четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Revolution beats Toronto 2-1 to stay four points clear atop MLS standings

Steve Ralston scored in each half to give New England a 2-1 win over Toronto on Saturday, maintaining the Revolution's lead in Major League Soccer.

New England retained a four-point lead in the Eastern Conference, ahead of Columbus, which beat Colorado 2-1. In other Saturday games, Chivas was held 1-1 at home by New York, struggling Kansas City ended its long winless streak in fortuitous style and beat Real Salt Lake 2-1, while Chicago shot blanks again in being held to a scoreless home draw by San Jose.

Veteran midfielder Ralston banged in a rebound off Adam Cristman's header in the 12th minute. He followed up Kheli Dube's drive off the Toronto crossbar in …

WiMAX boom? ; Yes, but it won't be before 2009, says Gartner.

India is likely to have 6.9 million mobile and fixed WiMAXconnections by the end of 2011, says IT research and advisory firmGartner. The firm estimates that currently there are about 35,000WiMAX connections in the country.

WiMAX, short for Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access,is a technology aimed at carrying wireless data over long distancesin a variety of ways, from point-to-point links to full mobilecellular-type access.

Gartner, however, believes that the major growth in WiMAX willhappen only after 2009. According to the research agency, eventhough the Indian government is pushing for WiMAX as a technologyfor connecting rural areas with broadband …

Enhancing Logistics Readiness

The end for which a soldier is recruited, clothed, armed, and trained ... is simply that he should fight at the right place and the right time.

-Carl von Clausewitz

The Department of the Army exists to ensure that our soldiers are prepared to fight and win. In today's environment of uncertainty, when the path ahead is unclear, preparing soldiers for the fight is more challenging than ever. In this environment of change, U.S. Army success is directly tied to the logistics readiness of its soldiers, units and equipment. It is the Army G-4's singular purpose to enhance that logistics readiness-it is our reason for being.

To establish the foundation for true logistics …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Study: secular Turks face discrimination, pressure

Non-practicing Muslims in Turkey are under pressure to wear headscarves, attend Friday prayers and fast during Ramadan if they want government jobs or promotions, a study has found.

Some secular Turks are changing their way of life to appear in step with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling Islamic-rooted party, according to the study by the Open Society Institute and Istanbul's Bosporus University.

The study, based on interviews with 401 people in 12 Turkish provinces, is the first to provide some backing for secular Turks' fears that political Islam has affected their lives.

Nihat Ergun, a senior official of Erdogan's party, rejected …

Almost one-third of Gulf fishing grounds closed

Almost one-third of federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico is closing to commercial and recreational fishing because of the oil spill.

The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration expanded the area by 5 percent Tuesday. NOAA says as of 6 p.m. EDT Tuesday (2200 GMT) that nearly …

Leading the Way

Jane Wilks and Leadership Fort Wayne (LFW) have become somewhat synonymous over the past 17 years. As the organization's Executive Dire Director, Wilks has parlayed a training program with an estimated lifespan of less than 10 years into a long-standing organization offering six distinct programs. With Wilks at the helm, the organization blossomed from one part-time position into three fulltime positions. Additional programs have been added over the years, each one supporting the non-profit organization's mission of providing leadership development and focusing community awareness on the need for effective leadership and service.

It all began in 1986, after Wilks' tenure as …

Romney, Huntsman spar over Afghanistan policy

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Jon Huntsman says the United States has achieved important goals in Afghanistan and that it's time to bring home most of the military forces to focus on rebuilding the American economy.

During the foreign policy debate Tuesday night among GOP candidates for president, Huntsman said he would …

AMERICAS NEWS AT 0500 GMT

TOP STORIES:

AP EXCLUSIVE: MISSING AMERICAN-IRAN

WASHINGTON — Long after he vanished in Iran, retired FBI agent Robert Levinson reappeared in a video and a series of photographs sent to his family over the past year, transforming a mysterious disappearance into a hostage standoff with an unknown kidnapper, The Associated Press has learned. By Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman.

AP photos.

CUBA-POPE

HAVANA — Pope Benedict XVI will visit Communist-run Cuba this spring, a senior Roman Catholic Church official says, the first trip by a pontiff since John Paul II's historic tour in 1998. By Anne-Marie Garcia.

AP Photos.

PRESIDENTIAL RACE

WASHINGTON — …

Surgical images: musculoskeletal: Sural neurocutaneous cross-leg flap

A7-year-old girl presented to the multinational medical unit at Kandahar Airfield with an open lateral malleolus fracture secondary to a blast injury. Serial d�bridement procedures preceded a vacuum-assisted closure dressing applied for 8 days (Fig. 1). Flap coverage was needed, and because of the location and size of the wound, no local options were feasible. The ipsilateral lesser saphenous vein and sural nerve had been injured, and there was no access to microsurgical expertise.

Although currently out of favour, a cross leg flap was chosen in this case. A sural neurocutaneous flap was harvested from the contralateral leg. An external fixator was then applied to hold the legs …

National League Standings

All Times EDT
East Division
W L Pct GB
Philadelphia 17 13 .567 _
New York 15 12 .556 1/2
Florida 16 13 .552 1/2
Atlanta 13 15 .464 3
Washington 13 18 .419 4 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
St. Louis 19 11 .633 _
Chicago …

Safe hands to care for drunk and disorderly ; Slumped in a chair and barely able to tell paramedics his own name.

Slumped in a chair and barely able to tell paramedics his ownname.

It's just another Friday night in Aberdeen and a sight withwhich police and paramedics are overly familiar.

The Evening Express joined staff at the triage centre in theheart of the city to see the hard work being carried out by police,paramedics and volunteers.

The Albyn House centre in Dee Street offers a "place of safety"to people who have been identified as "drunk and incapable".

Police refer revellers and street drinkers to the paramedicsworking there. The result is less time being spent on treating drunkpeople by police and hospital staff.

The triage centre is only open at …

Sri Lanka vs. Australia Scoreboard

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Scoreboard at stumps Saturday on the second day of the third test between Sri Lanka and Australia at Sinhalese Sports Club:

Australia 1st Innings
(Overnight 235 for five)

Shane Watson c Dilshan b Eranga 8

Phil Hughes b Lakmal 0

Shaun Marsh b Herath 81

Ricky Ponting c PJayawardene b Lakmal 48

Michael Clarke c PJayawardene b Eranga 6

Mike Hussey b Eranga 118

Brad Haddin c PJayawardene b Eranga 35

Mitchell Johnson c Herath b Welegedara 8

Peter Siddle c Paranavitana b Welegedara 0

Trent Copeland c MJayawardene b Welegedara 1

Nathan Lyon not out 3

Extras: (4lb, 1w, 3nb) 8

TOTAL: (all out) 316

Overs: 104.3. Batting time: 455 minutes.

Fall of wickets: 1-0, 2-22, 3-101, 4-120, 5-190, 6-265, 7-293, 8-293, 9-295, 10-316.

Bowling: Chanaka Welegedara 21-6-75-3, Suranga Lakmal 21-3-60-2 (3nb), Shaminda Eranga 23.3-6-65-4 (1w), Rangana Herath 27-5-78-1, Tillakaratne Dilshan 12-0-34-0.

Sri Lanka 1st Innings

Tharanga Paranavitana c Ponting b Johnson 46

Lahiru Thirimanne b Siddle 28

Kumar Sangakkara not out 61

Mahela Jayawardene not out 31

TOTAL: (for two wickets) 166

Overs: 65; Batting time: 259 minutes.

Fall of wickets: 1-56. 2-97.

Still to bat: Tillakaratne Dilshan, Prasanna Jayawardene, Angelo Mathews, Rangana Herath, Suranga Lakmal, Chanaka Welegedara, Shaminda Eranga.

