The Midwest, referred to as the Rust Belt since the wrenching adjustments of the early 1980s, has recently been performing more like a well-tuned machine than a region in decline.1 Its remarkable turnaround has been widely reported.2 The Midwest economy performed above the national average during the early 1990s recession. This was a remarkable achievement for a region that is dominated by manufacturing and the production of durables, sectors that tend to contract at a faster pace than the national economy during an economic downturn. We see further signs of the region's comeback in an unemployment rate that has been below the national average in each of the past four years-in each of the …
четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.
Consumer confidence in January further darkens
A private research group says that Americans' mood about the economy has darkened even further in January.
The Conference Board said Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index edged lower in January to 37.7 from a revised 38.6 in December. That's a historic low for the widely watched …
SIGMUND FREUD // Giant of the mind still towers over his critics
Our truly great are seminal thinkers, who bet their lives ongrand insights, who discover and map new universes. They dare all inthe name of art or science, and they alter our world, so that everygeneration is transformed, and sees these giants fresh.
No great man or woman risked more than Sigmund Freud, or, it maybe argued, suffered more in one embattled lifetime - rejection,ridicule, betrayal, persecution, cancer, exile - and above all,mistranslation and misinterpretation. He has been dead almost half acentury; he has been reviled and revised, in and out of fashion,mourned and mocked; but his name is a household …
среда, 14 марта 2012 г.
Obama text on debt deal with congressional leaders
WASHINGTON (AP) — Text of President Barack Obama's remarks on the debt-ceiling deal with congressional leaders, as provided by the White House:
___
Good evening. There are still some very important votes to be taken by members of Congress, but I want to announce that the leaders of both parties, in both chambers, have reached an agreement that will reduce the deficit and avoid default — a default that would have had a devastating effect on our economy.
The first part of this agreement will cut about $1 trillion in spending over the next 10 years — cuts that both parties had agreed to early on in this process. The result would be the lowest level of annual domestic …
Misheard comment leads to evacuation of nuclear power plant
Hundreds of employees were evacuated from a Wisconsin nuclear power plant for several hours Tuesday because a clerk at a nearby convenience store misunderstood a comment by a new plant worker.
A man entered the store about 7:15 a.m. and asked for directions to the Point Beach nuclear power plant, the clerk told police in Two Rivers. As the man was leaving, the clerk heard him say he "came to blow up the place," authorities said.
She called police, who tracked down the man's rental car at the power …
Proud to serve on jury
I was recently called for jury duty in Will County, for the first time.
After reporting on my first day, I was picked for a trial and thought, "This is really going to take away from my time." But once I got into the courtroom and the judge explained everything and thanked everybody for showing up, I …
PICTURES OF HOME
PICTURES OF HOME
Janet Al Muradi's "Alleyways of My Memories" at Davies-Reid
Among the pieces that hang this First Thursday at Davies-Reid is Village of the North, an impressionistic bird's-eye view of the small town in Northern Iraq where artist Janet Al Muradi was born and raised.
It's from her most recent collection, "Alleyways of My Memories," most of which are acrylic on canvas or paper and have been painted from photographs Al Muradi has taken. Her work is often architectural, depicting landscapes or buildings, from important civic structures to dilapidated doorways.
Born in a tiny mountainous village in northern Iraq, Al Muradi was raised by her …
Barcelona Striker Samuel Eto'o apologizes for head-butting journalist
FC Barcelona striker Samuel Eto'o went on TV to publicly apologize to a journalist he head-butted last week.
According to local media, Eto'o head-butted journalist Philippe Boney after he and other reporters walked out of a press conference last Friday. The reporters were protesting that the team had denied them access to training …
Lewis leads Bison to Region 7 championship
HUNTINGTON - Austin Lewis was just one brick shy of a wall.
And not a short wall, at that.
But did Buffalo High's standout sophomore point guard let alittle thing like missing his first eight 3-pointers dissuade himfrom shooting?
"You don't always start well," Lewis said, rationalizing. "Thatcan change. You've got to have confidence.
"They'll start falling."
So, Lewis kept on shooting.
And a funny happened on his way to a wall ... those bricks turnedinto butterflies that found nothing but net.
In fact, Lewis scored the last eight points in a pivotal thirdquarter that gave Buffalo (17-6) a lead it never relinquished in a69-52 win over …
High-school vote heavy for Lynch-Walsh
High-school vote heavy for Lynch-Walsh
Deborah Lynch-Walsh won an overwhelming majority of high school teachers and more than half of elementary school teachers in her victory last month over Tom Reece, president of the Chicago Teachers Union.
A CATALYST analysis of school-by-school vote totals shows that Lynch-Walsh won a whopping 72 percent of the high school vote and 53 percent of the elementary school vote. Overall, she got 57 percent of all votes cast in the election.
Traditionally, high school teachers have shown more militance, which grew as the School Board swept into a number of low-performing schools with its reconstitution and intervention programs. …
Dubai investors bids for Charlton football club
A Dubai group is looking to buy League Championship football club Charlton Athletic after rejecting approaches from other clubs in England seeking investment.
Zabeel Investments made an "indicative cash offer" Friday that is subject to due diligence, the London club said.
"Zabeel Investments had been looking at the opportunity to invest in a leading English football club and had been monitoring the situation at Charlton Athletic Football Club closely," a statement said. "In spite of being approached by various English football clubs as well as a number of well known clubs in Europe and South America, Zabeel Investments believes …
Today's birthdays
* Actress Barbara Rush is 81. Actress Dyan Cannon is 71. Countrysinger Kathy Forester of the Forester Sisters is 53. GuitaristBernard Sumner of New Order (and Joy Division) is 52. Actress AnnMagnuson is 52. Country singer Patty Loveless is 51. Singer MichaelStipe of …
Underwriters exercise option for Macerich shares
Regional mall developer Macerich Co. said Friday that the underwriters of its public offering of 12 million shares of common stock exercised their overallotment option to buy an additional 1.8 million shares of common stock.
That brings the total number of shares sold to 13.8 million at a price of $29 per share. The offering is expected to close on Tuesday.
Macerich plans to use the offering's net proceeds to repay part of the outstanding balance under its $1.5 billion revolving line of credit.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. and J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. acted as joint underwriters for the offering.
Macerich shares fell 12 cents to $30.94 in morning trading Friday.
вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.
Lottery
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- CASH 4 LIFE
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No problem found on flight diverted to Fargo, ND
FARGO, N.D. (AP) — A commuter jet was diverted to Fargo on Sunday after a member of the flight crew mistakenly thought a passenger had tampered with a fire-detection device in the lavatory.
