Thursday, 15 March 2012

World Opinion Divided on Saddam Sentence

Saddam Hussein's death sentence was celebrated by some on Sunday as justice deserved or even divine, but denounced by others as a political ploy two days before critical U.S. midterm congressional elections.

Worldwide, the range of reactions - including a European outcry over capital punishment and doubts about the fairness of the tribunal that ordered Saddam to hang - reflected new geopolitical fault lines drawn after America's decision to invade Iraq in 2003 and depose its dictator.

The European Union welcomed the verdict but said Saddam should not be put to death. At the Vatican, Cardinal Renato Martino, Pope Benedict XVI's top prelate for justice issues, called the …

Intel raises revenue forecast for current quarter

Intel Corp. raised its third-quarter revenue forecast above Wall Street's expectations Friday, citing strong demand for its chips and giving another signal that business is improving for one of the world's biggest technology companies.

Intel's shares rose 5 percent in morning trading.

The leading maker of computer microprocessors said it now expects sales of $8.8 billion to $9.2 billion. Its last guidance, which came July 14, was for revenue in the range of $8.1 billion to $8.9 billion.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were expecting $8.55 billion in revenue before Friday.

Santa Clara, California-based Intel also said it expects the …

COUNTY FACTS

Population: 5.1 million Budget: $2.2 billion County Employees: 28,000 County Commissioners: 11 Democrats; 6 Republicans State …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Jagr has groin strain, could miss 10 days

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Philadelphia Flyers forward Jaromir Jagr, who left the NHL's Winter Classic with a leg injury on Monday, has a mild left groin strain and will miss seven to 10 days.

Philadelphia general manager Paul Holmgren made the announcement on Tuesday.

Jagr, 39, is in his first season with Philadelphia after three in Russia, and was one of this summer's marquee free agents. The former Pittsburgh Penguin, …

Charleston Southern knocks off VMI 31-21

Tribble Reese threw for two touchdowns and ran for another to lead Charleston Southern to a 31-21 victory over Virginia Military Intsitute on Saturday.

Tribble, who was 19 of 25 for 243 yards, had touchdown passes of 1 yard to Tyrese Harris and 50 yards to Antwan Ivey. His 3-yard touchdown run gave the Buccaneers (4-5, 2-2 Big South Conference) a 17-14 lead with 16 seconds remaining in the second quarter.

VMI (3-5, 1-2) gained 239 yards on the ground, led by Howard Abegesah, who rushed for 102 …

Ky. center Morris' ban reduced to 14 games

LEXINGTON, Ky. -- Kentucky center Randolph Morris' seasonlongsuspension for his attempt to enter the NBA draft was reduced to 14games Thursday by the NCAA.

The NCAA cited new information for softening its punishment afterMorris tried to go into the draft. Additional information provided bythe school showed that Morris clearly intended to retain his collegeeligibility while declaring for the draft, the NCAA said in astatement.

The new information "provides additional understanding of Morris'original intent to enter the NBA draft as well as his mind-set duringthat process," the NCAA said.

Morris, a 6-10 sophomore, also must repay expenses related to …

Many Horses: A Personal Experience with National Board Certification and Creative Thinking

Horses of varying conformations and colors step across our view in a display of energy and forward motion in Rosa Bonheur's 1855 painting, The Horse Fair. The painting is a metaphor for my experience with National Board Certification. The process led me to critique and display my teaching practice, to generate multiple solutions as varied as Bonheur's horses, and to move my professional development forward.

In 1994, the first 81 teachers completed the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) certification process. The National Board was created in response to the 1983 report, A Nation at Risk, which gave a grim prognosis for the American education system. The …

Aniston: Jolie was out of line about Pitt comments

Jennifer Aniston says Angelina Jolie was out of line when she spilled details about her relationship with Brad Pitt while they were filming "Mr. & Mrs. Smith." In an interview in the December issue of Vogue, Aniston talks about the magazine's 2007 profile of Jolie, who talked about growing chummy with Pitt _ then married to Aniston _ while shooting the action film in 2004.

"There was stuff printed there that was definitely from a time when I was unaware that it was happening," Aniston says. "I felt those details were a little inappropriate to discuss. That stuff about how she couldn't wait to get to work every day? That was really …

Equality feedback plea ; In brief [Edition 2]

DISTRICT: Residents can have their say on council equalityobjectives by filling in an online consultation for m. Epping ForestDistrict …

Gates Urges More Help for Afghanistan

SINGAPORE - Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Saturday urged Asian nations to do more to defeat a global terrorist threat and to ensure that Afghanistan not be allowed to slip back into chaos.

His remarks to the annual Shangri-la conference on international security touched only lightly on China, whose military buildup had been a central focus of previous conferences. And while he mentioned the war in Iraq he focused more on broader themes of terrorism and U.S. commitments in Asia.

"In particular, the challenge posed by terrorists inspired by radical ideologies cannot be overcome by any one nation - no matter how wealthy or powerful," he said, alluding to U.S. efforts to …

Obama's 100-day mark

Editors:

U.S. President Barack Obama will mark his 100th day in office on Wednesday, April 29. For this traditional measuring point for new presidents, The Associated Press is preparing a series of stories and photos for use beginning Saturday, April 25, and continuing through Monday, April 27.

A list of the package:

Moving Saturday, April 25:

OBAMA-100 DAYS-STYLE

WASHINGTON _ It did not take long for Barack Obama _ young, inexperienced and ambitious _ to get acclimated to his newfound role as the calming leader of a country in crisis. "I feel surprisingly comfortable in the job," the nation's 44th president said …

FIGHT NOTES

LAS VEGAS Two young, unbeaten super-welterweight contenders willbe featured on the undercard. Montreal's Matthew Hilton (20-0) willfight a 10-rounder against Bruce Jackson (15-10-1) of Tulsa, Okla.,and Julian Jackson (27-0) of the Virgin Islands fights a 10-rounderagainst Dennis Johnson (13-7-1) of New Orleans. …

Toyota adding more time to new vehicle development

Toyota Motor Corp. is extending the time it takes to develop new vehicles by about four weeks for more quality checks in the wake of its massive safety-related recalls, a top executive said Wednesday.

Executive Vice President Takeshi Uchiyamada said the company has learned a lot in the wake of its recalls of more than 8.5 million vehicles worldwide, including the need to slow the pace at which it develops new vehicles.

Currently it takes Toyota about 24 months on average to bring a new vehicle to market in Japan, Uchiyamada said. The timeframe varies somewhat in other markets, including the U.S.

Uchiyamada, one of Toyota's highest ranking officials who is considered the father of the automaker's popular Prius hybrid, made the remarks during a press event with U.S. media at the company's headquarters in its namesake city in central Japan.

Toyota has been reeling in the wake of its recalls, which bruised its vaunted reputation for quality and dented its market share in the U.S., its biggest market. The company's largest recalls stemmed from unintended acceleration related to faulty gas pedals and floor mats. In recent months, the automaker has recalled hundreds of thousands of other vehicles, including one announced Monday to fix an engine problem in its Lexus luxury cars that could cause stalling.

Toyota executives have acknowledged that the company expanded too quickly in the U.S. before its recalls. Company officials said Wednesday that the automaker has taken a host of steps to beef up its quality controls since then.

For example, Toyota now has 1,000 people devoted to quality control as of March, an increase of about 50 percent. In addition, the company has created a 100-person committee devoted to incorporating customer feedback into vehicle development. It has also added a new layer of managers to help train and instruct engineers.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Sibanda anchors Zimbabwe to 254-5

Opener Vusi Sibanda's resolute 95 helped Zimbabwe to a satisfying total of 254-5 against West Indies in the first one-day cricket international at Guyana National Stadium on Thursday.

