Thursday, 15 March 2012

Bastianini, Ettore

Bastianini, Ettore

Bastianini, Ettore, notable Italian baritone; b. Siena, Sept. 24, 1922; d. Sirmione, Jan. 25, 1967. He studied in Florence with Flaminio Contini. In 1945 he made his operatic debut in the bass role of Colline in Ravenna. He made his first appearance at Milan's La Scala as Tiresias in Oedipus Rex in 1948. After additional training from Ricciana Bettarini, he made his debut as a baritone in Bologna in the role of Germont père. He sang Andrei in the rev. version of War and Peace in Florence in 1953. On Dec. 5, 1953, he made his Metropolitan Opera debut in N.Y. as Germont père, and was on its roster until 1957 and again in 1959-60 and from 1964 …

Age's Melancholy

If old age is a second childhood

No wonder I have changed.

Those days of wandering slingshot in hand

Searching for a rabbit

Or outraged magpie,

Perhaps a startled stoat

A pheasant or duck afloat

On some shaded pond

Have gone.

Now it's hours of household chores

That take eternity, so there's never time

To contemplate

Explore hedgerows where memories lie;

A forgotten kiss or squeeze of hand

That still send shivers down the spine.

For what does the heart ache?

A second chance? Those "only's..."

Hung on a …

Most Asian markets rise; Japanese exporters, financial companies gain after Wall Street rally

Most Asian markets rose Monday, with tech and financial companies gaining in Japan after Wall Street rallied at the end last week.

Meanwhile, property developers helped to boost the Hong Kong market, and the Shanghai benchmark gave up most of its early, sharp gains that came with a new regulatory ruling.

Tokyo's Nikkei 225 stock index rose 1.6 percent to 13,696.5. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 2.2 percent to 24,721.7. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.7 percent to 3,117.0 after surging nearly 7 percent in early trading.

Despite the robust gains there, traders in Tokyo said investors would likely trade with caution for the rest of the month ahead …

Weather Almanac

Yesterday's high 23

Record high 73, 2000

Normal high 43

Yesterday's low 15

Record low -5, 1928

Normal …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Cranberries: A side dish for your health

They are a rich source of proanthocyanidins, too.

Although it's a long way to go until Thanksgiving again, when cranberries garnish the special meal in the form of cranberry sauce, there are still plenty of reasons to add cranberries to your regular diet. Cranberries - like its cousins blueberries and bilberries - are a great source of vitamin C and fiber (when used in a whole form, as opposed to juice). All of these berries are also rich sources of bioflavonoids, including a class of bioflavonoids called proanthocyanidins.

While chlorophyll is well known for coloring the plant world green, and the carotenoids add a sprinkle of orange and yellow, most of the purples, …

Poland's Gdansk renames street after Vaclav Havel

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Gdansk — the birthplace of Poland's Solidarity movement — has renamed a street after Vaclav Havel to honor the Czech anti-communist icon deeply revered by Poles.

Officials in the city, the home of Poland's own anti-communist icon Lech Walesa, inaugurated Vaclav Havel Avenue on Friday, the same day the Czech playwright and president was being laid to rest in his …

Sierra Club asks feds to protect PR coastal land

Conservationists on Monday petitioned the federal government to protect an undisturbed swath of Puerto Rican coastline that is prime nesting ground for the endangered leatherback turtle _ among the largest reptiles in the world.

The Sierra Club is urging the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to set aside a corridor of coastal land for the hulking turtles, which can grow to more than 6 (2 meters) and weigh almost 2,000 pounds (907 kilograms).

The 3,200-acre (1,300-hectare) stretch of land immediately north of El Yunque, the only tropical rain forest in the U.S. National Forest system, was protected by …

DO BE DO BE DO

Today Hearing wonderous stories: Each spring, Victory GardensTheater invites Chicago celebrities to write 10-minute theatricalvignettes. This year's result, "Chicago Stories," will be performedtonight at the Four Seasons Hotel, 120 E. Delaware, at a fund-raiserfor the not-for-profit theater. This year's playwrights are Channel2 news anchors Mary Ann Childers and Jay Levine, WGN-AM personalityKathy O'Malley and Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White. Theevent, which begins at 6 p.m., includes cocktails, dinner, the show,silent auction and a raffle. Tickets are $200. Call (773) 549-5788.Musical sprouts: A musical version of "The Secret Garden" blooms at11:45 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. …

Bush stirs up fans with lockout posts on Twitter

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Reggie Bush insists he was only joking when he stirred up fans with posts on his Twitter account about enjoying free time during the NFL lockout.

Bush drew critical responses from a number of his nearly 1.7 million Twitter followers when he posted: "Everybody complaining about the lockout! Shoot I'm making the most of it! Vacation, rest, relaxing, appearances here and there! I'm good!"

Bush then added in a second post moments later: "Right about now we would be slaving in 100 degree heat, practicing twice a day, while putting our bodies at risk for nothing."

The timing of the posts heightened criticism of Bush because the flashy running back has been …

Biden tells Leno US did fine in Russian spy swap

Vice President Joe Biden had to convince a skeptical Jay Leno on Friday that the United States didn't get a raw deal from Russia in the biggest spy swap since the Cold War.

Leno asked Biden during a taping of "The Tonight Show" why the U.S. was sending 10 accused spies back to Russia while getting only four in return.

"That doesn't seem fair," Leno said.

"We got back four really good ones," Biden reassured Leno. "And the ten, they've been here a long time, but they hadn't done much."

Leno then showed a sultry photo of alleged Russian agent Anna Chapman and asked: "Do we have any spies that …

Reviewing civil liability

UPDATE

Government to review Civil Liability

On April 16th, the BC government announced it was reviewing civil liability and seeking public input. A public consultation paper on civil liability was released, and a deadline of June 15th was set for public feedback.

Of major interest to the profession is that the review will look at joint and several liability. According to the consultation paper, "...deep-pocket defendants face enormous liabilities, and rising insurance premiums, to pay entire damage awards that are out of proportion to their degree of fault."

The consultation paper noted that there are a variety of reform possibilities in the areas of joint …

Spain's justice minister wants to outlaw 2 Basque nationalist parties

Spain's justice minister said Wednesday he wants to outlaw two Basque separatist parties on grounds that they are part of the banned wing of the militant group ETA.

Such a move would bar the two parties from fielding candidates in Spanish general elections scheduled for March 9.

The minister, Mariano Fernandez Bermejo, told a news conference he would ask the Cabinet on Friday to authorize legal proceedings to outlaw the two parties _ Basque Nationalist Action and the Communist Party of the Basque Lands.

Spanish courts would make the final decision on barring them.

ETA's political wing, Batasuna, was outlawed by the Supreme Court in …

Liverpool hopes Man U slips up against Man City

Liverpool hopes that Manchester United will be so distracted by the mouthwatering Champions League final against Barcelona that it will take its eye off the Premier League title race.

Liverpool players say they are ready to take advantage if United slips up on Sunday against local rival Manchester City, which has won its last four games.

By then, Liverpool, which has scored 26 goals in winning seven of its last eight Premier League games, could be on top of the standings on goal difference for one day at least by winning at West Ham on Saturday.

"We will keep going until the end. We won't surrender when we're so close," Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard said. "Winning the title with this club would mean the world to me."

