четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Dukas, Paul

Dukas, Paul

Dukas, Paul, famous French composer and teacher;b. Paris, Oct. 1,1865; d. there, May 17, 1935. From 1882 to 1888 he was a student at the Paris Cons., studying under Mathias (piano), Dubois (harmony), and Guiraud (composition). He won 1st prize for counterpoint and fugue in 1886, and the 2nd Prix de Rome with a cantata, Velleda (1888). He began writing music reviews in 1892, and was music critic of the Revue Hebdomadaire and Gazette des Beaux-Arts. In 1906 he was made a Chevalier of the Legion cThonneur. From 1910 to 1913, and again from 1928 to 1935, he was prof. of the orch. class at the Cons. In 1918 he was elected Debussy's successor as …

Community forum targets local ex-offenders

A free, community forum this weekend will address some critical issues ex-offenders face when dealing with the criminal justice system.

"We hope this forum will be able to answer some of the lingering questions families within our community often have when a love one goes through the criminal justice system," said Evangelist Leonardo Gilbert, minister at Sheldon Heights Church of Christ, which is hosting the forum.

Gilbert hopes the forum helps many ex-offenders and family members who live in the church's 60628 ZIP code, which includes the Roseland, Pullman and West Pullman communities. The forum is from noon-4 p.m. July 19 at Sheldon Heights church, 11325 S. Halsted St. …

Hong Kong deports 3rd pro-Tibet activist

A third pro-Tibet activist has been deported from Hong Kong ahead of the local leg of the Olympic torch relay.

Lhadon Tethong of Students for a Free Tibet says fellow group member Tsering Lama, a Canadian …

Digging phase of Deep Tunnel project wraps up today

After 27 years of blasting and digging and $2.4 billion,construction crews today will cut through the last chunk of limestoneon the last leg of the massive Deep Tunnel stormwater controlproject.

The milestone "hole through," as it's known in the earth-boringbusiness, will complete the 109th and final mile of tunneling -- andtouch off a celebration among workers who have toiled underground foryears.

"Holing through in a tunnel is like winning the World Series, theIndy 500 and the Daytona 500 all in one day for a miner," said TroyBradshaw, special projects superintendent on the effort.

Today's work will happen deep under the south suburbs inside thenew 7.9-mile …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Curing an out of phase PA system while on tour

because many bands do not carry production, this situation holds true for the large majority of touring bands through North America. Most of the time entering a venue where production is supplied by a sound company or an in-house system, the system is usually packaged properly (in phase). Through some of my experiences I have run into instances where this is not always true. So what do you do if this is the case?

Here are a few things to keep in mind when coming up against an out-of-phase sound system in a club situation. Remember the house engineer and you are on the same team so you don't want to offend him/her by jumping down their throat insisting that the system is …

Raonic credits training in Barcelona for success

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Milos Raonic's first appearance at the Barcelona Open on Monday will mark the closest thing to a homecoming outside of his native Canada for one of the rising stars of men's tennis.

Raonic credits his climb up the rankings to a preseason move to the Catalan capital. A seven-week stint here was the lead-in to the Australian Open where the 20-year-old qualifier from Thornhill, Ontario, reached the last 16 in January.

Since Jan. 1, Raonic has jumped 122 spots in the rankings to No. 34.

"I think it was a big decision to make because it is hard to leave home, but it was the right decision," Raonic told The Associated Press from Barcelona's Royal Tennis …

Sanofi-Aventis names new member to board

Sanofi-Aventis SA Tuesday said it would nominate physicist Catherine Brechignac to its board of directors at its next shareholder meeting in May.

The temple

Ginza Holiday 6:30-9:30 tonight; 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday;11:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday Midwest Buddhist Temple, 435 W. MenomoneeSuggested donation, $3.50 for adults; $2.50 for senior citizens;children under 12 admitted free when accompanied by adult (312) 943-7801 If you'd like to learn more about Japanese culture than what toorder at a sushi restaurant, you may want to check out the MidwestBuddhist Temple's 44th annual Ginza Holiday this weekend.

This year, entertainment will be provided by the Wakayagi ShiyuKai classical dance troupe, whose members will perform dressed inkiminos as they "tell" favorite Japanese fables through dance. TheMBT Minyo Troupe will show off …

Manny Ramirez arrested over domestic battery

WESTON, Florida (AP) — Former World Series Most Valuable Player Manny Ramirez was arrested Monday after a domestic dispute at his South Florida home and charged with battery, police said.

Ramirez, 39, and his wife were arguing in their bedroom when he slapped her face, causing her to hit her head on their bed's headboard, according to a police report. She told the deputy she was afraid the situation would escalate and called police.

Ramirez denied hitting his wife, according to the report, telling a deputy she hit her head after he shrugged her. Ramirez's wife had injuries consistent with her story, but did not want medical treatment.

Ramirez retired in April from the …

Report: Amputations without anesthesia in NKorea

North Korea's health care system is in shambles with doctors sometimes performing amputations without anesthesia and working by candlelight in hospitals lacking essential medicine, heat and power, a rights watchdog said Thursday.

North Korea's state health care system has been deteriorating for years as the country's economic difficulties worsen. Many of the country's 24 million people also reportedly face health problems related to chronic malnutrition, such as tuberculosis and anemia, Amnesty International said.

"The people of North Korea suffer significant deprivation in their enjoyment of the right to adequate health care, in large part due to failed …

Meat canning moving to Elmira

St. Jacobs, Ont.

After 10 years of holding its mobile meat canning operation at the University of Guelph, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) Ontario is being forced to move.

At a fundraising breakfast in St. Jacobs last month, Trevor Adams of MCC Ontario explained that another location is needed this year because new regulations from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency say that a mobile canner needs to be attached to a permanent building. Fire regulations and other safety concerns mean that the Guelph location is no longer suitable.

MCC Ontario and the meat canning committee are working with the federal agency to develop a new partnership with the Elmira Produce …

Giuliani seeks one more 'I told you so' in high-stakes Florida primary

Rudy Giuliani loves to prove people wrong. He's trying to do it again in Florida.

Polls show the former New York mayor, last year's national front-runner, trailing badly in the state where he has bet almost everything in his pursuit of the Republican presidential nomination. If he wins on Tuesday, he will have earned the biggest, brashest "I told you so" of his political career.

Lose, and Giuliani may be uttering his final words of the campaign.

"Wednesday morning, we'll make a decision," he told reporters between campaign appearances.

"In the past, I've done the impossible _ things that people thought were …

Collective and Individual Progress

At a recent scientific conference, a group gathered around a table to compare experiences. Participants, in turn, asked their colleagues how to avoid problem X or how to resolve challenge Y. In most cases, those responding said, "I have found method Z to work, but not all the time." In other words, it depends. Hearing about others' approaches is helpful, but each problem still must be solved individually.

That is how science proceeds: through both collective and individual progress. Once in a long while, a breakthrough occurs, and everyone learns from it; yet each individual still must undergo extensive trial and error to understand how to apply that new knowledge or technique. When Cohen and Boyer filed their patent application in 1979 for restriction endonucleases, biotechnology took a leap forward. But everyone still had to go back to their laboratories to try to apply what Cohen and Boyer had figured out.

Such individual experiments also serve to test the new science, and often lead to new advances. It's like the way an amoeba moves: it extends a pseudopod, and gradually the body catches up. Then, another foot goes out.

I wonder if some scientists wish there were an easier way. In online role-playing games, some players take shortcuts: they pay others to play for them until their characters acquire certain skill levels. Others pay real money to buy virtual gold for their characters, instead of slogging through hours of playing time to earn the gold themselves.

Of course, those players are cheating, at least in my view. Not that there aren't times when I wish I could do something similar. Could I pay a freelancer to write my editorial when I am stumped? Probably. But it wouldn't be very satisfying, and I would neither gain from the process nor contribute anything to the world.

