четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Tunisia Convicts Ex-Guantanamo Detainee

A Tunisian court on Thursday convicted a former prisoner at the United States prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on terror charges, the Justice Ministry said.

Abdullah bin Omar was handed a 7-year prison sentence on charges of "belonging in times of peace to a terrorist organization operating in a foreign country," an official at the Justice Ministry said.

Bin Omar, a Tunisian citizen who spent five years at the detention facility in Cuba and was released in June, consistently denied the charges or any links to terrorism.

His lawyers had asked for an acquittal.

One of them, Samir Ben Amor, said he would appeal the decision to …

Master tap dancer, instructor

ERNEST 'BROWNIE' BROWN - 1916-2009

Ernest '"Brownie" Brown tapped into a tradition of American dance and entertainment that stretched back to the days of Harlem's Cotton Club and Bill "Bojangles" Robinson.

"Brownie was one of the last of the generation of men and women who crossed the lines from vaudeville to Broadway to movies to television," said Lane Alexander, founder and director of the Chicago Human Rhythm Project. "His career spanned the whole 20th century of American entertainment. He represented an important link in the chain of performers and teachers who passed the oral tradition of American tap from one generation to the next.''

He was the short funny …

Transcircularities: New and Selected Poems

by Quincy Troupe

Coffee House Press, September 2002

$30.00, ISBN 1-566-89137-X

Transcircularities is a comprehensive collection that should succeed with those not familiar with Quincy Troupe. The author of six volumes of poetry -- Avalanche is the most recent -- Troupe's career spans well over three decades. He was recently chosen as the first poet laureate of California, with his most recognized work being his collaboration with Miles Davis for Miles: The Autobiography in 1989.

Written in a frank, often profanity-laden voice of the legendary trumpeter, the book is arguably one of the best books on Miles. One cannot separate Troupe's poetic sensibilities …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

NYC issues warning after aphrodisiac kills man

Health officials are warning New Yorkers to stay away from an illegal aphrodisiac made from toad venom after the product apparently killed a man.

The city's poison control center issued the warning Friday after receiving a hospital report that a 35-year-old man who ingested the hard, brown substance died earlier this month.

The product is sold under names including Piedra, Love Stone, Jamaican Stone, Black Stone and Chinese Rock at sex shops and neighborhood stores. It is banned by the Food and Drug Administration.

City health officials said the victim, whose identity was not released, was admitted to the hospital complaining of chest and …

Iran expected to dominate G8 meeting in Italy

Italy hopes foreign ministers of the industrialized Group of Eight meeting Thursday will send Iran a "tough" message over its violent crackdown on protesters, the foreign minister said.

Italy had originally invited Iran to attend the three-day gathering of industrialized nations in Trieste, northern Italy, as a special guest, arguing that Tehran could have an important role to play in stabilizing Afghanistan _ a key focus of the meeting.

But Rome retracted the invitation after Tehran failed to respond and after days of violent clashes with demonstrators protesting Iran's disputed June 12 elections.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco …

Best Films: `Quiz,' `Pulp' And `Gump'

NEW YORK The New York Film Critics Circle has named "Quiz Show"as the best movie of 1994. And "Forrest Gump" and "Pulp Fiction"tied for best film honors in balloting by the National Board ofReview of Motion Pictures.

Both film groups agreed on best director: Quentin Tarantinofor "Pulp Fiction."

The Chicago-produced "Hoop Dreams" was …

Business events scheduled for Friday

Major business events and economic events scheduled for Friday:

WASHINGTON — Labor Department …

Kings-Blue Jackets Sums

Los Angeles 1 1 2_4
Columbus 0 0 1_1
First Period_1, Los Angeles, Greene 2 (Frolov), 11:05. Penalties_Smyth, LA (hooking), 3:18Harrold, LA (interference), 6:17.
Second Period_2, Los Angeles, Kopitar 21 (Smyth, Simmonds), 15:46. Penalties_Roy, Clm (interference), 12:07Simmonds, LA (interference), 17:52.
Third Period_3, Los Angeles, Smyth 16 (Brown), 4:05. 4, Los Angeles, Kopitar 22 (Stoll, Doughty), 9:26 (pp). 5, Columbus, …

Win gives ND hope vs. Michigan

SOUTH BEND, Ind. Upon further review, Notre Dame coach Bob Daviewas pleased with his team's play during a 48-13 victory againstKansas on Saturday in the Eddie Robinson Football Classic.

"After watching the tape of the game, I'm going to change a littlefrom what we said when we got together after the game," Davie saidSunday. "I think it ended up being a positive playing this game, andI'm certainly glad we played at home with all the new players and newcoaches we have.

"Any time you can rush for 363 yards, it is a positive. I don'tknow that we consistently ran the ball, but we had those big runs:(Tony) Fisher a 46-yard run, Jarious (Jackson) a 38-yard run andArnaz …

Barnes withdraws from remainder of Super 15 season

SYDNEY (AP) — Australia center Berrick Barnes has withdrawn from the remainder of the Super 15 season after sustaining another head knock, jeopardizing his World Cup selection chances and putting his rugby career in limbo.

Barnes told a news conference Tuesday he was following medical advice from his neurologist to take an indefinite rest from rugby following a series of head knocks and would not return for the New South Wales Waratahs this season, even if they reached the Super 15 final.

The influential midfielder, who turned 25 last month, has been diagnosed with a condition being referred to as "footballer's migraine," which reportedly makes him feel drowsy after strenuous …

Netflix enters Canada with streaming service

NEW YORK (AP) — Netflix Inc. has entered into the Canadian market with instant streaming video.

The movie rental service said Wednesday that this is the first time it is expanding outside the U.S.

The company, based in Los Gatos, Calif., also announced Canadian license agreements with major motion picture studios such as Lionsgate, MGM Studios, Paramount Pictures, Sony …

'Parrot Head' Jimmy Buffett fans celebrate in US

KEY WEST, Florida (AP) — About 3,500 fans of Jimmy Buffett are celebrating the singer's music and laid-back island attitude in Key West, Florida.

Attendees at the 20th Parrot Heads Convention were surprised Friday afternoon when Buffett made a rare appearance with his Coral Reefer Band. He played for more than an hour. Many of his 15 songs featured lyrics recalling people and places he knew while living in Key West during the 1970s and 80s.

The convention of "Parrot Head" fans, named for their offbeat tropical headgear, continues through Sunday. It will feature more performances and a charity auction.

Organizers say that since 2002, members of about 200 chapters have contributed over $20 million and nearly 3 million volunteer hours to local and national causes.

Romania: EU head of mission nominated as new foreign minister

Romania's Prime Minister Calin Popescu Tariceanu nominated a long-serving diplomat Monday as the country's new foreign minister.

Tariceanu put forward the name of Lazar Comanescu, 59, who has been the country's head of mission to the European Union for the past eight years. Before that he was head of the country's mission to NATO.