Pinnacle Airlines Flight 4375 was headed to Grand Forks from Minneapolis when the pilot requested to land in Fargo about 10 a.m. CDT. Fargo Police Lt. Joel Vettel said the pilot decided to land after being notified of the crew member's suspicions.
The Bombardier CRJ200 jet was carrying 20 passengers and three crew members, Pinnacle spokeswoman Amy Howell said.
The jet was moved to a remote location at the Fargo airport, where passengers deplaned. A search for explosives onboard turned up nothing, Transportation Security Administration spokeswoman Sarah Horowitz said.
No arrests were made. The FBI questioned a man who had used the lavatory most recently. Two people traveling with him also were interviewed.
The fire-detection device was inspected and found to be working properly, Vettel said.
The passengers, including the ones questioned, were bused the 75 miles to Grand Forks.
UK's top court to hear case of hacking private eye
LONDON (AP) — Britain's Supreme Court says it will hear the case of a private investigator who is fighting to keep secret who told him to hack phones on behalf of the News of the World tabloid.
Glenn Mulcaire was jailed briefly in 2007 for eavesdropping on the phones of royal aides, and police have found the names of hundreds of other potential victims in his notes.
Comedian Steve Coogan is suing Mulcaire and Rupert Murdoch's newspaper company, and wants Mulcaire to reveal who asked him to intercept voicemail messages.
Mulcaire wants to use the traditional privilege against self-incrimination to avoid doing so, but earlier this month the Court of Appeal ordered him to disclose the names.
The Supreme Court said Wednesday it would hear Mulcaire's case on May 9 and 10.
Supplier quotas: Who's kidding whom?
In recent years, the University of Michigan and numerous other American colleges have been embroiled in controversy over the acceptance policies for incoming students. It involves the affirmative action policies meant to insure balanced integration of races across college campuses. Supporters of the policies insist it is the only way to guarantee an equal shot for minorities. Opponents claim it's just more discrimination in reverse.
In the auto industry, we have our own version of this scenario. It's being played out in selection of suppliers.
It's not unusual to hear suppliers complain about how hard it is to develop new business with auto companies these days. Suppliers can lose business because they lack the required size, don't have a global presence or are without the socalled black-box design/manufacturing/delivery capability. Even more difficult is knowing the work was awarded to a competitor because it was a minority supplier and there were quotas to meet Worse yet is knowing your capability or quality was better than theirs.
Any honest purchasing executive will admit what a dilemma this is for the automakers. All the auto companies sincerely would like to see diversity in their supply base. Over the next few years purchases from minority suppliers will reach $9 to $10 billion, with a goal by the OEMs to source at least 5% to minority-owned companies.
Certainly the manufacturers have had a lot of prodding from various political factions and individuals, such as the Rev Jesse Jackson, to do more. Agreements have been struck with the U.S. Small Business Administration. Unfortunately, meeting the objectives has been difficult due to a shortage of "qualified," high-quality minority suppliers.
On a recent tour of a minority-owned supplier, we were shown a fairly large module assembly the company was shipping to several vehicle assembly plants. Each module was valued at over $200 and included stamping, molded parts, fasteners, paint, wiring and various other brackets and small parts. Ironically, the only work being done by this minority supplier was assembling the various pieces, sequencing and packaging them for shipment. All fabrication was done by suppliers selected by the OEMs and directed to ship to the minority supplier for assembly.
Although the total value added by the supplier was minimal, the OEMs were able to take credit for the total amount of over $200 per shipment toward their minority supplier credit Who's fooling whom?
The proponents of minority supplier sourcing should consider such practices a slap in the face. They are not benefiting from the jobs that would be created if the entire work was theirs. They aren't being trusted to do any of the more difficult work that ultimately determines cost and quality.
The above situation is certainly not the story with every minority supplier in the auto industry. We all know there are numerous minority-owned companies with outstanding performance, who deserve the contracts they have secured based on quality, cost and delivery performance. But there are still too many of the above cases where suppliers have received work based solely on their race or national origin. But they lose as much as the Ultimate Customer.
Diversity in the supply base is important and must be cultivated by every OEM. But selection must ultimately be performance-based. Efforts must be stepped up to help these suppliers through supplier-assistance programs. That includes conducting workshops on lean manufacturing, integrating them in training and education programs, involving them in product and process development, and helping with recruiting and new employee training.
Patronizing minority suppliers with low-skill assembly or sequencing work, simply for the purpose of fulfilling quotas, ultimately does little to improve their situation. Investing time and resources to improve the performance of all suppliers will guarantee work goes to those whose performance alone warrants it.
[Author Affiliation]
Ron Harbour is president of Harbour and Assoc., manufacturing consultants in Troy, Mich.
'A Tree Grows in Brooklyn' flourishes anew
NEW YORK, New York (AP) — Does a tree still grow in Brooklyn? A poignant revival of a musical about struggling upward from poverty reminds us that yes, it can.
The original musical, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," was based on the nostalgic, best-selling 1943 novel of the same name by Betty Smith, about her impoverished early 20th-century childhood.
Smith adapted her book with George Abbott for a Broadway musical, which was burnished by Arthur Schwartz's melodies and lyrics by Dorothy Fields, and the 1951 production had a 267-performance run on Broadway.
The delightful Peccadillo Theater Company revival, currently performing off-Broadway at the Theatre at St. Clement's in New York City, is based on an Elinor Renfield version that's been further refined by Susan DiLallo and Dan Wackerman, who also directed. Wackerman has found a talented cast to perform this unusual mix of comedy and melodrama, which has been rarely performed over the years.
Set in 1902 and 1914 Williamsburg, the story focuses on the courtship and marriage of Johnny and Katie Nolan, parents of bookworm Francie, (a perfectly charming Keaton Whittaker) who was the teenage narrator of the original book. Whittaker provides some narration for Act 1, then appears as 12-year-old Francie in the second act.
Handsome ne'er-do-well Johnny, a singing waiter with a drinking problem, is played with an abundance of charm by Jim Stanek, whose strong tenor and expressiveness are well-suited to this role. His soaring voice is masterful on solos such as "Don't Be Afraid," and "I'll Buy You a Star."
Elizabeth Loyacano also sings beautifully as Katie, particularly the heartfelt ballad, "Make the Man Love Me." Katie's youthful hope and sweet love harden into bitter coldness during the years she spends in angry poverty with her unrealistic, alcoholic husband.
The comedic character of Cissy, Katie's older sister, confused the original, much more melodramatic musical, when Abbott beefed up the role to showcase Shirley Booth. In Peccadillo's more balanced version, Cissy is portrayed with brass and sass by Klea Blackhurst, who ably belts out the show's best-known comedic tune, "He Had Refinement." Blackhurst gives a warm, loving air to her role as Francie's wistfully romantic and often very funny aunt.