Fortunately, most scientists want to play the game themselves, or they wouldn't have chosen their profession. After all, some 90% of all experiments fail, so it's not a field for someone who wants easy success. Persevering against such odds requires incredible optimism and dedication. That's good, because such perseverance leads to scientific advances - for both individual and collective progress.

[Author Affiliation]

Laura Bush

lbush@advanstar.com

Crapper Creations

Troy-based toilet artist transforms pooper into piece of art for charity

Robert Nelson is fretting that the dinky bathroom at his mom's modest ranch, where he's been staying since he moved back to Troy five months ago, won't suit our photography needs. He knocks around some visual concepts - like lounging topless with toilet water dripping down his face - and wonders what he should wear (if anything?). He says he'll shave before. And then he ponders whether this shoot will cost him more than it's worth.

"I'm gonna have to buy props for my photo shoot?" he asks. "(I'll have to be) like, 'Well the guy for the photo shoot was coming but he told me to buy some lenses, and one of those things that look like an umbrella when you flash the lights - and a throne. And he wanted a diamond-studded tiara. I had to take a loan out for the gay paper's photo shoot.'"

Not the case. Nelson's jazzed-up pooper seat, which was being repaired at the time of the shoot, is one of 25 to be displayed as part of Stagecrafters' "Decorating the Throne," a charity auction held 7 p.m. March 20 at Leon & Lulu in Clawson. The fundraiser is inspired by the Royal Oak-based community theater's upcoming March 28-April 13 production of "Urinetown: The Musical."

"We should always help local theater," he says, "because without local theater, where would the people who go see local theater be? And so that's a wonderful thing. And you should also buy it (the toilet seat) because it's fucking awesome. I don't know if you can say 'effing awesome'?"

You can. But looking like a queen on her crap throne isn't necessary. Nor is a porcelain bowl graveyard.

"Is there somewhere where old toilet seats go to die?" Nelson quips, still pondering the place for the shoot, which, alas, ends up unfolding in mom's miniscule lavatory.

We chatted with the 25-year-old, who runs Aveda at Somerset Collection South, via phone - but being at his mother's digs could've proved to be more scandalous. He was allegedly in his undies, wrapped in his car-themed blanket, canoodling with his 12-year-old golden retriever-lab hybrid on his bed.

"Put that he was lounging in some cute undergarments while - I wasn't smoking a cigarette - but I was doing something sexually charged with my face," he says, then acts mildly concerned. "I don't know how this article is gonna turn out; it's gonna sound like Fm a prostitute, isn't it?"

Not only did he urge us - in person, he might've got down on both knees - to mention his flattering skivvies (which, by the way, we can only take his word for), but listed, over and over, the adjectives we need to use to give readers a sense of The Good-Looking, Clever, Witty, Single, Old-Fashioned, Avant-Garde-Good Robert Nelson.

"Here's what you need to say about me: 'He's reminiscent of a young, but far more attractive, Charles Nelson Reilly,'" he adds.

Between self-compliments, jokes and talk of his finally-dissipating flu, Nelson bounced back to the original reason for this interview: His crapper creation, the "WCES" (Water Closet Entertainment System).

"From a very young age, I've used a toilet," he says. "I've always felt so close to it that when I had a chance to pay homage to that magnificent creature, the toilet seat, I jumped at it."

The design has an industrial, technologically-advanced feel - which makes Nelson doubt Martha Stewart would grant kudos. "Picture 'Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome' toilet seat - you know, with Tina Turner in it? - and she'd (Stewart) have more of like an old-world-charm toilet seat. So, I think - no. Well, she would be proud. I don't know! I don't know her inner workings - this is hard! You don't screw around at all! I thought this was gonna be a light, softball interview."

Well, poop!

[Sidebar]

Decorating the Throne

7 p.m. March 20

Leon & Lulu, Clawson

248-541-6430

www.stagecrafters.org.

[Sidebar]

"From a very young age, I've used a toilet. I've always felt so close to it that when I had a chance to pay homage to that magnificant creature, the toilet seat, I jumped at it."

- Robert Nelson, crapper creator

[Author Affiliation]

Chris Azzopardi is the entertainment editor of Between The Lines. To comment on this story, send an e-mail to chris@ pridesource.com.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Boeing posts $1.6B loss in 3Q on plane charges

Boeing Co. lost $1.6 billion in the third quarter, hurt by growing costs from two troubled plane programs that forced the airplane maker to slash its profit forecast.

The world's second-largest commercial plane maker after Europe's Airbus, Boeing has struggled to launch its new 787 passenger plane and a revamped version of its classic 747 jumbo jet. Production delays, parts shortages and last-minute fixes have cost the company billions in write-downs along with additional design and manufacturing expenses.

While sales edged up 9 percent during the quarter, profits took a big hit because Boeing booked charges of more than $3.6 billion for its two plane programs.

They "clearly overshadowed what continues to be otherwise solid performance across our commercial production programs and defense business," Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney said in a statement following the results announcement Wednesday.

They also led the Chicago-based company to cut its 2009 profit forecast to $1.35 to $1.55 per share from $4.70 to $5 per share.

Boeing's quarterly loss amounted to $2.23 per share, compared with earnings of $695 million, or 96 cents per share, a year earlier.

Quarterly revenue rose to $16.69 billion from $15.29 billion a year earlier. But the comparison was made easier by a labor strike and supplier problems last autumn, which sliced $2.1 billion off revenue.

Sales from Boeing's defense business, which makes fighter jets, satellites and security systems, rose 3 percent. The business accounts for about half the company's overall revenue. Commercial aircraft revenue rose 13 percent.

But investors remained focused on Boeing's delayed airplanes, with shares down 45 cents to $51.44 in midday trade.

Earlier this month, Boeing said production was delayed for a new version of its 747 freighter jet, blaming slow sales and late design changes.

Problems with the 747-8 program are hardly new. Last year, Boeing said it was postponing deliveries because of design changes and a strike that shut down commercial jet factories for eight weeks.

The 747 has been flying for four decades and is one of the world's best-known airplanes. The 747-8 version was unveiled in 2005 and is designed to be larger and more fuel-efficient. The passenger version of the 250-foot plane, called the Intercontinental, seats 467 passengers.

The freighter version of the 747-8 has sold in greater numbers than the passenger model. But demand remains muted as cargo operators have been hit particularly hard by the economic turmoil of the past year.

Boeing now expects the first flight of the 747-8 by early next year. First deliveries of the 747-8 freighter are expected in the fourth quarter of 2010, while initial deliveries of the passenger version remain on schedule for the fourth quarter of 2011.

The 787 has also struggled. In June, Boeing said parts of its aircraft needed to be reinforced. The highly anticipated passenger plane is more than two years behind schedule. The mid-size jet is built with lightweight carbon composite parts to improve fuel efficiency.

The 787 is supposed to be ready for its inaugural test flight by year's end, with first deliveries in the last three months of 2010.

Airline customers and analysts have grown skeptical of the company's timetable for the aircraft. Still, it remains Boeing's best-selling new plane to date, with 840 orders.

The latest charges come as Boeing grapples with dwindling orders amid the global economic downturn, which has undercut demand for air travel and cargo services.

Some airlines have been forced to cancel or delay plans to buy new planes. Boeing has cut costs and announced plans to slash thousands of jobs and scale back production of some aircraft.

Boeing said its order book shrank 2 percent during the quarter, to $320 billion, due to dwindling demand across its commercial airplane and defense businesses.

Date set for fun run

THE 31st Carmarthen Mayor's Fun Run will take place on May 7 ofnext year, members of the town council heard.

The 2011 event, sponsored by St Catherine's Walk, proved to be ahuge success and attracted nearly 500 runners and more than 2,000spectators to the town.

It is planned the 2012 event will follow the changed routebrought in this year, which had a new two-lap course for the juniorraces.