Bowling: Trent Copeland 15-5-34-0, Peter Siddle 11-3-25-1, Mitchell Johnson 11-0-49-1, Shane Watson 11-5-20-0, Nathan Lyon 15-2-33-0, Mike Hussey 2-1-5-0.

Toss: Sri Lanka.

Series: Australia leads three-match series 1-0.

Umpires: Tony Hill, New Zealand, and Aleem Dar, Pakistan.

TV Umpire: Richard Kettleborough, England. Match Referee: Chris Broad, England.

Hope for new AIDS protection seen in mouse study

NEW YORK (AP) — As scientists struggle to find a vaccine to prevent infection with the AIDS virus, a study in mice suggests hope for a new approach — one that scientists now want to test in people.

The treated mice in the study appeared to have 100 percent protection against HIV. That doesn't mean the strategy will work in people. But several experts were impressed.

"This is a very important paper (about) a very creative idea," says the government's AIDS chief, Dr. Anthony Fauci. He didn't take part in the research.

The new study involved injecting mice with a protective gene, an idea that's been tested against HIV infection in animals for a decade.

In the nearly 30 years since HIV was identified, scientists haven't been able to find a vaccine that is broadly effective. One boost came in 2009, when a large study in Thailand showed that an experimental vaccine protected about a third of recipients against infection. That's not good enough for general use, but researchers are now trying to improve it.

Researchers reported the new results in mice online Wednesday in the journal Nature. They hope to test the approach in people in a couple of years. Another research team reported similar success in monkeys in 2009 and hopes to start human tests even sooner.

A traditional vaccine works by masquerading as a germ, training the body's immune system to build specific defenses in case the real germ shows up. Those defenses are generally antibodies, which are proteins in the blood that have just the right shape to grab onto parts of an invading virus. Once that happens, the virus can't establish a lasting infection and is cleared from the body.

Scientists have identified antibodies that neutralize a wide range of HIV strains, but they've had trouble getting people's immune systems to create those antibodies with a vaccine.

The gene-injection goal is straightforward. Rather than trying to train a person's immune system to devise effective antibodies, why not just give a person genes for those proteins? The genes can slip into cells in muscle or some other tissue and make them pump out lots of the antibodies.

The mouse work is reported by David Baltimore and colleagues at the California Institute of Technology.

Ordinary mice don't get infected with HIV, which attacks the immune system. So the research used mice that carried human immune system cells.

Baltimore's team used a harmless virus to carry an antibody gene and injected it once into a leg muscle. The researchers found that the mice made high levels of the antibody for more than a year. The results suggest lifetime protection for a mouse, Baltimore said, although "we simply don't know what will happen in people."

Even when the mice were injected with very high doses of HIV, they didn't show the loss of certain blood cells that results from HIV infection. Baltimore said THAT researchers couldn't completely rule out the possibility of infection, but that their tests found no evidence of it. He said a few hundred mice appeared to be protected.

The work was funded by the federal government and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Baltimore said his lab has filed for patents.

"I think it's great," said Dr. Philip R. Johnson of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, who reported similar results in monkeys in 2009. "It provides additional evidence this is a concept that's worth moving forward."

Johnson said he has discussed doing a human trial with federal regulators and is preparing an application for permission to go ahead. If all goes well, a preliminary experiment to test the safety of the approach might begin in about a year, he said. Baltimore said his group is also planning human experiments that he hopes will start in the next couple years.

Fauci, who is director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, cautioned that mouse results don't always pan out in human studies. He also said both the gene approach and standard vaccines should be pursued because it's not clear which will work better.

"We're still in the discovery stage of both of them," he said.

Dr. Harris Goldstein, director of the Einstein-Montefiore Center for AIDS Research in New York, who has done similar research in mice, called Baltimore's result a significant advance if it works in humans because it shows a single injection produces high levels of antibodies for a long time.

It might lead not only to preventing infection, but also a treatment for infected people, he said. If it allowed people with HIV to stop or reduce their medications even for temporary periods, they could avoid the inconvenience and side effects of the drugs, he said.

___

Online:

Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

___

Malcolm Ritter can be followed at http://twitter.com/malcolmritter .

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Barcelona's Adriano recovers for match at Madrid

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Barcelona says defender Adriano has recovered from injury and will be available to play at Real Madrid on Saturday in the Spanish league.

The Brazilian missed Barcelona's last two matches with a muscle pull in his left thigh.

The Spanish club also says midfielder Ibrahim Afellay's recovery from a torn ligament in his left knee is going "very well" and that he would continue his treatment in the Netherlands.

The 25-year-old Dutchman had surgery after injuring his leg during practice in late September.

Technology company creates healthy exchange

A Dauphin County technology company is creating a virtual information exchange for health care insurers, providers and consumers.

Synertech Health, Systems Solutions, Susquehanna Township, develops software and hardware that allows health insurers to perform business transactions, such as processing claims.

For example, the company sells scanners that scan paper claims so that they can be processed electronically, and software thathelps companies ensure the privacy of health care information.

In late December, the company began marketing a new software product called Web Exchange.

Web Exchange helps health insurers expand the capabilities of their Internet sites, said Bob Klopotek, Synertech's chief information officer and vice president of management information systems.

For example, the software makes an insurer's Web site capable of allowing doctors to check patients' eligibility and submit treatment authorizations online.

On a site running the software, employers are also able to enroll employees online and send e-mail to an insurer, Klopotek said.

Patients can use the site to look for a doctor who is part of an insurer's provider network, he added.

"It's designed to serve everyone who is involved with health care transactions," he said. "It allows health plans to offer something extra to their customers."

Klopotek said several health insurers have expressed interest in using Web Exchange.

Because no sales negotiations have yet been completed, Klopotek refused to discuss the product's average price range, but added that this price will vary depending on an insurer's specific needs.

Tigers Close in on World Series Dream

DETROIT - From the very first day of spring training, Jim Leyland demanded that his Detroit Tigers walk with the swagger of World Series champions. One more win, and this once-lost franchise will get a chance to play for that golden trophy.

Kenny Rogers pitched the game of his life for the second straight week while the Tigers backed him with their bats, gloves and legs, beating the Oakland Athletics 3-0 on a frosty Friday to take a 3-0 lead in the AL championship series.

Pushing aside two decades of frustration and failure, plus a late-season collapse that threatened to wreck their year, the wild-card Tigers made it look easy - just like the 1984 club that stormed to the title.

Long gone was the embarrassment of 2003, when Detroit dropped 119 games.

"With what we've done now, it feels like that season has finally been wiped off the map," third baseman Brandon Inge said.

On a cold day, the thought that Detroit was on the brink of the World Series sent a chill through the fans packing Comerica Park.

"That's our goal. That's what we play for," Rogers said. "I can't say enough for the way the guys played behind me."

Leyland made another lineup hunch pay off Friday as the team that started the year with five straight wins posted its sixth playoff win in a row.The Athletics sense they're up against something special, too.

"We're running into a better team, and they're knocking down everybody in their path," A's third baseman Eric Chavez said. "It's not frustrating, they're better than we are."

Added slugger Frank Thomas: "That's a whole new team over there right now. That's not the team I've been battling for years."

Putting aside temperatures in the low 40s that forced both teams to put flame-throwing blowers in their dugouts, Rogers shut out the Athletics on two mere singles over 7 1-3 innings.

He drew a thunderous ovation when he left and took off his cap, waved it to the crowd and then spun around for all to see. The fans also got into the act, twirling white towels.

"You could really see the emotion building late in the game," Tigers leadoff man Curtis Granderson said.

Craig Monroe homered, Placido Polanco delivered two more hits off losing pitcher Rich Harden and Tigers closer Todd Jones finished for his second save of the series.

The Tigers led 2-0 after the first inning, and at this rate, nothing seems able to stop them. Want evidence? Leyland pulled Game 2 star Alexis Gomez, put Omar Infante into his first postseason game and the DH singled and walked.