This adaptation is replete with upbeat musical and dance numbers in the first act, such as "I'm Like a New Broom" and "Look Who's Dancin'," all ably performed by the ensemble, as the future still looks mostly bright for newlyweds Johnny and Katie.
But things turn darker in Act 2, 10 years later, as Johnny continues his downward slide with nightly drinking and unrealistic ambitions. His surrealistic hallucination, "Nightmare Interlude," presages his maudlin end, but the musical's final scene has an upbeat focus on Francie's hopeful future.
Four onstage musicians, led by Wiliam Waldrop on piano, provide full and rousing sound, seated atop Joseph Spirito's simple, efficient set. Colorful costumes by Amy C. Bradshaw brighten the dance numbers and firmly anchor the period.
The lovely songs by Schwartz and Fields hold up extremely well, and Peccadillo presents an appealing, spirited presentation of a classic American story.
___
Online:
http://thepeccadillo.com
Cleanup Continues After Northeast Storm
NEW YORK - Cleanup crews were out early Saturday to clearing snow and ice from Manhattan streets in preparation for the city's St. Patrick's Day parade, a day after a heavy storm buffeted the East Coast and caused the cancellation of more than 1,000 flights.
Forecasters said the sleet, snow and freezing rain that pelted the East Coast Friday had tailed off, and the National Weather Service canceled a winter storm warning for New York City and the surrounding areas.
"We got the whole gamut there," Nelson Vaz, a meteorologist with the weather service, said early Saturday. He called the weather "a pretty impressive late-winter storm."
The storm dumped up to six inches of snow on parts of Maryland and forecasters said more than a foot could have fallen in upstate New York. It was being blamed for at least five traffic deaths in New Jersey and three in Pennsylvania, authorities said.
JetBlue canceled nearly three-fourths of its scheduled flights on Friday to avoid the criticism and chaos that followed a Valentine's Day storm, when the company was slow to cancel flights and some passengers were stranded in planes for hours.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said more than 1,400 flights were canceled Friday at the region's three major airports because of the storm.
American, United, Delta and Continental also canceled flights, and there were delays reported in at airports in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Albany, N.Y., Baltimore-Washington and Boston.
At the airport in Newark, N.J., Karen Opdyke, 48, was trying to get to Miami for a cruise with her husband, three young children and mother after their 9 a.m. flight was canceled.
"We got on the plane, we got off the plane. We got on the plane and off the plane," Opdyke said as she balanced a crying child next to a pile of luggage. She wasn't having any luck rescheduling. "There's nothing available all week."
New Jersey state police had responded to about 1,300 reports of accidents or spinoffs on the roads by late Friday afternoon, state police Sgt. Stephen Jones said.
In Delaware, state police said sleet and ice were responsible for more than 100 accidents, and a vehicle in President George W. Bush's motorcade traveling from Washington to Camp David collided on Friday with another car along a slushy Interstate in Urbana, Md. No one was injured.
The storm also forced school cancellations throughout the Northeast and prompted some government agencies to send workers home early.
In Hartford, Conn. and York, Pa., officials postponed their annual St. Patrick's Day parades. New York did not cancel its parade, and officials were expecting up to 2 million people to attend.
Winter officially ends at the vernal equinox Tuesday evening, but climatologists said it was not unusual for storms to arrive well into March.
"Usually you have the biggest storms in March," said meteorologist Kevin Lipton in Albany, N.Y.
On Thursday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported that this winter was the warmest worldwide since record keeping began in 1880.
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Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz in New York, Jeffrey Gold and Janet Frankston Lorin in Newark, N.J., Rebecca Santana in Trenton, N.J., and Michael Virtanen in Albany, N.Y. contributed to this report.
Iranian carpet tradition faces modern pressures
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Deep in Tehran's carpet bazaar, merchants and laborers occupy chambers that have changed little over the centuries. But Iran's carpet industry now faces some modern pressures.
The country's more than 1 million weavers — producing an average of $500 million in exports a year — are fighting against competitors in major workshops in places such as Pakistan and China.
The U.S. also imposed a ban on importing Iran's Persian carpets in 2010 in response to Iran's nuclear policies. The United States had been a major target market for Iranian carpets after the embargo was lifted in 2000.
Persian carpets, however, remain one of Iran's most lucrative exports after oil. Some high-quality carpets sell for tens of thousands of dollars.
One of traditional signs of the financial situation of Iranian families has been the kind of carpets used at home. One square feet of an ordinary Iranian carpet is about $20 in the local market — which corresponds to about five gallons (20 liters) of milk or eight gallons (30 liters) of fuel in Iran.
WASTE DATA IN SCOTLAND SHOW THAT 181,000 TONS WERE COMPOSTED IN 2005
The Sixth Waste Data Digest published by Scottish Environment Protection Agency details data collected on controlled waste in Scotland. This survey was designed to allow the progress in reaching targets for recycling and composting of municipal waste to be monitored, reports a 2007 issue of Warmer Bulletin. Recyclables were collected through curbside and drop-off programs which consisted of 159 local recycling centers and 2,016 sites.
In 2005/06, 181,450 tons of residuals collected by Scottish local authorities were composted. In addition, roughly 8,000 tons were disposed of before composting, and 7,000 tons were used as daily cover for landfill sites. Majority of waste sent for composting was green waste (157,499 tons) with the remainder being mixed organics (16,664 tons) and mixed MSW (14.321 tons). Most residuals sent for composting originated from curbside collection of green waste, local authority recycling centers, and local parks.
понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.
Iran Rejects Criticism of Election
Iran dismissed Western criticism of its parliamentary elections, pointing Monday to 60 percent turnout in an election that saw conservatives win a majority, although reformists were largely barred.
Reformists say the deck was stacked against them because the cleric-led Guardian Council threw out most of their candidates on grounds they were insufficiently loyal to the values of Islam and Iran's 1979 revolution.
The United States called the election "cooked" because of the disqualifications. The European Union said the vote was "neither fair nor free" and that the barring of candidates was a "grave violation" of international norms.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said the European comments were "hasty and biased judgments" and that the EU should "reconsider its unjust and unconstructive approach" toward Iran.
The election "observed all provisions of the constitution and other related laws of the country and was approved by an absolute majority of the Iranian nation," he said, according to the state news agency IRNA.
Conservatives maintained their hold on the 290-member parliament. But their camp is split between hard-line allies of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and supporters who have become sharp critics of the president. They accuse him of fumbling efforts to fix the economy and of acting unilaterally and brashly on domestic issues without consultations with others.