Funds raised at the 2012 event will benefit the Cwm Serenoccupational unit, QE High's special needs minibus charity CanolfanElfed, Glangwili's cancer unit and Carmarthen rough sleeping charityNight Light.

The next meeting of the fun run steering group is due to takeplace on January 24.

Surgery a slice of life for basketball player

Peter Rudman faced 10 hours of surgery to remove a canceroustumor from his stomach. And he thought about basketball.

"Basketball always made me feel like I was normal, healthy," hesaid.

"As long as I had basketball, I could never get down."

Rudman, then 20, was diagnosed as having testicular cancer thathad spread to his stomach and parts of his chest.

During a six-month period, he endured numerous operations andchemotherapy.

Less than a year later, Rudman nearly led Lehigh University toan East Coast Athletic Conference championship and an NCAAtournament bid.

These days, the former All-Chicago Area player (1986) fromHighland Park gathers regularly with some of his old teammates toplay pickup games at the Deerfield Multiplex.

He still can drive the baseline with a flair and hang in theair. His jump shot is as accurate as ever. Life and basketball gohand-in-hand and once again Rudman is normal.

"Throughout my illness, I never dwelled on `Why me.' In orderfor me to deal with the physical and mental anguish that I suffered,I had to keep a positive approach to everything I did," he said.

"So I looked at each day as a new challenge and my goal was tofinish the treatment and get on with my life. This is the feeling Iwant to pass on that may help others in my situation. That's what Ican make out of all of this."

Growing up with basketball, Rudman always was too small or tooslow or too injured to be very good. But he made the Highland Parkvarsity team as a freshman.

Perhaps his most remarkable accomplishment was recovering from asevere knee injury and arthroscopic surgery midway through the 1984season to help the Giants reach the sectional final. Of all thegreat players to perform at the Proviso West holiday tournament,Rudman holds the record for most points in a game with 50.

During his senior season, Rudman averaged 24.2 points per game,an effort that put him in the company of future NBA players KendallGill, Nick Anderson and Marcus Liberty on the Sun-Times' All-Areateam.

Rudman was not the object of a major recruiting battle. So heenrolled at Lehigh, an Ivy League-like school in Bethleham, Pa. Hewas touted as a major recruit but, upon arrival, promises wentunfulfilled.

As a freshman, he played 117 minutes in 29 games and averaged1.6 points. As a sophomore, he played 31 minutes and averaged 2.1points.

Before a game at Colgate in December of his junior year, Rudmannoticed extreme swelling and pain in his left testicle.

Three days later, during a trip home for Christmas break, hehad the problem checked. He went back to school the next day.

But the pain never subsided and finally an ultrasound test atthe university medical center revealed a malignant tumor in histesticle. He flew back to Chicago where a urologist at Children'sMemorial Hospital confirmed the initial finding.

Fifteen years earlier, Rudman's mother had died of cancer.

"I remember thinking, `Am I going to die?' Whenever I thoughtof cancer, I immediately thought of death," he said. "My life wasbeing threatened and I wasn't equipped to deal with it. Here I amin the prime of my life. I was supposed to be enjoying life, notbattling for it."

On Dec. 30, 1988, Rudman underwent surgery to remove the tumor.Then came chemotherapy, every third week in the hospital takingradiation treatment. In between, he stayed up with his classworkthrough correspondence courses and stayed up with the game by workingout at Highland Park.

At the end of March, 1989, Rudman thought everything was out ofhis system. But when he went for his regular checkup in April, testsrevealed the cancer had spread to his stomach.

"We made it very clear there would be a small amount of residualtumor," said Dr. James Nachman, a pediatrician at the University ofChicago who treated Rudman. "That wasn't unexpected. Testicularcancer is probably one of the most common in young adults. It's alsoone of the most curable."

Maybe basketball prepared Rudman for the 10-hour surgery toremove the tumor that had spread to his stomach and chest. In allhis years of practice, he had run stadium stairs, boxed out biggerand stronger players and figured out how to break a trapping defensewhen there seemed to be no way out.

"I treated the surgery as just another hurdle in my life," hesaid, "but it turned out to be more physically and emotionallydraining than anything I had known."

Nachman said normal recovery time from such surgery andchemotherapy is two to six months before resuming rigorous activity.Rudman was playing basketball again in two.

Less than a year after the last surgery, Rudman scored 18 pointson seven-of-10 shooting to lead Lehigh to an ECAC Tournamentquarterfinal victory over Drexel. His three-point shot lifted theteam to a semifinal victory over Bucknell.

Life is back to normal now for Rudman, which means playing ballfour or five days a week. The game of basketball has helped himendure the game of life.

"I've learned to look inside myself for inner strength when theoutside forces seemed to pummel my previous confidence," he said.

"All my life, I've kept dodging bullets, always making it backfrom the most extreme injuries. I always thought it would be easy,but it hasn't been."

Barak's meandering ends with right move

JERUSALEM Ehud Barak finally has done the right thing. Themeandering path he took to arrive at his decision to resign andsubmit himself, but not the Knesset, to new elections, was asmanipulative as to put a Byzantine court to shame.

But it was the correct decision because full-blown elections-which in the end would not have changed much in the party makeup ofthe Knesset-was the last thing the country needed in the middle of amini-war.

What revealed the two sides of Barak-the leader with the basicallycorrect instincts, and the inept tactical schemer and manipulator-was that he could and should have taken the same step a fortnightago. At that time he surprised the Knesset and his own Cabinetministers and Labor faction by declaring his support for thedissolution of the Knesset and early (that is to say in a half yearor so) elections.

The fact that he is trailing badly in the polls behind Likud'sBenjamin Netanyahu is not new and also was there a fortnight ago. Sotoo was the fact that his own party's doves might challenge him forthe Labor leadership.

The worrisome thing about Barak's consistent failure to read thepolitical map correctly and in time, which has led to hiscontradictory policies and statements, is that it has characterizedhis conduct of the diplomatic process with the Palestinians, too.

Since by now we have become more than merely acquainted with Barakthe manipulator, it is important that due attention be paid to aseemingly minor sentence in his resignation address Saturday night.He said the new election would be "the true national referendum" onthe peace process."

Nothing could be further from the truth. The late Yitzhak Rabin'scommitment to submit to national referendum any negotiated agreementwith the Syrians and Palestinians was intended to permit theelectorate to give him a free hand in negotiating the preliminarystages of such agreements. But it also was a clear signal to theSyrians and the Palestinians that no Israeli premier, even underextreme American and international pressure, could make concessionsthat would not be ratified in a referendum.

The election of a prime minister, which will revolve primarilyaround the issue of the candidates' personalities, or of the Knesset,is no substitute for such a referendum on the most important issue ofthe last quarter century. Rabin's commitment was reiterated by bothNetanyahu and Barak.

Any attempt by Barak now to insist that his re-election should besubstituted for submission of an initialed agreement to referendumshould be seen as a flagrant breach of trust. Unless Barak reverseshimself clearly on that point it should be taken as a major reason tovote against him.

Shocked politicos and commentators have interpreted Barak's lateststep as a determination to freeze Netanyahu out of the competitionand to scotch any incipient rebellion against him within Labor. Butit also should be seen in its implications on Barak's policy ofexcessive self-restraint in response to the ongoing killing ofIsraelis.

It should be obvious that there is not the slightest chance ofBarak coming to those elections in 60 days with an agreement withYasser Arafat that stands even a glimmer of a chance of approval bythe electorate.

On the other hand, continuation of the daily killings withoutstepped-up retaliation is a sure formula for Barak's losing theelection against Ariel Sharon or any other Likud candidate. Atraumatized electorate will demand to see the heads of several of themilitary and political leaders of the intifada, who have hithertoenjoyed such blatant immunity from Barak.

Either Arafat will come to his senses and put an end to theintifada during these 60 days, or Barak will be compelled to resortto extreme retaliatory measures, for his own political survival.