Romania joined the European Union in 2007. Comanescu's nomination must be approved by President Traian Basescu, which is seen as likely.

Comanescu was criticized in 2002 for buying a building to serve as Romania's embassy in Brussels at what was said to be an inflated price, the daily Cotidianul newspaper reported Monday.

Former foreign minister Adrian Cioroianu resigned last week over the death of Claudiu Crulic, a Romanian man jailed in Poland. Crulic died after going on a hunger strike to protest his innocence. Romania's diplomatic mission in Poland was accused of failing to assist him.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

France confers top film award on 'Seraphine'

The French film industry gave Dustin Hoffman a special Cesar for his body of work and saluted Sean Penn at the Friday night ceremony. But France's coveted Cesar award for best movie went to a very French film, Martin Provost's "Seraphine," based on magical true-life story. It swept seven prizes.

A somber note clouded the festive 34th annual Cesar awards. The all-time box office hit for a French film, "Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis," being remade in the United States by Will Smith as "Welcome to the Sticks," failed to take an honor in the only category for which is was nominated, best original scenario. That Cesar went to "Seraphine."

The comedy directed by comedian Dany Boon, centered on the people of northern France, long the object of jokes, broke all box-office records for a French film, behind "Titanic." Boon had criticized the Cesar's failure to come up with a comedy category and had been expected to boycott the ceremony. He showed up in bright orange sweat pants topped by a tux jacket _ and went home empty-handed.

Yolande Moreau, who plays Seraphine, was awarded the Cesar for best actress for her portrayal of the dimwitted maid whose talents as a painter were discovered by a German art collector on the eve of World War I. The film is based on the life of the painter, known as Seraphine of Senlis. Paris' Musee Mayol recently exhibited her works.

The Cesar for best actor went to Vincent Cassel in "Mesrine," another story based on real life, this time the tale of a gangster. "Mesrine" won three Cesars, including the best director award to Jean-Francois Richet.

Dustin Hoffman, now 71, received a special Cesar, a day after the two-time Oscar winner was named an honorary commander in France's National Order of Arts and Letters.

He fought back tears Thursday. On Friday, he was visibly awkward _ and admitted it when collecting the Cesar to a standing ovation.

"I never learned how to bow," Hoffman said, adding that only acting made him feel sure of himself and declaring before leaving the stage, "I ain't finished yet."

Sean Penn, the other guest of honor, presented the best film award to Martin Provost for "Seraphine." His own movie, "Into the Wild," missed the best foreign film award which went to the Israeli animated documentary by Ari Folman "Valse avec Bachir" (Waltz With Bashir), winner of the Golden Globe and loser at the Oscars.

Another Oscar loser, "Entre les murs" (The Class) _ which won the Cannes film festival last year _ took home the Cesar for best adaptation. The Paris high school class that the film was based on presented the award for best set design _ which went to Thierry Francois for "Seraphine."

WHO WOULD BE HELPED

WHO WOULD BE HELPED

About 22 percent of the 3,139 counties in the United States wouldbe eligible for tax breaks under the proposed New Homestead Act,which would be aimed at encouraging businesses and people to stay inor move to rural counties where more than one in 10 people moved awayduring the last 20 years. The states with the most eligible countiesand percentage of counties eligible:

North Dakota 89%

South Dakota 64%

Nebraska 60%

Iowa 56%

Montana 50%

Kansas 50%

Alaska 48%

Wyoming 43%

W. Virginia 38%

Minnesota 36%

Source: Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,AP

Alicia Keys charity to honor late Beatle guitarist

NEW YORK (AP) — Alicia Keys' charity will pay tribute to late Beatle guitarist George Harrison with a star-studded concert in New York City next month.

Her charity, called Keep a Child Alive, will honor Harrison at its annual Black Ball event for his "philanthropic contributions to India."

The charity announced Tuesday that Keys will perform alongside Usher, Norah Jones and will.i.am at the Nov. 3 show at Manhattan's Hammerstein Ballroom. Mary J. Blige, Gary Clark Jr., Jay Sean and Midival Punditz with Karsh Kale will also hit the stage.

Harrison died of lung cancer at age 58 in 2001.

The event marks the eighth year for Keep a Child Alive, which helps children affected by HIV/AIDS in Africa and India.

All proceeds will go to the charity.

___

Online:

http://www.keepachildalive.org

Iraqis Urged to Take Up Arms for Defense

BAGHDAD - Prominent Shiite and Sunni politicians called on Iraqi civilians to take up arms to defend themselves after a weekend of violence that claimed more than 220 lives, including 60 who died Sunday in a surge of bombings and shootings around Baghdad.

The calls reflect growing frustration with the inability of Iraqi security forces to prevent extremist attacks.

The weekend deaths included two American soldiers - one killed Sunday in a suicide bombing on the western outskirts of Baghdad and another who died in combat Saturday in Salahuddin province north of the capital, the U.S. command said. Three soldiers were wounded in the Sunday blast.

Sunday's deadliest attack occurred when a bomb struck a truckload of newly recruited Iraqi soldiers on the outskirts of Baghdad, killing 15 and wounding 20, a police official at the nearest police station said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.

Also Sunday, two car bombs exploded near simultaneously in Baghdad's mostly Shiite Karradah district, killing eight people. The first detonated at 10:30 a.m. near a closed restaurant, destroying stalls and soft drink stands. Two passers-by were killed and eight wounded, a police official said.

About five minutes later, the second car exploded about a mile away near shops selling leather jackets and shoes. Six people were killed and seven wounded, said the official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

The Karradah area includes the offices of the Supreme Islamic Council in Iraq, the biggest Shiite party in parliament, and is considered among the safest parts of the capital.

Elsewhere, a bomb hidden under a car detonated Sunday at the entrance of Shorja market - a mostly Shiite area of central Baghdad that has been hit repeatedly by insurgents - killing three civilians and wounding five, police said.

Police also reported they found the bodies of 29 men Sunday scattered across Baghdad - presumed victims of sectarian death squads. Four other people were killed Sunday in separate shootings in Baghdad, police said on condition of anonymity because they were not supposed to release the information.

The string of attacks in the Iraqi capital showed that extremists can still unleash strikes in the city despite a relative lull in violence here in recent weeks amid the U.S. offensives in and around Baghdad.

But the bloodshed in the Baghdad area paled in comparison to the carnage Saturday when a truck bomb devastated the public market in Armili, a town north of the capital whose inhabitants are mostly Shiites from the Turkoman ethnic minority.

There was still confusion over the death toll.

Two police officers - Col. Sherzad Abdullah and Col. Abbas Mohammed Amin - said 150 people were killed. Other officials put the death toll at 115. Abbas al-Bayati, a Shiite Turkoman lawmaker, told reporters in Baghdad that 130 had died.