Reformists, who seek greater democracy in Iran and closer ties with the West, appeared likely to at least retain the small bloc they held in the outgoing parliament.
With final results reported from all races except those in Tehran, 113 of parliament's 290 seats went to conservatives. Approximately 70 went to a list dominated by pro-Ahmadinejad hard-liners and the rest to a slate led by his conservative critics, according to individual results announced by state television and the official news agency IRNA.
The numbers are not firm because some winners ran on both sides.
Reformists won 31 seats, according to the results. Another 39 winners were independents whose political leanings were not immediately known. Five other seats were dedicated to Iran's Jewish, Zoroastrian and Christian minorities.
Reformist leaders said at least 14 winning independents are pro-reform, bringing their bloc to 45 seats so far. That would be around the number of the reformists in the outgoing parliament.
Races for more than 70 seats will go to a run-off vote set for April or May, and reformists are participating in many of them.
Results for Tehran's 30 seats were expected later Monday. Ahmadinejad's allies were winning at least 14, according to partial results, IRNA reported. The rest were likely to head to a second-round vote, in which reformists could pick up several seats.
Death toll in Baghdad car blasts climbs to 147
Iraqi hospital and police officials say that at least 147 people have been killed in Iraq's deadliest bombings in over two years.
More than 700 people were also injured in the deadly blasts, which tore through the heart of downtown Baghdad on Sunday, hundreds of yards from the heavily fortified Green Zone.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
The deadly blasts appeared to target two government buildings _ the Ministry of Justice and the Baghdad Provincial Council _ and tens of government employees were among the dead.
Who's Who Publishing to produce 100 Black Men publication
DETROIT - 100 Black Men of America, Inc. has partnered with Real Times Media and its subsidiary, Who's Who Publishing, to create a comprehensive national publication chronicling the accomplishments of the organization. The publication entitled, "MANNING UP! A celebration of 25 Years of Achievement within 100 Black Men of America, Inc.," will be unveiled during the 100 Black Men of American Chapter Summit in December.
Supporting the mission of 100 Black Men, "Black men giving real time to positively impact the development of youth in our [African American] community." MANNING UP! will highlight how the organization has continued to improve the quality of life in communities across the nation while enhancing educational and economic opportunities for all African Americans.
"Through this partnership with Who's Who Publishing, 100 Black Men is able to put a face with the names of the men who are delivering upon the organization's promise in grand fashion." said Albert E. Dotson, Jr., board chairman of the organization. "Our 25th anniversary year is a perfect time for us to tell our story."
The book will also celebrate the organization's founders, highlight today's contemporaries who are maintaining its vision, profile emerging leaders who will carry on the legacy and contain bios and photos of individuals representing each of the chapters.
"As a company that focuses on African American achievement, we are excited to have this opportunity to chronicle the history of the 100 Black Men and be a part of their 25th anniversary," said Hiram E. Jackson, CEO, Real Times Media and Who's Who Publishing. "The 100 Black Men of America has done outstanding work in our community and we look forward to working with them to ensure they receive the recognition that they deserve."
Baldwin Faces Biggest Test of Career
BOSTON He's up against the Green Monster, a lethal offense andthe burden of breaking a four-game losing streak.
Like James Baldwin needed any more pressure.
"Definitely, I'll be nervous," Baldwin said. "But that'snatural. Hopefully after the first pitch, I'll get that out of theway."
After waiting two seasons at Class AAA Nashville, Baldwin, 23,makes his major-league debut today against the Boston Red Sox.
And he'll be asked to do something no other Sox starter has done- last more than five innings and win a baseball game.
"This game is definitely going to be big," Baldwin said. "It'llmean a lot to this team, and a lot to me. I've been waiting forthis opportunity for a long time."
Baldwin will battle rookie Frankie Rodriguez, who was given thestart after Tim VanEgmond was placed on the 15-day disabled list.
FAREWELL, FENWAY? Red Sox owner John Harrington said FenwayPark has become economically obsolete, and hopes to move out of the83-year-old stadium by 2001. Fenway's seating capacity of 33,871 isthe lowest in the major leagues, and Harrington is looking torelocate in South Boston.
"I liken this place to Wrigley Field," manager Gene Lamont said."I'd hate to see it go."
A REMINDER: While their team faltered again Saturday, there werea few performances on Friday that would make any Sox fan cringe.
Jack McDowell pitched seven innings to earn the win in hisYankees debut and Joey Cora hit a home run in Seattle. And MickeyTettleton hit two home runs for the Rangers. Tettleton signed forthe same price as Chris Sabo.
"You can't look back at those things," Lamont said. "But I washappy for Joey. I was probably Joey's biggest booster here."
RUFF GOING: After walking six of the 14 batters he faced Friday,Scott Ruffcorn has a 16.20 ERA in two appearances this season.
"You try to keep putting him in situations where he cansucceed," Lamont said. "You can't wait forever, but with a guy likeScott, you try to wait as long as you can because you know he has alot of potential."
Bill designed to kill off tax refund loans
Condemning what he called a "parasitic service," an Evanston statesenator has introduced legislation he hopes will make it impossibleto offer tax refund anticipation loans in Illinois.
A bill proposed by state Sen. Jeff Schoenberg (D-Evanston) andIllinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan does not ban refundanticipation loans, but could make them too expensive for companieslike H&R Block and Jackson Hewitt to make.
The law would cap the annual interest rate at 36 percent.Currently the annual rates are between 40 and 700 percent, notcounting administrative fees, according to the National Consumer LawCenter. The proposed law would also prohibit tax preparers from usingthe Earned Income Tax Credit to secure refund anticipation loans.
"Paying your own money to borrow your own money is a bad idea,"said Madigan, who along with Schoenberg announced the bill Tuesday --10 days before the April 15 deadline for filing federal income taxes.
Tax preparation services say consumers want the loans, and thatthey provide plenty of information to let people know what they'rebuying.
A refund anticipation loan, or RAL, is a short-term loan backed bya tax refund. The loan lasts seven to 14 days until the InternalRevenue Service refund covers the loan. The average cost of a rapidrefund is $100 -- paid by taxpayers to receive their refunds a weekor two early.
Consumer groups have spoken out against RALs as being similar topayday loans -- short-term, high-interest loans designed to wringmoney out of the poor.
The IRS found that 79 percent of RAL recipients had incomes of$35,000 or less. More than half of all RAL borrowers claim the EarnedIncome Tax Credit, which was designed to help the working poor,according to the National Consumer Law Center.
More than 12 million Americans took out refund anticipation loansin 2003, paying $1.4 billion in loan and other fees. Seventy percentof RAL borrowers didn't know they'd taken out a loan, the NCLC found.
