четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Bloody siege at Pakistan army HQ ends with 20 dead

Pakistani commandos freed dozens of hostages held by militants at the army's own headquarters Sunday, ending a bloody, 22-hour drama that embarrassed the nation's military as it plans a new offensive against al-Qaida and the Taliban.

The standoff killed 20 people, including three captives and nine militants, who wore army fatigues in the audacious assault. The rescue operation began before dawn Sunday, ultimately freeing 42 hostages, the military said.

One attacker, described as the militants' ringleader, was captured.

The attack on Pakistan's "Pentagon," home to the nation's most powerful institution, showed the continued strength of …

Lanterns Light Tribute to Victims

HIROSHIMA, Japan With tears and prayers for the dead whosecorpses filled the rivers of Hiroshima 50 years ago, thousands ofpeople set glowing lanterns afloat Sunday night, capping a day oftributes to victims of the world's first atomic attack.

"People were crying for water after the bomb was dropped," saidEiko Dangame, 50. "So we send the lanterns out onto the water toconsole them."

Dangame was a baby when the bomb exploded. Her father died 25years later of complications from radiation poisoning, and every yearsince, she has come to send out a paper lantern with her father'sname written on it.

People gathered on bridges and river banks to watch the …

Today in History

Today is Thursday, Nov. 3, the 307th day of 2011. There are 58 days left in the year.

Today's Highlight in History:

On Nov. 3, 1911, the Chevrolet Motor Car Co. was founded in Detroit by Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant. (The company was acquired by General Motors in 1918.)

On this date:

In 1839, the first Opium War between China and Britain broke out.

In 1900, the first major U.S. automobile show opened at New York's Madison Square Garden under the auspices of the Automobile Club of America.

In 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence from Colombia.

In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt won a landslide election victory over …

Options exchange CBOE to test shaky IPO market

The most anticipated IPO so far this year, CBOE Holdings Inc., is expected this week, but worries about its high price compared to other exchanges may weigh on its shares in the current lackluster environment.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange is the country's largest options exchange and the last major U.S. exchange to go public. The initial public offerings of other …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Simple solution will help keep your Christmas tree healthy

Buy your Christmas tree as soon as possible so you can give itthe "water treatment," a tried-and-true process that will make yourtree last a lot longer.

Ask the seller to cut a slice off the bottom off the bottom ofthe trunk. When you bring the tree home, plunge it into a pail ofwater and add a cup of sugar. The fresh cut will allow the tree todrink up the water.

Keep the tree outdoors, if possible. Don't worry if we have afreeze. The tree is used to that.Add water and sugar for two weeks. You'll be surprised to seehow much water your tree will drink, and you'll be amazed how longyour tree will last. It makes all that decorating and devotionworthwhile.TRAVEL …

Appeal to combined functions and diversified uses

Fuji Spinning Intensifying Marketing Spandex Overseas

With the opening of its liaison representative office in Hong Kong in October 2000, Fuji Spinning Co., Ltd. has begun to launch the global marketing of spandex. In March 2001 the company held an exhibition at a hotel in Hong Kong in order to introduce the start of this office and to give wider publicity to its spandex as well. Toru Hirano, General Manager of Spandex Sales Dept. is confident of the progress of overseas marketing in the future based on his conclusions that the holding of this exhibition has enhanced the awareness of the company's spandex.

As for the company's spandex sales, the weight of yarn sales is …

Second Mexican government jet crashes in a month

A Mexican official says a second federal government Learjet has crashed in just over a month, killing two pilots.

Tlaxcala state government spokesman Fernandez Ahuatzi says the Learjet 23 lost contact with controllers shortly before plunging into a lake east of Mexico City.

Rescuers recovered the body of the pilot and were trying to extract the copilot's body …

OAPs dig deep for hospital scanner [Edition 2]

YEARS of proud charitable effort have been continued this year byvillagers in Thor nwood.

Over the past 15 years people in the village, part of the NorthWeald Bassett parish, have raised more than Pounds 30,000 forcharity, with a majority of the money going towards St ClareHospice, based in Hastingwood.

Last week, members of the Thornwood Seniors Association gatheredto celebrate their latest achievement- Pounds 1,500 for a new breastcancer scanner.

The money has been given to St Margaret's Hospital in Epping tohelp them fund the purchase of a new scanner.

Cyril Hawkins, who lives in Thornwood, is chairman of theassociation. He said: "There …

Oregon State Poised for 2nd CWS Title

OMAHA, Neb. - Oregon State's Jorge Reyes got himself and his team a whole lot closer to the national championship trophy that's been teasing him.

Forced to sit by it at a recent news conference, the Beavers' starter noted the hardware was placed just out of his reach. But he did his part to change that, pitching the Beavers to an 11-4 victory over North Carolina in Game 1 of the College World Series final on Saturday night.

"The trophy was right there, and I sure want it," the Oregon State freshman said. "Now I put our team one game closer to it."

Now the Tar Heels, who won three straight elimination games to set up this rematch of last year's finals, need to win …

Ex-KKK head Duke in Austria after Czech expulsion

Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke has come to Austria after being ordered to leave the Czech Republic.

Duke's Klan past and suspicions that he questioned the existence of the Holocaust caused Czech authorities to cancel his lectures in Prague and Brno. Czech …

Ireland's Roads Throw Americans for a Loop

DUBLIN Renting a car and driving in a circle around Ireland is a -Whoosh! - great way - "AIEEEE-ah" - to see the - "Keep left!!!" -country up close and - "Hail Mary, full of grace" - personal.

Only the stout-hearted need apply.

The Irish, God bless 'em, drive like a nation on amphetamines.They jockey for position as if they're piloting a long shot in thesweeps. They tailgate, pass on curves, give charming but lousydirections, plant giant potholes in their roads, and then, and then .. . They smile and beep.

It's hard to say whether this behavior merits a special circlein Dante's Inferno, or the right of way to proceed through the PearlyGates.

All …

Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.74 pct.

NEW YORK (AP) — Rates on the 30-year fixed mortgages rose slightly this week, following increases in Treasury yields.

Freddie Mac says the average rate rose to 4.74 percent this week from 4.71 percent the previous week. It hit a 40-year low of 4.17 percent in November.

The average rate on the 15-year loan slipped to 4.05 percent from 4.08 …

Mining away the gains ; esurgere Mines and Minerals and Austral Coke & Projects, which operate in the out -of-favour commodities space, recently had a spectacular debut on the stock markets. The spectacular rise & fall of two mining stocks raises hackles.

These are bad times for new listings, as any market analyst worthhis name will tell you; and it's even worse for companies from thosesectors that are decidedly in a downturn. Yet, Resurgere Mines andMinerals and Austral Coke & Projects, which operate in the out -of-favour commodities space, recently had a spectacular debut on thestock markets. On the day of listing, the stock prices of Resurgereand Austral Coke rose over 100 per cent and 50 per cent,respectively.

Many investors couldn't help but curse themselves; they couldhave easily got the share of these companies in their initial publicoffers (IPOs) as these issues were barely subscribed. After gainingfurther over the next couple of days, the Resurgere stock slid backalmost 70 per cent and was quoting below the issue price of Rs 270per share.

Austral Coke was in better position, losing just 18 per cent fromits all-time high of 308; at the time of writing it was stilltrading above the issue price of Rs 196 per share. So, what explainsthe stunning success of these two IPOs at a time when the overallmarket sentiment was low and the commodities space an absolute no-no? Resurgere Mines is into mining of iron ore and bauxite andAustral Coke is into manufacturing coke and refractories, and bothfeed sectors like steel, cement, aluminium that are in a downturn.