Regardless of the precise figure, the attack was clearly among the deadliest in Iraq in months. It reinforced suspicions that al-Qaida extremists were moving north to less protected regions beyond the U.S. security crackdown in Baghdad and on the capital's northern doorstep.

In a joint statement, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and U.S. military commander Gen. David Petraeus said the attack against the Turkoman Shiites was "another sad example of the nature of the enemy and their use of indiscriminate violence to kill innocent citizens."

Turkish military air ambulances evacuated 21 people wounded in the attack for treatment in Turkish hospitals, the country's Foreign Ministry said. Turkey feels special responsibility for its ethnic brethren, the Turkoman, who speak a Turkic language.

During a news conference Sunday in Baghdad, al-Bayati criticized the security situation in Armili, saying its police force had only 30 members and that the Interior Ministry had finally responded to requests for reinforcements only two days before the attack.

In the absence of enough security forces, al-Bayati said authorities should help residents "arm themselves" for their own protection.

The call for civilians to take up arms in their own defense was echoed Sunday by the country's Sunni Arab vice president, Tariq al-Hashemi, who said all Iraqis must "pay the price" for terrorism.

"People have a right to expect from the government and security agencies protection for their lives, land, honor and property," al-Hashemi said in a statement. "But in the case of (their) inability, the people have no choice but to take up their own defense."

He said the government should provide communities with money, weapons and training and "regulate their use by rules of behavior."

Another prominent Sunni lawmaker, Adnan al-Dulaimi, said Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had failed to provide services and security but he stopped short of saying his followers would seek to topple the Shiite-led government in a no-confidence vote.

The CBS Evening News reported Saturday that a large block of Sunni Iraqi politicians will ask for a parliamentary vote of no-confidence against al-Maliki's government on July 15.

"The situation has become terribly bad," al-Dulaimi told The Associated Press. "All options are open for us. We are going to study the situation thoroughly, and we are going to look into the possible measures which go with the interests of the Iraqi people. We will also consider whether to keep on with the government or not."

But Iraq's national security adviser, a Shiite, insisted that the government still enjoyed broad support and he warned against any effort to replace al-Maliki.

"I can tell you one thing that after Maliki, there is going to be the hurricane in Iraq," Mouwaffak al-Rubaie told CNN's "Late Edition." "This is an extremely important point to make across and to the Western audience and to the Arab audience as well as the larger Muslim audience."

The idea of organizing local communities for their own defense has caught on here in recent months following the success of Sunni Arab tribes in Anbar province that took up arms to help drive al-Qaida from their towns and villages.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have said they hope to replicate the "Anbar model" elsewhere in the country, albeit under government supervision and control.

On Sunday, Lt. Gen. Ali Gheidan said the Iraqi army planned to raise volunteer forces in Diyala province, where U.S. and Iraqi forces have driven al-Qaida fighters from part of the capital of Baqouba. He said more than 3,800 volunteers had already been recruited.

"Their mission will be like the police, working under the Iraqi police," Gheidan told reporters. "They work as a protection for each area, and they will only be from the residents of that area. Their role is to hold onto territory after it has been cleansed by the military."

U.S. commanders have long believed the key to restoring security was the ability of Iraqi forces to hold on to areas cleared by American troops. Several senior U.S. officers have questioned whether the Iraqi police and army were capable of preventing insurgents from returning once the Americans had left.

Local defense forces would offer a way to compensate for weaknesses in the Iraqi police and army, but without careful controls, the system could backfire by promoting more militias in a country already awash in weapons.

Also Sunday, the British Defense Ministry announced the death of a British soldier who was wounded Saturday in the biggest British offensive against Shiite militias this year.

OSTP's anastas addresses public policy forum

The Washington Public Policy Forum at the Spring National Meeting explored pathways to achieving sustainability, including emerging scientific methods and creative new technologies and practices.

One of two presenters, Dr. Paul Anastas from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) presented a philosophical glimpse of sustainability from the perspective of the current Bush and recent Clinton administrations. Anastas is the former chief of the Industrial Chemistry Branch of the Environmental Protection Agency in the Clinton administration, where he established the Green Chemistry Program.

Anastas stated that the public often hears about the broad goals of sustainability, eco-efficiency, and industrial ecology, but is often frustrated by the lack and specific mechanisms and actions necessary to achieve these goals. He said that sustainable and environmentally sound solutions are possible: "Through green chemistry and engineering, science and technology can and is being brought to bear on the major challenges to sustainability-from resource depletion to sustainable food production-and from dematerialization to environmentally benign energy production."

Anastas said that government can play an important role in serving as a catalyst for change by funding cutting-edge technology and providing incentives for further research. To make this work, industry must communicate their research needs to government, and insist on continued government research in sustainability.

According to Anastas, industry will be where "the rubber meets the road." In his two most recent books, Green Engineering and Green Chemical Syntheses and Processes, he includes case studies on how industry is meeting the challenges to sustainability while increasing competitiveness. He added at the end of his lecture only half in jest, "Remember, green is not only the color of the environment, it is the color of our money too."

The session was co-chaired by Earl Beaver and Dick Siegel, and was the combined effort of AIChE's Government Relations Committee, Environmental Division, and Center for Waste Reduction Technologies. Cosponsored by the North American Alliance of Chemical Engineers, the event was coordinated in conjunction with the Houston Air Quality Topical and the Sustainability Topical.

US student says he was beaten after Cairo arrest

Forced to lie still for hours in the dark, the American students held during protests in Egypt were told they would be shot if they moved or made any noise, one of them said Sunday on his first full day home.

"It was the most frightening experience of my life, I believe," Derrik Sweeney said.

Speaking to The Associated Press by Skype from Jefferson City, Mo., Sweeney said the evening of Nov. 20 started peacefully in Cairo, with Tahrir Square "abuzz with ideas of democracy and freedom."

The three wandered the streets and wound up in a large group of protesters outside the Interior Ministory, Sweeney said. The demonstrations escalated, with the protesters yelling and perhaps throwing stones, he said.

"Eventually the police shot back something, I'm not exactly sure what," he said. "We didn't wait to see. But as soon as we saw some sort of firing coming from the gun and heard it, the whole crowd stampeded out and we sprinted away."

He said they fled to an area that seemed calmer and were approached by four or five Egyptians in plain clothes.

The Egyptians offered to lead them to safety but instead took them into custody, Sweeney said.

They were threatened to be force-fed gasoline, beaten and forced to lie in a near-fetal position in the dark for six hours with their hands in cuffs behind their backs, Sweeney said. He said they were told: "If you move or make any noise, we will shoot you."

"They were hitting us in the face and in the back of the neck," he said. "Not to the point of bleeding or I can't say I have any lasting major scars at this point, but they were hitting us."

Sweeney is 19 and studies at Georgetown University. He was arrested along with Luke Gates, 21, who attends Indiana University and is from Bloomington, Ind., and Gregory Porter, 19, who studies at Drexel University and is from Glenside, Pa.