Manager Rafa Benitez is also out to end Liverpool's 19-year wait for the league title and says his team can do nothing more than keep winning its games.

"Every single week it has been an opportunity for us, to get three points and to put pressure on Manchester United," said the Spaniard, who faces the Hammers without injured midfielder Xabi Alonso.

"We must keep winning, keep pushing and see what happens. It could be difficult for them against Manchester City, but United are a very good team with equally good players. But you never know what could happen. It is up to us to win our games and be waiting."

If the results go the wrong way for Liverpool, however, the league title could be out of reach on Wednesday when United, which has a game in hand, faces Wigan.

Gerrard says his team's form keeps it in contention for a first league title since 1990. But it's likely he will have to wait another season.

"We have got world-class players, we have turned in some fantastic displays of attacking football and some really solid defensive performances. We have got absolutely everything you need to be successful at the very highest level."

But United manager Alex Ferguson is confident that his team, which won 3-1 at Arsenal in a Champions League semifinal to reach the final for the second season in a row, is also playing at its best after five straight Premier League wins.

"The team has come into top form at the right time," he said Friday. "City have won their last four games and they've got some good players. But we're going into the game with a great deal of confidence ourselves.

"A lot of our players are smelling the big games now. If you look at the last few weeks we've had a fantastic performance in Porto, two great performances against Arsenal, the second half against Tottenham and a really good display at Middlesbrough."

Third place Chelsea is virtually out of contention with six points to make up on United and has a tough game at fourth place Arsenal on Sunday.

The game is a meeting of two eliminated Champions League semifinalists and both the Blues and the Gunners will be out to lift the gloom of European failure.

Chelsea is three points behind Liverpool and six ahead of Arsenal and coach Guus Hiddink, who has led the club to an FA Cup final against Everton, hopes his team will bounce back from the acrimonious end to its 1-1 draw with Barcelona on Wednesday.

Chelsea appeared to be going through to the Champions League final until Barcelona equalized in the third minute of injury time to advance on away goals. The Chelsea players were angry with the referee for disallowing several penalty appeals and Hiddink hopes his players will have calmed down enough to take on Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium.

"When you have 11 grown men battling to get to the final and at least three penalty decisions don't go your way, you can't expect men to walk off quietly," said Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard.

"There was nothing violent, it was just angry because we had worked so very hard to get this far."

Chelsea takes on an Arsenal side that caved in against Man United on Tuesday, losing 3-1 at home in the other Champions League semifinal, and manager Arsene Wenger has to lift a side which has failed to win any title for the fourth season in a row.

Down at the foot of the standings, last place West Bromwich Albion appears certain to be relegated and needs a home victory over Wigan to stand any chance of survival.

The Baggies are three points behind Newcastle and Middlesbrough who have 31 points but don't play each other until Monday.

One place above the northeastern neighbors lies Hull which has a three-point advantage over them with three rounds of games to go. The Tigers host Stoke, which is virtually safe.

Sunderland, which has 35 points, visits Bolton while Blackburn, 37 points and almost safe in 15th place, hosts Portsmouth which is one place above with 38.

Fifth-place Aston Villa goes to Fulham and Everton, one place behind, welcomes Tottenham with all four clubs chasing spots in next season's Europa League, the rebranded UEFA Cup.

After all the fuss, govt health plan to cover few

What's all the fuss about?

After all the noise over Democrats' push for a government insurance plan to compete with private carriers, coverage numbers are finally in:

Two percent.

That's the estimated share of Americans younger than 65 who'd sign up for the public option plan under the health care bill that Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is steering toward House approval.

The underwhelming statistic is raising questions about whether the government plan will be the iron-fisted competitor that private insurers warn will shut them down or a niche operator that becomes a haven for patients with health insurance horror stories.

Some experts are wondering if lawmakers have wasted too much time arguing about the public plan, giving short shrift to basics such as ensuring that new coverage will be affordable.

"The public option is a significant issue, but its place in the debate is completely out of proportion to its actual importance to consumers," said Drew Altman, president of the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. "It has sucked all the oxygen out of the room and diverted attention from bread-and-butter consumer issues, such as affordable coverage and comprehensive benefits."

The Democratic health care bills would extend coverage to the uninsured by providing government help with premiums and prohibiting insurers from excluding people in poor health or charging them more. But to keep from piling more on the federal deficit, most of the uninsured will have to wait until 2013 for help. Even then, many will have to pay a significant share of their own health care costs.

The latest look at the public option comes from the Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan economic analysts for lawmakers.

It found that the scaled back government plan in the House bill wouldn't overtake private health insurance. To the contrary, it might help the insurers a little.

The budget office estimated that about 6 million people would sign up for the public option in 2019, when the House bill is fully phased in. That represents about 2 percent of a total of 282 million Americans under age 65. (Older people are covered through Medicare.)

The overwhelming majority of the population would remain in private health insurance plans sponsored by employers. Others, mainly low-income people, would be covered through an expanded Medicaid program.

To be fair, most people would not have access to the new public plan. Under the House bill, it would be offered through new insurance exchanges open only to those who buy coverage on their own or work for small companies. Yet even within that pool of 30 million people, only 1-in-5 would take the public option.

Who's likely to sign up?

The budget office said "a less healthy pool of enrollees" would probably be attracted to the public option, drawn by the prospect of looser rules on access to specialists and medical services.

As a result, premiums in the public plan would be higher than the average for private plans. That could nudge healthy middle-class workers and their families to sign up for private plans.

"The concern was that the public option would destabilize the bulk of private insurance, but in fact what Congress has fashioned is very targeted," said economist Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund. "It's not going to be taking away the insurance industry's core business."

It's unclear whether there are enough votes in the Senate for a public plan. The version that Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has offered would let states opt out, probably leaving a smaller plan that the House would want.

Insurers aren't buying the budget office analysis. Asked if it might soften that opposition, industry spokesman Robert Zirkelbach of America's Health Insurance Plans responded with a curt "No."

While a government plan might start out modestly, insurers fear that Congress could change the rules later, opening it up to all people and setting take-it-or-leave payments for hospitals and medical providers, instead of negotiating, as the House bill calls for.

For the same reason, employer groups also remain wary. Big companies don't want to lose control of their health care budgets and instead have the government send them a tax bill.

"That cost is going to come back to you one way or another ... and it's coming back in the way of taxes and liabilities," said Eastman Kodak's chief executive, Antonio M. Perez, speaking for the Business Roundtable. "We just don't believe that there are miracles out there."

If Congress passes a public plan that's not much of a sensation, Democrats might have reason to regret all the time and energy they invested in it.

___

On the Net:

House bill: http://tinyurl.com/lftnuj

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

From closet to D.C.; Paul Schrader's talkin' about a variation on familiar character in 'Walker'

Reading over my notes after interviewing Paul Schrader, thewriter-director of "The Walker" and many other splendid films, Iheard his voice coming through so loudly and clearly that it struckme the conventional form of an interview ("He paused," "he said,"etc.) would only obscure his style. In London, the newspaperssometimes string together quotes and present them as if the subjecthas written them for publication. I thought I would try somethinglike that.

All you need to know going in is that Schrader's film stars WoodyHarrelson as a gay escort of society women in Washington, D.C. Oneof his friends, a senator's wife, finds the dead body of her lover.(My review appears Friday.)