Given the fact that the Knesset makeup will not change, the onlyother alternative will be that Arafat-and Labor-will get a prime-minister-elect Sharon, who will offer a riven Labor participation ina government of national unity under his own leadership.

Yosef Goell writes a column for the Jerusalem Post.

Missile Control Regime Focuses on Iran, NK

A group of countries devoted to stemming the spread of missiles vowed recently to intensify efforts to deny Iran and North Korea exports that could aid their missile programs. China's alleged failure to curtail such exports to Iran is a key factor frustrating Beijing's campaign to join the group.

The 34 members of the voluntary Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) met Oct. 4-6 in Copenhagen, Denmark, for an annual plenary to exchange information on global missile proliferation, update the group's export control list, and set action priorities. Regime members are supposed to restrict their exports of missiles and related items. In a post-meeting statement, the group cited recent UN Security Council measures on Iran and North Korea and "expressed their determination to implement the calls in these resolutions."

Security Council Resolution 1695, passed July 15 in the wake of a salvo of North Korean missile tests, requires all countries to prevent Pyongyang from procuring "missiles or missile related-items, materials, goods and technology." Two weeks later, the Security Council approved Resolution 1696 after Iran failed to suspend uranium-enrichment activities that could yield fissile material for nuclear weapons. Among other steps, that resolution calls on countries to prevent exports that might benefit Iran's ballistic missile program. (See ACT, September 2006.)

Per Fischer, the current MTCR chair and special adviser on nonproliferation to the Danish minister for foreign affairs, told Arms Control Today Oct. 17 that the group's commitment to follow through on these "extremely important" resolutions was the recent conclave's top achievement. A senior Department of State official agreed in an Oct. 18 Arms Control Today interview, applauding the regime's "very strong and unanimous agreement to take substantive action" on the resolutions.

Regime members have disagreed about what constitutes acceptable transfers to Iran. An August 2005 State Department report charged Russian entities with supplying "missile-applicable technologies to missile programs of proliferation concern in China, India, Iran, and other countries." The report added that the "continuing pattern" of such exports "calls into serious question Russia's ability to control missile proliferation."

More recently, Washington announced sanctions in August on two Russian entities-the state-owned arms export agency Rosoboronexport and aviation company Sukhoi-for shipments to Iran that allegedly appear on multilateral export control lists or could aid Tehran's development of unconventional weapons or missiles. (See ACT, September 2006.) Rosoboronexport protested the sanctions, saying they were unwarranted.

The U.S. government also has penalized Chinese entities repeatedly, most recently in June, for alleged unconventional weapons- and missile-related exports to Iran. All told, since 2001 the State and Treasury Departments have imposed a total of 50 sanctions on 25 Chinese entities involved in deals with Iran since 2001. In addition, the State Department has also levied four other sanctions against Chinese entities for missile proliferation to unspecified destinations.

In Sept. 14 testimony to the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, Paula DeSutter, assistant secretary of state for verification, compliance, and implementation, strongly criticized China's missile export control record. "The Chinese government's irregular enforcement of the regulations meant to stop such proliferation continues to give the United States deep reservations" about China's intentions, she said.

As a result, the United States maintains its opposition to China's MTCR membership bid. Applicant countries must win the consensus of the group to join. Eleven other countries-Croatia, Cyprus, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Libya, Lithuania, Malta, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia-also want regime membership but did not receive an invitation at the October plenary.

Until his term as chair ends at the next plenary, one of Fischer's main responsibilities is continuing consultations with regime applicants and other nonmembers about their missile export controls. Fischer asserted he wants to be more "systematic" in tailoring the regime's cooperation with outside states, particularly those in the Middle East and Asia.

A key outreach activity, the senior State Department official said, is pressing countries to establish or improve their export controls so proliferators cannot use these states' territories as transshipment hubs. Two years ago, Security Council Resolution 1540 obligated all governments to institute border, domestic, and export controls to prevent nonstate actors from acquiring unconventional arms and their potential delivery vehicles. (See ACT, May 2004.)

Fischer and the senior State Department official both said the primary challenge facing the regime is ensuring controls keep pace with the rapid development and diffusion of technology. Although members agreed in Copenhagen to some yet undisclosed control list changes, the U.S. official said Washington wanted more. The United States unsuccessfully sought to add some cruise missile technologies to the control list and remove some unmanned aerial vehicle technologies. - WADE BOESE

Medal given by university

The University of Bath has presented Jeremy Thring, of Bath lawfirm Thring Townsend Lee & Pembertons, with the Chancellor's Medal.

The accolade was introduced in 1994 to reward people who havemade a valuable non-academic contribution to the life and work ofthe university.

Mr Thring has been a member of the council of the universitysince 1992, and was its chairman from 1994 to 2003. He has served asa pro-chancellor since 2001 and was awarded an honorary Doctorate ofLaw in 2003.

He said: "I'm honoured that it was considered I deserved theaward. The university is so important to Bath and Bath life. I'vebeen inspired to get involved by the academic rigour and the qualityof the research, the buzz and the drive and determination to deliveruniversity education at the highest level."

Thousands flee Congo fighting; Journalist seized

Sporadic gunfire and explosions echoed Wednesday around this town in eastern Congo, as rebels fought pro-government militiamen for a second day, forcing thousands of people to flee.

A wider cease-fire between the rebels and the government was holding further south around the provincial capital, however, as diplomats prepared to assemble a regional peace summit Friday in Kenya bringing together U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the presidents of Rwanda and Congo.

In Kiwanja, 70 kilometers (45 miles) north of the main city Goma, clashes erupted Tuesday between rebels and a militia known as the Mai Mai, but the violence eased Wednesday afternoon.

Speaking in an interview, warlord Laurent Nkunda accused Congo's army of firing mortars toward rebel positions from behind militia lines during Wednesday's battles. He also said ethnic Hutu Rwandan militias linked to Rwanda's 1994 genocide were fighting alongside the Mai Mai around Kiwanja.

The army could not be reached for comment.

Nkunda claimed the army had also taken part in fighting Saturday in two other towns in the region: Mweso and Kashuga, breaking the cease-fire Nkunda unilaterally declared Oct. 29 three times.

"This morning they wanted to advance (past Kiwanja) ... but our forces fought them back," Nkunda said. "They were very well armed."

Associated Press journalists who visited Kiwanja at midday saw several thousand people on the roads, including mothers with babies on their backs, trying to find safety. As insurgents loyal to Nkunda searched houses, artillery fire boomed in the hills nearby, and rebels told the reporters to leave.

In nearby village of Mabenga, a Belgian journalist working for a German newspaper was kidnapped by the Mai Mai late Tuesday along with his assistant and three rebel fighters, according to local official Gilles Simpeze. He said the government was negotiating their release.

On the edge of Kiwanja, hundreds of people took shelter at a roofless, abandoned school beside a U.N. base manned by Indian peacekeepers. The soldiers, in blue helmets and flak jackets, crouched behind sandbags and a ring of concertina wire.

"(The U.N.) should open up their gates to protect us," said Ntaganzwi Sinzahera, a 30-year-old refugee.

But soon after, Sinzahera and everyone else at the school left, joining a large crowd of refugees streaming toward the adjacent rebel-controlled town of Rutshuru.

"Tonight we don't know where we're going," said 21-year-old Omar Issa, who joined the crowds leaving Kiwanja. "I didn't bring anything. We don't have any food."

Few had time to gather up possessions. One man carried only his bible.

In Kiwanja, the streets were empty except for refugees. Ramshackle shops were shuttered, wooden doors were padlocked. A few residents peeked out of their homes and ducked back inside.

Fighting in Congo intensified in August and has since displaced around 250,000 people, forcing exhausted refugees to struggle through the countryside, lugging belongings, children, even goats. Tropical rainstorms, which drench eastern Congo every day, have added to their misery.