John Hewitt, president and CEO of Liberty Tax Services, said therate cap would kill RALs in Illinois, because fees cover the cost ofdelinquencies. He said that 1.5 percent of RALs aren't paid off byeither the IRS or the borrower.
Hewitt said if such a law were passed, it would be repealedbecause consumers want the loans. "Wait until they hear from angrytaxpayers who can't get their money quickly," Hewitt said. "It's abit short-sighted."
In 2004, 16 percent of Liberty customers opted for RALs, comparedwith 35.5 percent for Jackson Hewitt and 26.6 percent for H&R Block.
U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) has introduced legislation thatwould prohibit tax preparers from selling RALs to families whoreceive the Earned Income Tax Credit.
Low-income people who need help filing their taxes can call theCenter for Economic Progress at (312) 252-0280.
Thompson Warns of al-Qaida Threats in US
SIOUX CITY, Iowa - Republican Fred Thompson said Friday that terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden is "more symbolism than anything else" as the presidential hopeful warned of possible greater al-Qaida threats within the United States.
As a new video surfaced from bin Laden days before the sixth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Thompson focused on the broader war on terrorism and the Iraq conflict. He argued that not only are the United States and Iraqi forces making progress in Iraq, but that public support for the war is increasing.
The new video of bin Laden is his first in three years. Thompson played down its release in talking to reporters on his second day of campaigning in Iowa.
"Bin Laden being in the mountains of Pakistan or Afghanistan is not as important as there are probably al-Qaida operatives inside the United States of America," Thompson said.
Bin Laden is considered the man behind the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people. The former Tennessee senator and actor argued that "bin Laden is more symbolism than anything else. I think it demonstrates to people once again that we're in a global war."
Thompson said the al-Qaida leader and the Iraq war must be seen as part of the larger war on terrorism.
"It's one that bin Laden and people like him are heading up and we need to catch him and we surely need to deal with him, but if he disappeared tomorrow we still have this problem. If Iraq disappeared tomorrow, we'd still have this problem," Thompson said.
Later in the day, and after Democrats had been critical of his earlier remarks, Thompson took a much tougher stance. "Apparently Osama bin Laden has crawled out of his cave long enough to send another video and he is getting a lot of attention," he said at a rally in Mason City. "He ought to be caught and killed."
Thompson maintained, however, that killing bin Laden would not end the terrorist threat.
The release of the bin Laden video drew a strong response from two of Thompson's rivals, Arizona Sen. John McCain and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
"Osama bin Laden and his henchmen must be hunted down - and as president, I will," McCain said in a statement. "My presidency will be al-Qaida's worst nightmare."
Campaigning in Florida, Giuliani said it's "a very, very important objective to capture him and take him out."
Among the Democratic presidential candidates, former Sen. John Edwards said, "Fred Thompson should know better. Responsible candidates for president talk about real solutions that will make America safer from terrorism. They don't ignore the fact that George Bush's policies have only made the threat of terrorism worse."
On Iraq, Thompson defended his support for the war and contended that progress has been made months after President Bush sent in 30,000 more combat troops. The American people, he said, recognize that the situation has improved.
"I think you're already seeing a change in perception as better news comes out of Iraq," Thompson said. "I think the American people will come to that view as they see things develop. We are finally on the right track in Iraq and we're making progress."
Asked whether the U.S. should have focused on getting bin Laden instead of going to war in Iraq, Thompson said: "It's not an either or situation. Saddam Hussein was on the cusp of having defeated the United Nations and the free world and the United States. He had certainly had weapons of mass destruction and the capability of reviving his nuclear program."
During his second day as an officially declared candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, Thompson sounded his trademark conservative themes, focusing on limited government, gun rights, opposition to abortion and tougher immigration laws.
"If we catch illegal immigrants who are here they need to be deported," Thompson said during a stop in Sioux City. "If they want to get in line to come back in the right way let them get in line."
When asked by reporters about gay marriage, Thompson said he supports a traditional view of marriage as being between a man and a woman, but he did not criticize gays and lesbians.
"I'm not going to pass judgment on several million of my fellow citizens," Thompson said. "I think anybody who knows me knows how I feel about the importance of the family. A president of the United States should not go out of their way to castigate or pass judgment on a large segment of people."
Earlier in the day, Thompson defended his wife's role in his campaign, saying she has only been doing what he had asked her to do.
"If some people who got their feelings hurt anonymously now want to go after her instead of me because they might feel like she's an easier target, there's nothing I can do about that," Thompson said.
"But I don't have any further need for explanation for anything that she's done. Thank goodness she's there," the former Tennessee senator said in an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America."
Thompson's initial efforts to get the GOP presidential nod were plagued by high-profile staff departures and lackluster fundraising. Some critics have blamed the rocky start on the active role played in the campaign by his wife, Jeri, a former political and media consultant.
Thompson, 65, who disclosed in April that he was diagnosed in 2004 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a highly treatable form of cancer, also sought to allay any concerns about his health.
"My latest checkup was 100 percent," Thompson said. "If I thought I had any problems I assure you I wouldn't be doing what I'm doing today. I haven't been sick a day in my life from this. It's a good kind of thing to have, if you can say such a thing."
среда, 7 марта 2012 г.
Famed quiz show host, and early James Bond, dies
LONDON (AP) — Famed British quiz show host Bob Holness, who also starred as an early incarnation of James Bond, has died at the age of 83.
Holness' family said Friday that the South Africa-born entertainer "passed away peacefully in his sleep."
Holness was born in KwaZulu-Natal province, South Africa, and returned there as a young man to begin an acting career after he was raised in southern England.
In 1956, Holness was one of first actors to portray Ian Fleming's Bond — starring in a radio adaptation of the novel "Moonraker."
He was best known in Britain as host of the long-running "Blockbusters" show, which ran for 10 years to 1993, and the quiz "Call My Bluff" for six years.
He is survived by his wife Mary, three children and seven grandchildren.
The What Of Nations?(Columnist; THE LAST WORD)
Byline: George F. Will
A pandering Obama praised Europe's 'leading role in the world.' Actually, Europe exercises almost no leadership, even in Europe.
"He's a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back--that's an earthquake."
--Arthur Miller, "Death of a Salesman"
President William Howard Taft understood how political cant can bewitch the speaker's mind. Listening to an aide natter on about "the machinery of government," Taft murmured, "The young man really thinks it's a machine." The current president's U.N. ambassador, Susan Rice, was on Sunday television recently explaining why she thinks Iran, now several decades into its pursuit of nuclear weapons and close to consummation, might succumb to the siren song of sweet reason and retreat from success. Doing so, she said, would enable Iran "to be a responsible member of the international community"--perhaps not the highest priority for a regime that denies the Holocaust happened, and vows to complete it--and "enter the community of nations." Otherwise Iran will face "the full force of the international community."
