lightly wounded a Polish soldier with whom he had been arguing. The Afghan soldier fled after the shooting and was being sought by Afghan and international forces.

Meanwhile, NATO reported a member of the international security force was killed by a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan. No other details were given in keeping with standard procedure.

The bus belonging to the Demining Agency for Afghanistan was struck early Sunday as it traveled through Kandahar province's Daman district, according to Mohammed Ibrahim, chief of medicine at Kandahar Hospital.

Roadside bombs are a signature weapon of the Taliban in their struggle against foreign forces and the Afghan government, but more often kill Afghan civilians. It wasn't clear if the blast was random or specifically targeted the demining agency, known as DAFA, which receives more than half its funding from the U.S. State Department, according to its Web site.

The group clears mines across southern Afghanistan that are a legacy of 25 years of near-continuous warfare and continue to kill scores of Afghans each year.

The unidentified Pole shot Saturday night at a joint command center in the eastern province of Ghazni was transferred to a medical facility for treatment, according to a NATO spokesman in Kabul, speaking on routine condition of anonymity.

The Ghazni base is headquarters of the 2,600 Polish troops stationed in Afghanistan as part of the NATO effort to root out Taliban remnants and extend the central government's remit into rural areas.

While rare, Afghan troop attacks on international forces risk damaging the trust between Afghan police and soldiers who work side-by-side with their foreign mentors on training and combat missions. An Afghan soldier killed a U.S. service member and wounded two Italian soldiers in December in the western province of Badghis, about one month after a rogue policeman in Helmand province shot and killed five British soldiers.

Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi said the shooting resulted from an argument between the two men, but details weren't immediately known. He said both had pulled weapons and fired, but only the Polish soldier was wounded. The whereabouts of the Afghan soldier weren't known, and it was possible he was hiding somewhere on the base, Azimi said.

"It seems to have been a fight and the soldier was operating on his own," Azimi said.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said the Afghan soldier had escaped, killing four Afghan soldiers in the process, and was now with the insurgents. The claim could not be verified, and the Taliban has a history of making false and exaggerated claims.

Also Sunday, Interior Ministry spokesman Zemari Bashary said investigators were questioning three Italian medical workers detained the day before as part of an investigation into an alleged plot to kill the governor of Helmand province. They were among nine people held after suicide bomb vests, hand grenades, pistols and explosives were discovered in a hospital storeroom in Helmand's capital Lashkar Gah.

"We need to question a number of people to find out who brought the materials to the hospital and for what purpose," Bashary said.

Emergency, the Milan-based organization that runs the hospital, has denied involvement in any plot.

Bashary said the investigation would proceed cautiously in recognition of the work done by Emergency, which has operated in Afghanistan since 1999 and runs three operating theaters, a maternity hospital and 28 health centers.

Emergency has had a tense relationship with local authorities in violence-wracked Helmand, due in part to its policy of treating all patients, including those who may be Taliban.

Helmand's governor, Gulab Mangul, alleged Saturday that Taliban insurgents had paid hospital authorities $500,000 to kill him, but Bashary said the ministry could not confirm that charge.

Published by HT Syndication with permission from EKantipur.com. For more information on news feed please contact Sarabjit Jagirdar at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Copyright Kathmandu Post brought to you by HT Media Ltd.

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

$10 million settlement averts Dial sex harassment trial

About 100 women who say they suffered sexual harassment frombosses and co-workers at Dial's soap-making plant near Aurora willsplit a $10 million settlement, lawyers for Dial and the federalgovernment announced Tuesday.

The awards will average $100,000, with some of the most seriouslyvictimized women getting as much as $300,000.

For four years, the government has laid out its claims that men atthe plant made crude comments to women, groped them, offeredpromotions in exchange for sex--one even allegedly carved a penis outof a bar of soap and left it for a female co-worker.

Jury selection was supposed to start Monday for the federal trial.Instead, both sides …

THANK YOU, MS. KING.(OPINION)

The extraordinary thing about Kathleen King is not that she was run over by her own car on Monday.