Sibanda anchored the visitors after they won the toss and batted. In his 80th match, Sibanda struck five fours and a six off 162 deliveries.

Wicketkeeper Tatenda Taibu contributed a vital 56 off 54 balls in a second-wicket stand of 100 with Sibanda.

Hamilton Masakadza scored 41 off 45 deliveries at the top of the order.

Kieron Pollard took 2-59 for West Indies.

Zimbabwe got a steady start from Masakadza and Sibanda, who added 67 for the first wicket on a placid pitch.

Masakadza was the more fluent, striking six fours before he was leg before wicket to left-arm spinner Nikita Miller as he missed a sweep.

Taibu took some time to settle but eventually flourished to dominate the century stand with the solid Sibanda.

The diminutive Taibu was eventually lbw to Pollard, who then ran out Brendan Taylor (1) in the same over with a left-footed direct hit in his follow through at 168-3.

Sibanda continued to be a perfect foil for the strokemakers and added a run-a-ball 47 with Elton Chigumbura, who hit a six and a four in 27 off 22 balls.

Chigumbura holed out off Pollard towards the end while Sibanda missed out on a second one-day century when Kemar Roach produced a wicked yorker that broke Sibanda's bat in half.

Stuart Matsikenyeri contributed an unbeaten 16 off 14 balls as 80 runs came off the last 10 overs.

Researcher: Hope, famed Internet bear, is dead

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota black bear who became a worldwide star when her birth was broadcast over the Internet is presumed dead after a hunter came forward to report that he had shot the animal without knowing it was her, a researcher said Tuesday.

Researchers last saw the yearling bear named Hope on Sept. 14. Lynn Rogers, senior researcher at the North American Bear Center and its affiliated Wildlife Research Institute in Ely, said he was contacted Tuesday by a hunter who said he killed the bear when it came to his bait station alone on the evening Sept 16.

The hunter told Rogers he would not have deliberately shot Hope and didn't know she was the same bear. However, Rogers said the hunter also did not express remorse.

Rogers said he's confident the bear was Hope because every other female bear known to be in that area near Ely in northeastern Minnesota where Hope and her family roamed has been accounted for, including Hope's radio-collared mother, Lily, who at one point bedded down just 165 yards away from the bait site. Hope was not collared or otherwise marked or tagged.

Rogers declined to give the name of the hunter. He said he's discouraging verbal attacks on him and hunters in general because that won't help his center's research and education efforts. But he acknowledged that feelings have been running high since the center put out word a few days ago on Facebook that Hope was missing and likely dead.

"I've gotten calls today from several people who could hardly talk through their tears, but there's also a lot of anger. It's a highly emotional item for the Lily fans. We're just trying to figure out where we go from here. And we want to protect the hunter," Rogers said.

Lily and Hope became an Internet sensation two winters ago when the center installed a camera inside Lily's den and thousands of people watched live as she gave birth to Hope. Students at over 500 schools have been following Hope, Lily, and Lily's new cub, Faith, on the bear center's website and Facebook, Rogers said. Lily's Facebook page has about 134,000 fans.

"This is probably the most famous bear in the world," Rogers said of Hope. "... It lived for 602 days and during that time it changed a lot of lives. Hope changed a lot of lives. It drew people together."

The center's announcement on its "Lily the Black Bear" Facebook page Tuesday afternoon that the hunter had come forward generated hundreds of comments within hours. Many visitors wrote that they were devastated, but grateful for how Hope and Lily's story had touched their lives. Many posts also blasted the hunter, but a few defended him and echoed Rogers' call to leave him alone.

The researcher also said it turned out that the hunter was never a member of a Facebook page called "Lily: a bear with a bounty" and never wrote messages there. Rogers on Monday had expressed suspicion that the hunter was a poster there.

Rogers reiterated that he's not against all bear hunting, pointing out that he helped write Minnesota's bear hunting regulations. Those rules allow hunters to set out bait stations, a practice that many of Lily and Hope's fans have condemned as unsportsmanlike. Rogers defends baiting, however, saying it gives hunters a better chance at a clean, humane shot, and reduces the overall number of bears killed because fewer are wounded by bad shots only to die later in the woods, unfound and unrecorded.

He also noted that the hunter's actions were perfectly legal, though Rogers said he wishes people wouldn't shoot his research bears.

"It's just one more instance of us being in the middle of a groundbreaking data set and having it cut short by a hunter killing a critical bear," Rogers lamented.

___

Online:

North American Bear Center: http://www.bear.org

WVU's newest assistant headed back to the Jets

MORGANTOWN - A day after adding 26 players to the program onNational Signing Day, West Virginia football added one name and lostanother Thursday.

Mike Smith, hired last month for an unspecified position on thedefensive staff, decided to return to the New York Jets. EricKinsey, a defensive end/linebacker from Miami, signed with theMountaineers to give the team 27 recruits and 83 scholarshipplayers, two shy of the NCAA limit, for the start of preseason camp.

Smith, 30, spent the previous two years as an intern with theJets and was hired as the outside linebackers coach before takingthe job with WVU. He started for four years at Texas Tech whenHolgorsen was there as an assistant.

Smith was a seventh-round draft pick by the Baltimore Ravens andplayed three seasons before starting in coaching as a defensivegraduate assistant at the University of Hawaii in 2009.

He signed a one-year contract for $250,000 with the Mountaineerslast month, but was never given a clear title or responsibility.

Holgorsen now needs two coaches to complete his staff followingdefensive coordinator Jeff Casteel's move to Arizona and thedecisions by defensive line coach Bill Kirelawich and cornerbackscoach David Lockwood to follow.

Holgorsen hired Oklahoma State assistant Joe DeForest to be atleast the co-coordinator last month. DeForest said Wednesday heexpects to know his title and responsibility soon.

The 6 foot, 3 inch, 225-pound Kinsey played at Miami'sNorthwestern High and was teammates with WVU defensive linemanImarjaye Albury, a freshman who is already enrolled. Kinsey made 87tackles, 24 tackles for a loss and 10 sacks and forced five fumblesand recovered three as a senior.

The Miami Herald listed him as the No. 1 defensive lineman inMiami-Dade County, though Kinsey will likely be an outsidelinebacker with the Mountaineers. He had scholarship offers fromLouisville, Nebraska, Ole Miss, USF and Vanderbilt.

Tropical waters in northern hemisphere heating at an accelerated rate

Tropical waters in the Northern Hemisphere have been heating at an enhanced rate since 1984, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists reported. The rate is nearly 0.5C per decade, ten times the global rate. The warming has contributed to unprecedented coral bleaching over the past decade.

Coral bleaching, damage to coral, can be a sign that the coral is being stressed by a number of factors. These factors include high water temperatures, pollution, sedimentation, high light levels, reduced water levels, or changes in salinity.

A team of scientists, led by Alan E. Strong of NOAA's Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service, analyzed sea surface temperature data from NOAA's polar-orbiting satellites for the period 1984 through 1996. "When viewed globally, from the perspective of the continuous and complete measurements that only satellites can provide, our oceans reveal some notable temperature trends over 13 years of the data," Strong said.

The data show that temperatures have been inching slowly upward on a global scale. The Northern Hemisphere's tropical oceans show some of the most notable increases about 0.05 deg C per year. Ocean basins tend to depict cooling in the centers of the major basins and warming around the margins.

"A most intriguing aspect was the finding that, other than a few regions representing areas that include the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio Current in the North Pacific, the Northern Hemisphere waters have been heating at an enhanced rate," Strong said.

Analyses of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans, when taken as a whole, indicate that from 1984 to 1996, a rather robust warming has been taking place over the Northern Hemisphere Tropics, close to what has been referred to as the thermal equator, Strong said. Many coral reefs are found within the region of marked temperature increase, and most of the reefs within these latitudes have experienced bleaching over the past 10 years.