"I think it's a matter of having confidence in all your players," Leyland said. "And I think there's a little luck that goes along with it."

Certainly the Tigers' luck didn't change on Friday the 13th. And, a day after the earliest measured snowfall in the city's history, the weather was no problem, though it helped the game was switched from nighttime to day.

The A's get one last chance Saturday in Game 4, with Dan Haren starting against former Oakland draft pick Jeremy Bonderman. Only once in baseball history has a team rallied from an 0-3 deficit in the postseason, with Boston doing it against the New York Yankees in 2004.

"For most of the year, the Detroit Tigers were the best in baseball," Athletics general manager Billy Beane said. "They seem to be, at this point, at least in the first three games, playing like that."

Thomas remained hitless in the series, yet the Big Hurt wasn't the lone Oakland hitter to feel the Big Chill against the 41-year-old Rogers.

Coming off his first victory in a previously awful playoff career, Rogers reprised his role as an October ace. He blanked the Yankees for 7 2-3 innings in the first round and the A's never did much against him, either.

Rogers was not nearly as animated as he was in the win over the Yankees. He saved his reaction for the end, thanking the 41,669 fans with a wave of the cap, making sure to salute every corner of the park.

"It was no less emotional," Rogers said. "But I just wanted to play my game. We've played great all year long. I take nothing for granted."

Rogers was aggressive, part of a personal plan this month: Encourage his inner emotions, rather than trying to keep them in check.

He certainly was in control on the mound. Rogers threw 13 straight first-pitch strikes starting in the first inning, and walked two overall.

Fernando Rodney got the last two outs in the eighth, and Jones pitched a perfect ninth to complete the combined two-hitter.

Rogers' lone jam came in the first after Jason Kendall led off with a single and Thomas was hit by a pitch with two outs. But Rogers retired Jay Payton on a grounder, and went on to strike out six.

"He's a professional pitcher, that's what he is," Leyland said. "There's guys with better stuff, there's guys that will light up the radar gun a little more.

"But nobody could've pitched better than Kenny in these last two outings."

Harden grew up in western Canada, playing baseball in sleet and freezing rain, and was the only Oakland player wearing short sleeves. It was 42 degrees at gametime, the lowest for a postseason game since it was 38 in Cleveland at the 1997 World Series.

No telling whether the cold bothered Harden. His control sure did, though.

Harden started off by throwing seven straight balls, and Monroe's perfect hit-and-run single put runners at the corners with no outs.

Polanco followed with an RBI single, sending Monroe scampering to third and bringing pitching coach Curt Young out for a visit. Magglio Ordonez drove in another run with a force-play grounder.

Harden walked the bases loaded in the second, escaping when he struck out Monroe. Polanco doubled his next time up, making him 6-for-6 lifetime against Harden.

A's center fielder Mark Kotsay saved Harden in the fourth with two outstanding catches, rushing in for Ramon Santiago's liner and sprinting to right-center for Granderson's shot about 420 feet from home plate.

Granderson also turned in a nice play, tracking down Chavez's deep drive to right-center. The long outs by Chavez and Granderson showed why former Tigers outfielder Bobby Higginson christened the stadium "Comerica National Park."

Monroe homered leading off the fifth to make it 3-0. With Rogers on the mound, that was plenty.

"Just amazing, another outstanding performance by Mr. Rogers today," Polanco said.

Rogers was 10-1 against the A's since 2002, and had beaten his former club more in that span than any active pitcher.

He added another victory with a win that he would certainly rank right up there with the perfect game he once pitched for Texas.

"This franchise, this city, has just welcomed me, and I'm just trying to reward the faith they had in me," Rogers said.

Notes:@ Oakland 2B Mark Kiger entered in the eighth, becoming the first player in modern day major league history to make his big league debut in the playoffs. He touched the ball once, catching an inning-ending force. The A's added him as a backup infielder for the ALCS after 2B Mark Ellis broke his right index finger in the first round of the playoffs. ... Monroe hit his third homer in this postseason. ... Granderson, who struck out 174 times in the regular season, drew three four-pitch walks. ... The forecast is for partly cloudy skies and a gametime temperature of 45 for Saturday.

DEAR PRUDENCE

DEAR PRUDENCE BROOKLAND BY EMILY BARTON NEW YORK: FARRAR, STRAUS & GIROUX. 496 PAGES. $25.

To Brooklynites, new and old, who can often be heard remarking on how much their neighborhoods have changed in recent years, Brookland offers this jarring bulletin: Cortelyou, Schermerhorn, and Joralemon were once the names of families, not streets. This thoroughly researched novel follows the life of Prudence Winship, Emily Barton's fictional heroine, from 1778, when British troops still occupied the land, until October 1803, when New York City was beginning to emerge as a world business capital. Such historic events as General Cornwallis's surrender and Thomas Jefferson's inauguration serve as the backdrop for domestic drama, which alternates between third-person narrative and reminiscence in the form of a letter that Prudence writes to her daughter, Recompense.

Prudence's life is driven by two principal ambitions: First, she wants to learn the craft of distilling from her father and eventually to oversee the gin business that he began. As a distiller, she develops a talent for the subtleties and science required to ensure that the liquor comes out right. Despite Prudence's impressive accomplishments in a field normally reserved for men, and the flourishing of the business after her father's death, she then becomes consumed with a second, grander ambition: to construct a bridge that will span the East River. This project's ostensible purpose is to facilitate delivery of her product, but it also has a more personal meaning for Prudence, whose father died in the river, as well as a symbolic meaning of the sort that accrues to any impossible dream. (Before the mass production of steel became possible in 1855, no material was strong enough to arc over such a great distance.) The protagonist is never more likable than when hunched over volumes of natural philosophy, studying how the principles of the lever might be ingeniously applied to salvaging the wood left after the destruction wrought by the British upon the forest. "Its twin spandrels had, from the start, sloped gently to convey any weight at the structure's center safely back to the ground," Barton writes, "but as she figured and drew, Prue at last uncovered the method for planking them that would both best repel water and please the eye."

Barton's first novel, The Testament of Yves Gundron, played fast and loose with the historical novel's conventions, introducing blues music into a purportedly medieval setting. Her second colors within the lines. Nevertheless, it is telling that marriage plays such a minor role in the plot of Prudence's life, as well as those of her sisters. One marries, one becomes engaged, and another rejects a number of proposals. But Barton offers the reader none of the love letters, flirtatious glances, or similar courtship business that occupy most novels concerned with heroines of this era. These women are almost all business. They even wear pants, as skirts would be less than ideal around the menacing machinery of the distillery. The hardheaded Prudence rejects the church and spares little emotion for romance, and though she samples every batch of gin she never overindulges.

Prudence's ambitions tend to overshadow the family and romantic troubles suffered by her parents and her two sisters, beautiful Temperance and mute, diminutive Pearl. Not that the domestic events are trivial, but none are probed deeply enough to count for as much as seems to be intended. Early in the novel, Johanna, the family's household slave, dies from a brain tumor, and Prudence's mother, already shown to be susceptible to depression, plunges into a fatal slough. But without a loving scene between master and servant, the reader cannot fathom how this loss brings such grief. Just how much are we supposed to read into the paternal rebuke, "That's enough from you.... Your mother loves Johanna"? Describing Prudence's first sexual experience, Barton musters only an awkward reference to "the smell and taste of him, made sweeter by proximity" (as opposed to how he tasted from across the room?). The author's hesitation makes Prudence seem like a prude and, as a result, less sympathetic.