It's that at 80, Ms. King was at work.

A volunteer for Meals on Wheels, Ms. King is one of some 500 volunteers who regularly deliver food for 1,000 people a day in Albany County. One colleague describes her this way: "A spunky, spunky older lady."

Actually, in a time when people are living longer and staying more fit, she isn't as much a rarity as one might think. Thursday, Senior Services of Albany will recognize volunteers with its Third Age Awards; their average age is 80, with at least one in her 90s. Still, it's remarkable that at a time in life …

BRIEFING.(LIFE & LEISURE)

On TV sitcoms, reality hits home Are the homes that serve as settings for TV sitcoms for real? Mostly yes, Worth magazine says. It estimates the ``Frasier'' furnishings at $40,000, plus tens of thousands of dollars worth of art. But the show's producers estimate Frasier earns $350,000 from his psychiatric practice and radio talk show, so he can afford it. On ``Dharma & Greg,'' the decor cost about $30,000, which is exactly what Dharma supposedly earns walking dogs and teaching yoga. Pillows stand the test of time Many of you keep your pillows long past their prime. So says a DuPont Co. survey, which found that, on average, consumers buy pillows every five or six years. …

Nepal prime minister resigns amid Maoist pressure

Nepal's prime minister announced his resignation Wednesday, bowing to pressure from opposition Maoists who have been demanding his ouster in parliament and on the streets.

Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal said in a televised speech that he decided to resign to end political deadlock and shore up the peace process that ended years of Maoist insurgency in the Himalayan nation.

The Maoists, the former communist rebels who won the most seats in the 2008 elections, have been protesting for months demanding his resignation and a new national government headed by them.

"I had frequently urged the political parties including the Maoists to find an …

A solvent model for simulations of peptides in bilayers. II. Membrane-spanning (alpha-helices)

ABSTRACT We describe application of the implicit solvation model (see the first paper of this series), to Monte Carlo simulations of several peptides in bilayer- and water-mimetic environments, and in vacuum. The membrane-bound peptides chosen were transmembrane segments A and B of bacteriorhodopsin, the hydrophobic segment of surfactant lipoprotein, and magainin2. Their conformations in membrane-like media are known from the experiments. Also, molecular dynamics study of surfactant lipoprotein with different explicit solvents has been reported (Kovacs, H., A. E. Mark, J. Johansson, and W. F. van Gunsteren. 1995. J. Mol. Biol. 247:808-822). The principal goal of this work is to compare …

Bigband, Triveni deal. (NCTA Briefs).(BigBand Networks, Triveni Digital)(Brief Article)

BigBand Networks and Triveni Digital are co-developing a system designed to allow cable operators to deliver off-air DTV signals. Components are Triveni Digital's ATSC-Cable StreamBridge metadata groomer …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

FOR THE RECORD.(Business)

BUILDING LOANS

SARATOGA COUNTY

Lender: Ballston Spa National Bank

Borrower: WBMD Group LLC

Location: 20 Prospect St., Ballston Spa

Purpose: Property improvements

Amount: $500,000

Recorded: June 1

SCHENECTADY COUNTY

Lender: Pioneer Savings Bank

Borrower: Development at Center City LLC

Location: State Street, Schenectady

Purpose: Property improvements

Amount: $2.5 million

Recorded: May 20

COMMERCIAL DEEDS

aLBANY cOUNTY

Seller: Mark Jeram and Christopher Baynes

Buyer: CDP Development LLC, 11 Arbor View Drive, Ballston Lake

Amount: $127,000

Property: 140 Forts Ferry Road, Latham

Recorded: May 27

Seller: Phyllis Rubinstein, Audrey Greenbert and Beatruce Levine

Buyer: State Street One …

Albany county calendar.(Capital Region)(Calendar)

TODAY

CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

Aerobics

Where: Albany YMCA, 274 Washington Ave., Albany When: 6-7 p.m. Cost: Free Contact: 449-7196, Ext. 15 or http://www.cdymca.org Notes: Offered every Wednesday. For members.