According to market sources, the spectacular rise and fall in thestock prices of these companies was due to the fact that just a fewplayers held most of the shares and they could move the stock priceat will. This happened as the retail portion of both issues wasundersubscribed, and as a result, institutional and high net-worthinvestors were allotted most of the shares. When the shares of acompany are in a few hands, it is very easy to control the stockprice, says a dealer with a domestic broking firm. Dealers say theshare price of Resurgere was pushed higher it went as high as Rs 740at one point to make a killing. When some people started selling theshares, the price was further pushed up again, luring them to covertheir short positions, which led to a further rise. After the shortcovering was over, selling started again but this time there were nobuyers and as a result the stock price fell sharply.

If market whispers are to be believed, both the Bombay StockExchange and National Stock Exchange have sought details frombrokers on buyers and sellers in the shares of these two companies.Till the time the stock exchanges are able to prove there wassomething fishy about the whole affair, we can ponder over thestrange ways of the market. Virendra verma

Web weary

Car dealers have to maximize the efficiency of Internet leads.

Three years ago pundits claimed that the Internet would transform auto retailing. Dealers would be marginalized as car buyers searched the net for their dream cars, submitted a request for a price and arranged the transaction from the comfort of home. Dealers attended seminars on how to survive in this new world and added staff to service the web savvy shopper. Websites were upgraded. Salespeople were given pagers so that they could respond instantly to an incoming e-mail and dealers signed up with third party sites that promised to funnel customers to them.

Despite the effort, not much has changed in the way people buy cars. The Internet has made people smarter about what they buy and what a fair price is, but the vast majority still purchase their cars faceto-face in a dealership. The Internet, it seems, hasn't had a significant impact on transaction prices or dealer margins, though the Internet shopper probably knows the fair market price and is unlikely to pay a premium.

Internet visitors flood manufacturers' websites, as well as those devoted to used car pricing, car reviews and general car information. Virtually every site and portal gives them the opportunity to fill out a request form for a price quote. Later these leads are sold to dealers who have purchased territories for their brands, sometimes with little screening for duplicates, pranksters or simply people curious about a car but having no intention to buy.

As a result, dealers are being flooded with requests to submit price quotes that vastly exceed the number of potential car buyers. Dealers, who once enthusiastically devoted resources to the Internet shopper have been frustrated by low conversion ratios on Internet leads since the typical Internet car shopper might submit six or more requests, and, of course, they will buy only one car. While some dealers have had success with the Internet, few of them have measured the cost of their operation in relation to the number of sales generated among customers outside of their normal trading area. What dealers have learned is that Internet shoppers get price quotes from more than one dealer and often go to the local store where they prefer to buy Dealers generally report that shoppers who contact them directly by e-mail as opposed to through a third party have the highest closing ratio. That customer has identified himself as being ready to buy and is doing what most people do when buying a car, arranging the purchase through the local dealer who will later provide service on that vehicle.

This year about 16.5 million passenger vehicles will be sold of which more than 3 million will be sold with some type of pre-arranged pricing. These units include rental cars, corporate, government and commercial fleet vehicles and vehicles sold under one of the many "friends and family" programs sponsored by automakers that fix prices at a percent of invoice. That leaves between 13.0 and 13.5 million units that will be sold by dealers through the normal shopping, negotiating and delivery process. While the number seems large, it is only 35,000 to 37,000 vehicles a day and spread over 22,000 franchise dealers in the country that amounts to about 1.6 cars a day per dealer. By Internet standards, auto sales are very small in contrast to the number of people researching cars.

Unfortunately, the Internet doesn't change the total number of cars purchased, it hasn't had any impact on market share shifts among brands, nor, at the local level, among dealers. But because Internet initiatives represent new expenses, dealers will be pressed to justify the expenses they are incurring. As Internet hype recedes car dealers are going to have to find ways of maximizing the efficiency of the leads they respond to and offset their investment in Internet related activities with cuts elsewhere.

[Author Affiliation]

MARYANN KELLER is a veteran auto industry analyst and author of the books "Rude A The Rise, FaR And S Tb Recover At General Motors and "Collision: GMt Toyota and Volkswagen And The Race Th Own The 21st Century."

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

High-flyers take off at park

PEDAL POWER Daredevil bikers and skaters showed their mettle at aspecial day at Cardigan's Maes Radley skateboard park. The eventfeatured stunts from many locals as well as professionaldemonstrations.

FRIENDS FAREWELL: 10 SEASON IN 10 DAYS I'll be square for you

For a show that's not really about fashion, "Friends" has had itsshare of, um, eye-catching looks. From Chandler's hair (yes,Chandler's -- not Rachel's) to Joey's eyebrows to Ross's armadillosuit, the $1 million-an-episode stars have been willing to appear ingetups that are unconventional, unflattering and sometimes just plaingoofy. Here we look back at some of the Friends' more memorablelooks:The final episode of 'Friends' will air May 6 on NBC.

2000: festival of fright

Trying to give his son a Hanukkah lesson, Ross skips the Santasuit and wears the only costume the store had. Unfortunately, the boyis more impressed by Joey -- who's dressed as Superman -- than byRoss' freaky Holiday Armadillo.

1994: something borrowed, something brewed

Quick -- how many times has Rachel worn a wedding gown? Twice.Once (pictured above) when she ran out on her wedding to Barry thedentist. And again when she and Phoebe tried on bridal gowns prior toMonica's nuptials. The big question is: Will she be wearing one onthe final episode?

1998: tool britannia

Was this Union Jack hat the reason Chandler slept with Monica?While in London for Ross' marriage to Emily, Chandler and Joey decideto sight-see solo, mainly because Chandler is embarrassed by thishat. Joey wears it and runs into Fergie. Later, Chandler and Monicawould share a bed.

Amid fears over toxins, FEMA offers refunds to those who bought disaster trailers

The Federal Emergency Management Agency, responding to concerns about formaldehyde in trailers issued to hurricane survivors, said it would offer refunds to people who bought them after their initial use.

The federal government began selling trailers in 2006 through online auctions and to victims of the intense 2005 hurricane season. Sales were suspended in July last year because of the fears about formaldehyde, which can cause respiratory problems.

Hundreds of people in Louisiana and Mississippi are suing manufacturers, accusing them of providing FEMA with trailers that contained high levels of the toxin after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which devastated much of the Gulf Coast.

FEMA said that 10,839 travel trailers and park models were sold by the federal General Services Administration at an average price of $6,936 (euro4,721), and that 864 trailers were sold directly to hurricane victims.

The agency said it would e-mail buyers to notify them of the refund option. Buyers have 60 days to request a refund, FEMA said Thursday.

FEMA will take back the trailers once a refund is issued, but it's not clear what will happen to them after that.

U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt, who is presiding over formaldehyde cases filed on behalf of 723 people, met with attorneys on both sides Thursday in New Orleans.

Henry Miller, a lawyer for FEMA, said the agency has received only 20 formaldehyde-related claims that it considers "legally sufficient."

FEMA says the trailers won't be used as temporary shelters for disaster victims until safety concerns are addressed.

In late December, government scientists began measuring formaldehyde levels in hundreds of FEMA trailers. Preliminary results are due next month, and a final report is expected to be released in May.

1 climber dead on Mount McKinley, 1 rescued

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The National Park Service says one of two climbers who were the targets of a rescue attempt on North America's tallest mountain has been found dead.

A second climber on the same guided expedition suffered a broken leg but has been rescued from Mount McKinley, about 180 miles north of Anchorage.

National Park Service spokeswoman Maureen McLaughlin did not immediately identify the climbers.

Rescuers battled winds gusting to 70 mph on Thursday.

WHO: Countries agree to share flu virus samples

GENEVA (AP) — The World Health Organization says countries have agreed on a deal to share flu virus samples after almost four years of fractious talks on the issue.

The WHO says diplomats haggled through the night before reaching agreement early Saturday.

The deal must still be approved at the WHO's annual meeting in Geneva next month.

Developing countries had for years refused to freely share samples of viruses such as bird flu because they claimed drug companies would profit from vaccines their own citizens wouldn't be able to afford.