After forcing the army into a humiliating retreat and reaching the outskirts of Goma, Nkunda called a cease-fire Oct. 29. The rebel leader has warned, though, that war could resume if the government does not accept his demand for direct negotiations. The government says it will talk _ but only with all rebel and militia groups, not just with Nkunda.

A U.N.-backed African Union summit is expected Friday in Nairobi, Kenya, attended by Congo President Joseph Kabila, Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Ban, the U.N. chief. Kagame is believed to wield strong influence over Nkunda's Tutsi-led rebels.

Ban said he would "sit down together with President Kabila and President Kagame and encourage them to find a path to peace."

Asked whether he would encourage Kabila to open a direct dialogue with Nkunda, Ban said: "I will certainly encourage him to engage in dialogue with whoever, including Nkunda. I will discuss this matter with president Kabila."

The conflict in eastern Congo is fueled by festering ethnic hatred left over from Rwanda's 1994 genocide and Congo's civil wars from 1996-2002, which drew neighboring countries in a mad rush to plunder Congo's mineral wealth.

Nkunda claims the Congolese government has not protected ethnic Tutsis from the Rwandan Hutu militia that escaped to Congo after helping slaughter a half-million Rwandan Tutsis.

Nkunda, who defected from Congo's army in 2004, now says he is fighting to liberate all of Congo from a corrupt government.

Rebels also say regional powers are again getting involved in the fighting. They accuse Congo allies Angola and Zimbabwe of mobilizing to back government forces, while the government says Rwanda is helping the insurgents.

On Wednesday, Rwanda's government called Congo's crisis an "internal" problem.

"The prevailing assumption that the crisis is a matter between Rwanda and the (Congo) is wrong," it said.

The U.N. World Food Program said Wednesday's fighting, which appears isolated around Kiwanja, stopped it from visiting refugee camps near Rutshuru that had been deserted. Residents have said the rebels forced them to leave, but it was unclear why.

"This is a dangerous and unstable environment and it's going to be challenging to deliver food to where it is needed most," regional WFP director Mustapha Darboe said. "We need proper security in place to ensure everyone involved is safe and that we reach the most vulnerable."

The Mai Mai are one of dozens of small militias operating across the forests and valleys of eastern Congo, which the central government has unsuccessfully struggled to control for years.

The U.N. children's agency criticized the Mai Mai for recruiting 37 children to bolster their forces last week.

"Child recruitment by all armed groups has increased significantly over the past two months," the agency said. "UNICEF reminds all armed groups of their obligation not to recruit and use children, and to release all boys and girls under the age of 18."

WFP began distributing 10-day rations Wednesday to more than 135,000 recently displaced people in six camps around Goma.

___

Associated Press Writer Edith M. Lederer contributed to this report from the United Nations.

(This version CORRECTS SUBS graf 16 to correct to 250,000 people. AP Video.)

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Blond Pacino confuses fans

NEW YORK--In "Simone," which opens Friday, Al Pacino plays adirector who creates a digital screen image named Simone and passesoff the hot new babe as real.

Holding court at the Regency Hotel in the Big Apple, the screenlegend joked that he wouldn't mind if someone made a fake himsomeday. "If they ever want to do a digital version of me in a movie,I just have one request... They could certainly smooth out a few ofmy wrinkles. It's only fair."

Pacino, like "Simone" is a blond these days, which apparentlycaused a little confusion with one fan recently. "This woman runs upand screams, 'Harrison! Harrison!' I think she thought I was HarrisonFord," said an amazed Pacino, who added, "I mean, do I even look likea Harrison?"

The blond 'do is for an upcoming role in the HBO movie version of"Angels in America," in which he plays Roy Cohn.

STOP THE MADNESS: After playing a loon in "Insomnia" and anothernutcase in Friday's "One Hour Photo," one wonders if Robin Williamsever loses it. "I do have my moments, such as in the car when someonesteals my parking spot and I want to scream... It's Hannibal time!"Williams is the subject of Oscar buzz for his disturbingpsychological portrait in "Photo," where he plays a loner who runsthe photo developing booth and begins to fixate on one family's life,living vicariously through their photos.

Says Williams of the twisted character, "You inhabit it and thenyou get out of it," he says. "It's interesting to me when I readabout these actors who claim they live the role 24 hours a day andbring it home to their family. I have no desire to go to that level,"he says.

ETC: "It's going to be sick." Uh, we think that's a good thing,but that's how Vin Diesel describes the sequel to "Pitch Black,"which he's getting together as we speak. One thing that's not so goodis the fate of "The Fast and Furious II." Diesel walked away from a$20 million paycheck to resume his role behind the wheel. ... JamieFoxx is the frontrunner to play Ray Charles in "Unchain My Heart: TheRay Charles Story," a big-screen biopic of the music legend. ... Whathappens to faded TV stars? Obviously, they stick together, becauseWillie Aames, Erik Estrada and Jimmy "J.J." Walker have filmed acomedy called "Heart of Love." No word on whether Maureen McCormickor Lauren Tewes was free.

Big Picture News Inc.

The top 10 songs and albums on the iTunes Store

iTunes' Official Music Charts for the week ending Nov. 28, 2011:

Top Songs:

1. "Sexy and I Know It," LMFAO

2. "It Will Rain," Bruno Mars

3. "We Found Love (feat. Calvin Harris)," Rihanna

4. "Good Feeling," Flo Rida

5. "The One That Got Away," Katy Perry

6. "Someone Like You," ADELE

7. "Moves Like Jagger (Studio Recording from "The Voice" Performance) (feat. Christina Aguilera)," Maroon 5

8. "Stereo Hearts (feat. Adam Levine)," Gym Class Heroes

9. "Without You (feat. Usher)", David Guetta

10. "Party Rock Anthem (feat. Lauren Bennett & GoonRock)," LMFAO

___

Top Albums:

1. "Talk That Talk," Rihanna

2. "Take Care," Drake

3. "Here and Now," Nickelback

4. "Mylo Xyloto," Coldplay

5. "Christmas," Michael Buble

6. "21," ADELE

7. "Break the Spell," Daughtry

8. "My Life II...The Journey Continues (Act 1)," Mary J. Blige

9. "A Very Gaga Holiday (Live)," Lady GaGa

10. "Ultimate Hits: Rock and Roll Never Forgets," Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band

___

(copyright) 2011 Apple, Inc.

23 hurt by bomb near mosque in southern Thailand

A drive-by bombing near a mosque wounded 23 people in Thailand's turbulent south in what police said Wednesday was an attack by Muslim insurgents.

Witnesses saw two men on a motorcycle throw an improvised explosive device at a government pickup truck in Yala town Tuesday evening, but the bomb missed the vehicle and landed just across the street from the mosque, Police Superintendent Col. Piyawat Chalermsri said.

Most of those hurt were Muslims. Two victims were in intensive care, including a 14-year-old girl in critical condition.

Thailand's southernmost provinces, the only ones with Muslim majorities in the predominantly Buddhist country, have been gripped for the past six years by a separatist insurgency that has claimed more than 4,000 lives.

Southern Muslims have long complained of being treated as second-class citizens, and the government has put more effort into suppressing the insurgency than dealing with the root causes of their disaffection.

Piyawat said he believed Islamist insurgents targeting the government were behind Tuesday's bombing. Surveillance video broadcast on Thai TV stations showed an explosion seconds after an army truck drove by a teahouse.

However, one analyst was skeptical about the government claim because no previous attacks had been carried out in that area of Yala, which is a wholly Muslim sector filled with people going to the mosque.

Buddhist vigilantes in the region have also been known to carry out attacks seeking revenge against Muslims.

"This smells very fishy," said Don Pathan, a journalist and co-author of a recent book on the southern insurgency. "It doesn't make sense that this is an insurgent-related attack."