Strong and his colleagues compared the satelliteonly sea surface temperature data to two separate datasets that are primarily based on in situ data. All three datasets consistently show a warming in the equatorial Pacific, cooling in the central North Pacific, and general cooling in the Southern Hemisphere. "The most troubling finding," Strong said "is the marked increase in the tropical waters of the Northern Hemisphere centered around the globe at a latitude of roughly 5N. If this trend were to continue, implications for our coral reefs throughout these waters would be bleak."

Strong cautioned that other factors such as changed in atmospheric water vapor, aerosols, and clouds, and instrument variation must be taken into account. "If this trend is real, and not an artifact of these factors, or other natural climate oscillators such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and/or North Atlantic Oscillation, the extensive bleachings that our reefs have experienced in the past two years would likely become commonplace," Strong said.

In the analysis that Strong and his colleagues performed, care was taken to avoid the anomalous conditions found accompanying the 1982-83 Chichon aerosols, the 1991-92 Pinatubo aerosols, and the El Nino and La Nina temperature extremes of 1997-99, so as not to bias the analysis. The dataset included data from 1984-96, with data from 1991-92 not included.

In addition to Strong, the researchers are Ed J. Kearns, University of Miami, and Kenji Gjovig, U.S. Naval Academy. The results of the research are published in the 1 June 2000 edition of the American Geophysical Union's Geophysical Research Letters.

Caption Only [Color Photo: John J. Kim/Sun-Times / 8 STRAIGHT! SOX SURGE...]

Caption text only.

Padres thrilled when Muhammad Ali visits clubhouse

Muhammad Ali provided the San Diego Padres will the thrill of a lifetime when he made a clubhouse visit on Monday.

Dozens of players and coaches waited in a long line to shake hands and take pictures with the boxing great, who made a 45-minute appearance for the Athletes for Hope foundation.

"This is the top unless I ever meet Michael Jordan," outfielder Tony Gwynn Jr. said. "I'm typically not star-struck, but I was today. I'm taking that picture home and I'm going to show it to my wife and have that for my kids when they get older."

Outfielder Aaron Cunningham and reliever Mike Adams heard on Sunday that Ali might be visiting, so they each purchased a pair of boxing gloves just in case. Both walked away with autographs and a cherished memory.

"This was a different kind of shook up," Cunningham said of his nerves. "You know how people just joke around and say, 'The man, the myth, the legend?' He really is the man, the myth, the legend. It was really cool and it was something I'll never forget."

Ali's appearance coincided with the 39th anniversary of his loss to Joe Frazier in a 15-round title fight. Manager Bud Black said he watched many of Ali's fights and was in awe of the boxer being in the clubhouse.

"Any time you meet a legend, you feel the presence, the aura. It was cool," Black said.

Padres officials say Ali is only scheduled to meet with a few big league teams.

BREAKFAST BRIEFING // CHICAGO

Bias suit hits suburban firm A Buffalo Grove manufacturer employing only two blacks out of morethan 400 workers is the target of a lawsuit alleging racialdiscrimination filed Monday by the federal government. The U.S.Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is suing Mid-West AutomationSystems Inc., a designer of integrated precision assembly systems, onbehalf of Ned Hutson, a black electrician who was denied employmentin 1994. Mid-West Automation did not return a call for commentMonday. The government says the facility's only two black workerswere hired after Hutson filed a complaint in October, 1994.Local 726 elects Carey backersTeamsters Local 726 has elected a slate of officers backed bysupporters of Teamsters President Ron Carey. IncumbentSecretary-Treasurer Daniel Stefanski was re-elected as his slategarnered 1,458 votes, compared with 600 votes received by a slatebacked by supporters of James P. Hoffa, and 144 votes garnered for aslate of independent candidates.Sportmart's River North site soldSportmart's eight-story building at 620 N. La Salle was sold througha sealed-bid auction to Captec Financial for more than $6 million,according to David Kaufman & Co. The 70,000-square-foot buildingpreviously was owned by MC Sports. Sportmart Inc. has operated astore in the building since 1994, when MC Sports closed its store.Carson's buy gets antitrust OKCarson Pirie Scott & Co. and Proffitt's, Inc., announced theirproposed merger was granted an early termination of the waitingperiod under the Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust act. Both chains havescheduled special shareholders' meetings Jan. 30 to vote onProffitt's plan to acquire Carson's and operate it as a separatedivision.UAL rises on profit forecastShares of UAL Corp., the parent of United Airlines, rose $5.37 1/2to close at $89.50 on the New York Stock Exchange after ChairmanGerald Greenwald told analysts that the company's fourth-quarterearnings should meet or exceed a First Call consensus estimate of$1.58 per fully distributed share. Fully distributed earningsaccount for all shares of UAL that will be distributed during thecarrier's employee stock ownership plan. United also said it hopesto produce a double-digit percentage increase in earnings per sharein 1998. Burnett wins Disney Hispanic jobLeo Burnett Co. said its Hispanic marketing unit won Hispanicadvertising responsibilities in the United States for Walt DisneyWorld. It didn't say how big the account is. The Chicago-basedagency has worked with Disney World since 1994.Online store software availableSoftCart Store Builder, developed by Mercantec Inc., the Lisleelectronic storefront software company, will be available startingJan. 1 on Microsoft FrontPage, do-it-yourself Web developmentsoftware from Microsoft Inc. The software will be available initiallyfor $99 at Mercantec's Web site at www.mercantec.com/frontpage andfrom some Internet service providers.Merc names several execsThe Chicago Mercantile Exchange named Mario Alberico, formerly withAndersen Consulting, as senior vice president for marketing theGlobex overnight trading system. In addition, the Merc promotedDavid Gomach to senior vice president and chief financial officer,Richard Baker to vice president of regulatory systems development,Tina Lemieux to vice president of currency and interest ratemarketing, Raymond Repede to vice president and controller, andKimberly Taylor to vice president of risk management.

Burks signs with Cleveland

Burks signs with Cleveland

CLEVELAND -- Former White Sox outfielder Ellis Burks said he wanted a chance to play in the World Series.

The Cleveland Indians happened to need a right fielder and could offer Burks as good a chance as any team of getting to the Series. The move to sign Burks might have been prompted by the fact current right-fielder Manny Ramirez refused Cleveland's latest contract offer.

On Monday, Burks inked a three-year deal to pursue that dream.

Now that Burks and the Indians have a deal, where does that leave hard-hitting right-fielder Ramirez?

Burks became the first free agent hitter to change teams this off-season, agreeing with Cleveland on a deal worth nearly $21 million.

Burks hit .344 with 24 home runs and 96 RBIs in only 393 at-bats last season for the San Francisco Giants. The NL West Champions, however, did not make a firm, multi-year offer to keep him.

Burks narrowed his choice to the Indians and the Texas Rangers. The Colorado Rockies had made a strong bid, and the New York Yankees dropped out after expressing early interest.

"It was a tough decision," Burks said Monday from his home in Englewood, Colo. "I looked at every different scenario possible and Cleveland was the route that I decided to go."

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Monday, 12 March 2012

IRS charges son of slain gambling boss

The son of slain suburban wagering boss Hal C. Smith and threebusiness associates were charged yesterday with failing to pay incometaxes on income from their alleged betting activities.

Michael J. Smith, 29, of McHenry, was one of four men named incriminal informations announced by IRS criminal division chief JamesM. Bittman and the U.S. attorney's office after a three-yearinvestigation.

The others were Dennis R. Harding, 39, of Wauconda; Gerald OwenMader, 50, of Hodgkins, and Charles Mulberg, 40, of Cleveland.

They face maximum two-year jail terms and fines of $35,000 to$50,000 if they are convicted. They reportedly took wagers over thephone for Hal Smith's mammoth betting network, sources said.