Rice really thinks there is a community out there. To believe that is to believe, as liberals do, that harmony is humanity's natural condition, so discord is a remediable defect in arrangements.
Regarding North Korea's missile launch, Rice was very stern. She said the U.N. Security Council would "meet," and there would be "consultation with our partners," who "all need to come together" and "add to" the 2006 U.N. resolution that North Korea had just disregarded, the one that demanded a halt to future missile-related activity, including launches. The Security Council met. It could not even bring itself to say North Korea's launch had violated the resolution against launches.
In the 1950s, conservatives vowed to "roll back" the Iron Curtain. Rice spoke of "ensuring that we roll back" North Korea's nuclear program. She took heart from what she called "some serious dismantlement" of North Korea's principal reactor. Actually, the reactor was not dismantled but disabled, an easily reversible act. Fuel rods were removed and the cooling tower was destroyed. The rods can be reinserted. The reactor can operate without the cooling tower--warm water would be released, which might kill lots of wildlife, but, then, the regime kills lots of North Koreans, even though that supposedly causes frowns to crease the faces of the supposed community of nations.
Perhaps Rice thinks the mere existence of the U.N. proves the existence of an international community. If so, she should spend some communitarian time with our allies the Saudis. The Obama administration has decided to join them as members of the U.N. Human Rights Council, which the Bush administration boycotted because it includes despotic regimes that are ludicrous auditors of other nations' respect for human rights.
An unmarried 23-year-old Saudi woman became pregnant when abducted and gang-raped. She was convicted of adultery and sentenced to a year in prison--and to a perhaps fatal 100 lashes after her child is born. Another woman was visited by two men--one had been breast-fed by her; the other was bringing her bread. Convicted of the crime of being in the presence of men who are not family members, she was sentenced to 40 lashes, which is perhaps a death sentence for a 75-year-old. The "community of nations" that liberals like Rice believe in certainly has what liberals celebrate: diversity.
If there is a "community of nations," then "Yes, we can" do this and that. But if not?
During Barack Obama's trip abroad, during which he praised himself by disparaging his predecessor and deploring America's shortcomings, he took pandering to a comic peak, combining criticism of America with flattery of Europe, when he deplored America's "failure to appreciate Europe's leading role in the world." Actually, as the crisis of aggression and ethnic cleansing in the Balkans demonstrated a decade ago, Europe plays almost no leadership role, even in Europe, which remains a geographical rather than a political denotation.
Europe's collective existence through NATO might be ending. Afghanistan, the supposed "graveyard of empires," might be the burial ground of NATO, which is 60 years old and showing signs of advanced senescence. Officially, NATO says the Afghanistan campaign is vital; actually, it promises a mere 5,000 more troops, none of them for combat. Most of the NATO nations that grudgingly send dribs and drabs of troops to Afghanistan send them enveloped in caveats that virtually vitiate their usefulness, including the stipulation that they shall not be put in harm's way. Tom Korologos, who was U.S. ambassador to Belgium from 2004 to 2007, recalls that when Belgium finally agreed to send a few hundred troops from its unionized "army"--average age: 40--other caveats concerned bottled water, a certain ratio of psychiatrists to troops and a requirement that dust be kept to a minimum.
In Europe, during his first star turn on the world stage, the president learned, or should have, that charm and two euros will almost get him a copy of the International Herald Tribune. Out there in the blue, flying high, selling himself, he found out how far he can go on a smile and a shoeshine.
America's enemies are not smiling back. Those are smirks, not smiles.
The What Of Nations?(Columnist; THE LAST WORD)Byline: George F. Will
A pandering Obama praised Europe's 'leading role in the world.' Actually, Europe exercises almost no leadership, even in Europe.
"He's a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back--that's an earthquake."
--Arthur Miller, "Death of a Salesman"
President William Howard Taft understood how political cant can bewitch the speaker's mind. Listening to an aide natter on about "the machinery of government," Taft murmured, "The young man really thinks it's a machine." The current president's U.N. ambassador, Susan Rice, was on Sunday television recently explaining why she thinks Iran, now several decades into its pursuit of nuclear weapons and close to consummation, might succumb to the siren song of sweet reason and retreat from success. Doing so, she said, would enable Iran "to be a responsible member of the international community"--perhaps not the highest priority for a regime that denies the Holocaust happened, and vows to complete it--and "enter the community of nations." Otherwise Iran will face "the full force of the international community."
Rice really thinks there is a community out there. To believe that is to believe, as liberals do, that harmony is humanity's natural condition, so discord is a remediable defect in arrangements.
Regarding North Korea's missile launch, Rice was very stern. She said the U.N. Security Council would "meet," and there would be "consultation with our partners," who "all need to come together" and "add to" the 2006 U.N. resolution that North Korea had just disregarded, the one that demanded a halt to future missile-related activity, including launches. The Security Council met. It could not even bring itself to say North Korea's launch had violated the resolution against launches.
In the 1950s, conservatives vowed to "roll back" the Iron Curtain. Rice spoke of "ensuring that we roll back" North Korea's nuclear program. She took heart from what she called "some serious dismantlement" of North Korea's principal reactor. Actually, the reactor was not dismantled but disabled, an easily reversible act. Fuel rods were removed and the cooling tower was destroyed. The rods can be reinserted. The reactor can operate without the cooling tower--warm water would be released, which might kill lots of wildlife, but, then, the regime kills lots of North Koreans, even though that supposedly causes frowns to crease the faces of the supposed community of nations.
Perhaps Rice thinks the mere existence of the U.N. proves the existence of an international community. If so, she should spend some communitarian time with our allies the Saudis. The Obama administration has decided to join them as members of the U.N. Human Rights Council, which the Bush administration boycotted because it includes despotic regimes that are ludicrous auditors of other nations' respect for human rights.
An unmarried 23-year-old Saudi woman became pregnant when abducted and gang-raped. She was convicted of adultery and sentenced to a year in prison--and to a perhaps fatal 100 lashes after her child is born. Another woman was visited by two men--one had been breast-fed by her; the other was bringing her bread. Convicted of the crime of being in the presence of men who are not family members, she was sentenced to 40 lashes, which is perhaps a death sentence for a 75-year-old. The "community of nations" that liberals like Rice believe in certainly has what liberals celebrate: diversity.
If there is a "community of nations," then "Yes, we can" do this and that. But if not?