The students flew home Saturday after an Egyptian court ordered their release two days earlier. The three were studying abroad at American University in Cairo, which is near Tahrir Square.

A popular uprising earlier this year forced out Egypt's longtime autocratic leader, Hosni Mubarak. But the democratic age that Egyptians hoped for has not followed. The military is in control, and protesters want it to hand power to civilians.

At least 43 protesters have been killed since Nov. 19 and 2,000 wounded, most of them in Cairo. Landmark parliamentary elections will start Monday.

Egyptian officials said they arrested the three students on the roof of a university building and accused them of throwing firebombs at security forces fighting with protesters.

But Sweeney denies doing anything to harm anyone and said he and the other Americans weren't ever on the roof or handling or throwing explosives.

"I don't know where that rooftop idea actually came from," he said. "We were never on a rooftop, we never entered a building. The American University campus building on that street where we were arrested — there were a lot of people that had broken in there, it was swarmed with protesters — but we were not on there. We were on a street."

In an earlier telephone interview with the AP after he arrived at St. Louis' international airport, Sweeney said he and the other students' treatment improved dramatically after the first night. He spoke with a U.S. Embassy official, his mother and a lawyer. He said he denied the accusations during what he called proper questioning by Egyptian authorities.

"There was really marked treatment between the first night and the next three nights or however long it was," Sweeney said. "After that first night, we were treated in a just manner ... we were given food when we needed, and it was OK."

The students took separate flights out of Egypt, and Porter and Gates declined to recount details of their experience after arriving in Philadelphia and Indianapolis, respectively.

"I'm not going to take this as a negative experience. It's still a great country," Gates said.

Porter said only that he was thankful for the help he and the others received from the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, administrators at the university they were attending, and attorneys in Egypt and the U.S.

"I'm just so thankful to be back, to be in Philadelphia right now," he said.

___

Associated Press photographers Jeff Roberson in St. Louis and Michael Conroy in Indianapolis contributed to this report. AP writers Kathy Matheson in Philadelphia, Bill Cormier in Atlanta and Andale Gross and Erin Gartner in Chicago also contributed.

Relief Convoy Rescued by UN in Bosnia

ZAGREB, Croatia United Nations forces rescued an aid convoySunday that braved fighting to deliver food to the Bosnian town ofGorazde only to fall prisoner to land mines on its way home.

The aid team, which brought 46 tons of food and medicine toGorazde after four months of isolation from the outside world, headedback toward the Bosnian capital Sarajevo Sunday evening after atwo-day trip through the war zone.

"We know of no problems, but until they are back in Sarajevo,there is concern," said Ron Redmond, spokesman for the United Nationshigh commissioner for refugees.

He said neither side in the fighting, which pits Muslims andand Croats against rebel Serb forces, had cooperated to remove themines and let the aid convoy go on its way.

In Serb-held northern Bosnia, "The dimensions of the problemare much greater than most foreigners imagine," said RichardHolbrook, heading a mission of the International Rescue Committee,the biggest refugee assistance agency in the United States.

To the south, tensions centered on the aid convoy, which wasdelayed by shooting on the way into Gorazde Saturday and delayed bymines on the way out. An effort to get food into Gorazde last monthfailed when the United Nations convoy hit a land mine and had to berescued.

This time, 46 tons of food and medicine were unloaded Saturdayin the eastern Muslim town, whose 70,000 residents have no access tofood, water and electricity under the Serbian siege.

But on the journey back Saturday evening, the relief convoy raninto a mined bridge about nine miles out of town that both sides inthe Yugoslav war refused to unblock.

The team camped out overnight and a mine-clearing team of three French armored personnel carriers was dispatched from SarajevoSunday to ensure their return.

That convoy in turn was delayed more than four hours as it passed through checkpoint after checkpoint in fighting zones southof Sarajevo, Redmond said.

It took the team about an hour to remove the mines.

Mo. National Guard joins search for missing baby

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Military police from the Missouri National Guard are joining the search for a missing Kansas City baby, crawling through a wooded area in search of evidence in her disappearance.

Gov. Jay Nixon ordered 25 members of a military police unit from Harrisonville to help Sunday in the search for Lisa Irwin, who was 10 months old when her parents reported her missing Oct. 4. Police and federal authorities have searched extensively for the missing baby, but so far say they have no suspects or major leads.

The Guard was called to help go over woods less than one mile west of the family's home, where the baby was last seen.

Guard spokeswoman Rachel Knight says its members are looking for clues that might have been overlooked in previous searches.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

TB Patient ID'd As Atlanta Attorney, 31

ATLANTA - The tuberculosis patient under the first federal quarantine since 1963 is a 31-year-old personal injury attorney who practices law with his father in Atlanta, a federal law enforcement official said Thursday.

The official, who asked to remain anonymous because he was not authorized to talk about the case, identified the patient as Andrew Speaker. A medical official in Atlanta also confirmed the name on condition of anonymity.

The man has a rare and dangerous form of tuberculosis that has proved resistant to drugs. He arrived at Denver's National Jewish Medical and Research Center for treatment Thursday, walking under his own power after flying from Atlanta with his wife and federal marshals, hospital spokesman William Allstetter said.

He looked healthy and tan, and "he said he still felt fine," Allstetter said.

Doctors plan to begin treating the man immediately with two antibiotics, one oral and one intravenous. He also will undergo a basic physical exam, a test to evaluate how infectious he is and a CT scan and lung X-ray, Allstetter said. Doctors hope to also determine where he contracted the disease.

He will be kept in a special unit with two rooms and a ventilation system, Allstetter said.

"He may not leave that room much for several weeks," Allstetter said.

According to a biography posted on a Web site connected with Speaker's law firm, he attended the U.S. Naval Academy, graduated from the University of Georgia with a degree in finance, then attended University of Georgia's law school.

His father, Ted Speaker, unsuccessfully ran for a Fulton County Superior Court judgeship in 2004, the same year his son was admitted into the Georgia Bar.

Andrew Speaker recently moved from an upscale condominium complex in anticipation of his wedding, former neighbors said. He also wrote in an application to become a board member of his condo association that he was going to Vietnam for five weeks as part of the Rotary club to act as an ambassador.

"He's a great guy. Gregarious," said Pam Hood, a former neighbor. "He's a wonderful guy. Just a very, very pleasant man."

In a phone interview with the Atlanta Constitution-Journal from an Atlanta hospital earlier this week, he explained that he knew he had TB when he flew from Atlanta to Europe in mid-May for his wedding and honeymoon, but that he didn't find out until he was already there that it was an extensively drug-resistant strain considered especially dangerous.

Despite warnings from federal health officials not to board another long flight, he flew home for treatment fearing he wouldn't survive if he didn't reach the U.S.

Health officials in North America and Europe are now trying to track down about 80 passengers who sat near him on the two trans-Atlantic flights, and they want passenger lists from four shorter flights he took while in Europe. Patients on the shorter flights are not expected to be as much at risk, health officials said.

