Thursday, March 15, 2012

Police Car In Head-On Crash

A Police officer was taken to hospital after her patrol car wasinvolved in a head-on smash with a stolen BMW in Knowle West.

The crash, which set both airbags off inside the police car,happened when the stolen car, driven by a 22-year-old man, sped outof a side road and into the path of the on-coming police car, whichwas being driven along Creswicke Road.

A female officer, who was in the passenger seat, was taken byambulance to Bristol Royal Infirmary suffering from minor headinjuries. The male driver of the police car escaped unhurt.

Officers had been in the area looking for the estate car, whichhad been reported stolen, after it was spotted in the Nover's …

SHEEP IN THEM THERE HILLS

Those white spots you'll see in the Foothills over the next few weeks may not be patches of snow. In fact, Instead of cold and melty, those spots may be woolly and moving.

Sheep ranchers have started the weekslong process of moving flocks to higher summer grazing areas as the snow continues to recede. Up to 6,000 domestic sheep will head up the hillsides, and besides being a picturesque Idaho moment, it means that recreationlsts using the Foothills need to pay extra attention.

The flocks can often be found near some of the most popular trail areas, so interactions between people and sheep aren't uncommon. The problem comes when dogs are allowed off leash around the …

Pernice takes a one-shot lead at AT&T National

Tom Pernice Jr. was easy to ignore Saturday in the AT&T National until he wound up in the lead.

All he did was make 15 pars on an explosive afternoon of birdies and bogeys at Congressional, and his lone complaint was that he made only two putts longer than his shadow. One was from 4 1/2 feet for par, another from 7 feet for birdie.

But it was that steady hand that gave him a 1-under 69 and a one-shot lead over Steve Stricker, leaving the 48-year-old Pernice optimistic about winning for the first time in seven years.

"It will be interesting to see how it goes tomorrow," Pernice said. "But I'm looking forward to it."

Local & National scoreboard

Baseball

American Legion State Tournament

At John Marshall High School, Glen Dale

Thursday

Game 1: Wheeling Post 1 4, Elkins Post 29 1

Game 2: Morgantown Post 2 11, Berkley County Post 14 1

Game 3: Kanawha Valley Post 94 15, Moundsville Post 3 5

Friday

Game 4: Elkins Post 29 (21-23) vs. Berkley County (26-14), 10a.m.

Game 5: Wheeling Post 1 (25-12) vs. Moundsville Post 3 (22-16), 1p.m.

Game 6: Morgantown Post 2 (26-11-1) vs. Kanawha Valley Post 94(36-10), 5 p.m.

If four teams remain after Game 6 and two teams after Game 9, thefollowing procedure will be observed:

Saturday

Game 7: Game 5 winner …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Solution conformation of the Met 61 to His 61 mutant of Pseudomonas stutzeri ZoBell ferrocytochrome c-551

ABSTRACT The gene encoding for bacterial cytochrome c-551 from Pseudomonas stutzeri substrain ZoBell has been mutated to convert the invariant sixth ligand methionine residue into histidine, creating the site-specific mutant M61 H. Proton NMR resonance assignments were made for all main-chain and most-side chain protons in the diamagnetic, reduced form at pH 9.2 and 333 K by two-dimensional NMR techniques. Distance constraints (1074) were determined from nuclear Overhauser enhancements and main-chain torsion-angle constraints (72) from scalar coupling estimates. Solution conformations for the protein were computed by the simulated annealing approach. For 28 computed structures, the root …

22 abducted oil workers freed in Colombia

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombian authorities say suspected leftist rebels have released 22 of 23 Colombian contractors abducted while doing exploratory work in a remote jungle region for the Canadian oil company Talisman.

Defense Minister Rodrigo Rivera says one contractor remains captive.

He told reporters the men were freed early Tuesday. He says that their captors were unable to evade …

Bracketed by crimes: Van der Sloot's last 5 years

For all of his garrulous charm, Joran van der Sloot didn't do himself any favors in his online interactions, where his generation tends to reveal a lot about itself.

"If I would have to describe myself as an animal it would be a snake," he wrote on his YouTube page. Perhaps wistfully wishing the past undone, he continued: "however, I want to be a lion and one day I will be a lion."

At age 22, Van der Sloot is now a caged animal. He sits in a bleak third-world prison, where he fears his fellow inmates. After requesting isolation, he shares a cellblock with a reputed Colombian murderer-for-hire.

Van der Sloot's journey from the …

Man who allegedly shot trooper to be transferred

MARTINSBURG - A man indicted for shooting a State Police trooperwill be transferred to a new jail after complaining of harassment. Berkeley County Prosecutor Pamela Games-Neely on Tuesday approved thetransfer of Hedgesville resident David Eugene Munday, who says he isbeing harassed at the Eastern Regional Jail.

He could be transferred to the Potomac Highlands Regional Jail inRomney next week.

"We agreed to allow him to be transferred to another prisonbecause, frankly, we were tired of listening to this guy whine. Aslong as he's locked up and he goes to trial, it doesn't matter wherehe is," Games-Neely said.

Berkeley County Circuit Judge David Sanders had …

Fit-again Warburton back for Wales against England

CARDIFF, Wales (AP) — Sam Warburton will captain Wales in Saturday's Six Nations match against England after recovering from a thigh injury.

The flanker will return to the team in place of Aaron Shingler in one of three changes to the side that started the 27-13 victory over Scotland on Feb. 12 — its second straight win in the competition.

Alun-Wyn …

Mystery deepens over disabled girl's killing

HICKORY, North Carolina (AP) — Police were confident a freckle-faced disabled 10-year-old Australian-born girl was killed, but the mystery of how she died deepened when police said a set of remains was uncovered five miles (eight kilometers) away from where one of her bones was found.

The bone, discovered in some brush alongside Zahra Baker's prosthetic leg, was discovered in an area near where the family lived until mid-September. Zahra's stepmother, Elisa Baker, is currently in jail, charged with trying to throw off investigators with a bogus ransom note. Her father, Adam Baker, has been arrested on charges unrelated to Zahra's disappearance and is free on bail.

Recently, …

Second Codo project in York captures its financing

YORK COUNTY

Eric Menzer has spent the better part of 18 months working to nail down a $4.7 million financing package for Codo 28.

The money was locked in this month and construction began Oct. 19 at 28 N. George St. in downtown York. Workers will transform the structure, which dates to the early 1900s and has been vacant for more than a decade, into 11 apartments and a 700-squarefoot retail storefront. It is expected to open in September.

"In our downtown, we are down to kind of the last few really decrepit industrial-era buildings that need significant new investment and life breathed into them, and this is one of them," Menzer said. "It's been a sore spot for a long …

Super 14: Bulls defeat New South Wales 16-13

The Bulls kept the race for Super 14 semifinal berths wide open by defeating New South Wales Waratahs 16-13 on Saturday.

The teams scored a try each and the Waratahs got a bonus point for losing by fewer than seven points, lifting them to second place _ and still within striking distance of several teams below them.

In an unattractive game played in driving rain at the Loftus Versfeld Stadium, the Waratahs scored first with a try from center Rob Horne, who exposed the Bulls' defenses out wide. Kurtley Beale kicked the conversion.

Derrick Hougaard _ on as a replacement for center J.P. Nel _ kicked a drop goal for the Bulls, and flyhalf Morne Steyn …

Where's the volume? Stock trading quiet in July

NEW YORK (AP) — This month may be the slowest in the stock market in more than three years.