Barton's detailed descriptions of the process of draining the wort from the mash and distilling it into fragrant liquor left me hankering for a martini: "She came to understand how a gifted rectifier introduced these sundry essences in novel and harmonious proportion to the final distillation of spirit, such that their individual properties would be less evident than the balance of the whole." Also, Barton convincingly employs the cadence and vocabulary of colonial America without falling into the Masterpiece Theatre trap that snares so many writers of historical fiction. And her love of obscure language is obvious without being ostentatious, with a few exceptions. Pearl's hair is described as a "blazing mandorla" (two interlocking circles, to save you the trouble of looking it up; it is not in my Webster's). To ease hangover pain, Temperance holds a cool rag to her occiput (back of the head). At other times, Barton shows herself to be quite deft with simple, memorable phrases. Contemplating his wife's death, Prudence's father "seemed as if a gun had gone off near his ear." And here is a striking way to describe remorse: "She wished she could tear her own personality out by the roots."

The anguish that Barton describes stems from a childhood superstition that festers over time throughout the novel until it explodes at the end: At the age of six, Prudence cast a prenatal hex on Pearl, and ever since, she has harbored feelings of guilt for her sister's handicapped condition. This irrational belief is most likely meant to humanize the seemingly logical protagonist, but the contradiction puts almost too much strain on the overall structure. It would be nice if novels were as sturdy as bridges, supporting historical traffic in one direction as well as emotional traffic in the other. Then again, perhaps the fascination is in how they splinter into tragic, twisted pieces.

[Author Affiliation]

Mark Swartz is the author of the novels Instant Karma (City Lights, 2002) and H2O (forthcoming from Soft Skull Press).

Penn National reports record earnings

Penn National Gaming Inc., parent of Charles Town Races & Slots,reported record fourth-quarter earnings of $9.19 million, or 23 centsper share. The company attributed its performance to managers of itsvarious properties.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson First Call expected earnings of 34cents per share.

Fourth-quarter net income in 2003 was $7.63 million, or 19 cents ashare, the Wyomissing, Pa.-based company said Tuesday.

Revenue for the quarter was $296.9 million, compared to $164.1million in 2002. Penn National owns the Charles Town horse track;Casino Magic, Boomtown Biloxi and the Bay St. Louis resort inMississippi; the Casino Rouge riverboat in Louisiana; Bullwhackerscasino in Colorado; two racetracks and 11 off-track betting parlorsin Pennsylvania; and a 50 percent interest in Pennwood Racing Inc.,which runs Freehold Raceway in New Jersey. It also operates CasinoRama in Toronto, Canada.

In March 2003, the company purchased Hollywood Casino Corp., withproperties in Tunica, Miss., Aurora, Ill., and Shreveport, La.

Peter Carlino, chief executive officer, said the company has been"aggressively seeking new growth opportunities that leverage ourproperty development and management skills and race track operatingexperience."

Penn National is one of seven bidders for a casino license inIllinois. The company has proposed building a casino in the Chicagosuburb of Rosemont, Ill., and then selling it to the state ofIllinois.

Graph Tech ghost Acoustic MIDI System

Guitarists looking for a pickup for their acoustic guitar have a bold new choice to consider from Graph Tech. The ghost Acoustic MIDI system not only amplifies the instrument, but allows it to interface with the world of MIDI, giving the acoustic guitarist new possibilities for recording and performing. The system is based on piezo saddles that send signals to both an adjustable acoustic preamp and a Hexpander MIDI interface board. Volume and EQ are manipulated with control knobs that are mounted on the guitar's soundboard.

I received a steel-stiing acoustic guitar for review that already had the ghost system installed, but the accompanying manual laid out clear steps for installation. Although the process doesn't require any soldering, modifications to the guitar are necessary and should be handled by an experienced technician. For this test, I reviewed the sound capabilities of the ghost system in a direct recording situation with professional headphones.

The Acoustic Module

The ghost's acoustic preamp is connected ?? three stacked knobs that control volume and treble, bass, mid, and mid sweep frequencies. At a flat setting, I was immediately impressed upon finding that the amplified tone matched the guitar's natural character very closely. The pickups were highly responsive and captured nuances with plenty of detail, which will please guitarists who are concerned with dynamics and subtleties in their playing.

The EQ controls gave moie than enough flexibility to create other inspiring and useable tones. There were plenty of highs to add shimmer and bite for fingerpicking, and cutting the treble just a little helped to tame the metallic attack of heavy strumming. Similarly, small adjustments of the bass control could easily give plenty of warmth or cut out unwanted boominess when tuning down a half-step or to drop-D. I found the mid controls to be especially useful in helping leads stand out without changing the character of the guitar too much.

The ghost's hexaphonic saddles are also available in another notch size for nylon-string guitars. As an added bonus, they aie made of Graph Tech's String Saver material to reduce string breakage.

The MIDI Module

The ghost's Hexpander is able to interface with both Roland and Axon controllers through a Traktion switch and 13-pin connector. For this review, I used a Roland GR-33 synthesizer to test the ghost's capabilities. Guitarists concerned with tracking issues should have no qualms as the ghost tracked my playing smoothly with no noticeable delays or misf irings. The system was particularly accurate when tracking notes played on the low E siring, which is usually a troublesome matter. It is important to note that the only real learning curve is adjusting the sensitivity of the synth to each string and refining one's technique to mute unwanted string noise. The effortless accuracy of the unit helped me to focus more on the novel thrill of using an acoustic guitar to play keyboard, horn, strings, and other instrument patches.

The ghost's applications are limited only by one's imagination. Since the control knobs in the system allow for independent adjustment of the acoustic and MIDI volumes, guitarists can switch between both sounds or mix them. For example, with both volumes turned up, I was able to double my single note lines with a sax patch, and make my chords sound fuller with a string pad behind it. Using the GR-33's hold function and only the MIDI volume on full, I was able to sustain a chord using a voice pad, and then bring up my acoustic volume to play leads over it.

Summary

The ghost Acoustic MIDI system by Graph Tech can empower acoustic guitarists in various recording and performing situations. The ability to play new sounds on a familiar instrument is simply inspiring when composing and creating demos. Its live applications can be numerous, from achieving a fuller sound as a soloist to recreating parts from a recording on stage. Loopers will especially delight in the ability to stack sounds from more than one instrument.

Since installation requires drilling, those seeking to preserve their favourite acoustic guitars might overlook this pickup; however, the ghost's MIDI capabilities and natural amplified sound should warrant serious consideration from players looking to push the envelope on what they can sonically achieve on the acoustic guitar.

[Author Affiliation]

Hal Rodriguez is a Toronto based guitarist, bassist, and music teacher who can be contacted at halromusic@gmail.com.

Beyond the programmable car

Customizing a vehicle's electronic functions will be as simple as downloading software from the Internet. But challenges remain.

The dream of a "programmable" car is upon us, and it's as close as the dealer service department's diagnostic console. The capabilities being explored by Volvo, which leads the trend, will give service technicians, and possibly owners, the ability to customize vehicle functions, such as door lock operation or how long the headlights remain on after locking the doors - and much more.

Last years introduction of Volvo's P23 large-car platform (the S80 sedan) was a great leap forward by an automaker in its approach to on-board electronics - and business in general - in the Internet age. Volvo's strategy is modeled on the personal computing world, in which repairs and accessory installations are handled digitally by software upgrades and reloads, instead of the wrench work and replacement parts traditionally required on automobiles. And these upgrades are distributed on the Internet, through a secure server.

Volvo's advanced electronics system is possible because the S80 features the company's initial use of a sophisticated multiplex electronic system. Like many recent competitors, the system employs an in-car data network to carry messages over a data bus, between controls, sensors, actuators and microprocessor-driven modules. A high-speed section of the network, based on the Bosch-developed Controller Area Network (CAN) architecture, handles functions that demand quick response, such as engine management and traction control. A lower-speed channel links body functions such as light switching, door locks and power windows. The bridge between the two network sections is provided by a central electronic module located at the instrument panel.

Volvo's network system keeps wiring and connectors to a minimum, and enables the use of an electronically-controlled throttle. Messages travel over a twisted pair cable, enabling data, such as vehicle speed, to be shared by whichever systems need it, all without the need for dedicated wiring to deliver the signal to each destination. Traffic on the network cable is managed by a proprietary communications protocol known as Volcano.