Among those being tested are more than two dozen University of South Carolina Aiken students, school spokeswoman Jennifer Lake said Thursday. Two were apparently sitting near him, possibly in the same row, she said.

One of those students, Laney Wiggins, said she is awaiting her skin test results, expected Friday.

"I'm very nervous," Wiggins told The (Columbia) State newspaper. "It's kind of sad that this is overshadowing the wonderful time we had in Europe."

The infected man had flown to Paris on May 12 aboard Air France Flight 385, also listed as Delta Air Lines codeshare Flight 8517, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

He and his bride also took four shorter flights while in Europe - Paris to Athens on May 14; Athens to Thira Island May 16; Mykonos Island to Athens May 21; and Athens to Rome May 21 - but CDC officials said there was less risk of infection during the shorter hops compared to the trans-Atlantic flights, which each lasted eight hours or more.

It was while they were in Rome that he learned further U.S. tests had determined his TB was the rare, extensively drug-resistant form, far more dangerous than he knew. Officials told him turn himself over to Italian health officials and not to fly on any commercial airlines.

Instead, on May 24, he flew from Rome to Prague on Czech Air Flight 0727, then flew to Montreal aboard Czech Air Flight 0104 and drove into the U.S., according to CDC officials.

Officials are trying to contact people who sat within five rows of him on the two longest flights for testing.

Other passengers are not considered at high risk of infection because tests indicated the amount of TB bacteria in the man was low, said Dr. Martin Cetron, director of the CDC's division of global migration and quarantine.

The infected man told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he wasn't coughing and that doctors initially did not order him not to fly and only suggested he put off his long-planned wedding. "We headed off to Greece thinking everything's fine," he told the newspaper.

Dr. Charles Daley, head of the infectious disease division at National Jewish Hospital, said the hospital has treated two other patients with what appears to be the same strain of tuberculosis since 2000, although that strain had not been identified and named at the time. He said the patients had improved enough to be released.

"With drug-resistant tuberculosis, it's quite a challenge to treat this," Daley told CNN Thursday. "The cure rate that's been reported in other places is very low. It's about 30 percent for XDR-TB."

"This is a different patient, though. We're told that this is very early in the course, and most of the time when we get patients that it's very extensive and very far advanced. So I think we're more optimistic," he said. "We're aiming for cure. We know it's an uphill battle, but we hope to get there."

---

Associated Press writers Lara Jakes Jordan in Washington, and Mike Stobbe, Greg Bluestein and Daniel Yee in Atlanta contributed to this report.

---

On the Net:

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/

Public Health Agency of Canada: http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/

Science/Health BRIEFINGS

WORLD'S TINIEST MACHINE: Scientists have made metal gears so smallthat several could fit on the head of a pin. "It's a majorbreakthrough in micromachines," said engineer Henry Guckel of theUniversity of Wisconsin at Madison. "As far as I know we havemanufacturered the smallest metal gear that has ever been made."Scientists say micromachines someday may guide rockets or powerminiature robots. The Japanese envision repairing human cells withmicrorobots. And Guckel says microknives may be used for delicatesurgery. `ARTIFICIAL WOMB': Some couples who can't conceive naturally undergoan expensive procedure called in-vitro fertilization. Eggs from themother are fertilized with the father's sperm and grown in a labdish. After two days, the embryos are returned to the mother inhopes that at least one will survive and grow into a baby. A newprocedure developed at Singapore's National University Hospital couldimprove the success rate, which is as low as 10 percent, the MedicalPost reports. Doctors grew embryos in an "artificial womb"consisting of cells from a human womb. Embryos produced by thismethod "are of much better quality than those obtained in routinein-vitro fertilization laboratories," said Dr. Arif Bongso. RED WINE BEATS WHITE: Drinking red wine in moderation may protectagainst heart disease. But white wine doesn't help, American Healthpublication reports. French researchers found that when 16 healthymen each drank three or four glasses of red wine every day for twoweeks, levels of the "good" HDL cholesterol increased. Drinkingwhite wine increased both the "good" HDL and "bad" LDL cholesterol.Among red wine drinkers, the tendency of blood platelets to clumptogether declined, reducing the chance of clots. Drinking white winehad no such effect. French researchers believe tannins in red winemay produce some or all of the effect. LONG RUNS OK: Studies of casual joggers have found disturbingchanges in knee cartilage and signs of fluid in the joint after only30 minutes of running, suggesting runners' knees could developarthritis and other degenerative joint diseases. But a new studyfound nothing unusual in the knees of seven runners who had justcompleted races ranging in distance from 17 to 50 miles and lastingfrom 3 to 10 hours. "Trained athletes may be able to compensate forthe wear and tear on the knee caused by running and avoid thedegenerative changes seen in untrained runners," said researcherFrank Shellock of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. BLUE LOBSTERS: Lobsters are a mix of green, red and brown. Theyturn bright red when cooked. But about one in every 3 or 4 millionlobsters caught along the Maine coast is blue. University of Maineresearcher Sam Chapman is raising blue lobsters in a study todetermine whether Maine's fishing grounds can be restocked withlobsters raised in hatcheries. No one has been able to prove thatrestocking coastal waters increases the number of lobsters in theocean because hatchery-raised lobsters, released when they're thesize of a thumbnail, are hard to identify after they've grown. Witha blue lobster, "what you have is essentially a colored tag," Chapmansaid. Chapman has released several thousand blue lobsters. BUGS GOBBLE OIL: After the Alaska oil spill, workers usedfertilizers to feed naturally occurring microbes that devour oil.Nitrogen and phosphorous fertilizer, some of it the same stuff usedon lawns, increased the degradation rate by 30 to 50 percent. "Ithad no adverse ecological effects," said Environmental ProtectionAgency biologist James Clark. "We saw no algae blooms, no toxicityto the fish." However, the technique, known as bioremediation,represented only a fraction of the cleanup effort. - Jim Ritter

Attitude toward US in Latin America changing

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says there is a changing attitude about the United States in Latin America as President Barack Obama heads to the region later this week.

Deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes says Obama is "hugely popular" in Latin America, and overall, the opinion of U.S. leadership there is on the rise. Rhodes says leaders in the region, like Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, can no longer stoke anti-American sentiment to promote their agendas.

Obama departs Washington late Friday for a five-day trip to Brazil, Chile and El Salvador.

The White House says the trip will underscore the deep partnership between the U.S. and Latin America, particularly on the economy. Obama aides have been promoting job creation in the U.S. as a benefit of increasing ties with the region.

45 beacon: Obituaries: Edward Brooks 1916-2002

Edward Morgan Brooks of Newton, Massachusetts, died at home after a brief illness on 11 December 2002 at the age of 86. He was a certified consulting meteorologist and professor of meteorology who first identified the mesoscale tornado cyclone effect and made long-range forecasts using sunspot cycles.