Trading volume, or the number of shares bought and sold, is down because there are fewer big investors buying stocks. And those who want to buy are worried about the job market and the European debt crisis — and the budget impasse in Washington. If Congress and the White House don't agree on budget cuts and raising the government's borrowing limit, the U.S. is at risk of defaulting on its debt after Aug. 2.

Daily volume on the New York Stock Exchange is down 22 percent so far in July compared with the same period in 2010, according to data provider FactSet. About 3.7 billion shares have traded hands every day on average, down from 4.7 billion in July last year.

If that continues, July will have the lowest average daily trading volume since December 2007, says Patrick O'Shaughnessy, a research analyst at Raymond James.

Low volume is worrisome because it suggests that few investors are driving the stock market's gains or losses. That creates the risk for bigger price swings. When, for example, there are few buyers, someone trying to sell a stock may be forced to keep lowering the price in hopes that someone will want it — the same as a homeowner who can't find a buyer for a house.

A lack of volume also indicates that some investors don't believe that stocks are worth buying right now.

"Volume in many respects represents conviction," says Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank. "And there's just very little conviction."

Traders have reason to be wary:

— Job growth is weak. Many investors were stunned when the government reported earlier this month that employers created just 18,000 new jobs in June. That was lower than the average of 215,000 monthly jobs created in February through April.

— The manufacturing industry is in a slump, too. The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank said last week that manufacturing activity in the Northeast rose only slightly in July after falling to the lowest level in two years in June. Supply disruptions from the March 11 earthquake in Japan have hurt factory production.

— Debt problems remain in the U.S. and Europe. If there's no agreement in Washington and the government defaults on its debt, that could have a catastrophic impact on the financial markets. Some analysts say stocks could fall the way they did during the 2008 financial crisis. Meanwhile, European leaders approved a new aid package for Greece last week to reduce its debt, but it's unclear how that will work.

All this has led investors to avoid stocks. And that has hurt volume.

In June, investors withdrew $14.5 billion more than they deposited into U.S. stock mutual funds, according to consulting firm Strategic Insight. That was the largest withdrawal from stock funds since August 2010. "Investors are running scared," said Frank Barbera, portfolio manager of the Sierra Core Retirement Fund.

Fewer hedge funds are in existence today than in 2008, which helps to explain the lower volume, says Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research. There were approximately 10,233 hedge funds in the world in the second quarter of 2008, before the financial crisis and stock market crash. By the end of June, there were 9,443, according to Chicago-based research firm HFR.

Even with the low volume, though, stocks have risen this month. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up 1.8 percent, while the Dow Jones industrial average is up 2.1 percent. The technology-focused Nasdaq composite index is up 3.1 percent. Stocks are up, in part, because companies like Apple Inc. and Coca-Cola Co. have reported strong profits. Second-quarter earnings are expected to rise 12.5 percent from the same period in 2010, according to FactSet.

Still, the low volume makes it difficult for investors to know when to put their money into stocks. If the S&P goes up two days in a row, but volume is low, that's hardly an indication that a trend is emerging, Ablin said.

There's another possible effect of low volume. As trading has been quiet, Howard Silverblatt, a senior analyst at Standard & Poor's, said he has a noticed something near his office in Lower Manhattan: "The bars downtown are a little bit emptier."

Hungry otters stray into fishermen's territory

The first hint of trouble in trying to save endangered sea otters and protect fishermen competing for the shellfish the creatures eat was when bureaucrats drew a line in the ocean separating the two.

That was followed by an unsuccessful attempt to create a colony for the creatures on a distant island and a more disastrous venture to relocate strays who wandered into what was dubbed the "no-otter zone."

The otters didn't cooperate and their subsequent rebound in Southern California created a classic man vs. nature conflict that could alter a two-decade recovery program and raises the question of what species is more endangered: animals or urchin divers.

At the heart of the matter is a well-intentioned attempt to control nature for commerce that backfired.

"It's a view of the world as if animals are your chess pieces," said Lilian Carswell, who oversees otter recovery at U.S. Fish and Wildlife.

The agency long ago abandoned the costly and ineffective transfer policy, but environmentalists who claim the otters are being targeted filed a lawsuit in federal court last year to extend protections for otters that migrate outside the artificial boundaries.

"They're moving into a hostile environment," said Allison Ford with The Otter Project, which sued the Department of Interior and Fish and Wildlife. "We've heard anecdotal evidence of otters being shot, harassed and run over by boats."

Shellfish divers liken the voracious mammals to locusts of the sea and fear that giving the critters free rein will jeopardize their industry. Fishermen deny harming the otters, but claim the animals have devastated the sea urchin population wherever they've gone.

"Based on historic action we think eventually they'll wipe out the shellfish industry in California," said Vern Goehring, executive director of the California Sea Urchin Commission.

Ironically, it was the near decimation of the otters that allowed segments of the fishing industry to thrive. Urchin and shellfish blossomed when the otter were driven near extinction by fur traders who hunted the marine mammals in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Once numbering as many as 18,000 along the giant kelp beds of the California Coast, the species sank to about 20 otters off Big Sur in 1938.

The population gradually rebounded after being listed as threatened in 1977 and the population now hovers around 2,800, including an estimated 70 in the no-otter zone.

About 25 years ago, however, conservationists worried that a single oil spill could wipe out the state's entire otter population. They came up with a plan that involved a compromise to quell shellfishing industry opposition to growing otter numbers.

An experimental otter colony would be planted 62 miles off Los Angeles on San Nicolas Island in the Channel Islands and they promised to confine other otters to the Central Coast. The safety zone designated in 1987, stretched from just south of San Francisco at Pigeon Point, to just north of Santa Barbara at Point Conception.

Anything outside that area was dubbed the "no-otter zone" and stray otters would be rounded up and returned.

The San Nicolas experiment struggled, with most of the otters either dying or swimming hundreds of miles back toward the Northern California mainland. The relocation effort _ at an estimated cost of $10,000 per otter _ also failed.

It often took a couple days to round up a crew of divers who would search in boats for wayward otters. If they were lucky enough to find one, divers had to wait until for the otter to fall asleep and then approach from downwind. Then divers would then sneak up on the animal from below with equipment that didn't release bubbles.

Sometimes the captured and returned otters would swim right back.

"They didn't like it _ it wasn't home," said Jim Estes, a biology professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who worked on the relocation effort that he now calls "naive."

The agency stopped catching otters in 1993 and five years later the otters had small but growing populations off Ventura and Santa Barbara, outside the protection of the Endangered Species Act.

Fish and Wildlife began re-evaluating the policy, but stalled in 2006 when the Navy expressed concerns that their operations might be limited if otter protections were extended. Under the Endangered Species Act, the military and projects such as oil drilling would need to ensure they wouldn't harm the otter.

Late last year, the Environmental Defense Center on behalf of the Otter Project filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in San Jose to force the agency to finally call the San Nicolas experiment a failure and lift the no-otter zone.

The federal government is fighting the suit, but declined to speak about pending litigation. The fishing industry has asked the court to intervene.

This isn't the first time efforts to save a threatened or endangered species have collided with other interests. From bald eagles to grizzly bears to gray wolves, protecting animals have often produced unintended consequences. Fights are still going on in Wyoming over whether wolves can be shot as predators.

Harry Liquornik, a longtime diver, calls the 4-foot member of the weasel family a formidable threat to his estimated $10 million-a-year urchin industry, which largely supplies the delicacy to sushi restaurants. Otters consume about 15 pounds a day of urchins, crab, mussels, snails and _ if they can find it _ abalone.

Pitting sea urchins, which have about as much personality as a rock with spines, against the sea otters is a public relations nightmare.