The deal foresees that drug companies either share the vaccine formula or reserve some of their vaccine production for poor countries in case of a future pandemic.

ROADSHOW; EAGLE SUMMER CONCERT SERIES

The Eagle Summer Concert Series just keeps it burning with the next show in the series. Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for John Hiatt and the Goners with the North Mississippi All-Stars.

With this latest band, John Hiatt and the Goners will heat up the already hot July night at this Friday's show, the latest in the concert series while they're out in support of Hiatt's newest release, Master of Disaster. Out less than a month, this album has received positive critical response, so he and the Goners should have a lot of fresh, new material to get everyone's feet a tappin'. Shouldn't be hard for a man whose songs have been recorded by some of the biggest names in the biz.

Singer/songwriter John Hiatt has been making music since the '70s. Largely unknown outside of the music industry, his songs have been recorded by Ronnie Milsap, Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, B.B. King, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Conway Twitty, Dr. Feelgood, the Neville Brothers, Iggy Pop and Three Dog Night, just to name a few. Opening for John Hiatt and the Goners are brothers Luther and Cody Dickinson - better known as the North Mississippi AllStars, a young group out of Memphis. With an eclectic mix of blues, gospel, rock and psychedelic pop, these boys have created their own unique Southern rock style and if you don't know it, you will. It will be a nice complement to Hiatt's sound - especially since the NMAS backed Hiatt on his latest disc (and their dad, legendary producer Jim Dickinson, produced it).

Out on a more than 30-city tour for Master of Disaster, Hiatt's near anonymity among the public at large is definitely going to change. One listen to this music and you'll think you've been listening to him for years. And, in reality, you have.

Article copyright Bar Bar Inc.

Photograph (John Hiatt)

Bond Increased for Miami Herald Intruder

MIAMI - A cartoonist arrested after brandishing a toy gun at The Miami Herald building had his bond increased Saturday to $75,000.

Jose Varela, 50, was arrested after a more than two hour standoff Friday in which he demanded to see an editor of the newspaper's Spanish-language sister paper. His bond was initially set at $22,500.

Varela was carrying a knife and a black, plastic toy gun that resembled a real semiautomatic weapon, police said. He was charged with three counts of aggravated assault with a firearm.

Police Chief John Timoney said Varela had problems with El Nuevo Herald, where he worked as a contractor, that included its position on Cuban emigres.

The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald share an office and are both published by The Miami Herald Media Co. El Nuevo Herald is one of the nation's largest Spanish-language newspapers.

E-mail and phone messages left for Joe Garcia, an attorney Varela contacted from inside the building, were not immediately returned Saturday.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Chavez set on 2012 re-election bid despite cancer

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he is certain he will pursue his re-election bid next year even as he struggles to overcome cancer.

Chavez said in an interview published Monday in the government newspaper Correo del Orinoco that he hasn't "for an instant thought about withdrawing from the presidency."

He said if there were physical reasons to step down he would do so but that he is pursuing his candidacy "with more strength than before."

"I'm resolved to reach 2031," Chavez said.

The leftist president has been in office since 1999 and is seeking another six-year term. He has suggested in the past that he hopes to keep winning re-election to remain president for many years to come. He has vaguely mentioned various dates, ranging from 2021 to 2031.

A poll released last week said Chavez's public approval rating remains at 50 percent and hasn't significantly varied since his cancer diagnosis.

Chavez completed his first phase of chemotherapy in Cuba last week. He said he is now waiting for additional phases of chemotherapy but did not say how soon the treatments would resume or how long the process could last.

Chavez underwent surgery in Cuba on June 20 to remove a cancerous tumor, which he has said was the size of a baseball. He hasn't said what type of cancer he has been diagnosed with or specified where exactly it was located, saying only that it was in his pelvic region.

Chavez, who turns 57 on Thursday, said he plans to celebrate his birthday in Venezuela.

He dismissed what he called the "macabre, perverse, morbid wishes of some commentators like Roger Noriega," a former U.S. assistant secretary of state under former President George W. Bush.

A message on Noriega's Twitter account on Sunday said he believes Chavez's "health is grave" and that the opposition "should fill vacuum/prepare for any scenario."

Chavez said after his return from Cuba to Venezuela on Saturday night that thorough tests found no signs that any cancer cells have reappeared.

Chavez gave a speech and sang at a public event on Sunday, appearing upbeat and energetic.

Location, Quality: That's the Pointe // First-Time Buyers Find Carol Stream

Ed Ryan's territory is DuPage County. When the salesman happenedto drive past the site of Carol Stream's Concord Pointe subdivision ayear ago, he returned later with his fiancee, Kim Bevans.

Apparently that's a common response for first-time buyers inthe area. The Orange Report market survey places the 325-unit condodevelopment among the top-selling new subdivisions in northernDuPage, along with the Bartlett subdivisions Fairfax Crossings, AmberGrove and Westridge. At least 140 units have been sold.

Ryan and Bevans had been looking for a couple of months. Therewere no models yet, but they looked at the plans and the price wasright. Ryan said they looked at some other places, but went back andbought their condominium pretty quickly. "Location and price areprobably the two big reasons we bought," he said.

They bought the Eaton plan, the most expensive of the five plansavailable. They paid a base price of $125,000 and put in about$10,000 worth of upgrades. (The current base price is $134,000.)

The Eaton is a 2-story model available with 3 bedrooms or 2bedrooms and a loft. Ryan and Bevans chose the loft model. "Weliked the loft and the big master bedroom with volume ceilings," Ryansaid. "Everything is very open. We picked an end unit because wewanted privacy and because of the windows. It has beautifulwindows."

Ryan is from Oak Lawn and Bevans from the Wrigleyville area ofChicago. "This is kind of in the middle," he said. The couple isgetting married in September and Ryan moved into the condo June 28,the closing date.

Upgrades they put in include parquet flooring, a wood banisterinstead of a half-wall, tiled floors in the bathrooms, better qualityappliances and a better grade carpeting and padding. Sockets werealso installed for ceiling fans, but Ryan said so far he hasinstalled only one.

Scott and Joelle Pohl live across the street. They were readyto give a down payment at another development next door but the"builders were not ready to work with us," Scott Pohl said. ThePohls also bought their unit before the models were up.

"We met with the service representative and really liked theBrookfield. It had the most living space in it and is a single levelon the second floor," Scott said.

The Brookfield is a 2-bedroom, 2-bath unit with a living roomand dining room with volume ceilings. There is a balcony off thekitchen and a master bedroom suite with volume ceilings and a walk-incloset. The master bath has his and hers vanities. Scott Pohl likesthe dramatic entrance.

"We bought it at $116,400," he said, "and have made moneyalready." That's if they sell the house at its current $126,000 baseprice.

"Because we are waiting until September to move in, they gave us$3,500 in upgrades free," said Scott. The Pohls will celebrate theirfirst anniversary in September.

The Pohls upgraded the carpeting and padding, cabinets,flooring, all the doors and added ceiling fans. "We just keptupgrading and deducted the $3,500 from it. We put it on themortgage," Scott said.

The couple met with an interior decorator from Concord Homes."She was very helpful. That was the last step," Scott said. "We didthat about the end of February. Now we have settled down to waiting.The whole process of approval and signing documents went verysmoothly," he said.

"When we got married we knew we wanted modern furniture. Webought stuff for the house. All the decorating is geared for thehouse," said Scott. "The time frame was really good for us. We havehad a year to buy and spread out purchases."

Scott and Christine Fitzgerald are also looking forward tomoving into their Brookfield unit in September. "We had been lookingfor a good five months before we actually bought," said ChristineFitzgerald. "We went up to Kenosha where my grandmother lives, butit was too far out.

"The more places we saw, the more we realized what we couldafford. Then we began to get pickier. My husband is a painter andhad been working on projects," said Christine.