The unspoken result of this system is that the relationship between hardware components and software has become more interdependent than ever before. For the S80, just adding a straightforward accessory such as a trailer hitch brings the necessity to install associated software, much the same as adding a DVD drive to your PC would, says Dave McHugh, an engineer at Volvo's Rockleigh, N.J., U.S. headquarters. First you must do the mechanical installation, he explains, then the electronic system must be configured to recognize the new pieces. Only by performing the required l(minute setup routine not so different from adding a new printer and its associated driver software to your PC - can the hitch installer notify the multiplex system of the added electrical loads of the trailer lights and brakes.

The possibilities are more exciting where the opposite is true - accessories that are predominantly software, with the car already carrying the hardware components. In markets outside North America, where a cruise control may not be standard equipment, this function could be added to the existing electronic throttle system merely by adding the steering wheel buttons and, of course, software. This is much like a manufacturer adding traction control to an ABS-equipped car, a process simplified by the fact that the wheel-speed sensors and actuators are already in place. A trip computer application fits the same scenario, and the capability could even be extended to a customer who needs to download a GPS map via cellular link for a hastily-scheduled journey.

The Factory Feels The Changes

The manufacturing process is altered under the new business model, too. The various electronic modules distributed throughout the car (there are 18 in an S80) are designed around a Motorola PowerPC chip and installed on the assembly line without any resident software. Those digital instruction sets are loaded at the end of the line according to the car's equipment package, and the software carries a part number as any mechanical component would. This concept enables the use of generic modules in many areas (where only the software would differ between models and equipment levels).

But, of course, it exacts a price. For example, when the overhead module that controls the rear view mirror dimming is replaced in a repair, the car's network must be configured to recognize the new part. It also means that a known "good" module can not be simply bolted into a car for a quick-and-dirty diagnosis because the system will immediately know that an alien is aboard.

The conduit between Volvo and its cars is VADIS (Volvo Aftersales Diagnostic and Information System), which the company developed with Hewlett-Packard It's a diagnostic station to which dealers are upgrading. The warehouse for all software is in Volvo's Gothenburg Sweden, headquarters. Software will not be kept "on the shelf ' at dealerships. The Volvo database holds all the information about the configuration of the car, what is installed and the possible combinations of compatible software. When a software installation is requested, the digital stream actually comes from dual replicated databases known as VIal (Vehicle Information Transfer and Loading), located in Sweden as well as at the company's Greensboro, N.C., data center. An encryption scheme has been designed to prevent unauthorized "hacking" and assure secure communications, including a coded "seal" for the vehicle's software when assembly is complete.

When the car is linked to VADIS (through an interface known as the Vehicle Communications Tool 2000) and its identity entered, software can be requested The transfer takes place entirely by modem using the Internet, though the signal may come over the dealership's satellite link instead of a conventional phone line. The software can be pre-ordered by VADIS, but it is automatically deleted from the VADIS station after installation Once the installation is complete, the car confirms that information to VADIS and updates the "declaration of contents" stored in the VIL vehicle database. The software "part" is invoiced at the same time.

Volvo will supply software through the VADIS link only, says McHugh, who is the VADIS team leader at Rockleigh. "A CDROM just can't be fresh enough or flexible enough to meet the needs."

While the industry is not yet at the point of remote diagnostics and software repairs via cellphone link (though Volvo is deploying this concept in long-haul trucks), or onboard FAA-type "black boxes" (there is a crash monitor program at General Motors), it's certain that the way vehicles are maintained, repaired and even upgraded is changing through software. Volvo has shown the way.

Potential Pitfalls

The programmable car brings a steep learning curve-- and potential downsides. Customers are war of complex software that, especially at first release, seems prone to glitches. Complete software reloads-just like rein stalling Windows 98 on your PC-could be necessary when a new model has been introduced before development has eliminated all the bugs, though this is preferable to sending a superceded ECU module to the landfill And when repairs can only be accomplished by a software upgrade from release 1.0 to version 2 0, access to software becomes an issue for independent repair shops.

Volvo also recognizes that it must acclimate customers to pay for repairs that don't dirty the mechanic's hands. Limits will be rapidly discovered in aftermarket accessories not programmable for the system. And demand for higher-- skilled technicians will increase. "We have to attract technicians cut from better cloth," comments Volvo engineer Dave McHugh.

Fixing grade costs Peirson Miami job

Miami University of Ohio fired men's basketball coach JerryPeirson Friday for giving one of his players a false grade.

Miami president Paul Pearson said the university, based inOxford, had dismissed Peirson for giving Karlton Clayborne an "A" inthe "Basketball Theory" course even though the player never attendedclass nor did any coursework.

Pearson said Miami athletic director R.C. Johnson hadrecommended Peirson be suspended without pay for four months, removedfrom further teaching duties and placed on permanent probation.

Pearson said he decided to terminate the coach because thereputations of Miami University's athletic and academic programsrequire him to "maintain a broader view and to consider coachPeirson's action . . . as it reflects upon the university as awhole."

Peirson, 46, said in June he admitted Clayborne to his coursehalfway through the fall 1988 semester, then gave Clayborne an "A"even though he never attended class nor did classwork. Denver acquired forward Orlando Woolridge from the Los AngelesLakers in exchange for the Nuggets' No. 2 draft choices in the 1993and 1995 NBA drafts. The NCAA refused to lift or reduce sanctions it imposed on theUniversity of Maryland's basketball program for rules violations.

The NCAA Council, after completing a three-day, closed-doormeeting in Monterey, Calif., said the Division I Steering Committeedenied Maryland's appeal. Nevada-Las Vegas has filed a formal appeal seeking to overturn anNCAA ban that would prevent the Runnin' Rebels from defending theirnational championship.

The appeal was prepared over the last two weeks after the NCAAruled July 20 that UNLV could not compete in postseason play nextyear. The penalty was an outgrowth of a case involving UNLV coachJerry Tarkanian and the NCAA dating to 1977.

Missouri chancellor Haskell Monroe said that he had not made uphis mind about basketball coach Norm Stewart and would not until theschool appears before the NCAA Infractions Committee. Center Ben Gillery had 20 points and nine rebounds and B.J.Armstrong scored 22 points to lead the Bulls past Golden State123-108 in the Summer Pro League in Los Angeles Thursday night. TheBulls enjoyed a 54-40 rebounding edge with support from Doug Lee (19points), Jeff Sanders (16 points, nine rebounds) and Stacey King (15points). Tom Tolbert led Golden State with 23 points.

AUTO RACING: Three of Emerson Fittipaldi's crewmen were burnedbut escaped serious injury in a pit fire in Brooklyn, Mich. TheBrazilian driver's car burst into flames when crewmen overfilled thefuel tank in a fuel stop during a late practice session.

Fittipaldi, who had won the pole position for tomorrow'sMarlboro 500 only minutes earlier, wriggled out of the cockpit withthe help of crew chief Rick Rinaman.

Fueler Vince Cremer, 33, had first- and second-degree burns tothe face, right ear and right hand; vent man Steve Tredup, 32, hadfirst-degree facial burns, and David Kiefer, the fuel tank valveoperator, 23, had first-degree facial burns.

Fittipaldi, the defending CART-PPG Indy-car series champion,made a lap on the two-mile Michigan International Speedway oval at222.593 m.p.h. in a Chevrolet-powered Penske racer.

Bobby Rahal's Lola-Chevrolet was next at 221.859 m.p.h.,breaking up a possible all-Penske Racing front row.

FOOTBALL: Once the Southeastern Conference completes itsexpansion and splits into divisions, the football championship couldbe decided in the Peach Bowl, the Mobile Register said.