"They're cute and have a really big following," Liquornik concedes.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Horoscope

TODAY'S FORECAST

eARIES (March 21-April 19). You are different from who you werebefore. You would rather show your newfound confidence with actionthan talk about it.

rTAURUS (April 20-May 20). You know yourself well. You require adegree of challenge in order to stay engaged and involved. Anotherperson might get stressed out by the stimulus you find comforting.

tGEMINI (May 21-June 21). You have nothing to prove. People reactto you the way they do because of their deeply rooted attitudes andopinions that have very little, if anything, to do with you.

yCANCER (June 22-July 22). You'll try new places, things andideas. This keeps life fresh and exciting. You may spend more moneythan expected, but you won't regret the expense.

uLEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Opposites don't really attract as oftenas people say they do. However, reacting in an equal and oppositeway to the one you love will build the relationship now.

iVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You value your friendships and expectthem to take up an appropriate amount of space in your life. Youhave no need for overpowering relationships that upset the flow ofnormal life.

oLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Maybe you don't know what to expect,but that hasn't stopped you before. You are a beloved child of theuniverse and will be cared for as such.

pSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The way you learn grace is to fallfrom it. Much depends on your ability to recover from the tips andtumbles that are a normal part of life.

[SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You won't give in. But the personyou're negotiating with doesn't realize this just yet, so he or shewill continue to try to sway you with logic, emotional appeals andother temptations.

]CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You will maintain the policy thatyour emotions are no one else's concern. You are so impressivelyself-contained now that you will earn the trust of people you don'teven know.

qAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You will give in on the small pointsand validate your loved one with your agreement, even when you'renot so sure he is right. Your selflessness, loyalty and support arecommendable.

wPISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Though a certain person sees you asattractive in every way, your standards for yourself are a bit morestringent. You've set the bar high, and now you'll work hard to keepit there.

IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: No matter what you do for a living,this year you will be in the business of making people happy. Yourintuition is honed, and you'll realize just what it takes to makepeople smile. This month, you'll spend time with those you admire.Your lucky numbers are: 4, 2, 19, 31 and 11.

Report: China's Taiwan Buildup Continues

China continues its huge military buildup opposite Taiwan, further pushing the balance of power between the two rivals toward the mainland's favor, the Defense Department says in its annual report on China's military.

Although the Taiwan Strait remains stable, China is adding more than 100 missiles a year to the estimated 1,000 it has targeting the democratic, self-governing island that Beijing claims as its own, the report found. Hundreds of thousands of troops are based opposite Taiwan, it said, and hundreds of planes are ready to make good on China's threat to attack should Taiwan formalize its de facto independence.

"A potential military confrontation with Taiwan, and the prospect of U.S. military intervention, remain the PLA's most immediate military concerns," the report said, referring to the People's Liberation Army, China's military.

China was said to be deterred "on multiple levels" from invading Taiwan. The report warned that a war would lead to international sanctions, damage China's economic development, destroy relations with the United States and taint Beijing's coming Summer Olympics.

Wang Baodong, spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said China "practices defensive policies" and pursues a "peaceful development route." He said China consistently opposes the Defense Department reports as "interference in China's internal affairs and a reflection of typical Cold War thinking."

He said Taiwan "is an integral part of the Chinese territory, and China, as a sovereign state, has the right to conduct necessary defense-building for the purposes of safeguarding national security and territorial integrity."

The report comes as U.S.-Chinese military ties have been becoming warmer. Last week, China agreed to allow access to sensitive records on American servicemen missing since the 1950-53 Korean War. The two countries also agreed to set up a military hot line for communicating in emergencies.

The U.S. closely watches the Taiwan Strait and, as Taiwan's closest ally, has hinted it would go to war to protect Taiwan if nuclear-armed China should attack.

The report said China is working to contain and prevent moves by Taiwan toward independence, "rather than seeking a near-term resolution."

But the situation remains delicate. A "perceived shift in military capabilities or political will" by either side could "cause Beijing to calculate its interests, and its preferred course of action, differently," the report said.

Despite China's continued focus on preparing for a fight in the Taiwan Strait, the Defense Department noted what it saw as some positive signs.

Chinese President Hu Jintao's annual speech to the Party Congress did not emphasize military threats toward Taiwan and included an offer for talks with the island's leaders, the report noted.

Taiwan has also reversed a recent trend of declining defense spending and has begun modernizing equipment and improving training, the report said.

China, though, has the "the most active ballistic missile program in the world" and had between 990 and 1,070 short-range ballistic missiles in its garrisons opposite Taiwan by November of last year, the report found.

China has nearly 500 combat aircraft able to reach Taiwan and has airfields that can handle hundreds more; about 400,000 troops were said to be based opposite Taiwan.

Jen changed Ann Ann Taylor strayed from its classic line with bright colors last year and started to alienate its core clients--like Jen. Now it's back to basics

Ann Taylor is sorry.

She was wrong. She misses you and wants you back.

And, if Ann Taylor were a real person, she would tell you thisherself.

Since she isn't, Kim Roy, company president, has to do it. Whichis why she mailed out 750,000 apologies last week.

Ann Taylor is, of course, a store. But for many years, it was muchmore than that. Through the power-suited 1980s and 1990s, it was alandmark on the career path of young, professional women. If you hada big interview or got a big promotion or were invited to a bigmeeting, you went straight to Ann Taylor for a new silk suit in navyblue. Or, if you were creative, black.

So, when Ann Taylor started filling its stores with tight, trendyclothes in shades of pink and lavender last year, it was a big deal.Big enough to warrant Roy's personal message. Her letters, sent outto customers who had been on the company's mailing list for more thana year, were the most public step Roy has taken since taking the topspot in May.

"We've been listening to you, and what you've told us has inspireda rediscovery of the Ann Taylor style," the letter read. "... Youwill notice the results this fall--in style, quality and comfort thatis much closer to both our expectations."

So it might be hard to believe that Ann Taylor's sales have beensteadily climbing and that last year's figures were up 12 percentfrom 1999. Why is the company so eager to revisit a strategy thatimproved its overall numbers?

The answer is Jen Addison. A 27-year-old lawyer who lives inLincoln Park, Addison is what Ann Taylor executives would call a coreclient. She wears suits to work every day. Her business wardrobe isutterly immune to trends.

The Ann Taylor core client is exceptionally loyal; she spendsnearly half of her total apparel dollars there. But not last year.

"Probably most of my suits in the beginning [of my career] werefrom Ann Taylor," Addison said. "But I didn't buy any suits therelast year. For one thing, they didn't have many suits last year. Andthen the ones they had were odd. Some of them had capri pants andthings that were not appropriate for me to wear to court."

"I didn't buy anything here last fall," said Ilene Bomsen, acorporate marketing manager visiting from New York, as she left theAnn Taylor store in Chicago Place on Michigan Avenue on Thursdayafternoon. Bomsen, another core client, explained that the offeringswere "less conservative" than what she wanted.

The company was well-aware of complaints such as those. WallStreet, too, was quick to take note. The company's stock was tradingat more than $40 a share last September, but by December, its valuehad fallen to $18. It climbed again in May, just as CEO J. PatrickSpainhour named Roy president of the Ann Taylor stores division, andis now trading at around $35 a share.

In his letter to shareholders in the company's annual report for2000, Spainhour bluntly acknowledged last year's problems.

"...[W]e made a misstep in fall and offered a holiday collectionthat did not clearly focus on the needs of our core client," hewrote. "We overemphasized contemporary, fashion-forward styling. Mostsignificantly, we interpreted the fashion look of the season withslimmer silhouettes in many of our designs, which our client foundless flattering."