The couple looked at Wildwood Glen across the street and saw thesign for Concord Pointe. "It had so many things we knew we wanted,we signed a contract that day," Christine said.

The Fitzgeralds liked the price of the Brookfield and got induring pre-construction pricing. They were able to see the unit inthe drywall stage. "Even then we knew it was what we wanted,"Christine said.

The major concern of the Fitzgeralds was a down payment."They've been working with us. We have added to the down payment aswe go along," said Christine, who works for Draper and Kramer.

"I have heard a lot of horror stories in my business but thishas been a really positive experience. The builder has been reallyprofessional. They keep in touch."

The Fitzgeralds' base price was $119,000. They added a thirdbedroom or den and a fireplace. With upgrades, the final price wasabout $135,000 for about 1,400 square feet.

Besides the Eaton and the Brookfield, other models are: The Astor, a one-level unit with 2 bedrooms or 1 bedroom withlibrary; 1 bath; living room with volume ceiling; dining room andpatio off the kitchen, and master bedroom with walk-in closet. Thecurrent base price is $108,000. The Camden, with 2 bedrooms and 2 1/2 baths; living room withvolume ceiling; kitchen with breakfast bar, pantry and separatebreakfast room; patio off dining room; master bedroom suite withvolume ceiling, walk-in closet, master bath. Optional third bedroom.The current base price is $126,000. The Dover: 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths; living room and dining room;patio off living room; kitchen with breakfast bar and separatebreakfast area; master bedroom suite with volume ceilings and walk-incloset, and 1-car garage.

The most popular models are the Brookfield and the Eaton."There are a lot of first-time buyers, young professional couples andwe also get older people who are downsizing," sales associate CheriSpalo said. Concord Pointe, North Avenue west of Bloomingdale Road, CarolStream; Concord Homes, (708) 510-9660.

Joanne Kanter is a Chicago area free-lance writer. Hot buttons Price starting from $108,000 Near city via Interstate 355 Volume ceilings Dramatic entry Central air-conditioning Thermopane patio doors with screens Underground utilities Party walls designed for sound control

Grounds at health lab getting an overhaul

The state is reconfiguring the grounds at the Bureau of PublicHealth's Office of Laboratory Services' campus at 167 11th Ave.,South Charleston.

Several old warehouses facing 11th Avenue have been demolisheddown to the concrete slabs in recent months.

State Department of Health and Human Resources spokesman John Lawsaid the slabs will be used as a base for new employee access andparking.

"Earthen areas between the slabs are being cut down to allow foraggregate base material to be applied for new paving before new fenceis installed," Law said. "We are also demolishing several oldbuilding foundations and sidewalks that are no longer functional. Weare recycling much of the material for erosion control and paving-base material."

Meanwhile, overgrowth on the Kanawha River bank behind thelaboratory is being cut to allow better views for surveillancecameras. The cameras "are going to be installed as part of our newplan to secure and provide access control to the entire campus," hesaid.

The state Department of Highways is using its staff and equipmentto do the current phase of work under an interagency agreement.

One result of the project should be a much-improved landscape, Lawsaid.

* n n

A $500,000 line-of-credit extended by the Charleston Area Allianceto the Mid-Atlantic Technology, Research and Innovation Center, alsoknown as MATRIC, is due to expire July 1. The original May 1 deadlinewas extended to give MATRIC an opportunity to present its financialstatements to the alliance.

Alliance CEO Matt Ballard said, "Our Executive Committee met lastweek with respect to this line of credit but have not made a finaldecision. The Finance Committee will be taking a look at it next weekas well before a final recommendation is made.

"MATRIC is something that began at the Alliance," Ballard said."We are strong supporters of the program as evidenced by the fact wemade this line of credit available. Their continued success is tiedto the continued success of the valley."

Some believe the alliance will never make MATRIC repay the line ofcredit.

* n n

John Allison, chairman and CEO of BB&T Corp., was in CharlestonWednesday.

"It is his annual visit," said BB&T spokeswoman A.C. McGraw. "Hedoes visit every single BB&T banking region at least once a year. Wehave more than 30 of those regions. He meets in the headquarters cityfor every region."

Charleston is the headquarters for BB&T's West Virginia-CentralRegion.

* n n

Gayle Vest, who retired in January as managing director ofAdvantage Valley, is administering a $2 million grant theorganization received from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation for a programcalled the entrepreneurial league system.

The program, which is designed to foster entrepreneurship, was thesubject of a New York Times Small Business Section article on April26.

Bush: Bin Laden Ordered Non-Iraq Attacks

WASHINGTON - Rallying support for the war, President Bush is pointing to U.S. intelligence asserting that Osama bin Laden ordered a top lieutenant in early 2005 to form a terrorist unit to hit targets outside Iraq, and that the United States should be first in his sights.

The information, which Bush was to cite Wednesday in a commencement address at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, was declassified by the White House on Tuesday. It expands on a classified bulletin the Homeland Security Department issued in March 2005.

The bulletin, which warned that bin Laden had enlisted Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, his senior operative in Iraq, to plan potential strikes in the United States, was described at the time as credible but not specific. It did not prompt the administration to raise its national terror alert level.

Bush, who is battling Democrats in Congress over spending for the unpopular war in Iraq, will highlight U.S. successes in foiling terrorist plots and use the intelligence to argue that terrorists remain a threat to Americans, said Frances Fragos Townsend, the White House homeland security adviser.

Previewing the president's remarks in New London, Conn., Townsend said the declassified intelligence showed that in January 2005, bin Laden tasked al-Zarqawi with organizing the cell. Al-Zarqawi was killed in Iraq in June 2006 by a U.S. airstrike.

"We know from the intelligence community that al-Zarqawi welcomed the tasking and claimed he already had some good proposals," Townsend said.

Reading from notes, she said that in the spring of 2005, bin Laden instructed Hamza Rabia, a senior operative, to brief al-Zarqawi on al-Qaida plan to attack sites outside Iraq, including the United States. Townsend did not disclose where in the United States those attacks were being plotted.

Around the same time, Abu Fajah al-Libi, a senior al-Qaida manager, suggested that bin Laden send Rabia to Iraq to help al-Zarqawi plan the external operations, Townsend said. It is unclear whether Rabia went to Iraq, she said.

She said the information was declassified because the intelligence community has tracked all leads from the information, and that the players were either dead or in U.S. custody.

The Bush White House in the past has declassified and made public sensitive intelligence information to help rebut critics or defend programs or decisions against possibly adverse decisions in the Congress or the courts. On a few occasions, the declassified materials were intended to be proof that terrorists see Iraq as a critical staging ground for global operations.

Democrats and other critics have accused Bush of selectively declassifying intelligence, including portions of a sensitive National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, to justify the U.S.-led invasion on grounds Saddam Hussein's regime possessed weapons of mass destruction. That assertion proved false.

---

On the Net:

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov

NATO says 9 service members killed in crash

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — NATO says nine service members with the international coalition in Afghanistan have died after their helicopter crashed in the volatile south.

Two other coalition troops, an Afghan National Army soldier and a U.S. civilian were injured in Tuesday's crash and were transported to a military medical center for treatment, the coalition said.

NATO did not disclose the location of the crash, which is under investigation.

"There are no reports of enemy fire in the area," NATO said in a statement.

Fed Holds the Line on Interest Rates

WASHINGTON - The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday and raised the possibility they could be cut in the months ahead, igniting a rally on Wall Street where investors are thirsting for a reduction. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his central bank colleagues left an important interest rate unchanged at 5.25 percent, the sixth straight meeting without budging the rate. The decision was unanimous.

On Wall Street, stocks rose sharply. The Dow Jones industrials closed up 159.42 points at 12,447.52 in the index's biggest one-day gain since July 24.