SWIMMING: Olympic silver medalist Beth Barr, who nearly lost herright arm in a horseback riding accident last year, completed amiraculous comback with a victory in the 200-meter backstroke at theU.S. National Swimming Championships in Austin, Texas.

HIGH SCHOOLS: Lake Forest Academy has notified the Illinois HighSchool Association it no longer will be a participating member instate tournament competition. Officials at the private boardingschool (enrollment: 250), a member of the Prairie League which becamean IHSA member in 1988, said several conflicts led to the decision.Many of its students are enrolled in five-year programs and springsports confict with final exams.

OLYMPICS: The International Olympic Committee expressed shock atthe death during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait of the Kuwaiti emir'sbrother, Sheikh Fahd al-Ahmed al-Sabah, who was active in the Olympicmovement.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Nasdaq Profits More Than Triples

NEW YORK - Nasdaq Stock Market Inc., the nation's largest electronic stock exchange, on Thursday reported that its second-quarter profit more than tripled after introducing new products amid another robust period for stocks.

Profit rose to $56.1 million, or 39 cents per share, from $16.6 million, or 13 cents per share, in the year-ago period. Total revenue was $198.7 million, up from $171.1 million a year earlier.

Results topped Wall Street projections for earnings of 37 cents per share on $194.3 million of revenue, according to analysts polled by Thomson Financial.

"Our ability to capture market share has grown NASDAQ into the largest single pool of liquidity for trading cash equities, creating a robust platform for growth," said Chief Executive Robert Greifeld in a statement. "To that end, we believe our business is poised to deliver strong results over the second half of the year through continued product innovation and diversification."

The exchange also said its acquisition of Nordic stock exchange operator OMX is progressing smoothly. Nasdaq will be the world's second trans-Atlantic stock market, alongside the NYSE Group Inc., which completed its takeover of Euronext earlier this year.

---

On the Net:

http://www.nasdaq.com

Braves 6, Mets 4

New York Atlanta
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jos.Reyes ss 2 0 0 0 McLouth cf 3 0 1 0
Hu ss 2 1 1 0 J.Abreu p 0 0 0 0
W.Harris cf 3 0 0 0 Delgado p 0 0 0 0
Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Mather lf-1b 4 0 0 0
Adams ph-1b 1 1 0 0 C.Jones 3b 3 1 1 2
D.Wright 3b 2 0 0 0 S.Bowman 3b 1 0 0 0
Ju.Turner 3b-2b 2 0 2 1 McCann c 3 1 1 0
I.Davis 1b 0 0 0 0 Varvaro p 0 0 0 0
Gee p 0 0 0 0 S.Marek p 0 0 0 0
K.Nieuwenhuis ph-cf 2 1 1 1 Clevlen rf 0 1 0 0
N.Evans lf 4 1 1 0 Uggla 2b 1 0 0 0
F.Martinez rf 4 0 1 2 W.Ramirez pr-lf 1 0 0 0
B.Emaus 2b 1 0 0 0 Hinske 1b 3 0 0 0
Z.Lutz 3b 1 0 0 0 Di.Hernandez 2b 1 0 1 1
Thole c 2 0 0 0 E.Lucas ss 4 0 1 1
R.Chavez c 1 0 0 0 Schafer rf-cf 3 1 1 0
Pelfrey p 1 0 0 0 D.Lowe p 1 1 1 0
Dan.Murphy 1b 2 0 0 0 Proctor p 0 0 0 0
Beato p 0 0 0 0 C.Gearrin p 0 0 0 0
Boyer p 0 0 0 0 W.Castillo ph-c 2 1 1 1
J.Valdespin ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 30 6 8 5

New York 000 003 100—4
Atlanta 011 030 01x—6

E_D.Wright (1), Uggla (1). DP_New York 2, Atlanta 3. LOB_New York 7, Atlanta 4. 2B_Ju.Turner (1), F.Martinez (2), Di.Hernandez (2), D.Lowe (1). HR_C.Jones (1). SB_Hu (1), Schafer (2).

IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Pelfrey L,0-1 3 4 2 1 0 0
Gee 2 3 3 3 1 1
Parnell 1 0 0 0 1 0
Beato 1 0 0 0 1 0
Boyer 1 1 1 1 1 0
Atlanta
D.Lowe W,2-0 3 0 0 0 2 2
Proctor 1 0 0 0 1 3
C.Gearrin 1 0 0 0 0 2
Varvaro 2-3 4 3 3 1 1
S.Marek 1 1-3 1 1 1 2 0
J.Abreu 1 0 0 0 0 1
Delgado S,1-2 1 1 0 0 0 1

HBP_by C.Gearrin (B.Emaus). WP_Beato. PB_W.Castillo.

Umpires_Home, Lance Barksdale; First, Jerry Layne; Second, Larry Vanover; Third, Laz Diaz.

A_8,293 (9,500).

Spain: Greenpeace protests outside nuke plant

Greenpeace parked a cargo container at the entrance to an aging Spanish nuclear power plant Thursday and some of its activists climbed inside, in a protest demanding the facility's immediate closure.

Other activists chained themselves to the gate of the plant in Garona in northern Spain, the environmental group said. The entrance was not blocked.

Greenpeace said the protest is to press the government to shut down Garona immediately and eventually Spain's five other nuclear power plants. Greenpeace said the Garona plant, which came on line in 1970, is obsolete and has safety problems.

Spain's six nuclear plants provide 20 percent of the electricity consumed in the country, according to the Industry Ministry.

In its general election campaign earlier this year, the ruling Socialist party said it would phase out nuclear energy in favor of renewable sources.

"It is time the Socialist government lived up to its pledge to close Garona and the other nuclear plants, said Greenpeace's director in Spain, Juan Lopez de Uralde.

Industry Ministry Miguel Sebastian said in an interview published Thursday that the government is open to letting utilities invest money in existing plants to improve safety and prolong their operating lives.

"Otherwise, they will gradually be closed as planned," Sebastian was quoted as saying by the newspaper Publico.

ONLINE ONLY: Delayed rectal anastomotic dehiscence presenting as a colocutaneous fistula in the popliteal fossa

Enterocutaneous fistulas are commonly associated with diverticular disease or inflammatory bowel disease. They usually involve the lower abdominal wall. If the process starts retroperitoneally, the resulting fistula will follow a tortuous route, tracking along the inguinal ligament, femoral canal, sciatic or obturator foramen and into the thigh.1 However, colocutaneous fistulas secondary to anastomotic leaks are rare.2 We describe an unusual colocutaneous fistula in the popliteal fossa secondary to a delayed anastomotic dehiscence in a man who had undergone a low anterior rectal resection 4 years earlier.

Case report

An 82-year-old man presented with increasing swelling and discomfort on mobilizing his right leg. He was apyrexial with no other constitutional symptoms. Physical examination revealed a painful right thigh that was swollen, erythematous and cellulitic; there was a large opening in the popliteal fossa discharging feculent material (Fig. 1). Digital rectal examination revealed that the posterolateral rectal wall was absent from the 3 o'clock to the 9 o'clock position. Blood tests showed leukocytosis and a C-reactive protein value of 241 mg/L. Doppler ultrasonography excluded deep vein thrombosis. Closer questioning revealed that the swelling had developed over the previous 6 months. This had led to recurrent admissions for "cellulitis" and treatment with intravenous antibiotics. Computed tomography confirmed breakdown of the posterior rectal wall and a fistulous tract extending into the right ischiorectal fossa and down the posterior thigh compartment (Fig. 2).

At exploratory laparotomy, there was no peritoneal contamination. After thorough irrigation of the diseased colon and rectum an end colostomy was performed. The right fistula was laid open, d�brided, given a copious hydrogen peroxide washout and packed with Betadine gauze (Purdue Pharma L.P., Stamford, Conn). Two days later, examination showed a healthy wound. The patient suffered gradual respiratory and renal deterioration secondary to sepsis and died 3 days later.