This isn't to say that Ann Taylor doesn't want to sell clothes toskinny, contemporary, fashion-forward women. Actually, the company isseeking the best of both worlds, selling less-expensive and trendieritems at its Ann Taylor Loft stores and, this season, once againoffering more classic items at its flagship Ann Taylor stores. Theidea is that core clients will shop at Ann Taylor, while trend-seekers, perhaps more profitable but definitely less reliable, willfrequent the Loft.

It remains to be seen how well the two-pronged strategy will work.This year, total sales are up 1.3 percent, but store sales in the AnnTaylor (non-Loft) division are down 17.2 percent. Classic clothesdon't typically sell well when the economy is slow, since consumerscan simply recycle pieces they already have. Some core clients, suchas Addison, who started buying more work clothes at Marshall Field'slast year, might not be inclined to return to Ann Taylor. Meanwhile,the profitable Loft division is counting on a notoriously ficklecustomer base that might soon move on to another, hotter venue.

NYC Flight Path Comes Under Scrutiny

NEW YORK - A day after the fiery plane crash that killed Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle, politicians expressed alarm that, five years after Sept. 11, small aircraft are still allowed to fly right up next to the New York skyline.

"I think everyone is scratching their head, wondering how it is possible that an aircraft can be buzzing around Manhattan," said Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., who has been lobbying for rule changes since 2004. "It's virtually the Wild West. There is no regulation at all, other than 'Don't run into anything.'"

The single-engine plane that carried Lidle to his death was flying over the East River, which separates Manhattan from Brooklyn and Queens and is lined on the Manhattan side by the United Nations and scores of other skyscrapers.

It is one of the city's busiest and most popular routes for sightseeing pilots, traffic helicopters and executives hopping from one business deal to the next, and it is largely unmonitored, as long as the aircraft stay below 1,100 feet.

Lawmakers have tried for years to close the corridor for reasons of safety and security.

Gov. George Pataki said Thursday that the Federal Aviation Administration "needs to take a much tougher line" about private, or general aviation, flights over the city.

However, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a recreational pilot with decades of experience, said he believes the skies are safe under the current rules.

"We have very few accidents for an awful lot of traffic," he said. "Every time you have an automobile accident, you're not going to go and close the streets or prohibit people from driving."

Aviation officials have downplayed the potential threat posed by light aircraft, but FAA spokeswoman Laura J. Brown said in a written statement Thursday that the agency would review its guidelines for general aviation and flight restrictions as a result of the Lidle crash.

And an aviation industry representative said Wednesday's crash demonstrates that small private planes have little potential as terrorist weapons.

"Yesterday's accident caused no structural damage to the building struck," said Chris Dancy, spokesman for the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. Small planes "are simply incapable of causing the kind of catastrophic damage that terrorists usually seek."

All flights over New York were grounded after Sept. 11, but the restrictions were lifted three months later.

Much of the airspace over the two main rivers that encircle Manhattan - the East River and the Hudson River - is unrestricted for small aircraft flying under 1,100 feet. Planes and helicopters beneath that ceiling do not have to file a flight plan or check in with air traffic controllers, as long as they do not stray from the sky over the rivers.

New York pilots said the path taken by Lidle's Cirrus SR20 on Wednesday is one of the most exhilarating: The plane went down the Hudson River, looped around the Statue of Liberty at the foot of Manhattan, then went up the East River, with the Brooklyn Bridge below and the United Nations on the left.

General aviation aircraft are allowed to go about as far north as Manhattan's 96th Street. There, they must either execute a U-turn to avoid the restricted airspace around LaGuardia Airport, or get permission from air traffic control to climb higher and continue north, or turn west over Central Park.

Lidle's plane slammed into the 30th and 31st stories of a luxury apartment building overlooking the East River, just a short distance from that turnaround point. Radar data indicated that the plane had begun a left turn, a quarter-mile north of the building, just before the crash, the National Transportation Safety Board said.

The 1,100-foot ceiling is not necessarily high enough for an off-course pilot to clear some of Manhattan's skyscrapers: The Empire State Building is 1,250 feet; the Chrysler Building 1,046 feet, the Citicorp building 915 feet.

Flight instructor Stanley Ferber of Brooklyn said that while the city's airspace is bustling with "a myriad of helicopters and planes," there is much more room than people on the ground realize.

"As a pilot, you always have to be on your toes, but it is not a tight situation," he said. "In all the time of my flying over New York, I've never had anything like a close call."

Still, he added, it isn't a place to let your concentration wander - especially in the narrower corridor over the East River. There, the water narrows in many spots to less than a half-mile, with the skyscrapers of Manhattan to the west and LaGuardia's airspace to the east, in Queens.

Ferber, 66, said that for reasons of comfort he prefers to fly in the loftier territory overseen by air traffic control, where he can take advantage of having those extra sets of eyes monitoring his position.

Jim Carroll, president of the Paramus Flying Club in New Jersey, said he also makes trips low over the East River more rarely, because of its "uncomfortably close" proximity to the big Queens airport. But "it's not unsafely tight," he said. "There is a sense of a lot of space and a lot of room."

It is also tremendously beautiful.

Carroll's sightseeing trips over the Hudson take him from the George Washington Bridge to the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, and include spectacular views of the city.

"I think it is a celebration of the right to be an American," he said. "To take it away would be tremendously disappointing."

The calls to do just that, or to at least restrict general aviation traffic, have mounted nevertheless.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has called for tighter rules, including a permanent closing of the Hudson River approach to the city and a requirement that low-flying aircraft submit a flight plan before entering New York airspace.

Weiner said all pilots flying near Manhattan should be required to be under the supervision of air traffic controllers. Most low-altitude flights over the island itself should be banned entirely, he said.

Unnerved residents of the apartment building struck by Lidle's plane also complained about the proximity of aircraft to tall city buildings.

"I feel like I can see the pilot at times, it's that close," said Lillian Snower Beacham, who lives on the 36th floor.

Federal aviation accident records list relatively few general aviation accidents near Manhattan, considering the large numbers of craft flying.

Two helicopters rolled into the East River last year immediately after takeoff, causing injuries, but no deaths. There were fatal helicopter crashes in 1997 and 1990. Passengers escaped unhurt when a Cessna dove into the Hudson in 1988. Four people died when a seaplane and police helicopter collided over the East River in 1983.

---

Associated Press Writers Sara Kugler, Richard Pyle, Adam Goldman and Amy Westfelt in New York and Leslie Miller in Washington contributed to this report.

Crews Search for Fossett on Foot, by Air

RENO, Nev. - Relying on a new Air Force analysis of radar and satellite images, crews looking for millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett combed the rugged Nevada backcountry on foot and by air.

Dozens of searchers set off Saturday after analysts spotted what may be clues to the whereabouts of Fossett, who has been missing since Sept. 3.

"We have about 50 people on ATVs, horseback, walking - anything they can find to get them into the canyon," said Gary Derks, the state Department of Public Safety official in charge of the search.

Three Civil Air Patrol planes flew over the mountainous area as volunteers scoured the ground. The search was to continue Sunday.

"If he's there, he's going to be hard to see. That's why we're sending in the ground search-and-rescue crews, too," Derks said.

The formal aerial search by the Civil Air Patrol and Nevada National Guard helicopters ended Sept. 19 after pilots spent more than two weeks scouring an area twice the size of New Jersey.

Saturday's search occurred southeast of the ranch in western Nevada where Fossett had taken off, Derks said, declining to elaborate to avoid attracting private pilots. Some have feared for the unwanted freelancers' safety.

"It doesn't make any difference to anybody who finds Mr. Fossett," Derks said. "This is not a race to find him. Whoever finds him will help all of us."