On the origins of "The Walker":

This film started with my "American Gigolo." I was wondering whatthat character would be like in middle age, and I realized he wouldbe funny; that his skills would be social. He'd be like a societywalker, and that struck me as an interesting occupational metaphor.

All of my man-in-a-room films are occupational service metaphors:a taxi driver, a drug dealer, a gigolo, now a society walker. It fitrather neatly into a kind of age 20, 30, 40, 50 progression. If in"Light Sleeper," I took him out of the front seat and put him in theback seat, in "The Walker," I took him out of the closet and put himin Washington, D.C. In my mind, those three films are linked.

It's a character piece, and one of the reasons that I had troublegetting it financed was that everyone wanted me to hype up theWashington thriller aspect. But that's such a set genre, theWashington thriller, that I figured if I went into that, I wouldn'thave a character piece anymore. Movies are about things that happenand people who do things, and this guy's mantra is, "I'm not naive,I'm superficial." So he's not the stuff of which movies arefinanced. I knew I needed to have some plot because otherwise peoplewould tire of these ladies talking. So I created a kind of a plotbut I tried to keep it far enough in the background. It's similar to"Taxi Driver" or "Gigolo" or "Light Sleeper" in that way; they allhave a plot but you don't really remember the plot so much as youremember the character.

On casting Woody Harrelson:

[He] arrived as a surprise to me because I when I wrote it I hadsort of financed it with Steve Martin and Julie Christie, and thenthat fell out. Now I was looking for an actor. Woody's agent calledme up and asked, "Have you thought about Woody?" I said no. I mean,nothing Woody's has done would make me think about him for thisrole. Jeremy, his agent, said, "Well, I was talking to him. He wantsto do something really different. Would you like to meet with him?"I said of course I would, because I've been looking for an actor whocould do comedy, and Woody is a good actor, despite his publicpersona of being a kind of a doofus. And so we met, and he wasplugged into it and off we went.

There was some trepidation; there was a point in pre-productionwhere I felt I might be jumping into an empty pool, but he finallygot into it and took off.

On working with Lauren Bacall:

Betty is a tough old bird. She has a reputation, which she hasearned, as being a tough lady. My initial response to her was toplay her game. She wants a lot of praise, and after a number ofdays, I realized that there was no praise that was enough, and shewanted to be praised in the presence of other actors so that you gotstuck if you had to tell her how great her last take was and therewould be Kristin Scott Thomas sitting there, Woody there. And nomatter what you said to her, it wasn't quite enough. So I decidedafter about a week to just be real professional, basically: "Good,very good, Lauren, thank you, let's move on," and not get into theeffusive flattery.

She didn't like that and Kristin told me that I was the maincourse for dinner on a number of evenings as Lauren launched intome. But I think her work started getting better when it wasn't allthis courtship and flattery. It's interesting about Lauren, becauseshe's just 83 now. She is the same age as Sidney Lumet, younger thanArthur Penn, yet you think of her as being older because she wasfamous so young. She was 19 when she was married to Bogart, so youthink of her as somehow an actor from the 1940s, which she was, youknow, in a way.

On the essence of character:

The Woody character genuinely sympathizes with the women. It'snot a job. These guys who do this, for the most part, don't do itfor money. They may get gifts. They love girl-talk. It's a veryancient profession. I'm sure Versailles was full of them. And thekinds of things that would make a heterosexual man wither in agony,endless talk about fabrics and who's done what, is endlesslyentertaining. What makes Carter interesting is he's using it as aprotection against the legacy of his father and grandfather. Hecan't compete with them, except as a black sheep, so he can becomethe guy that's whispered about. That's why he's still in Washington,D.C., and that's what makes the character interesting, because heshouldn't be [there] anymore. The essence of character iscontradiction. Why is he still in Washington? Why is he both in andout of the closet? Then you start to have an interesting character.

Between Ourselves

Jon Fitzgerald is a 43-year-old Royal Oak resident - and about the most dedicated volunteer LGBT community center Affirmations in Ferndale could ask for. There, the volunteerturned-part-time-worker spends 20 hours a week working at the center for pay, and countless other others helping out for free. Fitzgerald hopes to inspire others in the LGBT community - and beyond - to do the same.

1 How did you first get involved as a volunteer in the LGBT community?

After being "downsized" at the end of last year at my job, I realized I finally had time to pursue something I always wanted to do: volunteer. I picked Affirmations because after doing some research online, their mission statement was something I could believe in and stand behind.

2 What do you do for Affirmations now as a paid program assistant?

There are so many different programs happening at Affirmations on a regular basis that I get an opportunity to work on a variety of projects. For example, I recently was able to assist with the August Pittmann-Puckett Art Gallery opening. It also gives me an opportunity to coordinate an event from inception such as the Fall Family Photo Shoot and Identity Dialogue Sessions for next month's Coming Out Week events.

3 I understand that in addition to your paid work, you also volunteer for the center. Which programs are you involved in as a volunteer?

Currently, I perform a weekly shift at the front desk. I am also on two committees. The first is the Volunteer Development Committee that meets monthly and works consistently on enhancing the volunteer program with a focus on defining leadership volunteers. The second committee is the Diversity and Inclusion Committee. I was honored to be asked to join in and facilitate a training program that encourages everyone one of us to openly and candidly discuss our differences along with the things that make us the same.

4 Why is volunteering important to you?

For me, it is about giving back and being involved in a community that I love. I know it sounds like a clich�, but there is no other clever way of saying it. It turns out that doing volunteer work is the first time in my life that I feel I am doing what I should be doing. The longer I do it, the more I want to do it. On a daily basis, it reaffirms that I am an active participant in the LGBT community as well as in life and not just someone watching from a distance.

5 What would be your advice to someone who wants to get involved as a volunteer - but doesn't know how to get started?

Pick something you feel strongly about. Go online, ask your friends, do whatever you need to so that you can identify local organizations that share your passion and then make the telephone call. Before you know it, you will be asking yourself why you waited so long to get involved.

Be like Jon. To learn how to volunteer at Affirmations, visit their Web site at www.goaffirmations. org.

[Sidebar]

"It turns out that doing volunteer work is the first time in my life that I feel I am doing what I should be doing. The longer I do it, the more I want to do it."

[Author Affiliation]

Between Ourselves is a weekly feature that highlights members of Michigan's LGBT and allied community. To recommend someone for Between Ourselves, e-mail Jessica atjessica@ pridesource.com

Japan: Declining Production of RSF for Nonwovens

The sales of rayon staple fiber for dry-laid nonwovens have been declining since May. "There seems to be around a 10% fall in sales compared to the similar period of last year," said an RSF producer. One of the reasons for such a fall stems from an increase in imports of made-up goods, piece goods as well as staple. Customs statistics compiled by the Ministry of Finance indicate that RSF imports doubled from the first half of 2003 to 10,112 tons. In addition, imports of rayon nonwovens increased by 24.2% to 2,083 tons. Instead of a decline in shipments of RSF, product makers are busy processing imported piece goods.

Another anxiety for rayon makers is the movement of polyester fiber producers, who are making efforts to increase the use of polyester staple fiber for spun-laced wipers, which are made by mixing RSF and PSF together.

Industry sources expect that the sales of RSF will remain unchanged in the second half due to competition with PSF and an increase in imports despite an increase in sales in the season.