General Assembly should consider Orr proposal

General Assembly should consider Orr proposal

Given the clamor and fallout from the Nov. 7 election that still has yet to come to fruition, voting may never ever be the same in the U.S. again.

There should, there must be a better way to tabulate ballots in America and the so-called "experts" should brainstorm on what it will be. A new ballot design? Electronic voting? Cyber voting? What?

We -- as well as many others -- do not have the answer as of now, but a proposal by Cook County Clerk David Orr has some merit and deserves consideration by the Illinois General Assembly.

Orr on Monday called on the state legislative body to approve new equipment that would prevent a similar political quagmire such as is occurring in Florida from happening here.

While he already has the new tabulating equipment that includes a built-in safeguard to protect voters from accidental "over-votes" in contested races, Orr said his hands are tied until state lawmakers give him the go-ahead.

"We're suggesting two measures that would ensure what happened in Florida wouldn't happen here," Orr told the Chicago Defender earlier this week.

"The equipment enables the voter to insert the ballot themselves into the machine, not to let the judge put it into a can.

"By doing it this way, we can have an over-vote provision which means if this happens the machine would automatically kick it back out saying `over vote for president.'" Orr said voters would also have a chance to correct their ballot before they leave polling places.

That sounds like technology that needs to be employed here and elsewhere. We suggest that legislators examine the Orr plan and pave the way to make it a reality.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Nixon Is Back In Swing

ATLANTA With Deion Sanders on the disabled list because of anupper respiratory infection, Otis Nixon is making the most of hisplaying time.

Nixon is hitting .365 with 19 hits in his last 52 at bats.

"We all got a job to do, and while Deion is out, I have to domine," Nixon said Saturday after scoring a run in Atlanta's 5-1victory over the Cubs.

"Whether it's Deion or me, all I know is with the makeup of thisballclub, we won't miss a beat with either one of us out there. Thechemistry is there, which is why we have a chance."

Asked if he had been concerned about starting when Sanders washealthy, Nixon said: "I never thought about it. I was just hoping itwould turn out I could still be happy regardless of the situation.Everything's OK right now."

NOT RIGHT: With Saturday's loss to Braves starter Steve Avery, theCubs are 11-21 against left-handers.

BETTER NUMBERS: Today's game is the Cubs' final meeting withthe Braves this season, and the Cubs trail 5-6 in the series. Lastyear, the Cubs went 2-10.

MYERS IMPROVED: With the job Avery did Saturday, the Cubs didn'thave to call on closer Randy Myers, who has been bothered recently byshoulder soreness.

Just as well, said team trainer John Fierro. "I listed him asavailable but if we could give him another day, it would be good,"Fierro said. "But he is much better."

EARLY EDGE: How much does it bother a team like San Francisco toknow that the team chasing them - the Braves - won Saturday while theGiants were idle and could win again before they take the fieldtonight in Florida.

"It's always good to post a win before they get ready to play,"Avery said. "It puts a little more pressure on. In '91, we did thata lot to L.A. in night games, and it seemed to work out better forus."

POWER SURGE: With his grand-slam Friday, Derrick May became thesixth Cub to reach double-digits in home runs this season. May (10)joined Sammy Sosa (29), Rick Wilkins (24), Steve Buechele (11), MarkGrace (11) and Dwight Smith (11).

The club record for most batters having at least 10 homers iseight, set in 1955 and 1959.

WINE SIPPER; MERITAGE REDS

MERITAGE REDS

Meritage (it rhymes with "heritage"): a trade-marked name coined by California winemakers to describe a Bordeaux-style blend made in America. Only those who join the association and agree to stick with the classic Bordeaux grapes--Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Malbec, and Petit Verdot for reds--are allowed to label their wines Meritage. For this tasting, we also included a number of wineries that make beautiful blends, but haven't jumped on the Meritage bandwagon, and even threw in a wine from Bordeaux just to keep things interesting. Here are the top picks in what was a very, very close race.

1999 Estancia Meritage, Alexander Valley, $28.50

Very expressive aromas dominated by plum and dark berry fruit, with a nice kiss of toasty oak and a touch of black olive. Beautifully intense fruit in a big, but balanced wine with ripe cherry and blueberry flavors. The blend is Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, and it's drinking great now with just a hint of smooth tannins on the finish. A very good value on a top quality wine.

Three Rivers Winery River's Red, Columbia Valley, $14.99

This Walla Walla winery really has something going with this unusual blend of Cabernet Franc, Sangiovese, Merlot and Syrah. No, it wouldn't qualify as a Meritage, but it certainly can hold its own in their company. The grapes for this soft and supple wine are from both 1999 and 2000, and the sweet berry fruit flavors are a real sucker punch. Touches of toasty oak, black pepper, clove and coffee add interest too the lovely floral aromas, with hints of cedar, vanilla, and cherry adding layers of flavor in the mouth. An absolute bargain.

1998 St. Sup�ry Meritage, Napa Valley, $46

The wine press has not been kind to the 1998 red wine vintage in Napa Valley, but this Cabernet dominated wine has all the right stuff. The aromas are enticing, with creamy cassis, cherry and berry fruit and complex nuances of mocha, anise, clove and white pepper. The flavors are highlighted by ripe plums and blackberry with touches of anise and bittersweet chocolate. A more serious wine with the best structure and balance of this group. Not cheap, but worth the money if you're looking for something special.

This week's panel: Matt Burbank, BRJ Wines; Brandon Bruins, Idaho Wine Merchant; Fawn Goldy, Tastevin; David Kirkpatrick, Boise Co-op; Cindy Limber, Richard's Across the Street; Eric McLaughlin, Wild West Wines and Spirits; Phil Neville, Bardenay; Kevin Settles, Bardenay

Breakfast Briefing // Nation World

NYSE seat sells for $1.6 million NEW YORK - A seat on the New YorkStock Exchange sold last week for $1.6 million, down from a record $2million last month. The most an investor is willing to pay for aseat now is $1.4 million, and the lowest at which an owner is willingto sell a seat is $1.775 million, the exchange said. A seat givesthe holder the right to trade stocks and vote at exchange meetings.There are 1,366 seats on the exchange.U.S., France resume aviation talksPARIS - U.S. and French negotiators will resume talks Monday on anaccord to expand access to each other's aviation markets, a Frenchofficial said. An agreement could stir up trans-Atlantic competitionand push down fares. After six years of stalemate, France has agreedto allow more U.S. passenger flights over five years. In return itwill be allowed to to almost double its flights to the United States.The lack of a treaty has stunted air traffic between the twocountries and prevented both Air France and U.S. carriers fromexpanding services to meet with demand. An accord would let AirFrance forge closer links with partners Delta Air Lines andContinental Airlines and allow them to market each other's flights.Official: Japan's growth on track TOKYO - The director general ofthe Japanese Economic Planning Agency said the nation's economy wouldgrow 1.9 percent this year, in line with government projections.Japan's economy contracted 0.2 percent in the year ended Tuesday,according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. That would be thefirst contraction in 23 years, and economists foresee only 0.8percent growth this year. The government has spent $554 billionsince 1992 to boost the economy out of recession with little effect.Meanwhile it increased the national sales tax last year, snuffing outany chance of a consumer-led recovery.Report won't show inflation WASHINGTON - Falling energy prices andthe rising dollar have kept a lid on U.S. inflation in recent months,and reports for March due out this week are likely to carry the samemessage. Wednesday's report on prices paid at the wholesale level isexpected to show the producer price index fell for the fifth straightmonth, according to a Bloomberg News survey. The core index, whichstrips out volatile food and energy prices, is expected to beunchanged from February. Fed policymakers left U.S. borrowing costsunchanged at their meeting last week. U.S. central bankers, who willmeet May 19, have held the overnight bank lending rate steady at 5.50percent for more than a year as inflation has stayed close to itslowest level in over a decade.McCain backs local satellite TV LAS VEGAS - U.S. Senate CommerceCommittee Chairman John McCain (R-Ariz.) will push legislation thatwould let satellite TV companies air some local TV signals as cabledoes. McCain said that direct broadcast satellite companies shouldnot be required to air every single station and program in a marketbecause it is not feasible. McCain wants to let direct broadcastsatellite companies air local TV signals and to reduce the fees theyare required to pay for the right to air broadcast programming.Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) hasintroduced legislation that would let satellite broadcasters airlocal TV signals only if they carry every station in a market.Actors, producers sign pact LOS ANGELES - Film and TV producersreached a tentative contract agreement with actors, said the ScreenActors Guild, the American Federation of Television & Radio Artistsand the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers in a jointstatement. Contract details were not released. The agreement mustbe ratified by the union's rank-and-file, which has more than 130,000members.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Tale of escape shows you can make a difference

I was so moved by Maudlyne Ihejirika's [March 25] article "Escapefrom Nigeria: A story of love, war, faith." I cried while reading itbecause it is so personal to me.