During Barack Obama's trip abroad, during which he praised himself by disparaging his predecessor and deploring America's shortcomings, he took pandering to a comic peak, combining criticism of America with flattery of Europe, when he deplored America's "failure to appreciate Europe's leading role in the world." Actually, as the crisis of aggression and ethnic cleansing in the Balkans demonstrated a decade ago, Europe plays almost no leadership role, even in Europe, which remains a geographical rather than a political denotation.
Europe's collective existence through NATO might be ending. Afghanistan, the supposed "graveyard of empires," might be the burial ground of NATO, which is 60 years old and showing signs of advanced senescence. Officially, NATO says the Afghanistan campaign is vital; actually, it promises a mere 5,000 more troops, none of them for combat. Most of the NATO nations that grudgingly send dribs and drabs of troops to Afghanistan send them enveloped in caveats that virtually vitiate their usefulness, including the stipulation that they shall not be put in harm's way. Tom Korologos, who was U.S. ambassador to Belgium from 2004 to 2007, recalls that when Belgium finally agreed to send a few hundred troops from its unionized "army"--average age: 40--other caveats concerned bottled water, a certain ratio of psychiatrists to troops and a requirement that dust be kept to a minimum.
In Europe, during his first star turn on the world stage, the president learned, or should have, that charm and two euros will almost get him a copy of the International Herald Tribune. Out there in the blue, flying high, selling himself, he found out how far he can go on a smile and a shoeshine.
America's enemies are not smiling back. Those are smirks, not smiles.
понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.
Sutter hoping to create some sparks
Blackhawks coach Brian Sutter has opened himself up to second-guessing on his choice of goaltenders most of the season.
On Monday, he second-guessed himself after replacing JocelynThibault with Steve Passmore after the second period of a 4-0 playoffloss to the St. Louis Blues on Sunday.
I kick myself for not doing it earlier," Sutter said, and itwasn't just Joce. Every time I did it earlier, it changed the flow ofthe game, and you guys [the media] thought I was this genius fromheaven because we got a point out of it.
But most of the time when you make a change, it's not the goalie.It's because you want to make his teammates accountable to the goalieso they pick …
CITI TO PILOT ATM DEPOSITS AT 7-ELEVEN STORES.
Citigroup Inc. plans soon to begin a pilot during which customers can make surcharge-free deposits at certain ATMs located in 7-Eleven Inc. convenience stores, Mark Gilder, Citibank ATM and remittance business manager, consumer banking products, said yesterday at the ATM, Debit & Prepaid Forum in Chandler, Ariz. The test eventually will involve 900 of the 2,200 Citi-branded multifunctional ATMs, or Vcoms, that Cardtronics Inc. purchased from the Dallas-based convenience-store chain last year, he said. The Vcoms enable customers whose financial …
TIME HAS COME TO MAKE SADDAM COMPLY.(PERSPECTIVE)
Byline: HARRY ROSENFELD
A handful of weeks after the trumpeting of Iraq's agreement to abide by diluted terms of the truce that ended the Gulf War, Baghdad is failing yet again to live up to its obligations.
This is the least surprising development to occur in this crisis without end. Certain it was as only certain can be, that the regime of Saddam Hussein would no more respect the latest agreement that it had earlier ones.
As far as the world is concerned, there has not been a sufficient accounting of what Iraq has done with the weapons of mass destruction it agreed to give up. Consequently, it is ridiculous for the world community to continue to …
Asian shares lower after US holiday
Asian stocks fell Tuesday in the absence of fresh cues following a market holiday in the U.S.
Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average fell 82.22 points, or 0.8 percent, to 9,686.48 and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.7 percent to 4,401.10.
In Seoul, the Kospi lost 0.6 percent to 1,630.41 and Taiwan's benchmark fell 0.9 percent to 7,307.16. Hong Kong's Hang Seng bucked the trend, rising 0.1 percent to 19,787.89. U.S. financial markets were closed Monday for Memorial Day.
Japanese exporters mainly fell as the yen strengthened.
…Riding the tide: Banks follow the trend
Nowhere has the tidal wave of mergers and acquisitions been stronger than in the banking industry. Some examples locally are First Union's buyout last year of CoreStates, Community Banks Inc.'s 1997 acquisition of Peoples State Bank, and more recently, Fulton Financial Corp.'s June acquisition of Ambassador Bank of the Commonwealth.
Thomas Theurkauf, a bank analyst who covers banks such as PNC Bank, Mellon Bank and First Union/CoreStates for Keefe Bruyette & Woods Inc., New York City, summed up the merger wave in six words: "Bigger is better and more efficient."
While Theurkauf is primarily familiar with the banking industry, his analysis applies to just about any …
Science and Evidence for Design in the Universe. (Book Review).
Michael J. Behe, William A. Dembski, and Stephen C. Meyer, Science and Evidence for Design in the Universe, San Francisco Ignatius Press, 2000, 234 pages, paperback, $19.95 (Cdn.)
The authors of this book are well-known American scientists. The message of the book is that the best theory concerning the origin of life here on earth is that it was planned by an intelligent being. The authors show that this is not a philosophical or theological conclusion but one based on the same kind of reasoning sciences very often use when predicating the most likely cause of past events.
For there to be life in the universe, there had to be very special conditions met in …
воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.
New allergies study results from F. Gally et al described.
"The multifunctional surface protein CD38 acts as a receptor with ecto-enzymatic activity, hydrolyzing NAD to generate several products known to exhibit Ca2+-mobilizing properties. Although CD38 is a convenient marker of immune cell development, and an indicator of progression for several diseases, it is not restricted to the immune compartment," investigators in the United States report (see also Allergies).
"To determine the potentially multilayered involvement of CD38 in allergen-induced airway inflammation and hyperreactivity, we dissected the potential role of CD38 as a regulator of immunity, but also pulmonary function. CD38-deficient and wildtype (WT) mice were …
GM falls after alliance falters.(Business)
Byline: Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A key adviser to billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian resigned from the General Motors board Friday, citing a boardroom environment unreceptive to extensive probing and "grave reservations" about GM's abilities against Asian competitors.
Kerkorian, meanwhile, signaled he would not acquire more stock in the world's biggest automaker after GM decided against pursuing an alliance with Renault and Nissan. He already controls 9.9 percent of GM shares and had recently indicated he was considering raising that stake to 12 percent.
The twin developments, disclosed in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, …
BARBARA COOK REVIVING HER RECORDING CAREER.(ACCENT)
Byline: MATT WOLF Associated Press
LONDON Barbara Cook settles into a sofa at a central London hotel, and it's as if she never left home which, in a way, she hasn't. The singer is as beloved in London as she has long been in New York.