Husband of freed hostage Ingrid Betancourt admits to icy reunion

The husband of rescued Colombian hostage Ingrid Betancourt says their marriage may be over.

In an interview with the Bogota newspaper El Tiempo, Juan Carlos Lecompte acknowledges what many noted when the two reunited in front of TV cameras after last week's rescue.

Betancourt greeted him coldly.

Then she went to France without him, accompanied by her two children from a previous marriage.

Lecompte says in the interview published Wednesday that Betancourt's love for him "could have disappeared" during her six years as a rebel hostage.

He dismisses as gossip published rumors of an affair while Betancourt was captive. Lecompte had worked hard for Betancourt's release.

The two were married in 1997.

Giants 10, Dodgers 2

Los Angeles San Francisco
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Furcal ss 4 1 1 0 Renteri ss 5 2 4 0
Theriot 2b 3 0 1 0 FSnchz 2b 4 1 2 3
Blake 3b 4 0 0 0 Whitsd c 0 0 0 0
Kemp cf 4 0 0 0 A.Huff 1b 4 2 2 3
Loney 1b 4 0 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 1 0 0 0
Mitchll lf 3 1 1 1 Posey c 5 1 2 2
RJhnsn rf 3 0 0 0 C.Ray p 0 0 0 0
Barajs c 3 0 0 0 Burrell lf 4 1 1 0
Lilly p 1 0 0 0 Schrhlt rf 1 0 0 0
Troncs p 0 0 0 0 Uribe 3b 4 0 0 0
Hu ph 1 0 1 0 JGuilln rf 3 2 3 2
JefWvr p 0 0 0 0 C.Ross pr-lf 0 0 0 0
Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Rownd cf 4 0 0 0
Belisari p 0 0 0 0 JSnchz p 2 0 0 0
Dotel p 0 0 0 0 SCasill p 0 0 0 0
Lindsey ph 1 0 0 0 Fontent ph-2b 1 1 1 0
Link p 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 2 4 1 Totals 38 10 15 10

Los Angeles 100 010 000— 2
San Francisco 104 120 02x—10

E_Uribe (8). DP_Los Angeles 1. LOB_Los Angeles 3, San Francisco 7. 2B_Furcal (21), F.Sanchez 2 (18), Posey (21). 3B_Renteria (2), A.Huff (5). HR_Mitchell (1), A.Huff (25), Posey (14), J.Guillen (2). S_Theriot.

IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Lilly L,8-11 3 1-3 7 6 6 0 3
Troncoso 2-3 1 0 0 1 1
Jef.Weaver 1 1-3 3 2 2 0 1
Sherrill 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Belisario 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Dotel 1 1 0 0 0 1
Link 1 3 2 2 0 1
San Francisco
J.Sanchez W,11-8 7 4 2 1 0 12
S.Casilla 1 0 0 0 0 1
C.Ray 1 0 0 0 0 1

HBP_by Lilly (J.Guillen, J.Sanchez). WP_J.Sanchez.

Umpires_Home, Marty Foster; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Ed Hickox.

T_2:37. A_38,434 (41,915).

Our heroes They met as teenagers on combat training on the rough and rugged terrain of Benbecula.

They met as teenagers on combat training on the rough and ruggedterrain of Benbecula.

They came together again on the killing fields of Iraq.

Two brave young Territorial Army soldiers from the North-east inthe thick of battle.

Privates Alan George from Fraserburgh, and Hugh Lancaster, fromKeith, were to prove they had true grit.

Especially that black night in April when the comrades-in-armshelped rescue maimed and under-fire US troops.

Along with others in the 7th Battalion of the Royal Regiment, Alanand Hugh braved being shot by snipers' bullets as they swooped topluck the casualties to safety.

They were part of an air ambulance armed escort scrambled afterthe US troops' vehicle was smashed open by a roadside bomb.

Alan recalled: "These poor Americans had shrapnel and multiplegunshot wounds, missing legs and arms.

"The insurgents were still in the area. Still firing. But thewounded were going to die if we didn't keep moving - and movingfast."

Now safely back at their homes after their six-month tour of duty,Alan and Hugh - both 20 - have been jointly nominated in the Herocategory of our Aberdeen's Champion awards.

But the lads are modest about their bravery.

Alan, who works on mum and dad Moira and Carlton's livestock farmat Lonmay, said: " You didn't think about the danger. You just did itto help save those guys' lives."

Hugh - son of fruit-grower Chris and his wife Sue - is about tostart work as a civilian at RAF Kinloss.

The Keith lad said: "I reckon me and Alan and the other members ofthe unit will always be friends.

"It's a sort of brotherhood."

m.simpson@ajl.co.uk

Study sees discrepancies in VA care for men, women

Women veterans aren't receiving the same quality of outpatient care as men at many Department of Veterans Affairs' facilities, according to an agency review obtained exclusively by The Associated Press.

The review appears to validate the complaints of advocates and some members of Congress who have said the health care system needs to focus more on women's health.

Women make up about 5 percent of the VA's population, but that number is expected to nearly double in the next two years as more women return home from Iraq and Afghanistan and seek care.

The review of the quality of care at VA facilities, which was mandated by Congress, found that at about one-third of its facilities, the quality of outpatient care given to women wasn't as good as what was offered to men.

It said that the VA has made strides in improving care for women veterans, such as creating onsite mammography services and establishing women's clinics at most of its medical centers. It also said the VA is attempting to recruit clinicians with training in women's care and broadening its approach to better address diseases prevalent among women such as lung cancer.

However, it said that there were barriers that remained, such as the need to train more physicians in women's care and for more equipment to meet women's health needs.

"VHA is continuing to investigate the possibility of gender disparity in delivery of care through research efforts aimed at further delineating the factors involved," the review said.

It noted that other studies have found better surgical outcomes and decreased mortality for women at VA hospitals compared to women who receive care under the Medicare Advantage Program or under private care. And, performance of breast and cervical cancer screening exceeds that of commercial and some government plans.

But Dr. William E. Duncan, associate deputy undersecretary for health for quality and safety at the Department of Veterans Affairs, said any discrepancies in VA care were unacceptable and the agency is aggressively addressing the issue.

"We're striving to understand the reason for these health disparities and to eliminate differences in veterans health care based on personal characteristics," Duncan said.

Data was not available to compare the inpatient quality of care between men and women.

Overall, women make up about 14 percent of the U.S. Armed Forces. Of the 1.7 million troops who have deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, more than 190,000 _ or about 11 percent _ are women.

Among the other findings:

_Older and younger veterans appear to be receiving the same quality of care;

_About 86 percent of homeless veterans seen by VA received primary care, mental health care and/or substance abuse services;

_About 98 percent of appointments were completed within 30 days in primary care clinics and about 97 percent were completed during that period at specialty clinics;

_Overall quality of care appears to be good when reviewed using commonly accepted health care benchmarks;

_Minority veterans surveyed were generally less satisfied with inpatient and outpatient care than white veterans, but it wasn't clear if the quality of care offered was different. A more comprehensive study of care for minority veterans is expected to be complete this summer.

___

On the Net: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs: http://www.va.gov/

Monday, 12 March 2012

Maria Sharapova loses to Gisela Dulko at Wimbledon

Maria Sharapova won seven straight games during one stretch but let a late lead slip away Wednesday and lost to Gisela Dulko, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4 in the second round at Wimbledon.