Discussion

In November 2001, the patient had a low anterior resection for a giant dysplastic tubulovillous adenoma 8 cm from the anal verge, with formation of a J pouch and covering loop ileostomy. At the time of operation, there was no evidence of an anastomotic leak on air testing. Before closure of the loop ileostomy, 3 serial pouchograms all showed a small contained leak in the presacral space. Examination under anesthesia revealed a 1-cm defect in the posterior aspect of the anastomosis that was discharging pus. This was laid open and curetted. A final pouchogram showed pooling of contrast in the small cavity with no evidence of surrounding leak. This was confirmed by a follow-up flexible sigmoidoscopy as well as biopsies of the anastomotic site that gave negative results. The loop ileostomy was closed 2 years, later, after examination under anesthesia revealed no abnormality. The patient was aware of the potential risks of poor function and pelvic sepsis.

Owing to the abnormally late presentation, we cannot label this patient's condition as a leak but, rather, as a slow and progressive anastomotic dehiscence secondary to chronic subclinical pelvic sepsis. 3 The absence of peritoneal contamination led to insidious symptoms, and the lack of abdominal symptoms misled diagnosis and delayed treatment. The primary anastomotic defect likely caused a contained leak. The resulting cavity increased the chances of abscess formation, contributing to further breakdown of the rectal wall. The localized weak spot may have been subjected to increased mechanical stress secondary to chronic constipation and compounded by the many laxative enemas prescribed over the years.

Although a more radical surgical approach might have been appropriate (i.e., excision of the distal colon and rectum),4 this was deemed too risky in this rather frail, septic patient.

This report raises the question of the safety of closure when covering loop stomas in the presence of a contained leak after low anterior resection of the rectum.

Competing interests: None declared.

[Reference]

References

1. Drabble EH, Greatorex RA. Colocutaneous fistula between the sigmoid colon and popliteal fossa in diverticular disease. Br J Surg 1994;81:1659.

2. Marshak RH, Lindner AE, Maklansky D. Paracolic fistulous tracts in diverticulitis and granulomatous colitis. JAMA 1980; 243:1943-6.

3. Bruce J, Krukowski ZH, Al-Khairy G, et al. Systematic review of the definition and measurement of anastomotic leak after gastrointestinal surgery. Br J Surg 2001; 88:1157-68.

4. Penna Ch. Management of anastomotic fistula following excision of rectal cancer. J Chir (Paris) 2003;140:149-55.

[Author Affiliation]

Matei Dordea, MB BS; Arcot K. Venkatsubramaniam, MB ChB, MD; Sue E. Green, MB BS, MD; Jag S. Varma, MB BS, MD

Department of Surgery, University Hospital of North Durham, North Road, Durham, UK

Accepted for publication Sept. 22, 2007

Correspondence to: Dr. M. Dordea, Flat 5, 54 Clifton Rd., Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 8DQ, UK; matei.dordea@doctors.net.uk

It's Michigan - by a landslide

There are degrees of certainty in most everything in life.

Take, for instance, the Theory of Relativity. On one hand,Einstein developed the formula. But when it comes to getting cityjobs for cousins, Chicago politicians have turned it into a science.

What does that have to do with picking a Big Ten champion?

Well, like politics, it's a dirty job, but somebody has to doit.

So with the certainty of a third-generation Daley filling out ajob application at City Hall, here is the predicted order of finishin the Big Ten:

1. MICHIGAN: The question is not whether the Wolverines will goto the Rose Bowl, but rather, will they go undefeated and vying for anational championship?

Offensively, coach Bo Schembechler's team is solid top tobottom. Returning from its Rose Bowl championship team of last yearare fullback Leroy Hoard, tailback Tony Boles and quarterbackMichael Taylor.

While Boles rushed for 1,408 yards last season, Hoard ledMichigan with 11 touchdowns and was the Rose Bowl MVP with 142 yards.

Taylor, a fifth-year senior, threw only two interceptions innine games last year.

Although all-everything tackle Mark Messner graduated, the BigTen's top defensive unit returns nine of its 11 starters.

If an obstacle looms on their road to a championship, it may bethat the Wolverines must play three of their four toughest conferencegames (Michigan State, Iowa and Illinois) on the road. Michigan willplay its traditional rival, Ohio State, Nov. 25 at Ann Arbor.

2. MICHIGAN STATE: The Spartans return the nucleus of a defensethat held opponents to a league-low 9.5 points a game last seasonand ranked second over all to Michigan.

Middle linebacker Percy Snow, an all-America candidate, willlead the defense. Senior tailback Blake Ezor (1,496 yards rushing)heads the I-formation offense.

MSU won six straight conference games to close last season and,with its last six against Illinois, Purdue, Indiana, Minnesota,Northwestern and Wisconsin, could do it again.

3. OHIO STATE: The Buckeyes should be the Big Ten team with themost improved won-lost record this season. For coach John Cooper'sjob security, it had better be.

Last year, OSU bumbled its way to a 2-5-1 conference mark withdisastrous home losses to Illinois and Purdue.

This year, Cooper returns 15 starters (eight on offense andseven on defense), including his top passer, rusher and receiver andthree of his top four tacklers.

4. ILLINOIS: Thin may be in if you're Oprah, but not if you'rea football team.

While the Illini return one of the finest starting squads inthe conference, some of those quality players will get hurt -especially with opening road games at USC and Colorado. The Illinialso will have a tough time replacing running back Keith Jones' 1,196rushing yards.

Healthy, Illinois contends for a strong second. Hurt, theIllini could be a faltering fifth or even a sinking sixth.

5. IOWA: Even coach Hayden Fry, he of the perpetualFoster-Grants, seems to be in the dark as to how well his Hawkeyeswill fare.

"I've never gone into a season with so many question marks," hesaid.

After losing Chuck Hartlieb and his 3,738 passing yards tograduation, Fry hopes senior Tom Poholsky will be the answer atquarterback.

Without All-America tight end Marv Cook to throw to, theHawkeyes should run more, especially with Tony Stewart, Nick Belland Mike Saunders - who combined for more than 1,500 yards -returning in the backfield.

6. MINNESOTA: The good news for the Golden Gophers is theyreturn almost all their starters. The bad news is they were 0-6-2.

Even though it was winless, Minnesota was close often, losing toMichigan 22-7, Ohio State 13-6 and Iowa 31-22 while tying Illinois27-27. This year, Minnesota should be 3-5.

7. INDIANA: If any team is feeling the sting of graduation thisyear, the Hoosiers are it.

Coach Bill Mallory returns but one starter on defense and onlyfive on offense. Fortunately for him, two of those are Heismancandidate Anthony Thompson at tailback and Dave Schnell atquarterback.

If Thompson can duplicate last season - in which he led theconference in rushing and scoring - Indiana should be at least 4-4.

8. NORTHWESTERN: Since the Wildcats don't have to play Michiganand get to play Minnesota at Dyche Stadium, they could improve lastyear's 2-5-1 mark by a game or two.

9. PURDUE: Hope the indoor practice facility being built forthe Boilermakers has a stronger foundation than the team. With anoffense that lacks a proven quarterback, running back and front line,the only thing keeping Purdue from falling into the basement isWisconsin.

10. WISCONSIN: If it's true that misery loves company, youmight want to visit your relatives in Madison during the season.With only four starters returning to run a veer offense that recordedonly one victory last year, look for the Badgers to go winless.

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Shapey shines with Eaton's `Moonlight'

The Pulitzer Prize board can rest easy.

Ralph Shapey did not present a world premiere of his own musicFriday night during the Contemporary Chamber Players' annual PaulFromm Concert, which Shapey conducted at the University of Chicago'sMandel Hall.

Instead, the composer - whose "Concerto fantastique" waspassed over for this year's Pulitzer after a unanimous recommedationby the music jury - - presented the world premiere of a song cycle,"Notes on Moonlight" by U. of C.'s John Eaton.