A private search by Fossett's family and friends continued last week.

Fossett, 63, has not been seen since he left on what was supposed to be a short ride in a lightweight acrobatic plane to scout locations to break the land speed record.

The adventurer, who made millions as a commodities broker in Chicago, is the first person to circle the globe solo in a balloon. He also has swum the English Channel, completed the Iditarod sled-dog race and scaled some of the world's best-known peaks.

Neutral Colors Give Home Subtle Glow

Many people like to decorate with what I call the "subtles." Bythat I mean color combinations such as gray and green, cream andgray, or olive, rust and gray.

Some refer to these as non-colors; they are simply tints thatseem to create magic in rooms that have a collection of Europeanantiques or objets d'art from the Marco Polo era.

If you are a subtle person with a desire for a subtle look, trythis decorating scheme for your living room: Select a wallcoveringwith a gray and beige stripe design - perhaps one of those crackledtextured stripes that are very popular these days. At the windows,hang olive-green taffeta draperies, the kind that have a reflectiveand iridescent quality. Use wooden poles and wooden rings, and tiethe draperies back with rich cording. The taffeta curtains will lookparticularly elegant if they are hung over windows treated withwooden louver shutters.

Now for the sofa: Pick a gray and beige tweed for theupholstery, and accent it with exotic throw cushions made of tapestryfabric and spotted faux animal fur.

A room with muted colors needs interesting furniture. Considera French bergere with a pine frame, upholstered in a subtle beige andgreen tweed. Or try a coromandel Chinese screen for a littleintrigue. For the coffee table, my suggestion would be one with ananodized-green metal base and a glass top. Again, we're looking formaterials that reflect light. On the coffee table, accessories suchas a big wooden lacquer box and a set of candlesticks would make the perfect subtle statement.

And of course, a sophisticated room like this needs books, and abookcase or armoire to house them. You might even consider a steeland glass etagere for your books, since it won't take up a lot ofwall space or look cumbersome. Fill the shelves with classicaccessories: an old Roman bust, a series of antique Israeli bottlesand some leather books.

Q. I share your enthusiasm for hunter green and would appreciate your advice. I just moved into a 50-year-old two-story brickColonial home that has beautiful floors, baseboards and window trim.The living room will be used for reading, casual entertaining andgathering around the fireplace. Using hunter green and traditionalfurniture, what do you suggest for a sofa, chairs, accentcolors/pieces and window treatments?

A. Begin by installing a crown molding around the room, as wellas a chair rail. Paint or stain the crown molding a soft walnutcolor. Paint the walls below the crown molding to the top of thechair rail hunter green. For your sofa, select a brick-red tweedfabric. On your club chairs use a flowered print that featuresshades of green, white, yellow and soft pink on a red-brickbackground. Pick a hunter-green and white check fabric for the seatsof the occasional chairs. An antique trunk would make a nice coffeetable, and purchase some old wrought-iron standing lamps with piercedshades for occasional lighting. Use an Americana hooked rug for thefloor in front of your fireplace.

Q. We live in a row house that has two small 1950-stylebathrooms. The tiles in one of the bathrooms are blue; in the other,pink. The shower tiles are barely 5 1/2 feet high, so I am uneasyabout using wallpaper to brighten up these baths. I am consideringsponge painting or stenciling.

A. Why not paint 3-inch-wide stripes of blue, white and forestgreen on the walls of your blue-tiled bathroom. For the showercurtain and window curtain, choose a bright flower print of yellowand green on a white background.

For your pink tiled bathroom, why not sponge glaze your walls(washable sponge glaze, of course) in pink and lilac. Stencil somelavender flowers with green leaves around the room for a garlandeffect. For windows, choose white louver shutters. The showercurtain can be lavender, trimmed and tied back with cotton cord.

Questions should be addressed to Carleton Varney, ChicagoSun-Times Features, 401 N. Wabash, Chicago 60611.

Jonas Kazlauskas leaving as China basketball coach

Jonas Kazlauskas is stepping down as head coach of China's national basketball team, the International Basketball Federation reported Thursday.

Kazlauskas' tenure ended with last month's Beijing Olympic Games, where he led China into the semifinals, and he has since returned to his native Lithuania, FIBA reported on its Web site adding that no decision has been made on his replacement.

Team manager Bai Xilin declined to confirm the news, saying the team was reviewing its performance at the games and would make no decisions until next year.

"We're right now in the process of summing up," Bai told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Despite the lack of an official announcement, Kazlauskas was widely expected to leave after four years at the helm.

At a news conference following China's elimination from the Olympics by Lithuania, Kazlauskas aired a note of regret saying there had been only so much he could do with the relatively inexperienced Chinese squad.

"I was thinking that we can do something more. But not everything has to do with practice and games," Kazlauskas said.

Although Bai refused to comment on a possible successor, the FIBA report said assistant coach Guo Shiqiang was among those being considered. It quoted Guo as praising Kazlauskas' leadership, saying he had helped speed up the learning process for Chinese coaches on the staff.

"I've learned a lot from Jonas," Guo was quoted as saying.

Kazlauskas played in the former Soviet Union's Supreme League and has coached two top teams in his native country, as well as Lithuania's national team.

___

On the Net: http://www.fiba.com/

Monday, March 12, 2012

Fergie shoots down 'X-Factor' judge rumors

NEW YORK (AP) — Although Fergie has a list of things she wants to tackle during her long-awaited hiatus from the Black Eyed Peas, being a judge on Simon Cowell's upcoming "X-Factor" show isn't one of them.

Recently there were reports that Cowell was considering the powerhouse singer for the Fox talent competition, which is due to debut in September. But in a recent interview, Fergie eliminated herself from contention.

"You know what? I think that it's a very committed job that you have to put your time into and I don't think I'm gonna have that much time, but I love Simon and I would love to do something like that," she said. "It's right down my alley, but I just don't think I have enough time to give and I would want to give everything to those contestants."

Fergie is still touring with her Peas counterparts, but plans to wind things down. The group has been in overdrive. They've produced two albums since 2009 — "The E.N.D." and "The Beginning" — sold out arenas worldwide, and performed at this year's Super Bowl.

Just the idea of another Black Eyed Peas album — which had been rumored — sent Fergie into denial mode.

"No — I am so excited to take a break. The guys know that I've been waiting and it's time and it's exciting. We've had such a great run together and we're still touring this year, just less, more selective and we're not working (on an album). Unless they're doing one without me," she laughed.

The 36-year-old singer already has plans for her time off from the Peas.

"I'm gonna get more into my charities. Charity work. I'm excited to do more of that. Give back, make it not so much about me, me, me, me, me," she said in an interview last week. "And having some free time. I have a football team that I'm a limited owner of, the Miami Dolphins, and I want to go to a game."

While she no plans to follow up her multiplatinum 2006 album, "The Dutchess," she's working on expanding her Fergie shoe line, which made its debut at Macy's last week.

____

Online:

http://fergie.blackeyedpeas.com/

Despite firebombing, Loop florist gets flowers to church on time

Who would firebomb a florist?

Gary Gudino hasn't a clue -- and he doesn't really have much timeto ponder it.

He has a business to run, and it hasn't missed a beat -- or awedding -- despite a Molotov cocktail crashing through the frontwindow of the Loop shop and burning it down over the weekend.

A cabbie saw two men in dark clothing throw two bottles, includinga flaming one, into Randolph Floral, 70 E. Lake St., just after 3a.m. Saturday, police said.

When workers started arriving at 6 a.m., the shop and all theflowers inside, which were being held for a wedding that day, weredestroyed.