Sharapova saved four match points in a wild, 14-point final game. But on the fifth she pushed an easy forehand long, and she was out of the tournament after two rounds for the second year in a row.

The 2004 champion was playing in her fourth event since rejoining the tour last month following shoulder surgery in October. She's ranked 60th but was seeded 24th because of past success at the All England Club.

Dulko, ranked 45th, matched her best showing at Wimbledon by reaching the third round. She had won a total of only three games in two previous matches against Sharapova, but the Argentine repeatedly won points by hitting drop shots, while Sharapova struggled with her serve and forehand.

The day's first match on Centre Court was played in warm sunshine, and the new roof remained open for a third consecutive day. Dulko played almost flawless tennis at the start, committing only four unforced errors in the first 11 games.

But leading 3-love in the second set, she began spraying her shots, and Sharapova took advantage to win seven consecutive games.

Sharapova then wobbled, double-faulting to lose serve and fall behind 2-1 in the final set. She double-faulted twice in a row and lost serve at love to fall behind to stay, 4-3.

With Dulko serving in the final game, Sharapova lost two challenges as she fell behind 40-15. Always at her best under pressure, Sharapova hit a booming return and a feathery drop shot to overcome the first two match points, and her return winner erased another.

But with a point for 5-all, Sharapova pushed a backhand into the net, and she made errors on the final two points as well.

Sharapova fell to 6-1 this year in three-set matches. She finished with nine double-faults and had at least one in every service game in the final set.

On Court 1, Novak Djokovic cruised into the third round with a straight-set win over Simon Greul of Germany.

The fourth-seeded Djokovic won eight straight games after going down 1-0 in the second set to secure a 7-5, 6-1, 6-4 victory.

The Serb threw his racket in anger after being broken to start the second set, and also struggled with his serve in the third. He traded breaks twice with Greul before getting a decisive breakthrough to go up 5-4.

Djokovic will next play No. 28-seeded Mardy Fish of the United States, who matched his best showing at Wimbledon by reaching the third round when he beat Janko Tipsarevic 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.

On the women's side, No. 16 Zheng Jie, a semifinalist as a wild card last year, lost to Daniela Hantuchova 6-3, 7-5. No. 10 Nadia Petrova, No. 14 Dominika Cibulkova and No. 26 Virginie Razzano won.

Pakistani officials: Suspected US strike kills 13

A suspected U.S. missile strike killed 13 people Saturday in a Pakistani tribal region where several militant outfits plot attacks on Western troops across the border in Afghanistan, officials said.

A roadside bomb aimed at police elsewhere in the country's volatile northwest killed a civilian and wounded eight people. Also, gunmen opened fire on police at a court in the southern city of Karachi; one police officer and an attacker were killed.

The attacks came as U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke met with Pakistani leaders in Islamabad, the latest in a series of visits aimed at shoring up Pakistani support for the American effort in Afghanistan.

The missile, apparently fired from an unmanned drone, struck a house in Haider Khel village near North Waziristan's Mir Ali town, said two intelligence officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media on the record.

Local government official Noor Mohammad said at least 13 people had been killed, while the intelligence officials said some foreigners were among the dead. Their exact identities and nationalities were not immediately clear.

The U.S. frequently uses missile strikes to take out Taliban and al-Qaida targets in Pakistan's northwest, especially the lawless tribal regions where many insurgents hide.

This year, the vast majority of the missile strikes have landed in North Waziristan, a segment of the tribal belt that houses several militant groups that focus on attacking Western troops across the border in Afghanistan.

Pakistan publicly protests the strikes as violations of its sovereignty, and the attacks are deeply unpopular among the Pakistani people. But Islamabad is believed to assist in at least some of the missile attacks.

The U.S. doesn't publicly acknowledge the existence of the covert, CIA-run program.

During a news conference Saturday, Holbrooke said Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terror network had been severely degraded in recent years. But he declined to lay blame for the failure to find bin Laden or Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

The two wanted men are "still at large, but they are under an intense pressure," Holbrooke said. The envoy also praised Pakistan's efforts in fighting militancy and acknowledged the thousands of lives the country has lost in the fight.

He said the U.S. was committed to improving the lives of ordinary Pakistanis, pointing to ongoing partnerships aimed at easing problems related to water and energy and a host of other challenges facing the South Asian nation.

The roadside bomb in Dera Ismail Khan, which lies near the tribal belt, showed that Islamist militants continue to be active despite U.S. missile strikes and Pakistani army offensives against them.

Senior police official Aslam Khatak said the attack happened as the patrol vehicle traveled through the gritty town and that among the wounded was an area police official who played an important role in arresting militants, he said.

Six policemen and two civilians were wounded, while the one fatality was a passer-by.

In Karachi, police launched a manhunt for four suspected militants who escaped from a court after several assailants threw hand grenades and opened fire there, according to police officer Iqbal Mahmood. One police officer and an attacker were killed in the shootout.

Also Saturday, gunmen opened fire on a vehicle carrying an area police chief, Abdul Wahab, in the southwestern city of Quetta, wounding him critically, said Hamid Shakeel, a senior police official.

___

Associated Press writers Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Munir Ahmed in Islamabad, Abdul Sattar in Quetta and Ashraf Khan from Karachi contributed to this report.

Flood toll rises, rains resume in Hanoi

Tran Xuan Mien spent an entire day clearing mud and debris out of his flooded house _ only to watch the water rush back into his living room on Tuesday.

"I'm exhausted," said Mien, 62, who lives in Western Hanoi. "My house is full of water again."

After a respite from the rain for much of Monday, showers resumed in northern and central Vietnam on Tuesday and the death toll from days of flooding continued to rise.

Authorities announced they had recovered 19 more bodies, bringing the total to 85

Meanwhile, residents of the capital, where forecasters say rains were the heaviest in 35 years, attempted to clean up.

Mien has hoisted his washing machine, refrigerator and two motorbikes onto piles of bricks to keep them out of the water. "I've been living here since 1984, but I've never seen rain like this," he said.

Forecasters predicted several more days of rain but said it would be lighter than the downpours that soaked the region over the weekend.

With swollen rivers and lakes across the Red River Delta, authorities remained concerned that dikes could break. Some 9,000 soldiers had been sent to make emergency repairs.

Another 6,000 people had been sent to help 35,000 households affected by the floods in Hanoi, where 23 neighborhoods remained under at least a foot (about 30 centimeters) of water on Tuesday.

Water levels were lower in Hanoi on Tuesday, but schools remained closed and in some areas, garbage and debris floated into flooded homes.

"My house is still surrounded by water and it smells horrible," said Nguyen Thi Lien, 67, a retiree who lives in western Hanoi. "We have limited water, just for cooking, and we haven't had a bath in four days."

Vietnamese authorities were concerned about possible outbreaks of waterborne diseases, said Nguyen Huy Nga of the Health Ministry.

"Diarrhea, cholera and typhoid could occur after a week of flooding, and dengue fever is also a concern," Nga said.

In all, flooding in central Vietnam has killed 41 people, while 44 have died in northern provinces, including 20 people in Hanoi.

In the northern province of Vinh Phuc, five more bodies were discovered Monday, said official Nguyen The Hung.