I'm the younger son of two Holocaust survivors, both of whom aresole survivors of their large families. My partner's father was sentby his parents out of Nazi Germany in 1934 to live with strangers inthe United States. They ended up getting out of Germany in thesummer of 1939, right before war broke out. My grandparents and 21aunts and uncles and 20 first cousins weren't so lucky.

One of the many lessons of the Holocaust is that one person canmake a difference and, as is written in the Jewish Talmud, to saveone life is to save the world.

Last month, I hosted a reception in Chicago for PaulRusesabagina, the gentleman whose bravery saved hundreds of livesduring the Rwanda genocide and who inspired the movie "HotelRwanda," starring Academy Award nominee Don Cheadle.

I want to thank her for writing about James Wolter and remindingpeople that there is much we can do in the face of evil.

Michael Bauer, Lake View

New arrest in failed German train bombing: 12th suspect charged in airliner plot

BERLIN -- Police arrested a third suspect Friday in connectionwith a failed attempt to blow up two trains, while Lebaneseauthorities picked up a fourth man thought to have been involved,officials said.

The man arrested in Germany, whose identity was not released, wasdetained in the southern city of Konstanz on suspicion of membershipin a terrorist group, attempting to set off an explosion and multiplecounts of attempted murder.

"Whether, and to what extent he was involved in preparing theattacks is the subject of the investigation," said Frauke Scheuten,spokeswoman for the federal prosecutor's office.

Prosecutors said the man was an associate of Youssef …

Plumbing 101: How to prevent a drained wallet Using the right tools properly is the first step

The kitchen sink is clogged, and you stand there scratching yourhead wondering what to do. Then there's that irritating drip-dripfrom the faucet keeping sleep at bay.

Not many people are plumbing gurus. Knowing when to roll up yoursleeves and when to pick up the phone could save you money and grief.

In this age of the Internet, many people run for the computer tosearch out how-to tips from information Web sites. Armed withprintouts, many take a deep breath and plunge into the world of do-it-yourself remedies. Saving money is often the motivator, butplumbers caution over-zealous homeowners.

"The questions you want to ask yourself are 'Do I feel confidentenough in my ability to repair the problem?' 'Is it worth everythingif a nut blows in the middle of the night and then I have to dealwith water damage?'" suggested Wilbur Ray, owner of Wilbur RayPlumbing in Clarksville, Tenn.

Ray said he has encountered literally hundreds of customers whoattempted to make perceived simple repairs only to have those effortsresult in costly consequences.

"Murphy's Law is a big part of plumbing, any plumber will tell youthat," Ray said.

Maintenance is key

Ray is adamant about one particular tip to prevent cloggingproblems.

"Never, I repeat, never pour grease down a drain," Ray said.

J.D. Daigle, owner of Sewer Bee, also in Clarksville, agreed.

"Any kind of grease is a major no-no. It cools, hardens andbecomes slimy almost like a glue with warm running water," Daiglesaid.

The gooey grease then catches random particles of waste foodmatter. The gooey mess continues to mushroom until a drain isclogged, causing water to back up into the sink.

"But maintenance to drains is important," Daigle suggested."Drains require attention just like a car or anything else."

The best maintenance tool in Daigle's estimation is a bacteriacleaner, not liquid abrasive chemicals.

Daigle swears by a product called Bio-Clean, which is availablethrough plumbing supply outlets.

"It's an organic product that even if a small youngster were toconsume, it wouldn't harm him like most liquid or granular toxicproducts would," he said.

Suparna Kumar, a certified poison specialist with VanderbiltHospital Poison Control Center confirmed that Daigle's recommendationis an enzyme-based detergent that would not prove life threatening ifswallowed.

"But, it's important people realize this Bio-Clean product isproduced by Jabco International. There are other products with bio-clean in the name that contain highly toxic chemicals," Kumar said.

She suggested people look for Jabco International, a subsidiary ofKinzie & Payne Bio-chemical, on the product before assuming a falsesense of security for their children. She cautioned, however, thateven with this product there could be vomiting and nausea ifswallowed.

Having the right stuff

If you should decide to brave the frontier of do-it-yourselfplumbing, having the correct tools is a step toward success.

Professionals suggest the following:

PIPE WRENCHES. You'll usually need two pipe wrenches--one forholding and the other for turning. Use pipe wrenches only on pipes.The teeth in the jaws of a pipe wrench can bite into the metal andcan mar chrome-finished buts and pipes.

OPEN-END WRENCHES. Adjustable wrenches and monkey wrenches will dothe job, also. These tools have smooth jaws and can be used for hexor square nuts. These wrenches are ideal for working with interiorparts of faucets and valves.

STRAP WRENCHES. These can be used instead of a pipe wrench whenworking with chrome-coated pipe if a regular pipe wrench might marthe surface.

VICE GRIP WRENCHES. These are ideal for holding and working pipeof small diameter.

BASIN WRENCHES. These are used to remove or tighten nuts and hosecouplings under sinks and lavatories.

The alternate positions enable you to reach nuts that wouldordinarily be inaccessible to other wrenches.

Before making that call to the professionals, you might want totry a few tips from plumber Al Radford.

Radford said homeowners might opt to try using "a goodprofessional plunger" to dislodge stoppages.

He said to cover the overflow hole on a bathroom sink or theadjoining sinkhole if you're attempting to unclog a kitchen sink.

If you don't, you'll lose the plunging pressure. Use a goodprofessional plunger and work the clogged drain hole.

"That will take care of a clog in the trap; past that, thehomeowner is basically out of luck, unless they are experienced,"Radford said.

When it comes to finding a remedy for that dripping faucet,Radford said replacing the washer will usually take care of theproblem.

"If you should decide to replace the faucet, then be sure to readthe instructions and have the proper tools on hand," he said.

"And don't forget to turn off the supply line first thing, beforeyou do anything," he added.

Because most faucets require a nut to be held in place underneaththe sink while a bolt or screw is tightened at the top, Radford said,"You truly need a plumber's helper."

Scott Emerson works for Radford Plumbing. As a professional, heagreed.

He said installing a faucet is a job that requires someexperience. "Odds are the inexperienced do-it-yourselfer could tearup a new faucet and then pay a plumber to get another," Emerson said.

Gannett News Service

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Can Move and Kinect save a sagging video game industry?(Xbox Kinect and PlayStation Move)(Innovation)(Product/service evaluation)

Byline: Matthew Shaer

In 2006, Nintendo released a slim, slanted console called the Wii. Unlike the Sony PlayStation 3 and Microsoft Xbox 360, the Wii was a pretty underwhelming piece of hardware.

It didn't play DVDs or CDs. It couldn't handle HD graphics or surround sound. And it had a pretty goofy name.

What the Wii did have was the motion-sensitive "Wiimote." By waving the wireless video-game controller, a gamer could manipulate the on-screen character - one flick of the wrist sent Mario jumping, race cars flying, and golf balls soaring through the air.