The tax evasion charges stem from records seized in 1983Internal Revenue Service raids, which authorities believe led to theelder Smith's mob-style killing last year.

During one of the raids, IRS agents found a record $606,600 insuspected illegal wagers in a gym bag at Hal Smith's Prospect Heightshome. They later uncovered evidence of a gambling operation thatgrossed an estimated $140 million a year, authorities said.

The size of the operation reportedly also surprised mob bosses,who were supposed to be getting a percentage of Smith's profits.Police discovered Hal Smith's body Feb. 10, 1985, in the trunk of acar parked at an Arlington Heights hotel. He had been beaten and histhroat was slashed.

The $606,600 in cash and a Cadillac seized by the IRS wereforfeited by Hal Smith's estate in probate proceedings last year.

Hamilton Leads Pistons Past Wizards

With Richard Hamilton leading the way, the Detroit Pistons are not only winning night in and night out, they're winning easily.

Hamilton's 20 points made him the 10th-leading scorer in franchise history, and he added nine assists and seven rebounds to help Detroit earn its 10th consecutive victory by beating the Washington Wizards 106-93 Wednesday night.

It's the Pistons' longest winning streak since an 11-gamer in January 2006, and the average margin of victory during the current run is 16.8 points.

How lopsided was this one? Detroit led by double digits throughout the second half.

The Wizards (15-15) were paced by Caron Butler's 22 points and Antawn Jamison's 21, but they again failed to defeat a top team. Washington's last victory over a club with a winning record came Dec. 1 against the Toronto Raptors.

The Pistons, meanwhile, are beating everyone. They improved to 25-7 overall, 17-2 against Eastern Conference opponents. Detroit coach Flip Saunders was honored Wednesday as the East's coach of the month after his club went 15-2 in December.

"You're happy," Saunders said before the game, "because it shows your team is playing at a high level _ and they played at a high level for 30 days."

Hamilton's been a big part of that, and he now has led Detroit in scoring each of its past six games.

He entered Wednesday needing four points to pass Gene Shue on the Pistons' career scoring list and, surprisingly, didn't get there in the first quarter, shooting only 1-for-4. But the former Wizards player got going with 13 points in the second period.

A total of seven Pistons scored in double figures, including Rasheed Wallace _ like Hamilton, a former Washington player _ with 16 points and eight rebounds.

Detroit used a 10-0 run that began at the end of the second quarter and finished with consecutive 3-pointers by Chauncey Billups to open the third quarter, making it 63-47. That pretty much put an end to the competitive portion of the proceedings, with the Pistons leading by as many as 20.

The Pistons opened the second quarter with a 10-0 spurt to go up 36-27 on Rodney Stuckey's fast-break layup a little more than three minutes into the period. Washington got as close as four points only once the rest of the game, and the half ended with Detroit ahead 57-47.

The Wizards were led in the first half by 11 points from Antonio Daniels, who returned after missing seven games with a sprained right knee. He finished with 18 points and two assists in 36 minutes.

Notes:@ Wizards reserve F-C Andray Blatche left during the first half with a sprained left foot but returned in the third quarter. ... Pistons F Jarvis Hayes scored 12 points in his first game against his former team; he left the Wizards as a free agent in the offseason. "It's a little weird coming in as a visitor, but that's the name of the game," he said. ... Washington Redskins RB Clinton Portis, sitting courtside, drew loud cheers when he was shown on the videoboard. Boos came when the logo of the Seattle Seahawks _ the Redskins' playoff opponent Saturday _ was put on the board in the first quarter. Then again, the jeers were even more vociferous a couple of minutes later, when the screen showed the Dallas Cowboys' logo, followed by shots of QB Tony Romo and WR Terrell Owens.

Tourists Flee As Felix Nears

SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras - Tourists fled island resorts by plane or helicopter as powerful Hurricane Felix neared Honduras and Nicaragua, threatening to devastate a swampy coastline home to thousands of stranded Miskito Indians.

In the hours before the Category 4 storm was to make landfall early Tuesday, Grupo Taca Airlines frantically airlifted tourists from the Honduran island of Roatan, popular for its pristine reefs and diving resorts.

About 1,000 people were taken off the island, including 19 Americans evacuated by a U.S. Chinook helicopter sent from the Soto Cano Air Base on mainland Honduras. Another 1,000 people were removed from low-lying coastal areas and smaller islands.

Bob Shearer, 54, from Butler, Pa., said he was disappointed his family's scuba diving trip to Roatan was cut short by the evacuation order. "I only got seven dives in. I hope they didn't jump the gun too soon," he said as he waited for a flight home in the San Pedro Sula airport.

Felix's top winds were at 150 mph as it headed west early Tuesday, and forecasters warned it could strengthen again before landfall along the Miskito Coast. From there, it was projected to rake northern Honduras, slam into southern Belize on Wednesday and then cut across northern Guatemala and southern Mexico, well south of Texas.

Its massive storm surge could devastate Indian communities along the Miskito Coast, an isolated region straddling the Honduras-Nicaragua border where Miskito Indians live in wooden shacks, get around on canoes and subsist on fish, beans, rice, cassava and plantains. Thousands were stranded along the coast late Monday.

The only path to safety is up rivers and across lakes that are too shallow for regular boats, but many lack gasoline for long journeys. Provincial health official Efrain Burgos estimated that 18,000 people must find their own way to higher ground.

The storm was following the same path as 1998's Hurricane Mitch, a sluggish storm that stalled for a week over Central America, killing nearly 11,000 people and leaving more than 8,000 missing, mostly in Honduras and Nicaragua.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Felix could dump up to 12 inches of rain in isolated parts of northern Honduras and northeastern Nicaragua, possibly bringing flash floods and mudslides. As far away as the highland capital of Tegucigalpa, more than 100 miles inland, authorities cleared vendors from markets prone to flooding.

Across the border in Belize City, skies grew increasingly cloudy and winds kicked up as residents boarded windows and lined up for gas. Tourists competed for the last seats on flights to Atlanta and Miami. Police went door-to-door forcing evacuations.

This is only the fourth Atlantic hurricane season since 1886 with more than one Category 5 hurricane, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Only 31 such storms have been recorded in the Atlantic, including eight in the last five seasons.

At 2 a.m. EDT, Felix remained a fearsome hurricane. It was centered 100 miles east-southeast of the Nicaragua-Honduras border, moving west at 17 mph.

Off Mexico's Pacific coast, meanwhile, Tropical Storm Henriette was nearing hurricane strength on a path to hit the resort-studded tip of the Baja California Peninsula on Tuesday.

The hurricane center said it was expected to be near or over the southern Baja Peninsula by Tuesday afternoon or evening.

Earlier, Henriette caused flooding and landslides that killed six people in Acapulco. On Monday, police in Cabo San Lucas said high surf stirred up by Henriette led to the drowning of an unidentified woman.

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Associated Press writers Paul Kiernan in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico; Olga Rodriguez in Belize City; Diego Mendez in San Salvador, El Salvador; and Freddy Cuevas en Tegicugalpa, Honduras contributed to this report.

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On the Net:

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov

Paris menswear designers buck crisis aesthetic

Paris designers spurned the temptation to play it safe during the economic crisis, sending out challenging, fun and bold collections that went well beyond the basic, perennially marketable suit.

Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto dared bankers to go to work in their PJ's with a collection of sleepwear-inspired suits, while French wild-child Jean Paul Gaultier served up jazzed-up zoot suits for the entire family.

Hugo, German suitmaker Hugo Boss' avant garde line, fulfilled its mission with a bold display that married a 1960's silhouette with tailored, futuristic cuts to create a mod-does-the-Matrix look.

Even Thursday's most marketable shows, Louis Vuitton and Dries Van Noten, had an edge. That was an element that was largely absent from the recent winter 2009-2010 menswear shows in Milan, where the perfectly tailored sober suit reigned supreme.