A total of seven more deaths were reported in the northern provinces of Phu Tho, Thai Nguyen, Bac Giang, Hung Yen and Ha Nam, authorities said.

In central Vietnam, authorities said Tuesday that three more bodies had been discovered in Ha Tinh province, bringing the total there to 15.

In neighboring Nghe An, the worst-hit province, 22 people have died.

Although the rains have eased in the central region, flooding continued to cut off some isolated areas.

"Roads to those villages are still under water," said Pham Viet Phu, a disaster official in Nghe An. "The death toll could rise."

After years of rumor, Tijuana mayor faces charges

TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — Wild-animal collector, gambling tycoon and eccentric former mayor Jorge Hank Rhon has faced unproven allegations of criminal activity throughout his career in the border city famed as a base for drug traffickers.

Now a raid on his home has turned up an arsenal of illegal weapons, prosecutors said Wednesday, and they are setting out to finally make charges stick to a man with deep roots in Mexico's elite who has long been considered untouchable.

Hauled first to Mexico City for questioning, Hank Rhon was flown back to the border early Wednesday. The man who once described himself as a billionaire sat in a Tecate prison awaiting arraignment.

The case comes as Mexico heads into a presidential campaign and the party that ruled for 71 years, the party of Hank Rhon and his legendary father, looks likely to return to power. The unusual circumstances of the raid have had federal officials scrambling to deny it had political motivations.

U.S. officials have long been suspicious of the Hank clan, and the flamboyant Hank Rhon in particular. Gambling can be a prime way to launder money, and Hank Rhon runs a gaming empire based in one of the world's busiest drug-trafficking corridors. Never, though, have they even indicted him on any corruption-related charge.

The word "eccentric" often clings to Hank Rhon. And the 55-year-old father of 19 children with various women has been happy to feed the impression. He has boasted of getting energy from drinking a tequila laced with bear bile, scorpions, and rattlesnakes and steeped with the penises of tigers, lions and dogs.

The Tijuana estate where he was arrested includes a casino, a dog racing track, a private zoo of 20,000 animals and a soccer complex.

He once caused a stir by saying women were his favorite animal, a comment for which he later apologized.

After running Tijuana from 2004 to 2007, Hank Rhon lost a bid to become Baja California governor, but he has been expected to run again in 2013, trying to unseat the National Action Party of President Felipe Calderon.

Deputy Attorney General Patricia Bugarin said Wednesday that troops had found 40 rifles, 48 handguns, 9,298 bullets, 70 ammunition clips and a gas grenade at Hank Rhon's home, and that only 10 of those weapons were licensed.

Weapons possession can be a major crime in Mexico. Most light guns must be licensed and only the military can have high-caliber firearms. Violations can bring as much as 30 years in prison.

Hank Rhon issued a statement denying any knowledge of the guns. And his attorney, Fernando Benitez, said the evidence will be thrown out anyway because officials had no search warrant: "If the search is illegal, everything that was obtained through it is inadmissible."

The army said soldiers caught men carrying illegal weapons and they confessed they had gotten the weapons at Hank Rhon's compound. They justified the warrantless search by saying they saw men with illegal weapons entering the house.

Every major Calderon official has come out to say the arrest of Hank Rhon was an act of law enforcement carried out in full transparency under the law.

Many Mexicans find that version hard to believe.

Columnist Raymundo Riva Palacio wrote Wednesday on the online news site ejecentral that the raid was "an illegal action" by soldiers carrying out duties that belong to police. He questioned the assertion that top officials knew nothing of it beforehand.

The charges against Hank Rhon seemed to bolster longstanding complaints about his Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which governed Mexico for seven decades, often through force, corruption and impunity.

PRI leader Humberto Moreira warned that the party would not permit a witchhunt or intimidation during the election season.

"There is no witch hunt. Hank's arrest was not for electoral purposes," Federal Attorney General Marisela Morales insisted.

Hank Rhon has been used to the sometimes unfriendly spotlight of attention since his childhood. His father, Carlos Hank Gonzalez, was an oft-criticized mentor to generations of PRI politicians. Starting as an impoverished school teacher, he built an immense fortune with companies he amassed while in public office.

Hank Gonzalez also gave his son close ties to the country's elite. The father was a leader of the Mexico State political clique known as the Atlacomulco Group. A man from that faction has a clear lead in early presidential polls: outgoing state Gov. Enrique Pena Nieto. Some have suggested the Hank Rhon arrest was an attempt to sully his candidacy.

Controversy has dogged Hank Rhon at least since the 1988 murder of investigative journalist Hector Felix Miranda in Tijuana. Two of Hank Rhon's bodyguards were convicted in the killing, but denied there was any link to their boss, and no charges were filed against him.

In 1995, as he returned from a trip to Japan, he was detained at the Mexico City airport for not declaring pieces of ivory and ocelot pelts, which are illegal to import. He said they were fakes and spent less than a day in custody after posting bail. The case was dropped.

In 1999, a U.S. National Drug Intelligence Center report described him as an associate of drug traffickers. But then-U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno said the report was incomplete and its conclusions were "never adopted officially."

Suspicions continued to haunt U.S. officials. The U.S. State Department revoked Hank Rhon's visa a couple years ago, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke anonymously because it was not intended for public disclosure. The person didn't know the grounds for revocation.

A cable from the U.S. consulate in Tijuana, obtained by WikiLeaks and dated June 2009, said the PRI in Baja California was struggling to get rid of the "shadow" of the former mayor, "best known for his ties to organized crime and maintaining an animal menagerie in the municipal hall."

The cable gave no evidence of such ties.

In another cable dated July 2009, the same U.S. consulate said that "Hank is widely believed to have been a corrupt mayor and to be still involved in narco-trafficking." Again, it cited no evidence.

A 2008 report by New York state's inspector general said foreign bookmaking operations were in a unique position to launder illegal drug proceeds and it pointed to Hank Rhon's Grupo Caliente. Without alleging actual illegal activity, it said Caliente "could easily exploit its status as a licensed bookmaker to launder illicit proceeds through U.S. tracks' pari-mutuel wagering pools. It is a relatively simple matter."

Nevada's Gaming Control Board has twice warned companies operating there to avoid any contracts with Grupo Caliente.

Despite the suspicions that Hank Rhon could be wallowing in drug money, his operation found itself in debt last year. Grupo Caliente restructured $121 million in debt by selling a majority interest in 46 of its gaming operations across Mexico to Spain's Grupo Codere SA.

A Codere spokesmen declined to comment on the record about the Hank Rhon case, but said his company has no role in the Tijuana complex where Hank Rhon was detained.

About 2,000 people gathered at a traffic circle in Tijuana on Tuesday afternoon to express support for Hank Rhon, who is remembered by many as a kind of political Santa Claus who hosted Mothers' Day and Children's Day parties and gave cash and even homes to those in need.

The group was joined by taxi and bus drivers who stopped their vehicles mid-street to shout: "Calderon, don't be a jerk! Free Hank Rhon!"

___

Associated Press writer Mariana Martinez contributed to this report.

Aviation authority: cargo plane crashes in Pakistan's largest city, casualties feared

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Aviation authority: cargo plane crashes in Pakistan's largest city, casualties feared.