Thirty or more years ago, Cook now well into her 60s epitomized Broadway at its brightest. Her creamy, lilting soprano helped define show after show, from ``Candide'' (1956) and ``The Music Man'' (1957) through to ``She Loves Me'' (1963) and various revivals of ``Carousel,'' ``The King and I'' and ``Showboat.''
In recent years, she has turned her voice to the cabaret circuit across the United States and abroad, with a revived recording career to match.
She was in town to publicize her fourth …
Technology News.
Charter Oak FCU Rolls Out Spanish Website
WALLINGFORD, Conn.- Charter Oak FCU has launched a Spanish language link from its website at www.charteroak.org.
The credit union reported that during its first month the pages were viewed 37,000 times for an average of more than 18 minutes each. Charter Oak said it launched the site following growth in the Hispanic population of New London County, Conn., of 57% over the past 10 years. Prior to launching the site, it already had brochures and other materials available in Spanish.
COFCU said it is also seeking to recruit additional Spanish- speaking employees. The site was created by SmartSource Solutions, …
8 arrested in Venezuela housing probe
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela's attorney general says at least eight people have been arrested and dozens more are being investigated on fraud accusations in residential construction projects.
Attorney General Luisa Ortega said authorities have also barred 43 people from leaving the country while the investigation proceeds. She told state television Saturday that authorities …
Seaside village fears for homes
North-east villagers are living in fear of their homes beingwashed away.
People living in Gardenstown in Banffshire claim the road infront of their properties is sinking and waves are eroding the seadefences.
Villagers worry the wall will collapse and their homes could bewashed into the sea.
The fisher homes in the village's Seatown area hug the cliffsnext to the …
Kyrgyzstan discusses the rule of law and the principle of separation of powers.(Conference notes)
The international conference "Rule of Law and Principle of separation of powers" was hosted by the Kyrgyz Parliament and held in Bishkek on May 25-26. This conference enjoyed strong support from the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe1, the European Union and the UNDP. During the conference, representatives of all branches of power, non-governmental and donor organizations discussed the issues of the rule of law and effective interaction between the executive, legislative and judicial branches of power for the benefit of further democratization. The agenda of the conference included the following topics: constitutional principles of the rule of law and separation of …
суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.
FRENCH WOMAN DIES AT 115.(MAIN)(Obituary)
Byline: Associated Press
PARIS -- Marie Bremont, a 115-year-old French woman believed to be the world's oldest person, died early Wednesday.
Bremont died in her sleep at the retirement home where she lived in Cande, about 150 miles west of Paris, according to her nephew, Georges Crespin.
She was considered the world's oldest person since the death of Eva Morris of Britain in November, just four days before her 115th birthday.
Bremont is the second French woman to …
Kinsey Didn't 'Talk About Sex' at Bowdoin College.(student days of Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey)
Byline: Bowdoin College
BRUNSWICK, Maine, Nov. 11 (AScribe Newswire) -- For Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey - the man who conducted the first scientifically based study of human sexuality and is the subject of the new movie "Kinsey" starring Liam Neeson (in limited release Friday, November 12) - the road to becoming one of the world's most influential and controversial scientists began at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine.
The 20-year-old "Al," as he was known, transferred to the small, liberal arts college in the fall of 1914 as a junior. He needed financial aid to pay for tuition, room, board and books, since his stern and controlling father disapproved of the …
Roddick beats Raonic for 30th career title
MEMPHIS, Tennessee (AP) — Andy Roddick won the 30th title of his career in his 50th final Sunday, finishing off a thrilling 7-6 (7), 6-7 (11), 7-5 victory over Canadian Milos Raonic in the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships.
Roddick polished off the 2-hour, 36-minute match by diving to put his racket on the ball for a winner down the line that broke the 20-year-old Raonic for the victory.
The top-seeded Roddick has at least one title in 11 straight years, something only Roger Federer has done among active players.
"I think I was very fortunate. I feel like I got outplayed, I just stuck around and kept trying," Roddick said. "What a memorable 30th victory for me. I …
WXTV(TV) New York, the Univision owned and operated station has named two veterans of the station's news department to anchor its new morning newscast: Adhemar Montagne and Any Alfaro.
WXTV(TV) New York, the Univision owned and operated station has named two veterans of the station's news department to anchor its new morning newscast: Adhemar …
The shock; Vera Whitman, heart patient June 4, 2005 Wedding reception.(Life-Style)
As told to Jennifer Gish
Some people say it's like being kicked by a horse, but I've never been. Or being punched. I've never been punched in the chest either. I really can't compare.
I have three wires in my chest, two that go to the bottom part of the heart for the pacemaker. The third wire goes to the top of the heart, which is actually the internal defibrillator. The device was there for a reason. It did what it needed to do, thank goodness.
I was at my brother's wedding. No matter what my husband and I are at, a wedding, any kind of a party that has dancing, we're usually the first ones on the floor. We were having a wonderful day. I felt just …
Supervising Variable Annuities Sales.
After experiencing a more than 50% increase in variable annuities (VA) sales last year, banks must pay careful attention to supervising sales of VAs at their branches through affiliated broker-dealers (BDs). Under today's risk-based examination approach, such a large sales jump invites targeted examinations by regulators - and extraordinary scrutiny.
Effective supervision begins at the top, with clearly delineated lines of responsibility, reflected in written organizational charters, and detailed written descriptions of each position's precise responsibilities. Many institution-rattling scandals arose from a lack of this precision. If duties and responsibilities are misunderstood at multiple levels, violations may start or continue unnoticed.
The …
GOT IT BOXED OFF: Trelech [...] [Edition 3]
GOT IT BOXED OFF: Trelech youngsters were busy before Christmascollecting to help less fortunate children. The Ysgol Hafodwenogpupils filled shoe boxes with gifts and goodies to send …
HAWAII JOINS BATTLE OVER GAY MARRIAGE.(MAIN)
Byline: WILLIAM SAFIRE
MAUI, Hawaii -- As the legislative session headed toward a midnight close Friday night, opponents of homosexual marriage insisted on a recorded vote. Supporters of gay rights won. Hawaii's state senators voted 15 to 10 against the more conservative House's bill to ban the licensing of marital unions of persons of the same sex.
As a result, the state's lawyers will find it harder to assert a ``compelling state interest'' in limiting marriage to one man and one woman. Baehr vs. State of Hawaii comes before Judge Kevin Chang in August; the likelihood increases that he will rule that the state Constitution's provision against sex …

















