Eaton's set of five songs for soprano, mezzo-soprano and asmall chamber ensemble, was a worthy focal point for the concert.In addition to Eaton's piece, Friday's program included the localpremieres of "Verticals for Piano" (1982) by Shulamit Ran and"Mysteries of the Horizon" (1987) by Eugene O'Brien, as well asSchoenberg's Three Pieces for Orchestra" and a work for fourpercussionists, "Ku-Ka-Ilimoku" (1978) by Christopher Rouse.

Sung by soprano Rebecca Berg and mezzo-soprano Nelda Nelson,"Notes on Moonlight" explored images of the moon by poets GarciaLorca, Wallace Stevens, Leopoldo Lugones, Baudelaire and WilliamButler Yeats. Eaton uses microtones regularly in his music, and theodd tonal pitches helped create an austere, unsettled atmosphere.The setting of Garcia Lorca's "Romance de la luna, luna," opened withthe dry whistling of a violin that swept by like an icy wind. Therewas a sense of secrets being told as Nelson's dusky voice ranged upand down while Berg set forth, high, faintly wild tones.

Pianist Abraham Stokman created a compelling, forward-drivingunit from the rugged chords and jagged rhythms of Ran's "Verticals.""Ku-Ka-Ilimoku" was a study in virtuoso drumming while individualbrass and woodwind instruments seemed to press forward and thendisappear like passing scenery on a cross-country trip in "Mysteriesof the Horizon."

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Settlement may ease mortgage insurance load

WASHINGTON Millions of American homeowners who pay privatemortgage insurance premiums in their loan payments every month couldbe indirect beneficiaries of a class-action settlement.

Two subsidiaries of one of the largest banks in the country,Banc One Corp. of Columbus, Ohio, have agreed to automatically cancelPMI coverage on loans when the borrower's equity in the propertyexceeds 20 percent.

Banc One Mortgage Corp. and Bank One, Texas also agreed toexplain to all new borrowers in writing how PMI coverage works, andto send customers an annual statement on how and when they canrequest cancellation of premium payments.

The lawsuit directly covers 45,000 …

Richardson continues to run for White House after 4th place finish in Iowa

Despite his fourth-place finish in Iowa, Democrat Bill Richardson said he will keep campaigning as the only candidate who will get the troops out of Iraq next year.

"I just believe there is a lot of support for my position on the war, and I'm going to make this campaign a referendum on ending the war," the New Mexico governor said in an interview with The Associated Press late Thursday, shortly before boarding a plane to New Hampshire.

Richardson, who got just 2 percent of the vote in Iowa, said he had called Barack Obama to congratulate the Illinois senator for his victory in the first test of the 2008 presidential election.

Now that …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

CY calls for action on bird risk.

Byline: Jean Christou

CYPRUS Airways (CY) yesterday called for immediate steps to be taken to remove the risk associated with bird strikes on aircraft flying in and out of Larnaca airport.

The call came from the national carrier after an incident on Wednesday, when a CY flight to London was hit by a flock of birds.

The captain deemed it safe to continue with the flight, but when the plane was examined in London, dead birds were found in the engine and the aircraft had to be grounded overnight in the UK to clean it out.

This had a knock-on effect on other flights, he said

It also cost the company thousands of euros, CY spokesman Kyriacos Kyriacou told the Cyprus News Agency …

CY calls for action on bird risk.

Byline: Jean Christou

CYPRUS Airways (CY) yesterday called for immediate steps to be taken to remove the risk associated with bird strikes on aircraft flying in and out of Larnaca airport.

The call came from the national carrier after an incident on Wednesday, when a CY flight to London was hit by a flock of birds.

The captain deemed it safe to continue with the flight, but when the plane was examined in London, dead birds were found in the engine and the aircraft had to be grounded overnight in the UK to clean it out.

This had a knock-on effect on other flights, he said

It also cost the company thousands of euros, CY spokesman Kyriacos Kyriacou told the Cyprus News Agency …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

George Lappin Service Award inaugurated

Dale Kirmse, a professor at the University of Florida, received the inaugural George Lappin National Program Committee Service Award at the 1998 Spring National Meeting in New Orleans. The award was in recognition of his dedication in developing Al(hE's initial Web presence and helping to implement AIChE's electronic Web-based programming initiative.

The award was given in memory of George Lappin, a long-time active member of the Institute and most recently meeting program chair for the 1998 Spring National Meeting in New Orleans. Lappin passed away in October 1997. The award was presented by 1998 AIChE President Vern Weekman, Jr., and Martha Lappin, George's widow, in a ceremony …

FOOD REVIEW: Masterchef, 185 Baslow Road, Totley S17 4DT. Tel: 0014 235 0884.

I'M not sure I should be recommending the roast beef at Masterchef at Totley after what happened on an earlier occasion when I raved about the excellence of a Sunday joint.

But here I am at the laptop just a couple of hours after eating, waxing lyrical about my three slices of perfectly cooked, tender, rosy, juicy (indeed, its essences were still gently trickling out) beef and I can still taste it.

My congratulations to the chef and my compliments to the cow for this was no prime cut but humble silverside, dressed up on the menu as salmon cut.

On that earlier occasion similar plaudits led to a gratifying increase in business for a certain Derbyshire hostelry.

Less gratifyingly, the review brought a barrage of complaints. Unaccustomed to such numbers, waiters spilled food in …

ARAFAT, THE ULTIMATE SURVIVOR, IS HEART OF PALESTINIAN CAUSE.(Main)

Byline: Neil MacFarquhar Associated Press

Yasir Arafat, the Palestinian movement's ultimate survivor, has …

HOUSE FULL OF GUNS LEADS TO MAN'S ARREST.(Local)

Byline: Catherine Clabby Staff writer

More charges may be brought against a man arrested for keeping 17 guns, several of them loaded, in his East Chatham home without the needed permits, according to investigators.

Frank Ciasullo, 46, of Cemetery Road, was charged Saturday with second-degree criminal sale of a weapon, a felony, under a legal provision that says anyone having five or more guns illegally can be presumed to be planning to sell them, said investigator George Hoffman of the Columbia County Sheriff's Department.

Caisullo was given an appearance ticket to appear in Columbia County Court on Thursday.

State Police will test some of …

Ledger's body flown to Los Angeles, where friends pay respects; headed home to Australia

Heath Ledger's body was taken to a celebrity mortuary in Los Angeles where family members and friends paid their respects to the young Australian actor, according to a media report.

In New York, police reiterated Sunday that they do not plan to question actress Mary-Kate Olsen, who received a flurry of phone calls from the woman who found Ledger's body.

The "Brokeback Mountain" actor's body was at the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park and Mortuary on Saturday, where it was taken en route to Australia, the New York Daily News reported Sunday.

A call to the mortuary was not immediately returned early Sunday. The arrangements …

As in '90, Reds start off with a victory

The Cincinnati Reds turned the traditional National League openerinto a championship party Monday.

The Reds received shiny new World Series championship rings in apre-game ceremony, then showed the visiting Houston Astros how theywon them. Tom Browning pitched eight strong innings and doubled homethree runs in a 6-2 victory that kept the Reds in their favoriteplace - first place.

"We wanted to get off to a good start," shortstop Barry Larkinsaid. "We led all last year. We want to get up on top and staythere."

"A lot of guys had smiles today," Browning said. "We wanted toget out there and defend our title."

Browning, the Reds' top winner last …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Spirit contract offer rejected by SPEEA members.(Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace)(Brief article)

AIRLINE INDUSTRY INFORMATION-(C)1997-2011 M2 COMMUNICATIONS

The Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA) on Thursday announced that employees of Spirit have voted to reject the latest contract offer.

SPEEA members voted 684 to reject and 25 to accept the offer by Spirit …