Sanofi-Aventis 4th quarter net profit up 10 pct

Sanofi-Aventis reported a 10 percent increase in fourth quarter net profit Wednesday as strong sales of its vaccine against the swine flu drove higher than expected earnings for the year.

France's largest drug maker said net profit rose 10.4 percent in the three months ending Dec. 31 to euro1.8 billion ($2.5 billion), up from euro1.63 billion a year earlier.

The company, whose Sanofi Pasteur division is the world's biggest vaccines manufacturer, said the fourth quarter performance was lifted by record high growth in revenue from its human vaccines business of 64.6 percent.

Sales of 100 million doses of pandemic vaccines last year helped lift earnings per share on an adjusted basis by 13.1 percent at constant exchange rates, above the 11 percent target Sanofi-Aventis had set in October.

PLUS SPORTS

COX PACT EXTENDED: The Atlanta Braves have extended manager BobbyCox's contract by two years, through the 1995 season. The club didnot disclose the terms of the deal. But the AtlantaJournal-Constitution reported today that Cox, who managed the Bravesto National League championships in 1991 and 1992, would get morethan $350,000 per year. Cox told the newspaper the contract isextremely fair. "I'm just happy to be around another three yearswith this club," he said. "We should win." Said general managerJohn Schuerholz: "He has a great relationship with the players, andhas been a big part of our success these last two years." OLYMPIAN'S BROTHER KILLED: A brother of Olympic skiers Julie and RobParisien was killed in Bethel, Maine, when his car was forced off theroad and crashed into some trees. Jean Paul Parisien, 24, diedinstantly after his auto was forced off the road by another car alongState Route 26 Thursday night, state police said. Derek Bonney, 29,was arrested a short time after the accident and charged with drunkendriving. Police identified him as the main suspect in their searchfor the driver of the other car. OH, CANADA: Fred Anderson, a Sacramento, Calif., businessman, hasapplied for a CFL franchise and submitted a $50,000 down payment onthe expansion fee of $3 million. A group from San Antonio, includingLarry Benson, previously applied. Benson is the brother of NewOrleans Saints owner Tom Benson. The CFL agreed earlier this monthto expand into the United States and will meet in Calgary, Alberta,during the second week of January to vote on the applications. "I'mnow just waiting for Jan. 12," Anderson said. "I'm very optimisticthat my application will be accepted." IN THE BANKS: Former New Mexico guard Willie Banks signed a one-yearcontract with the New Plymouth Bears of New Zealand's professionalleague. Banks, who has been helping Lobos coach Dave Bliss as avolunteer student assistant this season, said Thursday that he'sscheduled to leave Albuquerque on Feb. 19 for New Plymouth, which issouth of Auckland. KANSAS PLAYERS SUSPENDED: Two players were suspended from the Kansasfootball team for unspecified rule violations, coach Glen Masonannounced. Mason said senior outside linebacker Hassan Bailey andsophomore offensive tackle Khristopher Booth will not accompany theteam to the Aloha Bowl in Hawaii for the Dec. 25 game against BrighamYoung. Both players started all 11 games during the season. MARINERS NAME COACH: Sam Mejias, a minor league manager in theCincinnati Reds organization the past 10 seasons, has been namedfirst base coach for the Seattle Mariners. The 40-year-old Mejias,hired Thursday, will handle outfield and base-running instruction inaddition to coaching first base. WOMEN'S SKIING: Ljubow Egorova led a Russian sweep of the top threeplaces today in a World Cup women's 15-kilometer freestylecross-country race. The world and Olympic champion beat teammatesLarissa Lazutina and Elena Vaelbe in the second event of the yearlycompetition, and climbed to fourth in the over-all standings with 120points. Vaelbe and Lazutina were tied for first with 140 points.Egorova had a time of 39 minutes, 18.7 seconds. Lazutina finished in39:53.9, and Vaelbe followed in 40:03.7. MEN'S SKIING: Vladimir Smirnov of Kazakhstan won a World Cup30-kilometer cross-country freestyle today, beating Norwegian Olympicchampions Vegard Ulvang and Bjorn Daehlie by more than one minute.The upset victory in the third event on the World Cup circuit putSmirnov into first place in the over-all standings with 240 points.Ulvang, who had scored a win and finished second in the two previousraces at Ramsau, Austria, slipped to second place with 225 points.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

[ OUT & ABOUT ]

More than 250,000 festivalgoers are expected to attend this year'sNorthalsted Market Days this weekend on the North Side.

The 20th annual party, running Saturday and Sunday, will featuremore than 40 entertainment acts over three days. Also on hand will bea whopping 350 arts and craft vendors and booths from local retailersand plenty of food and drink. Entertainment highlights include SophieB. Hawkins, Patty Elvis, Valerie James, Honey West and Hedwig & TheAngry Inch

Festival hours are 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.Suggested donation is $5. The festival is on Halsted, between Addisonand Belmont. For more information, call (773) 868-3010.

Bush 5 pounds heavier but fit for duty: doc

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's doctors pronounced him healthy andin better shape than most men his age after his annual physicalTuesday, but the president seemed a little upset about packing onsome extra pounds.

Doctors treated a small precancerous lesion on his left arm butindicated it was nothing serious. …

I Self Devine works to get his message across

I SELF DEVINE; PSALM ONE AND DJ SPONTANEOUS; P.O.S. FEATURINGDOOMTREE

- 8:30 p.m. Wednesday

- Abbey Pub, 3420 W. Grace

- Tickets, $10 in advance, $12 at the door (18-over show)

- (773) 478-4408

Minneapolis-based rapper I Self Devine is a socially consciousartist who truly knows that of which he speaks.

But he also knows that isn't enough.

Known as a member of the Micranots, I Self has built a reputationfor an almost militant social consciousness. Raised in South CentralLos Angeles to parents involved with the Black Panthers, he callshimself a "a person of deep consciousness." A coordinator at aMinneapolis community center, he's constantly in touch with thechallenges of urban living in 2005.

But while he's always had much to say, he says his work hassometimes been so rooted in analysis that he's lost the very audiencehe's sought.

"Sometimes when you do something, you get too analytical and youforget the basic necessities of what you need to do," he says. "Whena doctor writes his thesis, how many people read it? It's pretty muchfor people who talk shop. But the average, everyday person who mayneed that information is excluded because it's not written in alanguage they can understand. So if I want to come to you andconnect, I'm going to have to make the effort to come to where youare and bring you to where I'm at."

In other words, "I have to utilize the time I have on the mike tosay something, but if I come in a matter that is too preachy, peoplewill think, 'Man, that's bull.'"

His solo debut, "Self Destruction," seeks to tackle this problemby presenting I Self not as a greater-than-thou orator with all ofthe answers, but as flawed man who has struggled to get things right.The CD follows a storyteller born of great expectations into asociety that in many ways couldn't have cared less. It's a CD aboutwhere the thug life meets real life.

"I've come to the realization that prior to doing any agitation,there needs to be some relational things going on," I Self says. "SoI decided to deal with the everyday struggles of the people in themovement rather than [the abstraction] of the movement."

To do this, he said, he needed to evaluate himself and openhimself up more than he's ever done before, which meant being honestabout himself and his own vulnerabilities.

"Going into the Micranots, the persona I pushed was one or twonotches above who I really was -- as in when you aspire to dosomething you set the bar higher," I Self says. "But the feedback Igot didn't really acknowledge who I was a person."