The Fed's decision means that commercial banks' prime interest rate - for certain credit cards, home equity lines of credit and other loans- stays at 8.25 percent. The Fed has left rates alone since August, giving borrowers time to catch their breath after two years of steadily rising rates.

In an important change, Fed policymakers got rid of language from previous policy statements that suggested their next move could be a rate increase. Instead, the Fed is now widening its options and raising the possibility that rates also could go down.

Investors are betting the Fed will cut rates later this year to guard against any undue economic weakness. Many economists predict the central bank will probably start cutting rates early next year.

"The needle has shifted a little more to the center. I think they are more open to easing rates than they would have been several months back," said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Bank of America's Investment Strategies Group. "They are moving away from the notion there could only be a rate increase."

The Fed is still sticking to its forecast that inflation should recede over time and that the economy - despite strains from the housing slump and troubles facing lenders and borrowers of risky mortgages - should log moderate growth over the coming quarters.

That being said, the Fed did slightly downgrade its assessment of current economic conditions, saying recent barometers "have been mixed." In contrast, at its previous meeting in late January, the Fed said recent indicators "suggested somewhat firmer economic growth."

Similarly, the Fed on Wednesday talked about the ongoing "adjustment" taking place in the housing sector. The Fed didn't mention any "tentative signs of stabilization," as it had in January, a view that led some to hope that the painful housing slump could be improving somewhat.

The economy has been feeling the strain of the housing slump. Economic growth in the final quarter of last year clocked in at a 2.2 percent pace, a sluggish performance that is expected to continue in coming months.

Investment in home building in the fourth quarter was slashed by 19.1 percent on an annualized basis, the steepest decline in 15 years.

Even with lackluster economic growth, however, the jobs market remains in good shape. The unemployment rate dropped to 4.5 percent in February and workers got fatter paychecks even as bad winter weather sent a chill through U.S. job growth.

Inflation, meanwhile, is still running above the Fed's 1 percent to 2 percent comfort zone. An inflation gauge closely watched by the Fed that excludes volatile energy and food, was up 2.3 percent for the 12 months ending in January.

After citing some inflation improvements in its last statement, the Fed this time noted that underlying inflation readings have been "somewhat elevated" recently.

Fed policymakers continued to make clear that the biggest risk to the economy is inflation.

The "predominant policy concern remains the risk that inflation will fail to moderate as expected," Fed policymakers said.

To fend off inflation, the Fed steadily boosted interest rates for two years, the longest stretch in its history. But since last summer, it has left rates alone. The Fed's goal is to slow the economy sufficiently to thwart inflation but not so much as to cripple economic activity.

Fed policymakers' meeting on Wednesday is their first since a worldwide stock market meltdown on Feb. 27, when the Dow Jones industrials suffered a 416-point plunge.

Fears about risky mortgages, economic slowdowns in two global powerhouses - the United States and China - and the possibility of a U.S. recession this year raised by former Fed chief Alan Greenspan, were factors in the market nosedive.

One day after the stock swoon, Bernanke - tackling his first financial crisis - sought to calm jittery investors. The Fed chief said nothing had altered the Fed's outlook for moderate growth in the economy this year.

"The Fed may not have blinked in the face of subprime mortgage problems but it seems ... that its eyelids are fluttering" as it takes into account the prospects of an economic slowdown, said Terry Connelly, dean of Golden Gate University's Ageno School of Business.

---

On the Net:

Federal Reserve: http://www.federalreserve.gov/

Doctor: Man said he raped woman post-strangling

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (AP) — A psychiatrist says a Connecticut man convicted of killing a woman and her two daughters in a 2007 home invasion told him he raped the woman after he strangled her.

Dr. Eric Goldsmith testified for a second day Thursday in New Haven Superior Court during the punishment phase of Steven Hayes' trial. Jurors will consider whether Hayes should get the death penalty or life in prison.

Other witnesses said earlier in the trial that Hayes confessed to raping and strangling Jennifer Hawke-Petit in her Cheshire home. Prosecutors said her daughters died of smoke inhalation after the house was set on fire by Hayes and a co-defendant.

Hayes was convicted earlier this month of killing Hawke-Petit, 17-year-old Hayley Petit and 11-year-old Michaela Petit.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Thomas proves the difference as brace is enough for County

FORMER Town favourite Danny Thomas proved the difference asHaverfordwest County beat Carmarthen 3-2. Thomas scored a brace andwas pivotal to many of the Bluebirds moves.

Jack Christopher and Sacha Walters both had early runs, but thefirst real chance came in the third minute when Town were forced toclear Gareth Elliot's header off the line.

Town broke the deadlock just after the quarter hour. Tim Hickswas brought down by Lee Jarman five yards outside the box. Walterslifted the free-kick over the wall, keeper Lee Idzi misjudged thebounce and Town took an early lead.

Walters had an opportunity to make it 2-0 but took one touch tomany before his shot was blocked.

On 23 minutes the Bluebirds were back on level terms. Town let ahigh ball bounce, the hurried clearance was sliced and the ball fellto the unmarked Christopher who lobbed the keeper.

Mike Lewis made amends for a missed punched clearance by savingDanny Thomas's shot before denying Christopher twice in as manyminutes.

At the other end Darren Griffiths did well to put Walters throughbut the winger fired into the side-netting.

Walters's persistence along the touch line saw him win the ballbefore clipping it in to Nick Harry, who was denied by the post.

But the Bluebirds broke and with Lewis getting down toChristopher's low shot, Thomas was on hand to net the parried ball.

Seven minutes after the resumption Town were back on level terms.The hosts failed to clear a corner ball and Hicks side-footed home.

Town lost Corey Thomas through injury just before the hour.

Kyle Graves found Christopher and with the winger crossing in,Danny Thomas found himself free but failed to capitalise.

After Richard Evans's low shot was turned wide by Lewis, Thomassecured the win with a minute to go, turning in a lose ball afterTown failed to clear a contentious late free-kick.

Lingo Media Acquires A+ Child Development

TORONTO, ONTARIO--(CCNMatthews - Dec. 6, 2006) - Lingo Media Inc.(TSX VENTURE: LMD)(OTCBB:LNGMF) ("Lingo Media" or the "Company")today announced that it has acquired a 62.33% controlling interest inA+ Child Development (Canada) Ltd. ("A Plus") and will acquire anadditional 8% interest within 90 days. A Plus had reported revenuesof CAD $3.8 million in 2005. A Plus derives revenues from publishingand distribution of educational materials aimed at the earlychildhood market. A Plus has developed a successful and uniquecurriculum for parents to use with their children based on the latestneuroscience research. To date, A Plus has focused its marketingefforts only in Canada. With Lingo Media's established operations inBeijing, A Plus will introduce its learning system and products toparents of pre-school children across China. Plans also include anexpansion of A Plus' markets to the United States and Latin America.

Under the terms of the acquisition, Lingo Media:

i) acquired 50.33% of the outstanding capital stock of A Plus fromits shareholders for the purchase price of CAD$730,000 satisfied byissuing 2,650,000 common shares of Lingo Media and paying CAD$200,000cash;

ii) invested CAD$150,000 in A Plus for an additional 12% interest;

iii) agreed to invest a further CAD$100,000 in A Plus for anadditional 8% interest within 90 days; and

iv) issued an additional 3,000,000 common shares of Lingo Media tothe selling shareholders of A Plus subject to meeting annual earningsmilestones to be held in escrow and released over a three-year periodwith a maximum of 1,000,000 shares released per year;

"Acquiring A Plus, brings Lingo Media a company with growingrevenues in Canada and the opportunity to expand to new markets inChina and the United States. This acquisition will dramaticallyincrease our revenues beginning October 1, 2006 which will bereflected in our fourth quarter financial statements. We are veryenthusiastic about the growth for 2007 and beyond from A Plus'planned expansion in Canada and new markets. To date, Lingo Media hasbeen entirely focused in China and now we have a diversified revenuebase that includes North America," said Michael Kraft, President &CEO of Lingo Media.