Gudino, who owns the business his uncle Peter Tsurekidis opened in1943, didn't throw up his hands. With the help of his employees andthose at his wholesaler, Randolph Floral re-created nearly 18 hoursof work in just a few hours.

"It was amazing," said Fernando Lozano, manager at Roy Houff Co.,the wholesaler that let Gudino use its cooler, warehouse andemployees to get the job done in time for the nuptials.

"In the morning at 6, they were all teary-eyed and crying," Lozanosaid. "Nobody was even thinking about the wedding at all. All of thesudden, Gary starts sending people all over. And in three hours, theyhad a wedding put together."

The bride was "just absolutely wonderful and accommodating," saidGudino, who reports she was "thrilled" with the end result.

Gudino couldn't even stop to take a break to assess the hundredsof thousands of dollars in damage to the shop. With Passover thisweek and Easter this weekend, he has orders to fill.

"It came at a horrible week," said Gudino, who has alreadyreopened in a second-floor suite in the Lake Street building, thanksto his management company.

No one has been arrested in the arson, and police said they don'thave a motive. Gudino said he can't imagine who would do it.

"Whoever did this is emotionally deranged and just absolutelygutless," he said. "People don't settle grudges like this anymore.This is something that happened in the '20s and '30s, not in acivilized society."

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev says Syria must be allowed to settle its own affairs

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev says Syria must be allowed to settle its own affairs.

Gold down

NEW YORK (AP) — Gold for current delivery closed at $1,788.30 per troy ounce Monday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down from $1,794.10 late Friday.

EU defense ministers talked of better efficiency

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — The European Union defense ministers have discussed ways of improving the efficiency of joint European forces and better coordination with NATO.

The ministers on Friday closed two days of informal discussion in Wroclaw, southwestern Poland, that concerned EU defense capabilities.

Among the main topics was how to increase the efficiency of EU fast-reaction combat groups in case of a sudden crisis, sharing various defense forces among the 27 EU members and better coordination with NATO to avoid their missions overlapping.

The meeting also discussed steps that should be taken to curb piracy targeting ships off the Somali coast and the need for EU members to remain committed to the security mission there.

Dow reaches 2011 high after unemployment falls

NEW YORK (AP) — A two-year low in the unemployment rate sent the Dow Jones industrial average to a new 2011 high Friday.

The Labor Department said the unemployment rate fell to 8.8 percent, the lowest since March 2009, as companies added workers at the fastest two-month pace since before the recession began. Approximately 216,000 new jobs were added to the economy last month, offsetting layoffs in local governments. Economists had expected the unemployment rate to remain at 8.9 percent.

"We are clearly seeing a breakout in the labor market," said Paul Zemsky, the head of asset allocation at ING Investment Management. "The jobless recovery is ending and we are moving into a job expansion stage of the economy."

Stocks rose across the market. Nine of the 10 company groups that make up the S&P 500 index moved higher, led by a 1.3 percent rise in industrials shares.

The Dow rose 96 points, or 0.8 percent, to 12,415. The S&P 500 rose 11, or 0.9 percent, to 1,337. The Nasdaq composite rose 19, or 0.7 percent, to 2,800.

"This jobs report shows that we are in the early stages of a sustainable recovery in employment, and that is what's letting the market put the recent correction behind us," said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors.

The Institute of Supply Management reported a slight slowing in manufacturing growth during March. The trade group's index of manufacturing activity slipped to 61.2 from February's 61.4. However, the drop was expected after manufacturing hit its highest level since May 2004 during February.

The Commerce Department delivered more bad news on the construction industry. The government said construction spending fell in February to its lowest level since 1999.

General Motors gained 3.7 percent after the company said its U.S. sales rose 11 percent in March.

Nasdaq OMX Group and IntercontinentalExchange said early Friday that they are making a bid for NYSE Euronext, offering what they say is a 19 percent premium to the deal the company struck with the operator of the German stock exchange. NYSE shares jumped 11 percent.

Depeche Mode: interrupted tour to restart in June

Depeche Mode say its lead singer Dave Gahan has had a malignant tumor removed from his bladder and the British electro-pop group will soon be ready to restart its interrupted tour.

A statement on the group's Web site Thursday said doctors discovered the tumor after Gahan was hospitalized with severe gastroenteritis in May.

The statement says the low-grade malignant tumor has been successfully removed, and doctors have ordered Gahan to rest until June 8. The group says it will restart its interrupted concert in Leipzig in Germany on that day.

Depeche Mode says concerts scheduled after that _ including June 10 in Berlin and June 12 in Frankfurt _ will take place as originally planned as possible.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Nueva Regla Permite Matar y Comer Cocodrilos

Funcionarios del Departamento de Fauna y Vida Silvestre recomendaron que durante cinco a�os los cocodrilos deb�an ser calificados como una especie de preocupaci�n especial.

De igual modo, la Comisi�n de la Florida para la Conservaci�n de la Fauna y los Peces determin� que se les permita a los propietarios de casas matar cualquier cocodrilo que se aparezca en su vivienda, as� como tambi�n contratar a un cazador experto para que lo haga. C�mo disponer del reptil una vez que haya sido capturado o muerto es algo que a�n est� por determinarse, dijo el coordinador del programa, Harry Dutton.

"Creemos que no se podr� vender la carne del cocodrilo, pero el due�o de la casa se lo podr�a comer si quisiera", expres� Dutton.

Las recomendaciones se tomaron despu�s de la primera revision exhaustiva en 20 a�os del programa estatal para el manejo de los cocodrilos. La comisi�n considerar� todas las proposiciones en su reuni�n anual de diciembre.

Dutton dijo que las sugerencias se tomaron luego de una encuesta hecha por Internet y en parte porque la poblaci�n de cocodrilos ya ha alcanzado un mill�n, una cifra que empieza a preocupar, no debido a los tres ataques fatales que ocurrieron en la Florida desde el pasado mes de mayo.

"Todo parece estar relacionado, pero en realidad no lo est�", dijo Dutton. "Hubiera deseado que esas tres tragedias no hubieran sucedido, y aunque no hubieran pasado, de todos modos hubi�ramos hecho estas proposiciones".

A principios de mayo, Yovy Su�rez Jim�nez, de 28 a�os, al parecer fue arrastrada a un canal de Sunrise y devorada por un cocodrilo. Su cad�ver desmembrado fue hallado d�as despu�s de haber desaparecido por trabajadores de la construcci�n que estaban en el �rea. La muchacha no regres� a su casa tras haber salido a trotar.

En otro incidente similar, Annemarie Campbell, de 23 a�os, de Paris, Tennessee, fue atacada por un enorme cocodrilo de 11 pies y cuatro pulgadas y de un peso de 417 libras mientras buceaba en Jupiter Creek el 14 de mayo, y tambi�n muri�. El mismo d�a, el cuerpo sin vida de Judy W. Cooper, de 43 a�os, residente de Dunedin fue encontrado en un canal a unas 20 millas al norte de St. Petersburg. Seg�n las autoridades, la mujer presentaba serias mordidas que coincid�an con las fauces de un cocodrilo.

El cocodrilero de Lake Worth, Rick Kramer, dijo que muchos de sus colegas no respaldan las nuevas recomendaciones.

Pot is not the cure they need

FOR years, it has been known that smoking marijuana can help easethe symptoms of an eye disease called glaucoma.

But a report in the November issue of the American MedicalAssociation's Archives of Ophthalmology says smoking marijuana isill-advised because of its toxic effects.