He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, the son of Charles F. Brooks and Eleanor Stabler Brooks, who encouraged his lifelong devotion to peace and his passion for meteorology, astronomy, and music. He graduated from Harvard University (1937) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT; 1939 and 1945).

Brooks's long career teaching meteorology began in 1939 at Pan American Airways in Hawaii. During World War II he taught the Royal Air Force at the University of Miami and the U.S. Air Force at MIT. In the following years he was a professor of meteorology, geophysics, and astronomy at such institutions as Boston College, St. Louis University, the State University of New York, Plattsburgh, and MIT, and at universities in Canada, Taiwan, Brazil, and Saudi Arabia. Brooks also conducted research for high-tech industries for seven years and directed many cruise ships to total solar eclipse viewing sites.

Brooks is the author of over 200 articles and the joint author of the book The Meteorology of Mars and Venus. He was a trustee of the Mount Washington Observatory, and a member of the Newton Ward 7 Democratic Committee.

An accomplished pianist, he married soprano and violinist Sarah Bergh in 1941. They made music together and delighted audiences for more than 60 years. They have seven surviving children and 32 grandchildren. All will miss Brooks's enthusiasm and sense of humor.

The season may be the reason for the blues

For many people, the winter season is associated with depression.Sometimes it is the result of past problems or trauma associatedwith the holiday season.

Other forms of seasonal depression can be related to the "let-down" effects often described as the post-holiday blues.

Another influence that lends itself to depressed mood is thebeginning of the new year, and our concerns about New Year'sresolutions. We often feel regret or guilt about having failed toaccomplish previous goals or frustration about the plans we wish toestablish for the coming year.

Then there is the depression that is actually related to theseason of winter, called seasonal affective disorder, or SAD. It isassociated with the amount of exposure we have to sunlight.

The pattern is typically clear. During the summer months a personwith SAD will be energetic, relatively elated and productive. In thewinter, he or she will slow down, feel lethargic, be underactive,overeat, oversleep and crave carbohydrates.

The solution to seasonal depression is light.

Exposure to full spectrum light and re-establishment of theproper biological rhythms can usually lead to significant diminutionof symptoms. Light therapy involves use of full-spectrum lightingduring the early morning and late evening hours to simulate thedaytime light patterns of the summer months.

In addition, brightness is important. The light should be atleast 2500 lux. A normal living room might be only 100 or 299 lux.

Best results are obtained when a person looks at the fullspectrum light once each minute between 5 and 8 a.m. and 5 and 8p.m.

It also helps to keep lights on in the home during those hoursand to replace bulbs in domestic lights with full-spectrum bulbs.

If you notice that your mood falls during the winter months, itmight be worthwhile to try more light.

If your symptoms are debilitating even after light enhancement,then it is time to seek medical help.

The Roman physician A. Cornelius Celcus was ahead of his timewhen he passed along these helpful hints: "Live in rooms full oflight; avoid heavy food; be moderate in the drinking of wine; takemassage, baths, exercise and gymnastics ... strictly avoidfrightening ideas; indulge in cheerful conversations and amusements;and listen to music."

What should we do about those resolutions and our failed goalsfrom the past?

Martin Rossman and David Bresler, two California physicians, haveworked with interactive-guided imagery, a form of visualization thatallows a therapist to guide a patient inward and to discoverunderlying causes for current symptoms and release them. Suchtechniques often assist with release of physical as well asemotional tension.

Other, less structured forms of visualization also can be veryhelpful.

For example, daily practice of simply visualizing or imagining apeaceful scene that you visit in your mind can produce a relaxedphysiology that persists throughout the day.

Nutrients also have applications to the winter blues. Previouscolumns have mentioned St. John's Wort, a plant extract that hasexcellent antidepressant qualities and also has some immune-enhancing effects that are helpful during the winter months.

The added stress of the winter season can further be addressedwith ginseng supplementation. Panax or Korean ginseng has been usedthroughout the ages to enhance energy, stimulate immune function andimprove brain function. Ginseng supplementation during the wintermonths can help to relieve the extra stress of cold weather, combatinfection, improve general sense of well-being and improve mood.

Panax ginseng should be avoided if you have high blood pressureand should typically be taken only periodically in cycles of abouttwo months at a time with periods of two to three weeks betweencycles. The usual dose is 75 to 150 mg daily of a standardized 7percent extract.

Robert Burton, born in 1577, became famous for his encyclopedicstudy of depression, "Anatomy of Melancholy." The first editionappeared in 1621 and there were five revised editions during thenext 30 years. His life as an Anglican clergyman may have left himwith excesses of contemplative time.

Much of what he wrote describes his own journey throughdepression. It is likely that he wrote and lived in under-illuminated circumstances, so maybe he was an early sufferer of SAD.

In any event, his eventual cure for depression was lovingrelationships and meditation - again, both timely remedies wellsuited to our contemporary holistic approach to the winter blues andnot so different from the suggestions of our Roman physician,Cornelius.

Some information is timeless.

News briefs

Group's rolls up

since hate spree

PEORIA, Ill. - From Matthew Hale's perspective, the year since agunman went on a two-state campaign of racial violence has been oneof conflict that yielded significant reward. While the survivors ofBenjamin Smith's attacks last July 4 physically healed and familiesof those killed nursed deeper wounds, the group that is accused ofhelping hone his racist beliefs - the World Church of the Creator -grew.

The organization found a national platform and has seen itsmembership increase. Hale, its leader, claims to have adherents inmost states and says membership to the East Peoria-based group hasdoubled.

But the growth, Hale said, has had more to do with its philosophythan Smith's rampage, which targeted blacks, Jews and Asians acrossIllinois and Indiana.

Hale, 28, refuses to say how many members pay dues. But accordingto one group, the organization has added 35 chapters in the pastyear.

The World Church of the Creator has become a "magnet for youngvolatile white supremacists," the suburban Chicago hate-monitoringgroup Center for New Community said in new report. The report wasreleased to mark the anniversary of the shooting spree by Smith, whowounded nine and killed two before killing himself.

Former day care

operator sentenced

COLUMBIA, S.C. - A former day care operator has been convicted ofkilling two infants who were in her care and sentenced to two lifeprison terms.

It was the third trial for Gail Cutro; a conviction in her firsttrial was overturned and the second trial ended in mistrial.Prosecutors said the case was an example of child abuse calledMunchausen syndrome by proxy, a condition in which a care providerharms children for attention.

Jurors on Sunday found Cutro, 40, guilty of homicide by childabuse in the deaths of Parker Colson and Ashlan Daniel, both 4months old.

Prosecutors had sought murder convictions.

The jury acquitted Cutro of charges that she injured a third 4-month-old.

Prosecutor Johnny Gasser told jurors that Cutro either suffocatedor severely shook the infants at the day care center she operated ather home in suburban Irmo.