"At A Plus we recognize the massive potential within the NorthAmerican and China preschool markets with today's educated parentslooking for support in stimulating their children withdevelopmentally valid, age appropriate learning tools. Thispartnership with Lingo Media allows us to realize the profound effectwe can have. Our growth strategy includes expanding A Plus' businessin Canada and to utilizing Lingo Media's marketing and distributionchannels in China", said A Plus CEO Terry Pallier.

The acquisition of A Plus was an arm's length transaction. Aconsulting fee of 10% of the purchase price will be paid to MichaelStein & Associates Inc. equally by both parties in cash and shares ofLingo Media. The cash component of the purchase price was fundedthrough a third party loan bearing interest at 12% per annum, dueJanuary 2008 and secured by the assets of Lingo Media.

About A Plus

A Plus, a private Alberta corporation, has been operating inCanada for over ten years through its four offices in Calgary,Edmonton, Vancouver and Toronto. A Plus specializes in the field ofearly childhood cognitive development, through the publishing anddistribution of educational materials along with its uniquecurriculum developed by its advisory panel of psychologists. To date,over 17,000 families have used A Plus' programs in Canada.

About Lingo Media

Lingo Media is a leading publisher of English language learningprograms in China. The Company incorporates print, audio/videocassette and CD-based products for students and teachers from pre-school through university. Founded in 1996, Lingo Media has anestablished presence in the Chinese educational market of more than200 million English language students. To date, over 120 millionunits from Lingo Media's library of more than 290 program titles havebeen published and sold in China. While Lingo Media remains focusedon its royalty-based educational publishing business, it is advancingits China Expansion Plan to establish itself as a distributor ofeducational print media including books, newspapers and magazines inChina.

Portions of this press release include "forward-lookingstatements", which may be understood as any statement other than astatement of historical fact. Forward-looking statements contained inthis press release are made pursuant to the safe harbour provisionsof the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Thesestatements are based on management's current expectations and aresubject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Actual resultsmay vary materially from management's expectations and projectionsexpressed in this press release. Certain factors that can affect theCompany's ability to achieve projected results are described in theCompany's Annual Report 20-F and other reports filed with theSecurities and Exchange Commission.

Lingo Media Acquires A+ Child Development

TORONTO, ONTARIO--(CCNMatthews - Dec. 6, 2006) - Lingo Media Inc.(TSX VENTURE: LMD)(OTCBB:LNGMF) ("Lingo Media" or the "Company")today announced that it has acquired a 62.33% controlling interest inA+ Child Development (Canada) Ltd. ("A Plus") and will acquire anadditional 8% interest within 90 days. A Plus had reported revenuesof CAD $3.8 million in 2005. A Plus derives revenues from publishingand distribution of educational materials aimed at the earlychildhood market. A Plus has developed a successful and uniquecurriculum for parents to use with their children based on the latestneuroscience research. To date, A Plus has focused its marketingefforts only in Canada. With Lingo Media's established operations inBeijing, A Plus will introduce its learning system and products toparents of pre-school children across China. Plans also include anexpansion of A Plus' markets to the United States and Latin America.

Under the terms of the acquisition, Lingo Media:

i) acquired 50.33% of the outstanding capital stock of A Plus fromits shareholders for the purchase price of CAD$730,000 satisfied byissuing 2,650,000 common shares of Lingo Media and paying CAD$200,000cash;

ii) invested CAD$150,000 in A Plus for an additional 12% interest;

iii) agreed to invest a further CAD$100,000 in A Plus for anadditional 8% interest within 90 days; and

iv) issued an additional 3,000,000 common shares of Lingo Media tothe selling shareholders of A Plus subject to meeting annual earningsmilestones to be held in escrow and released over a three-year periodwith a maximum of 1,000,000 shares released per year;

"Acquiring A Plus, brings Lingo Media a company with growingrevenues in Canada and the opportunity to expand to new markets inChina and the United States. This acquisition will dramaticallyincrease our revenues beginning October 1, 2006 which will bereflected in our fourth quarter financial statements. We are veryenthusiastic about the growth for 2007 and beyond from A Plus'planned expansion in Canada and new markets. To date, Lingo Media hasbeen entirely focused in China and now we have a diversified revenuebase that includes North America," said Michael Kraft, President &CEO of Lingo Media.

"At A Plus we recognize the massive potential within the NorthAmerican and China preschool markets with today's educated parentslooking for support in stimulating their children withdevelopmentally valid, age appropriate learning tools. Thispartnership with Lingo Media allows us to realize the profound effectwe can have. Our growth strategy includes expanding A Plus' businessin Canada and to utilizing Lingo Media's marketing and distributionchannels in China", said A Plus CEO Terry Pallier.

The acquisition of A Plus was an arm's length transaction. Aconsulting fee of 10% of the purchase price will be paid to MichaelStein & Associates Inc. equally by both parties in cash and shares ofLingo Media. The cash component of the purchase price was fundedthrough a third party loan bearing interest at 12% per annum, dueJanuary 2008 and secured by the assets of Lingo Media.

About A Plus

A Plus, a private Alberta corporation, has been operating inCanada for over ten years through its four offices in Calgary,Edmonton, Vancouver and Toronto. A Plus specializes in the field ofearly childhood cognitive development, through the publishing anddistribution of educational materials along with its uniquecurriculum developed by its advisory panel of psychologists. To date,over 17,000 families have used A Plus' programs in Canada.

About Lingo Media

Lingo Media is a leading publisher of English language learningprograms in China. The Company incorporates print, audio/videocassette and CD-based products for students and teachers from pre-school through university. Founded in 1996, Lingo Media has anestablished presence in the Chinese educational market of more than200 million English language students. To date, over 120 millionunits from Lingo Media's library of more than 290 program titles havebeen published and sold in China. While Lingo Media remains focusedon its royalty-based educational publishing business, it is advancingits China Expansion Plan to establish itself as a distributor ofeducational print media including books, newspapers and magazines inChina.

Portions of this press release include "forward-lookingstatements", which may be understood as any statement other than astatement of historical fact. Forward-looking statements contained inthis press release are made pursuant to the safe harbour provisionsof the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Thesestatements are based on management's current expectations and aresubject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Actual resultsmay vary materially from management's expectations and projectionsexpressed in this press release. Certain factors that can affect theCompany's ability to achieve projected results are described in theCompany's Annual Report 20-F and other reports filed with theSecurities and Exchange Commission.

Stoudemire Perfect at Line, Leads Suns

Amare Stoudemire scored 38 points, including a franchise-record 20-of-20 on free throws, and the Phoenix Suns won their seventh in a row by beating the Houston Rockets 122-113 on Saturday night.

Stoudemire, who also had 13 rebounds and four blocked shots, broke the club record for consecutive free throws in a game of 17, set by Paul Silas against Atlanta on Jan. 10, 1971. Shaquille O'Neal added 23 points _ his most since coming to Phoenix _ and grabbed 13 rebounds.

Since the trade for O'Neal, Stoudemire is averaging just under 29 points and 10 rebounds.

He has scored at least 15 points in a franchise-best 57 consecutive games. Leandro Barbosa, starting because Raja Bell is out with a sprained right ankle, scored 21 for Phoenix.

Tracy McGrady had 30 points, nine assists and seven rebounds for the Rockets, who trailed by 23 in the second quarter and 17 at the half. The Rockets cut it to eight on several occasions but could get no closer.

The Suns shot 57 percent, 76 percent in the first half, to move ahead of the Rockets with the third-best record in the West (46-22), a half-game behind New Orleans and a game behind the conference-leading Los Angeles Lakers.

The Rockets have lost three of four following their 22-game winning streak. Two of those losses came when they were playing for the second night in a row. They won at Golden State 109-106 on Friday night.