But doing this was not easy, especially for an MC, a character whois supposed to be invulnerable, infallible and absolute, eitherpreacher or thug.

"I have been very scared and kind of terrified [of showing mywhole self]. I've always kind of done it halfway," I Self says. "WhenI watch cats in the game perform and fans are hanging on every wordand waiting for every release, that is a heavy responsibility. Ididn't necessarily want to take that, so I would set myself up forfailure."

So he refocused.

"As KRS-One said, 'It doesn't matter what your content is -- youhave to rock the mike.' I am an entertainer, but I'm also more thanthat."

David Jakubiak is a local free-lance writer.

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

HOMICIDE VICTIM'S WIDOW SAYS SUICIDE MAKES EVANS THE LOSER.(MAIN)

Byline: EDWARD FITZPATRICK Staff writer

Gary Evans didn't win.

Dana Rysedorph, the wife of one of the five men Evans confessed to killing, was adamant on that point Saturday, one day after the killer kicked his way out of a prisoner van and leaped to his death, leaving behind an apparent suicide note that ended with the words ``I win.''

``He won nothing,'' Rysedorph said from her home, sitting across from a silver urn holding her husband's ashes. Police say Evans shot Timothy W. Rysedorph in the head and cut up his body with a chain saw.

Dana Rysedorph said Evans' plunge off the Troy-Menands Bridge amounts to little more than a publicity …

HOMICIDE VICTIM'S WIDOW SAYS SUICIDE MAKES EVANS THE LOSER.(MAIN)

Byline: EDWARD FITZPATRICK Staff writer

Gary Evans didn't win.

Dana Rysedorph, the wife of one of the five men Evans confessed to killing, was adamant on that point Saturday, one day after the killer kicked his way out of a prisoner van and leaped to his death, leaving behind an apparent suicide note that ended with the words ``I win.''

``He won nothing,'' Rysedorph said from her home, sitting across from a silver urn holding her husband's ashes. Police say Evans shot Timothy W. Rysedorph in the head and cut up his body with a chain saw.

Dana Rysedorph said Evans' plunge off the Troy-Menands Bridge amounts to little more than a publicity …

Monday, 5 March 2012

Investing turns `green' // Interests go beyond cash yield

Is your money green?

Before you reach for your wallet to make sure . . . that's notthe kind of money in question.

And the question isn't as silly as it sounds. It's not aboutwalking-around money or the money you have stashed in a checking orsavings account or certificates of deposit.This is about stocks, mutual funds, individual retirementaccounts, pension plans, 401(k) plans and all the other ways youinvest, directly or indirectly, in corporate America.And it's about viewing those investments through the prism ofenvironmental and social responsibility.Green, or environmentally conscious, investing has been aroundfor more than two decades. "Green" also has come …

S&P says S Korea Posco's winning bid for Daewoo Intl not to affect its investment-grade rating.

(ADPnews) - May 17, 2010 - S&P today affirmed its investment-grade ratings on South Korean steel major Posco (SEO:005490) on expectations its potential buy of Daewoo International (SEO:047050) would not materially affect its financial profile due to its solid cash generation, low debt levels and resilient earnings.

Posco on Friday filed a winning bid in the range of KRW 3.4 trillion - KRW 3.5 trillion (USD2.9bn-3bn/EUR2.4bn-2.5bn) for 68.1% in local trader Daewoo International with the deal expected to be sealed in August-September 2010.

The agency believes the transaction would only modestly hike Posco's financial burden and would have a minor effect on its …

SWEET SMOOTHIES ARE PART DRINK, PART SNACK.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: WILLIAM RICE Chicago Tribune

My dictionary defines smoothie as a ``suave, glib, attractive person, especially a man.'' But I know better. The smoothies I come across these days are satin-textured beverages, combinations of fruit and/or fruit juices or vegetables and herbs, frequently enriched with ice cream or yogurt.

Once, it sufficed for a smoothie -- originally a signature drink of the beaches of Southern California -- to quench thirst. Recently, more is being asked of it. According to Pat Crocker in the newly published book, ``The Smoothies Bible'' (Robert Rose Inc.), ``Two daily smoothies, brimming …

Genpass At A Glance.

 Business          ATM Driving/Network Switch     Majority Owner    GTCR Golder Rauner     Focus             Off-Premise ATMs … 

BC-BKN--NBA Standings,1st Ld-Writethru, BKN

BC-BKN--NBA Standings, …

Tentative first contract reached for home child care workers

The union representing 49,000 home child care providers reached atentative agreement with the state on its first contract -- a 39-month deal that boosts pay 35 percent, provides health care benefitsto some and includes incentives for training.

Providers who would be covered by the agreement, which is subjectto ratification, care for roughly 140,000 children across the statewhose parents are eligible for child care assistance so they canwork.

The contract agreement, announced Tuesday, will provide workerswith their first rate increase in seven years and "improve child careservice throughout Illinois," said Helen Miller, president of theService Employees …

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Race for Life for Karen.

Karen Crouch was a much loved member of the College staff and the big hearted runners decided to turn out as a team at the Race for Life in Hastings to raise funds in her memory.

Marie-Ange Coxhead , Course Manager said …

Direct flights between Albany, Buffalo cut: Commutair service will come to end July 7, in surprise announcement.

Byline: Eric Anderson

Jun. 20--COLONIE -- Albany will lose direct air service to Buffalo on July 7 when Commutair ends its daily Continental Connection flights between the two cities.

A spokeswoman for Continental Airlines confirmed Tuesday afternoon that the service would end, but that Continental Express would continue to fly from Albany to its hub airports in Newark and Cleveland.

Calls to Commutair, which also is seeking to end service in Plattsburgh and Saranac Lake, weren't returned. The airline is buying larger, 37-seat aircraft to replace its 19-seat planes and previously said demand on routes out of the North Country wasn't sufficient. …

`WE JUST WANT TO GO OUT AND FIGHT FIRES'.(MAIN)

Byline: Knight Ridder

BUNNELL, Fla. -- He'd had -- what? -- maybe five hours sleep and a quick bite to eat. The smell of smoke still clung to him like cheap cologne, but here came Paul Madraza, a knight in a yellow fire-retardant suit, ready to walk willingly again into the dragon's mouth.

Off to the shady side of the Bunnell Volunteer Fire Station, Madraza balanced himself on the bumper of an empty van, hastily adjusting the suspenders that held up his billowy bunker pants. He moved quickly -- losing time, after all, means losing more acres -- adjusting his boots, checking his helmet and pausing only when asked where his assignment would take him this day. …

Fertilizer: soggy fields, soft exports. (Farm Chemicals)

The relentless rains that flooded the Mississippi valley bogged down farm equipment and delayed fertilizer applications well beyond the swollen riverbeds, even though only 3%-5% of

Midwestern cropland was actually flooded this spring.

Nonetheless, most observers say the "Great Rains" will be a positive for the domestic market next year. "The flood will result in lower than normal deliveries this fall-especially phosphates," says John Douglas, principal of agricultural consultants Douglas

Associates (Florence, AL). But "next spring we should have a barn burner because of pent-up demand."

However, with the domestic market mature, the prospect of a strong season ahead may not be sufficient to revive fertilizer profits, especially depressed phosphate …