Making Ends Meet

Where: Albany Public Library, 161 Washington Ave., Albany When: 7-9 p.m. Cost: Free. Contact: 765-3557 or http://www.albany

publiclibrary.org Notes: Learn ways to reduce credit card debt and control spending. Registration required.

COMMUNITY

Adoption information

Where: Parsons Child and Family Center, 60 Academy Road, Albany When: 7-9 p.m. Contact: 426-2888 or http://www.parsons

center.org Notes: For adults interested in becoming foster parents or to adopt children; registration requested.

Review library designs

Where: Howe Branch, Albany Public Library, Schuyler and Broad streets, Albany When: 7 p.m. Contact: 427-4300 or http://www.albanypublic

library.org Notes: Albany residents can review draft designs for new and/or renovated branches in five …

TROY MAN CHARGED WITH ABUSING 2 GIRLS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: TIM O'BRIEN Staff writer

TROY A city man has been arrested on charges of sexually abusing two children.

Jack D. Kent, 36, of 1 Phelan Court Apartments was arrested Tuesday evening at the police station. He is accused of sexually abusing two girls one 8 years old and the other 10 four years ago.

Kent is charged with three counts of first-degree sodomy, one count of first-degree rape, and one count of first-degree sexual abuse. All of the counts are felonies.

Kent was arraigned before City Court Judge Henry R. Bauer, who ordered him held without bail. He is due back in court Monday for a hearing. A preliminary order of …

Hurricane Isabel Takes Its Toll On Virginia Cable Systems.

Byline: K. C. NEEL

Hurricane Isabel may have only been a Category 1 storm, but it cut a swath of damage that took experienced cable executives by surprise.

"The damage is the worst I've ever seen, and I've lived through hurricanes and earthquakes," says Thom Prevette, VP, governmental affairs, for Cox Communications in Hampton Roads, Va.

Most operators began preparing for the storm at least a week before Isabel's arrival. Adelphia's VP, operations, Dell Hanley and his team secured equipment that could withstand the wind and rain and lined up contractors to repair any resultant damage.

Cox had 3,000 standby generators at the ready to keep its …

Swedish prince visits Delaware on royal trip to US

WILMINGTON, Delaware (AP) — U.S. officials are celebrating the ties between Delaware and Sweden in royal style.

Prince Daniel, the husband of Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden, was to be the guest of honor Thursday afternoon at a reception in Wilmington, the capital of the U.S. state of Delaware. The prince's visit highlights the historic ties between Sweden and Delaware, which date to 17th-century colonial …

[ ON THE CUBS ]

PITTSBURGH -- There could be no better city for Kerry Wood topitch in than Cincinnati, where he is 10-0 in 11 career starts.Overall against the Reds, Wood is 12-3 with a 2.74 ERA.

It won't be a walk in the park, however, as Wood seeks his firstvictory tonight. The Reds have opened the season with a 5-1 homerecord.

Wood is 0-1 with a 5.84 ERA in his first two starts. He has 13strikeouts in 121/3 innings but also has walked seven and hit twobatters.

Like I talked to him, it's still spring training for him becausehe only had two [Cactus League] starts," Cubs manager Dusty Bakersaid. The main thing is to tell him not to worry. We know Woody hasdone …

Singing in the rain: most Asians remain confident they will achieve their financial goals.(Life: Asian Markets)(Survey)(Statistical data)

A strong savings tradition has shielded Asians from the global financial storm and kept confidence levels high for meeting long-term financial goals in most of the region's countries.

HSBC Insurance (Asia) Ltd. found in a survey that Asians saved at least one-third of monthly personal income for savings, insurance, pensions and investment.

Mainland Chinese saved 40% of their income every month; South Koreans, 36%; and Indians, Singaporeans and Taiwanese, 35%, according to HSBC's survey. The study was conducted in April with 2,974 respondents, age 35 to 65 years, in China, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore.

Asian consumers are the "king of …