The Rockets rallied behind McGrady to cut it to 93-85 on his 15-footer with 1:37 left in the third period. O'Neal's bank shot made it 95-85 entering the fourth.

The Suns opened the fourth with a 12-2 run to go up 105-87 on Gordan Giricek's two free throws with 9:07 left. Houston came back again, with Bobby Jackson's 3-pointer from the corner cutting the lead to 107-99 5:44 from the finish. But Stoudemire's two free throws and Steve Nash's 3-pointer lifted Phoenix out of trouble.

The Suns missed eight shots in the first half, going 25-of-33 to lead 74-57 at the break. Stoudemire had 26 at the break on 7-of-11 field goals and 12-of-12 free throws. O'Neal, Barbosa and Nash also were in double figures after the first two quarters.

A 10-0 run put Phoenix up 12-3 and the Suns were in control from there. The Suns made 22 of their first 26 shots and led 68-45 on Boris Diaw's rebound basket with 2:38 left in the half.

Notes:@ The Suns shot 74 percent (14-for-19) in the first quarter to Houston's 33 percent (8-of-24). ... Phoenix leaves on a four-game road trip to the East while the NCAA West Regional is staged on their home court. ... Dikembe Mutombo had six points, three rebounds and four fouls against his old foe O'Neal. ... Grant Hill had 10 assists, his highest since Oct. 31, 2000, for the Pistons against Washington.

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Twin Cities to Host 2008 GOP Convention

WASHINGTON - Republicans will hold their 2008 presidential convention in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul, choosing a location in the politically pivotal Midwest.

Party and state officials announced the selection Wednesday. The convention is slated for Sept. 1-4, 2008.

"This is fantastic news," Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty said. "We're very, very pleased."

Losing out were New York City, Cleveland and a joint bid from Tampa and St. Petersburg, Fla., other cities that had sought the convention.

The four-day event will be held at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., a concert venue and the home of the National Hockey League's Minnesota Wild.

Democrats also had been considering holding their convention in the Twin Cities but the Republican announcement left Democrats with two competing cities to choose from - New York and Denver.

By picking the Twin Cities for 2008, the GOP will ensure plenty of news coverage in media markets in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa - all battleground states in the 2004 election and ones expected to be competitive in the next presidential race.

"The heartland of America," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn. "Whoever wins those states is going to be the next president of the United States."

Minnesota had been seen by some as an unlikely host, with just 10 electoral votes and the nation's longest streak of voting for Democratic presidential candidates.

In 2004, Democrat John Kerry won the state 51 percent to 48 percent. The last Republican to win a presidential race in the state was Richard Nixon in 1972 and the last national convention happened in 1892, when the GOP backed President Benjamin Harrison in his unsuccessful re-election bid.

Minnesota's political landscape, however, has shifted right in recent years. It has become less of a Democratic bastion and more of a swing-voting state, a change attributed in part to population growth in the Twin Cities suburbs.

The state was a hard-fought battleground in the 2004 and 2000 presidential elections, and in 2002, Minnesota elected Pawlenty, a Republican, as governor and Coleman as senator.

"Our stereotype is that we're cold and liberal and Democratic, and we're still cold," said Steven Schier, a political scientist at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn.

In the 2004 general election, 38 percent of Minnesota voters identified themselves as Democrats, while 35 percent called themselves Republicans, according to exit poll data. Twenty-seven percent identified as independents or "something else."

With the convention, the GOP hopes to court voters in a region Republican and Democratic strategists alike say will play a critical role in winning the White House in 2008. The GOP held its last convention in New York City, a Democratic stronghold where GOP delegates nominated President Bush for a second term.

Democrats, who last met in Boston, plan to hold their convention Aug. 25-28, and will announce a location later this fall. A spokesman said 11 sites expressed interest in having the party's convention, but only four completed the proposals. New Orleans later withdrew its bid, leaving Denver, New York City and Minneapolis-St. Paul.

But Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak has said that because of timing and logistics, the Twin Cities can't host both conventions. The two conventions are scheduled for consecutive weeks.

Democrats said the competition for their convention now is between two cities.

"The DNC was thrilled to have three great American cities submit strong bids for the 2008 Democratic National Convention. We are looking forward to working with Denver and New York as we make our final decision," said Stacie Paxton, a Democratic party spokeswoman.

The Twin Cities are the two largest in the state with a combined population of more than 650,000, and the metropolitan region straddles the Mississippi River.

In Minnesota, the effort to woo a national political convention has been a bipartisan affair, with the two big-city mayors, both Democrats, joining forces with top Republicans. They argued that Minnesota is a critical part of an Upper Midwest region that combined offers 27 electoral votes.

The GOP convention will coincide with the Minnesota State Fair, and state officials have predicted a national political convention would boost the Twin Cities economy by about $150 million.

----

Associated Press Writers Philip Elliott and Fred Frommer in Washington and Martiga Lohn in St. Paul, Minn., contributed to this report.

----

Republican National Committee: http://www.rnc.org

Xcel Energy Center: http://www.xcelenergycenter.com

Twin Cities to Host 2008 GOP Convention

WASHINGTON - Republicans will hold their 2008 presidential convention in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul, choosing a location in the politically pivotal Midwest.

Party and state officials announced the selection Wednesday. The convention is slated for Sept. 1-4, 2008.

"This is fantastic news," Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty said. "We're very, very pleased."

Losing out were New York City, Cleveland and a joint bid from Tampa and St. Petersburg, Fla., other cities that had sought the convention.

The four-day event will be held at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., a concert venue and the home of the National Hockey League's Minnesota Wild.

Democrats also had been considering holding their convention in the Twin Cities but the Republican announcement left Democrats with two competing cities to choose from - New York and Denver.

By picking the Twin Cities for 2008, the GOP will ensure plenty of news coverage in media markets in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa - all battleground states in the 2004 election and ones expected to be competitive in the next presidential race.

"The heartland of America," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn. "Whoever wins those states is going to be the next president of the United States."

Minnesota had been seen by some as an unlikely host, with just 10 electoral votes and the nation's longest streak of voting for Democratic presidential candidates.

In 2004, Democrat John Kerry won the state 51 percent to 48 percent. The last Republican to win a presidential race in the state was Richard Nixon in 1972 and the last national convention happened in 1892, when the GOP backed President Benjamin Harrison in his unsuccessful re-election bid.

Minnesota's political landscape, however, has shifted right in recent years. It has become less of a Democratic bastion and more of a swing-voting state, a change attributed in part to population growth in the Twin Cities suburbs.

The state was a hard-fought battleground in the 2004 and 2000 presidential elections, and in 2002, Minnesota elected Pawlenty, a Republican, as governor and Coleman as senator.

"Our stereotype is that we're cold and liberal and Democratic, and we're still cold," said Steven Schier, a political scientist at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn.

In the 2004 general election, 38 percent of Minnesota voters identified themselves as Democrats, while 35 percent called themselves Republicans, according to exit poll data. Twenty-seven percent identified as independents or "something else."

With the convention, the GOP hopes to court voters in a region Republican and Democratic strategists alike say will play a critical role in winning the White House in 2008. The GOP held its last convention in New York City, a Democratic stronghold where GOP delegates nominated President Bush for a second term.

Democrats, who last met in Boston, plan to hold their convention Aug. 25-28, and will announce a location later this fall. A spokesman said 11 sites expressed interest in having the party's convention, but only four completed the proposals. New Orleans later withdrew its bid, leaving Denver, New York City and Minneapolis-St. Paul.

But Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak has said that because of timing and logistics, the Twin Cities can't host both conventions. The two conventions are scheduled for consecutive weeks.

Democrats said the competition for their convention now is between two cities.