JEAN PAUL GAULTIER

This menswear-in-name-only show burst with an energy, cheekiness and joy capable of sweeping away even the densest clouds of financial gloom and doom.

Men, women and children of all ages, sizes, shapes and colors skipped down the catwalk in extra-large Afro wigs and zippy zoot suits.

Straps that looked like suspenders confused about their mission in life sprouted out of trouser legs, cinching tight around the models' ankles. Others fastened snugly around the torso like parachuters' harnesses.

The children, who ranged in age from wide-eyed toddlers to skulking teens, were dressed just like the adults, some of them in snappy three-piece suits and tophats.

It was the first time Gaultier _ who has mellowed since the 1990s, when he forged his reputation as the wild child of French fashion _ presented a children's line, under the title Gaultier Junior.

YOHJI YAMAMOTO

The Japanese designer woke up the classic pajama set, dusted the sleep off and called it streetwear.

Silky trench coats that looked like well-loved bathrobes topped oversized pajama suits in navy and white polka-dots. Coats, in fuzzy flannel-like wool, were cut wide _ almost like a blanket _ and some showed flashes of contrasting white lining.

"I was looking for the very most luxurious moment and I found it's before sleeping," Yamamoto told The Associated Press in a backstage interview.

HUGO, HUGO BOSS

Hugo art director Bruno Pieters drew on mod and futuristic elements to create innovative looks that at once evoked monks, matadors and the Matrix.

Pieters played with volume, pairing slim cut, Mao-collared sports coats or cropped, second-skin matador jackets with trousers that zipped at the ankle for a slim silhouette. Other looks went bulky, with oversized, with wool coats and low-waist crutch pants.

Voluminous hooded capes that looked like they'd been plucked of a Benedictine friar gave the models a monastic quality that was right at home in the show's venue, a 15th century former monastery in central Paris.

American actor Vincent Gallo hailed the show _ the label's first menswear display in Paris _ as "avant garde," adding he was "startled a bit" by the show's "extreme aesthetic."

DRIES VAN NOTEN

Though Dries Van Noten's collection of smart, clean-cut suits in drab and navy could be dubbed Communist chic, the Belgian designer's collection was, ironically, among the most marketable of day one of Paris menswear week.

Van Noten, whose use of ethnic elements and vivid prints has won him a cult following, pared down his palette for Thursday's show, which was held in the French Communist Party's Paris headquarters.

The tailoring was razor-sharp, and sartorial details abounded _ like a single metal hook that replaced a row of buttons on a double-breasted blazer. Many of the overcoats were double-breasted, too, and tied snugly around the waist with matching wool belts.

Scott Schuman, whose fashion blog The Sartorialist has attracted a cult following of his own, applauded Van Noten for taking "a step in a new direction" without alienating his fan base.

"You're looking at this and you're thinking 'I'd buy 90 percent of this, and the other 10 percent gives me something to think about and maybe pick up on later,'" said Schuman.

LOUIS VUITTON

The French luggage-maker hit the road with an appealing collection of vacation-friendly fabrics, cut slim for an almost aerodynamic silhouette. Still, it was accessories, the giant label's cash-cow, that stole the limelight on Thursday.

Models padded the runway in tomato-red hightop sneakers designed by superstar rapper Kanye West, who donned his own pair _ and a matching red scarf _ for the occasion. The sneakers, which are embossed with Vuitton's logo and also come in white, beige, black and blue, are to hit Vuitton boutiques in June.

The models also toted the label's signature monogram luggage _ embossed on monochrome leather _ on foldable wheelies or carried shoulder bags made like a soccer ball out of monogramed pentagons.

YVES SAINT LAURENT

Models looked as if they were preparing for a flood of biblical proportions as they skulked the Yves Saint Laurent's runway in all things cropped, from high-water pants to abbreviated jackets and truncated overcoats.

An overcast palette of inky blacks and somber grays dominated the Wednesday evening presentation, which featured distressed but noble fabrics like cashmeres, silks and buttery leathers.

Could the insistence on abbreviation been a clever trick to save on fabric costs in times of economic turmoil? Designer Stefano Pilati insisted the financial crisis hadn't actively influenced the collection.

"This house used to lose money, so I've always been very conscious of financial concerns," the Italian designer told The Associated Press. "But so far, if the crisis has affected my collection, it's done so unconsciously."

Phoenix man indicted for violating arms export law

PHOENIX (AP) — A Phoenix man and the company he heads have been indicted by a grand jury for violating federal arms export laws by shipping military aircraft engines to the Venezuelan air force and providing training on how to maintain them.

The indictment announced on Thursday alleges that Floyd D. Stilwell and Marsh Aviation Co., sent military turboprop engines to Venezuela and provided training to the Venezuelans without getting a required federal export license. The U.S. government has forbidden the export of military hardware to Venezuela since 2006 because it does not cooperate with anti-terrorism efforts.

"Our national security depends upon U.S. companies abiding by our export laws. Failure to do so harms our national interests." U.S. Attorney for Arizona Dennis Burke said in a statement.

Stilwell is president and CEO of Marsh, which is based in Mesa, Ariz. The indictment said he received $1.8 million into his personal bank account for the deal.

Stilwell has been issued a court summons, according to the U.S. attorney's office in Phoenix.

Calls to the company and to Stilwell's listed home phone number were not returned Thursday.

Court records show the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization last year but is still in business. Stilwell signed a court document as president and CEO of Marsh that was filed earlier this month.

According to the 10-page indictment charging conspiracy and arms export law violations, Stilwell, his company and others began the conspiracy in November 2005 and ran it until Feb. 5, 2008.

Stilwell and his company allegedly agreed to overhaul and upgrade T-76 turboprop engines for use on Venezuelan air force OV-10 Bronco armed reconnaissance planes, according to the indictment. A former Venezuelan air force officer contacted Stilwell by e-mail about the engine deal, and told Stilwell he knew of the arms embargo and ways to get around it.

Stilwell allegedly agreed to overhaul and upgrade six engines, disassemble them and disguise them as civilian models for export, and sent a Marsh employee to Venezuela to reassemble the engine. The indictment shows only four being shipped.

If convicted, Stilwell could receive 10 years in prison for the arms violations and five years on the conspiracy charge.

Compost product quality in Georgia

University survey compiles data on composting operations, volumes and types of feedstocks processed, product quality and ways to expand markets.

IN THE FALL of 2001, the University of Georgia's Engineering Outreach Program (EOP) completed a statewide composting survey designed to help expand the industry and organic materials recycling in Georgia. Some goals of the survey were to visit each composting operation in the state to collect data on the types of feedstocks being composted, origin of feedstocks, annual throughput volumes, maximum throughput capacity, quality of finished product, equipment owned or contracted, price of marketed compost, market sectors for finished product, type of composting method employed, permit requirements, and the quantity of finished material stockpiled. Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates were obtained to create a digital map of the facilities for the state, a compost sample was taken for lab characterization at the university, and technical and educational assistance was provided if necessary.

The survey found Georgia has 38 facilities actively composting that handle over 550,000 tons/year (tpy) of organic materials in addition to five new facilities coming on line later this year. While half of these facilities are private operations, they handle more than 80 percent of the recycled organics. More than 35 percent of the composted materials are handled through operations that manage a variety of feedstocks, while yard waste composting operations handle the second most at nearly 20 percent of the total materials composted.

The EOP analyzed finished compost samples from 33 of the 38 operations in the state. Lab analysis included: moisture content, bulk density, pH, organic matter, heavy metals, soluble salts (conductivity), nitrate-- nitrogen, ammonium-nitrogen, total nitrogen, total carbon, C:N ratio, phosphorous, potassium, percent inerts, particle size, biological stability (respirometry), and maturity (germination rate).