Yet the author suggests that researchers should considerdeveloping topical or oral antiglaucoma drugs based on thecannabinoid molecule.To control the disease, a person would need to smoke between 2,920and 3,650 marijuana cigarettes a year, the report says.Such long-term exposure to marijuana can cause respiratory,hormonal and pulmonary toxic effects plus effects on many otherorgansystems, …

Go ahead for new care home places

Greenhill House, in Cheddar, has got the go ahead for a majordevelopment.

Sedgemoor District Council has agreed the proposal despiteobjections from the parish council.

At the moment the home has room for 26 residents, this will beincreased to 37 including a unit for people with dementia. Therewill also be 22 care apartments, which will be for sale.

That part of the scheme will give people the chance to live intheir own homes but with the opportunity to have extra careavailable on site.

Sedgemoor's agreement to the plan has a number of restrictionsincluding the fact the applicants, Somerset Care, must agree to alocal labour agreement which means that it must encourage peoplefrom Cheddar and surrounding villages to apply for jobs and helpthem to do so.

But there is no compulsion on the company to employ local people.

Cheddar Parish Council objected to the scheme on a number ofgrounds including a lack of parking and insufficient assistedbathrooms for residents.

But Sedgemoor ward councillor Jeff Savage has made it clear he isin favour, for a number of reasons including the fact that therevamped home will provide a much improved and greatly neededservice to the community. Although six people objected to the scheme12 wrote in support.

Their reasons included:

Providing more day care places for local people;

Cheddar is in dire need of an up-to-date care home;

Special dementia unit will be the only one locally;

Creating more badly-needed jobs;

More than 23 per cent of Cheddar's population is more than 65.

Somerset Care has already promised that the existing residents beaffected as little as possible by the changes.

The plan is to do the building in phases and they will only bemoved within the site as new buildings become available.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Lott late in seeing feeding frenzy

Sen. Trent Lott, reeling from poor strategic handling of anunanticipated crisis, on Thursday afternoon sustained a potentiallymortal cut from George W. Bush. Lott's inner circle was stunned, notby the harsh criticism, but by what wasn't said. He didn't put a capon the feeding frenzy, failing to commend Lott for service to countryand party.

That was a conscious decision by President Bush. He was determinedto avoid a debate over whether Lott should resign as Senate leader.By saying nothing good about Lott, Bush was feeding the furor. Thepresident's aides are well-aware of this, but contend they can donothing about it. Consequently, Lott's leadership remains injeopardy.

This is a classic case of Republicans eating their own. Democratsgather around disgraced colleagues, most famously Bill Clinton, butalso Sen. Robert Byrd, the Senate's senior Democrat. Unlike Lott,Byrd used overtly racist language, but got away with it. It wastypically Republican that the president did not telephone his Senateleader until he had spoken to a predominantly black audience inPhiladelphia one week after Lott's infamous remarks. Jack Kemp,Lott's longtime political ally, assailed him without warning. Theseattacks seemed prompted by criticism of Lott rather than what Lottsaid.

After Bush's speech, a national GOP political operative said Lotthad one week to stop the bleeding. "Less than that," one of thesenator's aides told me. Once the president spoke, Lott decided tohold his Pascagoula, Miss., news conference Friday, in which hepleaded for "forbearance and forgiveness."

At first, prominent Republicans did not see Lott in serioustrouble with his declaration at Thurmond's 100th birthday celebrationthat the country would have been better off had he been electedpresident on the 1948 segregationist ticket. When Democratic attacksbegan, Lott was advised by Republican counselors the storm would soonblow over.

Lott did not see the peril because of what he really meant. WhileThurmond is a geriatric miracle, it has been a long time sinceanybody engaged him in serious political discussion. Typically,Thurmond would rave about the beauty of Lott's wife, Tricia, and Lottwould caution him not to "steal her."

Another set piece dialogue had Lott--tongue-in-cheek--wishing thatThurmond had been elected in 1948. The birthday party comments werepreviewed dozens of times by Lott in private encounters withThurmond. The birthday audience's applause suggests it saw Lott wasjust kidding the centenarian. Turning a private joke into a publicjoke, however, produced a train wreck.

The Congressional Black Caucus and the Rev. Jesse Jacksoninstantly seized on Lott's remarks to play the race card. ProminentDemocrats were slow on the pickup. Senate Democratic Leader ThomasDaschle talked to Lott Monday morning, Dec. 9, and said "I accept"Lott's explanation, adding: "There are a lot of times when he and Igo to the microphone and would like to say things we meant to saydifferently." That afternoon, a Black Caucus member who had workedwith Lott--Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia delegate--said on MSNBC: "I've never seen any scintilla of racism in him."

That night on CNN, Jackson called Daschle "weak," and Daschle twodays later demanded "a fuller explanation and apology" from Lott.Further scrutiny of Lott yielded the unsurprising revelation that heopposed racial integration as an Ole Miss fraternity boy in 1962.That overlooks the Deep South's remarkable transformation. Whilenearly all white politicians were segregationists then, none is today--including Trent Lott.

Lott was late in recognizing the feeding frenzy. His incrementalresponses were insufficient, aggravated by phoning radio and TV showsinstead of going on camera.

Conservative activists and publications have demanded that Lottresign. It is now up to the Senate Republican Conference whether theBlack Caucus and the news media shall pick the Senate Republicanleader. George W. Bush is saying he has no dog in this fight.

Monday, March 5, 2012

U.S. consumers are spending briskly

WASHINGTON American consumers have money and are spending it thisholiday shopping season, taking home billions of dollars in new cars,furniture and clothing.

Department stores and other general merchandisers reported theirbest sales in nine months in November, the start of the importantseason when stores ring up one-fifth of their annual sales. Autodealers recorded brisk sales for a third consecutive month.

"It's hard to keep consumers from spending as long as they havethe money, and they seem to have the money," said economist RosalindWells of the National Retail Federation.The world economic slump that began in Asia last year has hurtfarmers and caused layoffs …

New Epins Service In Singapore Supports PIN-Debit Payments.(Brief article)

Byline: Ankush Chibber

Two foreign banks operating in Singapore will be the first to use a service launched on June 21 that enables consumers to shop using their ATM and debit cards, according to Card Alliance Pte. Ltd., which is providing the service.

In Singapore, holders of ATM and debit cards of foreign banks historically have only been able to withdraw cash from ATMs. Only cardholders from three local banks-OCBC Bank Ltd., United Overseas Bank Ltd. and DBS Bank Ltd-have been able to make debit purchases through NETS, or Network for Electronic Transfers (Singapore). The three banks own the network.

The new service, called Epins, enables cardholders of …

ADMIRABLE OVERACHIEVERS.(SPORTS)

Byline: DAN HOWLEY Staff writer

They had played all year without a nickname. They had played their previous nine games in front of empty seats because a measles epidemic at the school forced public health officials to bar fans from attending.

But in an empty Hartford Civic Center, where the only noise was the thump of a basketball and the squeak of sneakers, they beat Boston University for their first North Atlantic Conference title and first entry into the NCAA Tournament.

The volume was about to be turned way up for the 1988-89 edition of the Siena men's basketball team.

The fan ban was lifted and their old politically incorrect nickname of Indians was changed to Saints just in time for their first-round game against the Stanford Cardinal in Greensboro, N.C.

The measles story already had become a national curiosity, so when Marc Brown made two free throws with three seconds left to topple Stanford 80-78, the little Loudonville college of 2,700 students had earned a permanent place among the tournament's fabled underdog success …

CNN names new executive producers.(FAST TRACK)

In the latest attempt to juice up prime time, CNN is expected to name broadcast-news veterans as executive producers on two of its news programs.