"The DNC was thrilled to have three great American cities submit strong bids for the 2008 Democratic National Convention. We are looking forward to working with Denver and New York as we make our final decision," said Stacie Paxton, a Democratic party spokeswoman.

The Twin Cities are the two largest in the state with a combined population of more than 650,000, and the metropolitan region straddles the Mississippi River.

In Minnesota, the effort to woo a national political convention has been a bipartisan affair, with the two big-city mayors, both Democrats, joining forces with top Republicans. They argued that Minnesota is a critical part of an Upper Midwest region that combined offers 27 electoral votes.

The GOP convention will coincide with the Minnesota State Fair, and state officials have predicted a national political convention would boost the Twin Cities economy by about $150 million.

----

Associated Press Writers Philip Elliott and Fred Frommer in Washington and Martiga Lohn in St. Paul, Minn., contributed to this report.

----

Republican National Committee: http://www.rnc.org

Xcel Energy Center: http://www.xcelenergycenter.com

In continuing a long tradition, political sparring will be feature of Beijing Olympics

As much as Olympic officials want to focus on sports, the Beijing Olympics are sure to feature plenty of politics.

The International Olympic Committee likes to say the games are about sports.

The latest instance came after IOC president Jacques Rogge responded to Steven Spielberg's withdrawal as an artistic adviser for Beijing: the IOC is a "sports, not a political organization."

Spielberg pulled out because he says China isn't doing enough to pressure Sudan into ending the humanitarian crisis in the Darfur region.

Historians and political scientists contacted during the uproar over Spielberg's departure offered a long list of other games that were tied to politics: Berlin (1936), Mexico City (1968), Munich (1972), Montreal (1976), Moscow (1980), Los Angeles (1984) and Seoul (1988). They probably could have added others.

Chinese-born historian Xu Guoqi, author of the soon-to-be published book on Chinese sports _ "Olympic Dreams" _ disputed the nonpolitical claims.

"As a matter of fact, the main reason for China to host the games is for political considerations rather than its appreciation for the games itself," Xu said in an e-mail. He teaches history at Kalamazoo College in Michigan.

Despite Spielberg's withdrawal and threats of protests from human rights groups, religious groups and Tibet and Taiwan separatists, Xu said the games _ in the long-term _ will reinforce a positive image of China.

"By bidding for and hosting the Olympic Games, China obviously tried to project a positive image abroad as a peace-loving and respected power," Xu said. "At home, however, the message transmitted from the propaganda machine is that hosting the games is a glorious moment in Chinese history and every Chinese should present the best face of China to the world and help Beijing successfully host the greatest party, bringing honor to the nation and the Communist Party."

David Huang, who completed his doctorate at Bowling Green State University and works for the Beijing municipal government, said Beijing would try to control the political aspect of the games.

"The Olympic Games have been trying hard to get rid of politics," he said. "Unfortunately, the Olympics are a place that is good for politics.

"China definitely will not let political issues be involved in the Beijing Olympics, but some other countries will."

Writing in the Times of London, columnist Simon Barnes said China should brace for foreigners who oppose areas of Chinese politics or culture.

"By wishing the Olympic Games on itself, China has come into greater contact with the Culture of Disagreement than would otherwise have been possible. Beijing will be stuffed full of athletes and journalists who disagree with all kinds of things. ... Some will make a fuss about Darfur and executions and reeducation and so on, others will not. It's an individual decision."

Yosuke Fujiwara, the head of broadcast relations for the Beijing Olympics, has worked at Olympics since 1992. Fujiwara, who is Japanese, has been in Beijing for three years and said the Chinese government, Chinese people and the IOC have different ideas about what will constitute successful games.

"I don't quite understand what the Chinese people, the Chinese government and the organizing committee will use to evaluate if the games are a success," he said. "Will it be good looks, fairness, international rules or large participation by ordinary Chinese? This is a riddle for me."

And for others.

___

AIR AND MARATHON: Marathon world record holder Haile Gebrselassie said a few weeks ago in Beijing that the Olympic race should begin at 6:30 a.m. to avoid stifling heat and humidity.

However, Liu Wenbin, deputy director of the Sports Department for the local organizing committee, said there are no plans to deviate from the scheduled start at 7:30 a.m.

Gebrselassie also threatened to skip the race, complaining bitterly about Beijing's polluted air. IOC president Jacques Rogge has said repeatedly that endurance events would be rescheduled if the air were too bad. Liu, however, said he knew of no contingency plans to reschedule because of pollution.

"So far our contingency plan doesn't have any relation with the air quality, only the bad weather," he said this week.

Asked if he was upset that growing numbers of countries are planning to set up training camps away from China, hoping to avoid the pollution, Liu replied: "It's their choice. We welcome them and it's their decision."

___

NO FOREIGN HELP WANTED: Zhang Jilong, a director for the Beijing organizing committee, confirmed this week what everyone suspected: no foreigners will be among the 28 competition managers. All managers will be Chinese nationals, people who are likely to have grown up in the state-run sports system and probably are also loyal members of the Communist Party.

The IOC had been pushing for the Chinese to employ foreign experts, but lost the battle. This goes against trends in Athens and Sydney, where many foreigners were employed.

Zhang said 11 "candidates" had trained in Athens for several months to prepare for these Olympics. Being a competition manager can become a high-profile job if there is controversy with disputes being contested in English or French. The post could also be on the front line in the event of security problems.

"I am very confident in their competence," Zhang said. "I believe all of them will do a good job and play their role."

Zhang said the games would provide a "legacy" of Chinese who are trained in managing sports, many of which are foreign in China _ like fencing, sailing and equestrian events.

Zhang's assistant, Liu Wenbin, said all 28 would have strong language skills in English or French and "none of these competition managers will have to resort to an interpreter."

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DON'T BANK ON IT: The Olympics could put Chinese banking technology under stress.

Guo Ligen, vice chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, cautioned in a statement this week that an expected influx of 800,000 foreigners _ and one million Chinese from outside Beijing _ might overload the system that handles bank card transactions.

He said technology problems in the last year at five commercial banks "revealed the fragility of our banking information system."

"We can by no means bring the problems to the Olympics and spread hazards outside the banking industry," Guo was quoted as saying by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Despite rapid changes, China is mostly a cash-based society. Credit cards came in to common use only about a decade ago.

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TIDBITS: Beijing's roads, Olympic venues and hotels will be decked out with millions of flowers during the games. According to widely published plans, 20 roads that lead to venues, 31 venues and 24 Olympic hotels will be filled with flowers by the end of July. ... Shanghai is making its contribution to the Olympics: 40 female university students from the city will become medal presenters. The Eastern Morning Post in Shanghai reported that recruiting ends on March 10. Candidates must be 18 to 25 and of a certain height. In addition, "appearance must be relatively good, features must be in proportion, there must be a high-degree of political awareness, a devotion to group consciousness and a certain degree of English."

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Summerall enters clinic

CBS sportscaster Pat Summerall voluntarily checked into the BettyFord Clinic in Rancho Mirage, Calif., last Friday.

"We're not looking to have more attention on this than whatexists," CBS Sports president Neal Pilson said. "It's a matter ofrespecting Pat's privacy."

The 61-year-old Summerall previously had treatment for alcoholdependency at a Savannah, Ga., clinic late in 1990 after becoming illfollowing an NFL game. Summerall has said in numerous …

YOUR BEST SHOT.(Capital Region)

ELEPHANTS WAIT side by side in Ayutthaya, Thailand, in this photo from Jean-Pierre Bince in Bangkok.

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FRAN AND LARRY KEELEY

LARRY AND FRAN KEELEY of Clifton Park, came upon the Corinth Canal in Greece in September. The photo doesn't do justice to the depth of this engineering feat, they say, but it's still an impressive shot. The isthmus is a narrow land mass which, connects the Peloponnese peninsula with the mainland of Greece. The Corinth Canal, built by Greeks goes through the isthmus and connects the …