The Wii was a risk for Nintendo. Conventional wisdom said that the way to make money was to create more advanced and better-looking games. But Nintendo executives bet that the Wii would attract an audience of so-called "casual gamers," who have little interest in spending 30-plus hours on the latest first-person shooter, but who might swing at a pixilated tennis ball a couple times a week.

The gamble paid off: The Wii was a sensation.

By the end …

Can Move and Kinect save a sagging video game industry?(Xbox Kinect and PlayStation Move)(Innovation)(Product/service evaluation)

Byline: Matthew Shaer

In 2006, Nintendo released a slim, slanted console called the Wii. Unlike the Sony PlayStation 3 and Microsoft Xbox 360, the Wii was a pretty underwhelming piece of hardware.

It didn't play DVDs or CDs. It couldn't handle HD graphics or surround sound. And it had a pretty goofy name.

What the Wii did have was the motion-sensitive "Wiimote." By waving the wireless video-game controller, a gamer could manipulate the on-screen character - one flick of the wrist sent Mario jumping, race cars flying, and golf balls soaring through the air.

The Wii was a risk for Nintendo. Conventional wisdom said that the way to make money was to create more advanced and better-looking games. But Nintendo executives bet that the Wii would attract an audience of so-called "casual gamers," who have little interest in spending 30-plus hours on the latest first-person shooter, but who might swing at a pixilated tennis ball a couple times a week.

The gamble paid off: The Wii was a sensation.

By the end …

Can Move and Kinect save a sagging video game industry?(Xbox Kinect and PlayStation Move)(Innovation)(Product/service evaluation)

Byline: Matthew Shaer

In 2006, Nintendo released a slim, slanted console called the Wii. Unlike the Sony PlayStation 3 and Microsoft Xbox 360, the Wii was a pretty underwhelming piece of hardware.

It didn't play DVDs or CDs. It couldn't handle HD graphics or surround sound. And it had a pretty goofy name.

What the Wii did have was the motion-sensitive "Wiimote." By waving the wireless video-game controller, a gamer could manipulate the on-screen character - one flick of the wrist sent Mario jumping, race cars flying, and golf balls soaring through the air.

The Wii was a risk for Nintendo. Conventional wisdom said that the way to make money was to create more advanced and better-looking games. But Nintendo executives bet that the Wii would attract an audience of so-called "casual gamers," who have little interest in spending 30-plus hours on the latest first-person shooter, but who might swing at a pixilated tennis ball a couple times a week.

The gamble paid off: The Wii was a sensation.

By the end …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

A step apart

For Roxie Hart, the "killer chorine" of the musical "Chicago,""family" means someone who will take her murder rap as she continuesher immoral ways.

But a conversation with Charlotte d'Amboise, the rising youngsong-and-dance woman who plays Roxie in the hit revival at theShubert Theatre, circles pleasantly around a more positive view ofthe nuclear group, particularly when the subject is her father, thelegendary ballet dancer, choreographer and teacher Jacques d'Amboise.

It's not a case of the dutiful daughter out to please or emulateDaddy. Nor is it an example of name-dropping or coattail-riding.D'Amboise is her own woman, giving a …

Jobs hope in quarry plan.

An application for a 14,854 metre sq water bottling plant has been submitted for Cowdale Quarry on the outskirts of Buxton.

And if the proposals are successful, that could be followed by a science park and a leisure centre.

However objectors claim the quarry, closed in 1956 and situated in the open countryside, has become a wildlife haven.

John King from the Friends of the Peak District said: "This scheme must not go ahead! It goes completely against the council's own planning policies, and will totally destroy a tranquil spot of local countryside."

His view has been echoed by villagers from the hamlet of Cowdale who at a parish meeting …

ROBINSON INTERVIEWS WITH RANGERS.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

NEW YORK -- Former New Jersey Devils coach Larry Robinson met this week with New York Rangers general manager Glen Sather to discuss the team's coaching job.

Robinson, who has two years remaining on his contract with New Jersey, was given permission by the Devils to talk to the Rangers. He is expected to meet again with Sather following this weekend's Entry Draft in Nashville.

Sather took over behind the Rangers bench last season after firing Bryan Trottier. The Rangers went 11-10-4-3 with the GM doubling as coach. Sather said he had no timetable for hiring a coach and did not rule out returning to the bench.

Broker pay, TRIA top conference agenda as risk managers head to Philadelphia.(RIMS 2005)(Terrorism Risk Insurance Act)

Byline: GLORIA GONZALEZ

Broker compensation arrangements and the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act will feature prominently on the agenda of the Risk & Insurance Management Society Inc.'s 2005 Annual Conference & Exhibition in Philadelphia April 17-21.

When developing its conference program, RIMS typically reserves openings for hot-topic sessions devoted to the major industry events of the past year, said Janet Barnes, RIMS vp-conference and risk manager and security administrator for Snohomish County Public Utility District No. 1 in Washington state. "This year, it was quite easy to fill all three hot-topic slots,'' Ms. Barnes said.

The first hot-topic discussion will examine whether policyholders affected by the insurance placement practices of Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc. should participate in Marsh's $850 million settlement with New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. The session will explore the factors policyholders need to consider in making their decisions, whether there are other options for policyholders and whether the settlement resolves all the issues for Marsh. It will take …

Billy Graham enjoys 'restful night' in hospital

ASHEVILLE, North Carolina (AP) — Evangelist Billy Graham slept well at a North Carolina hospital where he continues battling pneumonia.

Mission Hospital spokeswoman Merrell Gregory said Saturday morning that the 93-year-old Christian leader had a "restful night."

Doctors at the hospital in Asheville said Graham was able to stand and walk Friday during a physical therapy session.

Dr. Mark Hellreich, a pulmonologist treating …

Feds want Laski campaign records: Financial data sought in hunt for Hired Truck ties

Federal prosecutors have subpoenaed the campaign finance recordsof city Clerk James Laski, as the investigation of Laski and hispossible ties to a Hired Truck company heats up, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned.

The subpoenas were sent in recent weeks and ask for all financialinformation from two campaign committees over several years.

Craig Tobin, a prominent Loop attorney, has just been hired torepresent the two Laski committees. He said the committees will turnover all records.

"We are in the process of complying," Tobin said. The U.S.attorney's office had no comment.

Federal prosecutors interviewed Laski in August for a few hours,and he …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Laser the disk advantage: while no single piece of equipment is ideal for everything, those looking for a better way to perform production welding ought to consider these solid-state laser systems for speed, efficiency, and effectiveness.(FEATURE)

Although TRUMPF Inc.'s laser division (trumpf-laser.com) has a full array of industrial laser types-[CO.sub.2], disk, fiber, diode, rod-and while David Havrilla, manager of Products and Applications there believes that there are appropriate tools for appropriate tasks, when it comes to high-power applications typical of both OEM and supplier welding operations (think in the context of 4-to 6-kW requirements; typical cutting tasks are performed at lower power, say 1 kW), the disk laser oftentimes provides the sorts of advantages that cannot be readily overcome by the other types of lasers in their portfolio.

And yet before taking a look at the characteristics of the disk, it is worth noting that Havrilla is bullish about the potential of the direct-diode laser. He considers it to be "disruptive technology," and that it will quell the debate that currently occurs in laser circles between partisans of the disk and fiber …

Extra extra access. ('Extra - The Entertainment Magazine' to be shown on WMAQ television, Chicago, Illinois) (Brief Article)

Warner Bros. Domestic Television Dislribution's syndicated Extra-- The Entertainment Magazine will begin airing in prime access (6:30-7 p.m.) on WMAQ-TV Chicago beginning March 6. That marks a large improvement from the station's current 1:05 a.m. in on the station-- the weakest among Extra's top-10 market lineup. However, a second run …