China approves

sale of Viagra

BEIJING - After more than a year of clinical trials, Chinaannounced today that it has approved sales of the anti-impotencedrug Viagra.

The State Drug Administration said the drug will be available byprescription.

The agency said the drug is to be marketed under the Chinese name"Wan Ai Ke," according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

Introduction of the drug abroad in 1998 drew widespread interestin China, whose men have been interested for centuries in drugs toincrease sexual potency.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Maddux, Grace back in place

ACubs fan in Wrigley Field Sunday could dream a sweet dream. Hecould imagine nothing had changed. He was back in 1989, with thehome team contending for a championship.

Greg Maddux was pitching a splendid game against Montreal. MarkGrace was hitting line drives. Jerome Walton was excitement on thebases, advancing to second on a fly ball to move the tying run intoscoring position. Don Zimmer's brain was spitting out bold ideasthat worked, like Shawon Dunston's attempted steal of home thatprovoked catcher's interference.

As Grace said: "We were finally playing like we should have beenall year."

But, alas, this is 1990, and the fan reading this newspaper …

Dugard sues US over failure to monitor abductor

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Jaycee Dugard is suing the federal government for failing to monitor the convicted sex offender who kidnapped her and held her captive for 18 years.

The complaint filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco on Thursday says the failures by federal parole officers in the handling of Phillip Garrido's case are as "outrageous and inexcusable as they are numerous."

Garrido was …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Lebanese Mark Rafik Hariri Assassination

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Tens of thousands packed into a city square Wednesday to mark the second anniversary of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's assassination as hundreds of troops were deployed a day after bus bombings killed three people. Troops in full combat gear and armored cars deployed in and around Martyrs' Square, where the country's two main rival groups were present: government supporters commemorating Hariri's death and opposition supporters continuing their daily sit-in to demand the government's resignation.

The soldiers set up a razor wire barrier to separate the two groups, and police conducted body searches of people arriving in the square.

At exactly …

Lebanese Mark Rafik Hariri Assassination

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Tens of thousands packed into a city square Wednesday to mark the second anniversary of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's assassination as hundreds of troops were deployed a day after bus bombings killed three people. Troops in full combat gear and armored cars deployed in and around Martyrs' Square, where the country's two main rival groups were present: government supporters commemorating Hariri's death and opposition supporters continuing their daily sit-in to demand the government's resignation.

The soldiers set up a razor wire barrier to separate the two groups, and police conducted body searches of people arriving in the square.

At exactly …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Manufacturer feels forced out of capital

DAUPHIN COUNTY

A coin roller and change counting-machine manufacturer in Harrisburg's South Allison Hill neighborhood wants to get out of the city.

At 1380 Howard St., N.F. String & Sonine, is surrounded by abandoned buildings, vacant tracts, litter and crime.

But Vice President Gregory F. String, who runs the company, said blight isn't making him move the business. He said it's satisfying providing fulltime jobs with full benefits to 52 employees, many of whom are from the depressed neighborhood.

String wants to move to the West Shore because in 2006 Harrisburg's Community Action Commission blocked his bid to expand on an unoccupied 4-acre former …

Norwegian TTS wins EUR 4.3m ship equipment deals.

(SeeNews) - Jul 26, 2011 - Norwegian ship-equipment maker TTS Group ASA (OSL:TTS) said its German unit TTS Marine GmbH in Bremen, signed two newbuild and conversion contracts, worth a total NOK 33 million (USD 6.2m/EUR 4.3m), with an unnamed shipyard in the USA.

Delphi to carry BPI newswire. (Delphi Internet Services Corp., BPI Entertainment News Wire) (Brief Article)

Delphi Internet Services Corp, has signed an agreement with BPI Entertainment News Wire to bring the service online. This boosts the entertainment news content available on Delphi, which is competing with Prodigy, …

Books available for review.

If you would like to review any of the books listed below, please contact the book reviews editor, Adam Morton, by email: adam.morton@nottingham.ac.uk

Akram-Lodhi, A. H., R. Chernomas & A. Sepehri (eds.) (2005) Globalization: Neo-Conservative Policies and Democratic Alternatives: Essays in Honour of John Loxley (Arbeiter Ring Publishing).

Alonso, L. E. & M. Martinez Lucio (eds.) (2006) Employment Relations in a Changing Society: Assessing the Post-Fordist Paradigm (Palgrave).

Althusser, L. (2006) Philosophy of the Encounter: Later Writings, 1978-1987 (Verso).

Anderson, P. (2005) Spectrum: From Right to Left in the World of Ideas (Verso). …

2 N.M. Officers Charged in Ark. Brawl

Two police officers from New Mexico are wanted in a bar fight in which one of them stomped a bouncer's head, Fort Smith police said Thursday.

Albuquerque officers Russell E. Carter, 24, and Kenneth Ronzone, 27, are accused in second-degree battery warrants issued Wednesday of fighting with two bouncers early Oct. 26, said Cpl. Mikeal Bates, a Fort Smith police spokesman.

At one point, bouncer Robert Dan Beshears was on the ground and Ronzone stomped …

FDA calls for ban on some hemorrhoid treatments

WASHINGTON (UPI) Some ingredients of major hemorrhoid remediesare of questionable effectiveness and should be banned, the Food andDrug Administration said Tuesday.

In a report containing its recommendation, the FDA said theingredients shown not to be helpful include Peruvian balsam,belladonna and a live yeast cell derivative.

Among the nonprescription products containing these ingredientsare Anusol Ointment, Wyanoids Suppositories and Preparation H.

The manufacturers, who had claimed that the disputed ingredientswere antiseptics or promoted …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Ericsson wins 4G network deal in Canada.

(ADPnews) - Apr 29, 2011 - Swedish telecoms equipment major Ericsson AB (STO:ERIC B) said on Thursday it would deliver a 4G, or long term evolution (LTE), network to Canadian operator Rogers Communications Inc (TSE:RCI.B).

No financial details were available.

The multi-year agreement covers Ericsson's multi-standard radio base …

AllBusiness.com sold to D&B for $55 million.

Business information company D&B (New York) has acquired all the assets of AllBusiness.com from a group of equity investors for $55 million and has raised its 2008 revenue outlook to account for the purchase. D&B said AllBusiness.com is expected to generate about $10 million of incremental revenue in 2008 and add to earnings in 2009. D&B said it purchased the entity as part of its effort to expand its internet business.

AllBusinss.com was established in 1999 with $20 million in venture capital funds and was sold to GE division NBC Internet in 2000 for $225 million. In 2002, NBC sold the property to private investors and the company raised $12.4 million through equity …

CLINTON VOWS TO FIGHT FIRES.(MAIN)

Byline: DOUGLAS JEHL New York Times

After what he called ``one of the worst fire seasons in memory,'' President Clinton said Saturday that he would seek to more than double federal spending on wildfire programs in the year ahead.