David Doss, who has been executive producer for ABC newsmagazine Primetime Thursday and the NBC Nightly News, will be taking over Anderson Cooper's 7 p.m. show Anderson Cooper 360. He will replace Terry Baker, also a former ABC producer who worked on Nightline.

Another ABC veteran, Victor Nenfeld, is the new executive producer of CNN's 8 p.m. show, Paula Zahn Now. Neufeld most recently was No. 2 at the CBS Early Show and had previously executive-produced ABC's 20/20 and Primetime Thursday. He takes over for Mark …

Gadhafi son, reported killed, appears on Libyan TV

BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) — Libyan state television broadcast images Wednesday of a man it said was Moammar Gadhafi's youngest son in an attempt to refute rebel claims that he had been killed in a NATO airstrike.

Rebels claimed on Friday that 27-year-old Khamis Gadhafi, who commands one of the best trained and equipped units in the Libyan military, was killed in the western front-line town of Zlitan. The regime dismissed the claim and said the rebels were only trying to deflect attention from the killing last week of the opposition's military commander, possibly by other rebels.

The images on television showed the son at a Tripoli hospital visiting people wounded in a NATO …

Mark Martin could be driving a full season for Hendrick in '09: ; NASCARA Sprint Cup Notebook

Hendrick Motorsports is expected to announce Friday at DaytonaInternational Speedway that Mark Martin will drive its No. 5 SprintCup Series Chevrolet next season.

The race team issued a media advisory Tuesday that it wouldconduct a news conference Friday at the track to announce who willreplace Casey Mears in the No. 5 car.

Martin has been talking with Hendrick Motorsports about drivingfull time or part time for the team next year and will be part ofthe announcement, sources confirm.

Although Martin has said in previous weeks he wanted to continuewith a partial schedule, sources indicated he might run a fullseason for Hendrick.

Before the June 22 race …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Dispensing fees eyed.(RX RETAIL PHARMACY: Government)(Congress. Senate)(Brief article)

A proposal to study the factors behind a pharmacy's cost of dispensing a Medicaid prescription may be …

MEETINGs.(Capital Region)

KNOX

PLANNING BOARD

June 28

Resumed a public hearing on a three-lot subdivision proposed by Martin Leggiero on Bozenkill Road. The hearing had begun May 10.

Completed a site plan review of an application by James Devine to install a windmill on his property in Helderberg Estates.

Held a public hearing on a subdivision proposed by David Doherty of Knox Cave Road for property on Bozenkill Road.

Discussed with Enterprise Consulting Solutions a potential application to build a wireless cellular tower on a town-owned parcel on Street Road.

Discussed with Robert Chase his plans to develop the former Glenn Paris …

MAN ACCUSED OF BEHEADING NEIGHBOR.(MAIN)

Byline: -- From wire reports -

NORMAN, Okla. -- A man allegedly beheaded his neighbor, walked naked to a trash bin to throw it out, then returned home to take a bath, according to police, who arrested him on suspicion of first-degree murder.

Cameron Lee Smith, 33, was arrested Friday night as he was taking a bath at his rooming house. The decapitated body of Roydon Dale Major, 44, was found in another room, Detective Dave Pearo said. …

'New Telephony' launched as biweekly e-magazine by Virgo.(Brief Article)

Virgo Publishing (Phoenix, AZ) has begun the publication of 'New Telephony," a new biweekly electronic magazine designed to serve the VoIP market. The title has a controlled, opt-in circulation of 6600 presidents, CEOs, consultants, vendors, service providers and technical managers at leading IP communications companies, including Microsoft, IBM, Verizon, Lucent, Sprint and Nokia.

Originally launched as a weekly e-newsletter, the digital magazine is designed to carry analysis of technology, market strategies, information on regulations and legislation on VoIP services and related data relevant to the VoIP industry. Described as an executive report on IP …

IN THE PITS: Tire troubles ruin Indy

Yes, the race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway was a debacle. No point in denying it.

But don't be so quick to castigate NASCAR, which was faced with the unenviable task of trying to salvage a race that was destined to look like stalled, rush-hour traffic.

When it became obvious in Saturday's practice sessions that the tires Goodyear brought to Indy had a serious durability issue, there was only one option for NASCAR a day ahead of the green flag: figure out how to stage a safe race. Option No. 2? There wasn't one.

Formula One and Michelin learned that at Indy in 2005, when three-fourths of the field refused to compete in the United States Grand …

Helping hands Multimillion-dollar industry assists those relocating

Moving the family to a new city and a new job is no longer just amatter of renting a U-Haul truck and gathering up some empty boxesand strong backs to help.

Chicago is a major hub in a new multi-million dollar relocationindustry that has sprung up to keep pace with the need of newexecutives and employees of rapidly expanding businesses.

The big move for John and Leslie Yerger was magnified andmultiplied by several thousands miles of ocean from their previoushome in Weymouth, England, to a new one in Hawthorn Woods.

"We moved pretty much everything," John said. "It comes by seafreight. From a lorry_sorry, truck_it goes into big corrugated metalcontainers and …

FTTP watch.(Brief article)

The following charts show how the three major telcos did in AAA (Advanced Access Architectures lines for the quarter, and historically. As previously noted, this is not a bright spot for the report this quarter.

New Forecast for …

SPA CO. JAIL NEAR SCHEDULE.(Local)

Byline: Kenneth C. Crowe II

The new Saratoga County Jail is "about on schedule," the construction project's overseer told the county Jail Construction Committee Tuesday.

The schedule discussion came as the committee approved $189,503.56 in changes required by the state and supported a $126,779 proposal to build a cement floor in an unfinished portion of the jail in order to use it for storage space.

"We're about on schedule, if anything slightly off," Clerk of the works Brian Dwyer said.

Construction crews have been moving from job to job on the project because there have been difficulties in obtaining certain pieces of door equipment from …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

WOMAN INDICTED 2ND TIME IN STABBING DEATH.(Local)

A city woman who has been in jail for 17 months was indicted Friday for a second time in the 1988 stabbing death of an Arbor Hill businessman.

Linda Thomasine Edmonds, 35, whose last address was 128 Lark St., was charged by a grand jury with second- degree murder and first-degree robbery in the April 3, 1988, death of Asbury Booker near the Masonic Lodge on Second Street.

Initial murder and robbery charges against Edmonds were dismissed in April by County Judge Thomas W. Keegan because testimony of a witness before an earlier grand jury was prejudicial to Edmonds and should not have been allowed.

That witness said he once paid Edmonds $20 to have …

The timbre of turntable rediscovered

Travis Dryden spent his childhood listening to his parent's records. And then he left them behind with the other detritus of his pre-college years to be sold for pennies at a yard sale.

Lured by the portability of cassette tapes, the iridescent gleam of compact discs, then the miniaturized wonder of MP3 players _ who needed the fragile, antiquated technology of an LP?

As it turns out, Dryden did.

Now, like thousands of other reborn vinyl addicts, he scours record stores around the country, trying to get those lost records back.

"I abandoned a lot of my collection, unfortunately," Dryden said. "I started at record stores, …

Abbott faces challenges amid success

As shareholders gather at Abbott Laboratories' annual meetingtoday, they'll find business at the company's diabetes care businessaccelerating and its drug business scoring successes.

But the jury is still out on Abbott's ability to regain marketshare in its U.S. diagnostic test business, hurt by since-resolvedU.S. regulatory issues.

Abbott reported global sales of $5.4 billion in the first quarter,up 16 percent. Pharmaceutical sales contributed strongly, rising 20percent to $1.9 billion in the United States and 18 percent to $1.3billion abroad.

Diabetes-care products rose 74 percent globally, and the companygained 2 percentage points in U.S. market share for …