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Moisture contents ranged quite a bit depending on whether the material was stored under shelter or left outside. The driest material was seven percent moisture while the wettest was 51 percent; average moisture content was approximately 34 percent. Bulk density of the characterized samples was partly dependent of the original feedstocks.

Yard trimmings composts, some food residuals composts, municipal solid waste (MSW) compost and agricultural residuals composts tended to be lighter than manure, industrial by-products, and biosolids composts. Bulk materials were as light as 385 lbs per cubic yard and as heavy as 1,400 lbs per cubic yard. The state average was approximately 900 lbs per cubic yard. All products met U.S. Composting Council (USCC) standards for inert materials present in the finished compost, less than one percent on a dry weight basis. Of the 38 operations, 15 screen their finished products and all screen to 3/8 inches. Organic matter content was quite variable as well ranging from 13 percent to 63 percent depending on the amount of carbon material or bulking agent used in the initial recipe as well as the length of time the material was composted. The state average was approximately 30 percent.

CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS

The pH levels of Georgia's composts signify that most of the products are good quality. While the range was from 4.9 to 8.6, the majority of the products were near neutral and averaged 6.5. The pH levels seemed to be affected most by type of feedstocks used and length of composting time. Composted biosolids seem to consistently have lower pH levels and materials that have short residence times seem to have higher pH levels.

Soluble salt contents are most often a result of the initial feedstocks and curing time. Some animal manures and food waste composts often have higher salt contents; however, curing time can help to reduce these levels. Soluble salt content (conductivity) ranged from 0.09 to 25.20 mmhos/ cm. The average was 5.5 mmhos/cm, which exceeds the Georgia Department of Agriculture's (GDA) standards for horticultural grade compost set at 4 mmhos/cm. Of the 38 products tested, 12 exceeded GDA standards; they were mostly derived from food waste composts and poultry litter composts with a couple of biosolids and yard trimmings compost products testing high as well. It should be noted that soluble salt levels exceeding 4 mmhos/cm may still represent a high quality material that is well suited for other applications such as landscaping and erosion control.

The carbon to nitrogen ratio (C:N) of the sampled products ranged from a low of 7.6 to a high of 147.2, with an average of 16 if the highest sample is removed. This is a positive indicator for the state's products, and is often influenced by the initial recipe and thoroughness of composting. Materials that seemed to produce high C:N ratios were wood residuals and some yard trimmings composts, MSW compost, and compost made from pulp and paper mill solids.

Ammonium nitrogen levels ranged from 1 ppm or 0.0001 percent to 4876 ppm or 0.49 percent. The average was approximately 500 ppm or 0.05 percent. The composts with the highest levels were poultry litter composts and some of the food residuals and biosolids composts. Nitrate nitrogen ranged from 1 ppm or 0.0001 percent to 1817 ppm or 0.18 percent with an average of 330 ppm or 0.03 percent. Again the poultry litter composts were consistently higher followed by some food residuals composts and biosolids composts. TKN followed the same trend ranging from 0.18 percent to 3.57 percent with an average of 0.75 percent. The wood residuals and yard trimmings composts generally were lowest in nitrogen followed by those products that had feedstock recipes high in wood residuals or yard trimmings.

Total phosphorous ranged from 54 to 18,930 ppm or 0.0054 percent to 1.9 percent with an average of 5500 ppm or 0.55 percent. Generally the poultry litter and biosolids composts had the highest levels of phosphorous followed by food residuals, MSW, yard trimmings and wood residuals composts respectively. Potassium ranged from 151 ppm or 0.015 percent to 34,570 ppm or 3.46 percent. The state average was 7300 ppm or 0.73 percent. Again the poultry litter composts were the highest followed by food residuals composts, biosolids, MSW, wood residues, and yard trimmings respectively.

Finally, all compost samples were analyzed for metals and micronutrients, including: aluminum, boron, calcium, cadmium, chromium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, molybdenum, sodium, nickel, lead, sulfur, silicon, and zinc. Metals and micronutrient levels are generally a product of the initial feedstocks. While none of the composts exceeded EPA 503 standards and should pose no concern for any application, some trends were evident.

Calcium and manganese levels were highest in the poultry litter composts, and pulp and paper compost. Chromium levels were higher in biosolids composts, boron levels were higher in poultry litter materials, and iron levels higher in yard trimmings composts. Sodium was generally higher in the food waste composts, poultry litter composts, pulp and paper, and MSW composts respectively. Nickel was generally higher in the pulp and paper, MSW, and biosolids composts. Lead was highest in the MSW compost and some of the poultry litter composts. Silicon seemed to be higher in some of the food waste composts and biosolids composts. Zinc appeared to be higher in some of the poultry litter composts, biosolids and MSW composts. There were no apparent trends for cadmium, copper, molybdenum or sulfur. Levels of metals and nutrients proved to be and are highly variable between composts and no conclusions should be made on composts and/or feedstocks in general based on data presented here.

MARKETING QUALITY COMPOST

The physical and chemical characteristics of Georgia's composts ranged quite a bit depending on feedstocks, management style, and intended application for the end product. In addition, time of sampling and replications may produce different or more consistent results that were beyond the scope of this study. While some operations compost specifically as a waste management tool, less attention is given to the quality of the product and its consistency, especially if the material is used for internal purposes or given away. Those materials that were composted the longest and given ample curing time seemed to produce higher quality products, especially if the end use was for market sales.

While standardizing finished compost products may help the composting industry in Georgia, it may only serve a handful of the larger private composting operations, and of course, the consumer. The Georgia Composting Association (GCA) and the EOP at University of Georgia are interested in creating standards for compost products in the state as well as specifications for various applications. The Georgia Composting Association is considering endorsing the USCC's Seal of Testing Assurance (STA) program and may provide incentives for GCA composters to become STA certified. In addition, the GCA may also create their own stamp of approval for high quality compost produced within the state. The stamp can be used as a marketing tool for GCA composters and can serve to ensure consumers that the material they are buying is a certified high quality material that was made in Georgia with materials recycled from Georgia industries and municipalities.

The University of Georgia has already completed a set of recommended specifications for using compost in erosion and sediment control applications. These recommendations are evolving as research is completed on the environmental impacts of using compost and mulch in erosion and sediment control applications. They can be found on the web at www.ces.uga.edu/pubcd/B1200.htm.

[Author Affiliation]

Britt Faucette is with the University of Georgia's Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Malaysian referee under probe for firing shots in unruly soccer game

A Malaysian referee is under investigation for allegedly firing warning shots in the air after he was attacked for suspending a player during a local soccer match, police said Thursday.

The referee, who was also a policeman, ran to his patrol car to get the gun during the Sunday match in southern Johor state after angry players mobbed him for showing one of them a red card, a Johor police official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity, citing protocol.

The New Straits Times newspaper said the referee, fearing for his life, fired two warning shots to disperse the crowd.

However, the police official said the gun was seized from one of the players and investigation was ongoing to determine who fired the shots. The referee suffered bruises from the mob attack and has been detained for questioning over suspected misuse of firearms, he said.

Five players between the ages of 23 and 40 were also being held for questioning and could be charged for rioting, he added.

9TH ARMY BAND MENTORS EAGLE RIVER SCOUTS.

The following information was released by U.S. Army Bands:

By Staff Sgt. Jason Epperson, 3rd MEB PAO

US Army Alaska (USARAK)

Members of U.S. Army Alaska's 9th Army Band gave members of Boy Scout Troop 229 a music lesson Feb. 24 in Eagle River.

The Soldiers present the Scouts a brief history of music appreciation and familiarized them with instruments from the brass section. They also demonstrated the different genres of music throughout the ages, playing different period pieces to demonstrate each.