He asked Congress for nearly $1.6 billion to aid affected communities and to try to prevent future blazes.

The announcement was in part an attempt to bounce back politically after weeks in which Clinton and Vice President Al Gore have come under sharp criticism from Republicans, including Gov. George W. Bush, for what their critics say is a pro-environment bias that has increased the fire risk.

Concern about fires …

EDITORIAL: Let the people decide: The Summit County Council would improve county government by allowing charter review commissions to go directly to voters.(Editorial)

Jun. 26--In a step toward compromise with the county executive, three members of the Summit County Council have made a welcome proposal on how to amend the county's basic governing document, its charter. They have in mind a slightly modified charter review commission that would have the power to take proposed changes directly to the voters. Opposition from other council members to putting the issue on the fall ballot is strong, but misguided. The end result of the change would be a more orderly and rational process, as the founders of charter government envisioned. James McCarthy is circulating petitions to get a similar plan on the November ballot. The county executive has …

Shaq, Kobe back together for NBA All-Star game

The NBA All-Star game will see the return of the Shaquille O'Neal-Kobe Bryant pairing that once dominated league headlines, on and off the court.

Together they led the Los Angeles Lakers to three straight championships and four finals berths in five years, but that success was eventually overshadowed by the bickering that triggered their breakup.

On Sunday they'll be on the same team for the first time since the 2004 NBA finals, when the Lakers were knocked off by Detroit. They traded sporadic barbs through the years after O'Neal's departure, but say they've patched things up _ with O'Neal saying they were never that bad in the first place.

hint of mint

Don't wait till after dinner! Enliven your meals now with this bright, refreshing herb By Neil Zevnik

According to Greek mythology, the origins of the mint plant are to be found in a tale of lust, betrayal, and spite that rivals any prime-time reality show. We are told that I lades, god of the Underworld, cast his wandering eye upon a particularly tasty little nymph by the name of Mintile. Uades's wife, Persephone, was understandably put out, and in a fit of anger punished Minthe by turning her into a plant that would be trod upon by anyone strolling by. I lades was unable to undo his wife's spell, but he softened the blow by giving Minthe a sweet and soothing scent. Doubtful she …

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Most often in infectious disease, bacteria are the attackers.

But they, too, can be infected, by viruses and plasmids. And so in their genomes, bacteria have clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats or CRISPRs u "a small RNA-based immune system," Rebecca Terns told BioWorld Today, "that protects prokaryotes and archaea from invaders."

The CRISPR system has two components. One consists of bacterial RNAs that binds to DNA or RNA from viral invaders. Once it is bound, it attracts a protein complex that silences those invaders.

There are multiple CRISPR systems, and Terns said that one interesting fact is that some …

Utility chairman says steps taken to assure water supply.

Byline: Dick Cook

Jun. 10--Jerry Lee, the chairman of the Catoosa Utility District, asked more than 18,000 customers last week to stop any outside watering on a voluntary basis to allow the utility to fill its depleted water tanks.

Mr. Lee, a barber by trade, was elected to the water board almost a decade ago. He recently sat down with the Chattanooga Times Free Press to talk about drought, where Catoosa's utility gets its water and how growth in North Georgia is affecting the operation of his organization.

Q: You're a barber. How and why did you get involved in the Catoosa Utility District?

A: I had a daughter-in-law that worked there and she had lost her job, and we thought she lost it without probable cause. I had a friend of mine discussing it one day, and he told me that I ought to run for the water board.

I didn't realize there was as much politics in it as there was. When I got into the race, I got into it to …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

ORDERS FOR DURABLE GOODS STAGNANT IN APRIL AS U.S. ECONOMY STALLS.(BUSINESS)

Byline: SYLVIA NASAR - New York Times

Too much inventory and too little enthusiasm for new investment spending seem to be taking some steam out of the nation's factories, a government survey shows.

Orders for machinery, transportation equipment and other durable goods were flat in April, failing to recover from a sharp 3.7 percent drop in March, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. Shipments of durable goods actually fell 1.9 percent last month, a big drop.

Durable-goods orders in April were a seasonally adjusted $130.3 billion, after moving down a revised 3.7 percent in March to $130.246 billion.

That came as a surprise to …

UK prime minister's senior aide resigns

A senior aide to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown resigned Saturday after reportedly circulating scurrilous rumors about political opponents.

Special adviser Damien McBride stepped down after a newspaper published a summary of e-mails he allegedly sent to prominent political blogger Derek Draper, a supporter of Britain's governing Labour Party.

Draper said the e-mails, sent in January, were intended to provide fodder for a gossip Web site called "The Red Rag" which would attack members of Britain's opposition Conservative Party. But in a post to his blog, Labour List, he noted that the Web site never got off the ground and that the personal …

About-Face! Dow Declines 8

NEW YORK The stock market took a dramatic last-hour about-faceand ended the day down 8 points.

At 2 p.m., the Dow industrial average was up 22.15 points to3,362.17, registering encouragement over the latest data onemployment.

By the close, the measure of blue-chip stocks was down 8.38 to3,332.18.

Losers outnumbered gainers 2 to 1 in nationwide trading of NewYork Stock Exchange-listed issues; at 2 p.m., those figures were justthe opposite.

Volume was 189.21 million shares.

The Labor …

Scalzetto, Jerry.(Obituaries)

SCALZETTO Jerry We all lost you eight years ago, but we never really lost you in our hearts, in our thoughts and we continue to love you forever. Yes, we …

KNICK WANTS RPI-UNION GAME ARENA EXEC SEEKS ANNUAL ECAC MEETING BETWEEN TWO AREA RIVALS.(SPORTS)

Byline: BOB CROCE Staff writer

ALBANY On a day when Knickerbocker Arena officials announced that the building will play host next year to college hockey's premier tournament, an additional idea was floated at the press conference.

As reported by the Times Union a month ago, the Knick has won the rights to the 1996 Division I East Regional for the second time in three years.

Along with Bob Ducatte, the athletic director for host school RPI, Knick general manager Rick Linio lobbied for the Knick to become the site of at least one regular-season Eastern College Athletic Conference game between RPI and Union.

``Let's talk about that. We'd …

Lackey, Angels ruin Manuel's debut in win over Mets

John Lackey scattered six hits over seven-plus innings Tuesday night to lead the Los Angeles Angels to a 6-1 victory that spoiled Jerry Manuel's debut as New York Mets manager.

Manuel was promoted from bench coach after Willie Randolph was fired a night earlier.

In a matchup of staff aces, Lackey (4-1) outpitched Johan Santana (7-5). The Angels' right-hander, whose 2008 debut was delayed by a strained biceps, shut out the Mets after giving up a run in the first inning. He struck out seven in 7 2-3 innings and walked one _ the last batter he faced.

Scot Shields pitched 1 1-3 hitless innings to earn his second save.

Santana gave up five …