In addition to providing a music lesson, the information helped the scouts gain the knowledge they needed to earn their music merit badge.

Staff Sgt. Dale McSwain, the bandleader, started the presentation with a breakdown of the different instrumental groups.

"The five musical instrument groups are brass, electronic, strings, woodwinds, and percussion," McSwain, a native of Shelby, NC, told the scouts.

"Of course we represent the brass, which is the best musical group," he joked, with his French horn in hand.

Each band member gave them a brief history of the instrument they were playing and the band played music from a different era of music. They played "Rondeau" from the classical period, "Salvation is Created" from the romantic period, as well as "Just a Closer Walk" from the Jazz and Dixieland era.

Staff Sgt. Alton Huckaby, a trumpet player explained it's hard work and takes a lot of practice.

"Can you guess how long I've been playing this?" Huckaby, a Houston, Texas native, asked the crowd. "I'll have to do the math!" he then closed eyes in deep concentration while silently counting. He opened his eyes and smiled. "It's been 18 years since I've been playing this and I am still learning how to do this."

Some of the Soldiers said they had been Scouts themselves.

Sgt. Jason Taylor, a trumpet player with the 9th Army Band, was a Scout at age 12 when his father was stationed in Italy.

"It was a great way to meet new friends and learn to do new and interesting things," Taylor said.

"Our purpose is to perform and hopefully educate these young Boy Scouts with music," Taylor, a Stafford, Va., native said. "We are going to go through a brief history of different music styles and the different instruments we have tonight. Hopefully that can help them earn their music merit badge."

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Jeff Price, 9th Army Band commander, was excited to have the opportunity to help the Boy Scout Troops in a community function.

"We are Soldiers serving Soldiers. On a daily basis throughout USARAK we have opportunities to play for and make sure that Soldiers know they are important," Price said. "In the same way, when we go out into the community, it's a way to let them know what the Army does."

The Scouts were then given the opportunity to ask questions. One Scout asked if the Soldiers play other instruments.

"I like to play guitar sometimes to do something different, because I've been playing this for so long, and sometimes I like to sing karaoke just to have some fun," Taylor said.

The scouts were not the only ones interested to hear what the Army band members had to say. The parents also asked questions.

"Is a piano a percussion or string instrument?", one parent asked.

Price let everyone guess before revealing, "It's a percussion [instrument] because it's struck. The hammer strikes."

"Is every band member a rifleman also?", the parent asked.

Without hesitation, the band members answered in unison, "Rifleman first!"

Lucas Mahi, senior patrol leader for Troop 229 said he enjoyed the interaction between the Soldiers and Scouts. He has also played the trumpet for four years.

"I liked how they talked about the different genres of music. I also liked how they showed us the brass instruments," Mahi said. "The Army helped everyone get into the Scouting spirit. Since they are the adulthood version of Scouts, it helps us become better Scouts."

Lahsen Mahi, assistant Scout masters, and also Lucas' father, said there were many positives that come out of the interaction: an appreciation of music, community involvement, patriotism, and perseverance.

"They've seen a lot of individuals here that have been playing instruments for 15 years," Mahi said, "They are doing something that they actually like. I think [the scouts] could be inspired music wise, towards their country or [to] set new goals."

"I noticed the scouts really appreciated it," Mahi said with a smile. "They were really quiet and that's one of the few times that they [have] sat in awe listening."

9TH ARMY BAND MENTORS EAGLE RIVER SCOUTS.

The following information was released by U.S. Army Bands:

By Staff Sgt. Jason Epperson, 3rd MEB PAO

US Army Alaska (USARAK)

Members of U.S. Army Alaska's 9th Army Band gave members of Boy Scout Troop 229 a music lesson Feb. 24 in Eagle River.

The Soldiers present the Scouts a brief history of music appreciation and familiarized them with instruments from the brass section. They also demonstrated the different genres of music throughout the ages, playing different period pieces to demonstrate each.

In addition to providing a music lesson, the information helped the scouts gain the knowledge they needed to earn their music merit badge.

Staff Sgt. Dale McSwain, the bandleader, started the presentation with a breakdown of the different instrumental groups.

"The five musical instrument groups are brass, electronic, strings, woodwinds, and percussion," McSwain, a native of Shelby, NC, told the scouts.

"Of course we represent the brass, which is the best musical group," he joked, with his French horn in hand.

Each band member gave them a brief history of the instrument they were playing and the band played music from a different era of music. They played "Rondeau" from the classical period, "Salvation is Created" from the romantic period, as well as "Just a Closer Walk" from the Jazz and Dixieland era.

Staff Sgt. Alton Huckaby, a trumpet player explained it's hard work and takes a lot of practice.

"Can you guess how long I've been playing this?" Huckaby, a Houston, Texas native, asked the crowd. "I'll have to do the math!" he then closed eyes in deep concentration while silently counting. He opened his eyes and smiled. "It's been 18 years since I've been playing this and I am still learning how to do this."

Some of the Soldiers said they had been Scouts themselves.

Sgt. Jason Taylor, a trumpet player with the 9th Army Band, was a Scout at age 12 when his father was stationed in Italy.

"It was a great way to meet new friends and learn to do new and interesting things," Taylor said.

"Our purpose is to perform and hopefully educate these young Boy Scouts with music," Taylor, a Stafford, Va., native said. "We are going to go through a brief history of different music styles and the different instruments we have tonight. Hopefully that can help them earn their music merit badge."

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Jeff Price, 9th Army Band commander, was excited to have the opportunity to help the Boy Scout Troops in a community function.

"We are Soldiers serving Soldiers. On a daily basis throughout USARAK we have opportunities to play for and make sure that Soldiers know they are important," Price said. "In the same way, when we go out into the community, it's a way to let them know what the Army does."

The Scouts were then given the opportunity to ask questions. One Scout asked if the Soldiers play other instruments.

"I like to play guitar sometimes to do something different, because I've been playing this for so long, and sometimes I like to sing karaoke just to have some fun," Taylor said.

The scouts were not the only ones interested to hear what the Army band members had to say. The parents also asked questions.

"Is a piano a percussion or string instrument?", one parent asked.

Price let everyone guess before revealing, "It's a percussion [instrument] because it's struck. The hammer strikes."

"Is every band member a rifleman also?", the parent asked.

Without hesitation, the band members answered in unison, "Rifleman first!"

Lucas Mahi, senior patrol leader for Troop 229 said he enjoyed the interaction between the Soldiers and Scouts. He has also played the trumpet for four years.

"I liked how they talked about the different genres of music. I also liked how they showed us the brass instruments," Mahi said. "The Army helped everyone get into the Scouting spirit. Since they are the adulthood version of Scouts, it helps us become better Scouts."

Lahsen Mahi, assistant Scout masters, and also Lucas' father, said there were many positives that come out of the interaction: an appreciation of music, community involvement, patriotism, and perseverance.

"They've seen a lot of individuals here that have been playing instruments for 15 years," Mahi said, "They are doing something that they actually like. I think [the scouts] could be inspired music wise, towards their country or [to] set new goals."

"I noticed the scouts really appreciated it," Mahi said with a smile. "They were really quiet and that's one of the few times that they [have] sat in awe listening."

Monday, 5 March 2012

Spacey recants attack story, says he was conned

LONDON -- Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey admitted Monday that hehad misled British police about being mugged in a London park at 4:30a.m. while walking his dog.

The American movie star had gone to a police station early onSaturday morning and claimed he had been beaten and robbed of hismobile phone.

But after receiving hospital treatment for his injuries, Spacey,44, returned to the police station and withdrew the allegations.

Spacey admitted Monday that he had not been attacked but hadinjured himself by tripping over Mini, his Jack Russell terrier,while chasing a youth who, he claimed, had conned him into handingover his phone.

He had misled police in …

Engineers: Efficient Organic LEDs a Step Toward Better Lights.

Byline: University of Florida

GAINESVILLE, Fla., Dec. 23 (AScribe Newswire) -- For those who love "green" compact fluorescent bulbs but hate their cold light, here's some good news: Researchers are closer to flipping the switch on cheaper, richer LED-type room lighting

University of Florida materials science and engineers have achieved a new record in efficiency of blue organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs. Because blue is essential to white light, the advance helps overcome a hurdle to lighting that is much more efficient than compact fluorescents -- but can produce high-quality light similar to standard incandescent bulbs.

"The quality of the …

TRAVEL NOTE.(TRAVEL)

Visits tax sacred sites

Are they churches? Are they museums? The question is increasingly vexing church officials across Europe, as the number of visitors to sacred buildings increases.

``What is already a large problem will become a nightmare if we don't prepare ways to receive them,'' said the Rev. Timothy Verdon, an art historian and Roman Catholic priest who advises the Diocese of Florence on tourism matters. On a summer day, he said, the Florence cathedral, referred to as the Duomo, has as many as 30,000 to 40,000 tourists, up from 10,000 a day in 1986.

In 1993, Italy's Catholic bishops, in a document titled ``The Cultural Treasures of the …

Cubs job interests Bobby Valentine

Count Bobby Valentine among those who would like to manage the Chicago Cubs.

The ESPN analyst and former New York Mets manager says he's interested in taking over for the retiring Lou Piniella after this season.

Valentine, who led the Mets to the pennant in 2000 and also managed the …

J.P. coalition suing T for E Line service

J.P. coalition suing T for E Line service

Last week the state's Executive Office of Transportation and Construction apparently buckled under the weight of pressure from the feds and the Massachusetts Attorney General's office and agreed to meet the requirements outlined in a 1991 pollution mitigation agreement that called on the MBTA to reduce emissions from urban bus routes to improve service to low-income communities.

Promises extracted from the EOTC -- albeit for the second time -- include pledges that alternative fuel buses will be added to MBTA routes, the so-called Silver Line project of bus service from Dudley Station to downtown Boston will move ahead and that the …

Focus on theoretical chemistry. (Conference Planner).

If you are not a specialist in the field of theoretical chemistry, it probably will not interest you much. Yet it is important to us all, as the design of new drugs through to new lasers depend on it.

Theoretical chemistry occupies a unique position at the crux of where chemistry meets physics, maths and computational science. SCI's Fine Chemicals Group, one of SCI's largest special interest Groups, is promoting theoretical and synthetic chemistry with various conferences throughout the UK, with dates confirmed as far ahead as 2004.

The Fine Chemicals Group and the affiliated Young Chemists' Panel (YCP), which supports younger members of the chemical …

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Fidelity Marketing Roths Through Web Seminars.(Fidelity Investments to market Roth IRA)(Brief Article)

Fidelity Investments has launched on-line seminars to market the much- touted Roth IRA.

The seminars, which were rolled out in the last two weeks, present a mixture of graphics and text explaining Roth IRA eligibility to investors and run for three to four minutes, said a spokesman for the Boston-based fund giant. They can be accessed by hitting …

`Defensive medicine' cost includes more than money; A reporter's illness personalizes human toll of extra medical tests.(Main)

Byline: DAN FREEDMAN Hearst Newspapers

WASHINGTON - With Senate Republicans ready to bring up legislation that would limit medical malpractice verdicts, I realize my recent bout with prostate cancer might qualify me as a poster child for one of their rallying cries - reining in defensive medicine.

Defensive medicine is when physicians, fearful of lawsuits, order extra tests to make sure patients don't sue them later and claim that the doctors didn't do enough to make a correct diagnosis.

Joined by President Bush, the American Medical Association and the health insurance lobby, Senate Republicans led by Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., himself a doctor, say the costs of defensive medicine show the need for limits on jury verdicts for punitive damages and awards for "pain and suffering" in malpractice lawsuits.

Supporters of malpractice caps argue that the nation's health-care system could save up to $126 billion annually in expenditures for …

UNSCHEDULED LANDING SAVES 2 ALBANY PETS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Associated Press

A United Airlines passenger jet made an unscheduled landing to rescue two pets of an Albany family that were mistakenly shipped in an unheated cargo compartment.

The emergency landing in Madison, Wis., delayed the Chicago-to-Spokane flight by about two hours. The animals -- golden retriever Sunny Day and cat Daisy -- arrived in Spokane safely.

"The crew did an outstanding, professional job," said the pets' owner, Randy Moore. He is moving his family from Albany to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, about 30 miles east …

Tool-free components for conveyors.(Product Showcase)

Tool-free-adjustable side rails, overhead hold-downs and lane dividers are available fur low-profile conveyors. Lockable stops allow presets of two side-rail positions for rapid changeover. Guided cross-rail support improves rigidity, parallelism and ease of changeover. All side rails have UHMW liners to protect …

Cash-strapped cities, schools say: 'Your Ad Here'

CHICAGO (AP) — Seven vinyl banners draped this month along one of Chicago's most iconic bridges, advertisements some have dubbed "a visual crime" and "commercial graffiti," are reviving a debate about how governments raise money in tough economic times.

In the aftermath of the Great Recession, a public school district in Colorado is selling ads on report cards and Utah has a new law allowing ads on school buses. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel's administration, straining to fill a $600 million budget hole, is looking to raise $25 million from ads on city property — including bridges, electrical storage boxes and garbage cans.

The effort kicked off this month with Bank of America …

TV investigation into psychiatrist's sect's life

Claims by a Bath psychiatrist that he had been a member of anobscure French sect in the 13th century are being investigated aspart of a television documentary.

Most people have experienced deja vu at some time in their livesand while many of us just shrug off the feeling, others believe suchmoments can provide an insight into a previous life.

In the 1960s, Arthur Guirdham took this belief even further andwas convinced that he could remember details of his previous fourincarnations.

He gave accounts of life as a slave girl in Rome, a Celtic priestin Cumberland, a Napoleonic sailor and, perhaps most notably, aFrench Cathar. This involved being a member of an …

Product Pipeline.

Product Pipeline

Thoratec gets OK for Heartmate II IDE trial

In what could be seen as a coup, ventricular assist device maker Thoratec (Pleasanton, California) reported last month that the FDA granted it a virtually condition-free approval of its investigational device exemption (IDE) for the company to begin a Phase II pivotal clinical trial for its next generation HeartMate II LVAS (Left Ventricular Assist System). The system is designed to provide long-term cardiac support for patients who are in end-stage heart failure.

The study incorporates a number of unique elements, including the use of the device for both bridge-to-transplantation (BTT) and destination therapy (DT), the first time the FDA has approved a clinical trial with both indications in one protocol, Thoratec said.

The company is in the process of identifying prospective centers beyond those 10 that participated in the Phase I study. Initial patient enrollment could begin within 30 days, pending appropriate approvals within the hospitals, the company said.

A unique aspect of the BTT study design is that the control group will be comprised of data from previous clinical trials and concurrent data from the companys voluntary VAD implant registry, enabling a non-randomized trial design in which all subjects will receive the HeartMate II. The BTT arm of the study will involve 133 patients at up to 25 centers with the primary endpoint being the rate of survival to transplantation, or 180 days.

Secondary endpoints include adverse events, device reliability, quality of life and functional status. The company noted that it has already enrolled 25 patients in the Phase I portion of the BTT trial, leaving 108 patients to be accrued in the Phase II pivotal study.

The DT arm of the study will involve 200 total patients, randomizing the HeartMate II to the currently approved system, the HeartMate XVE on a 2-1 basis, respectively. The study provides for a composite two-year endpoint, which includes patient survival, rate of neurological events and device reliability.

Secondary endpoints …