четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Medvedev to tour Silicon Valley, seek investors

Russia's Dmitry Medvedev visits Silicon Valley for the first time on Wednesday, eager to reinvent his country's outmoded, oil-dependent economy _ and lure talent and money from the high-tech capital.

Two years into his presidency, the 44-year-old, tech-savvy Kremlin chief still lives in the shadow of his predecessor Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, but that hasn't stopped him from strenuously pursuing pet projects, the most grandiose of which is the creation of Russia's own Silicon Valley outside Moscow.

But to succeed, Medvedev knows he needs to attract some of the best minds and investors in the United States to a project that many Russian businessmen are …

Toyota affiliate opening plant

A truck manufacturer controlled by Toyota is apparently going totake over the former Walker Systems Inc. plant near Williamstown andcreate hundreds of jobs.

An economic development announcement has been scheduled for Mondayat the plant site in Wood County. State officials have been trying tokeep the deal under wraps.

However, Hino Motors Manufacturing U.S.A. Inc. received a businesslicense from the state on Monday. The company listed its WestVirginia address as 1000 Innovation Drive, Williamstown - the addressof the former Walker Systems plant.

Matt Turner, Gov. Joe Manchin's press secretary, said Manchin,Sen. Jay Rockefeller and Williamstown Mayor Jean Ford …

Chrysalis considers possible sale or acquisitions

Shares in British music publisher Chrysalis Group PLC rose more than 5 percent Wednesday after the company said it is assessing options to boost value to shareholders, including a sale of the business or possible acquisitions.

The options include remaining as a leading independent music company, potential acquisition opportunities, …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Marcum, Fielder keep torrid Brewers rolling

Shaun Marcum pitched seven shutout innings, Prince Fielder homered for the third time in four games and the Milwaukee Brewers won their sixth in seven games, 6-0 over the Pirates on Wednesday night in Pittsburgh.

Marcum (2-1) was perfect through four and kept the Pirates off-balance with his changeup, allowing only four singles with four strikeouts and a walk. Acquired in an offseason trade with Toronto to bolster Milwaukee's rotation, Marcum lowered his ERA to 2.55 through three starts.

Johnson stifles Braves

Josh Johnson took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning before rookie Freddie Freeman doubled with one out, and the Florida Marlins beat the Braves 5-1 in …

House votes to ban dial-a-porn services

WASHINGTON The House on Tuesday approved a ban on pornographictelephone message services, rejecting arguments that the measure isunconstitutional.

The ban, which was approved earlier in the Senate, was includedin an $8.3 billion education bill passed 397-1. Final Senate actionon the package was expected today.

The bill renews all major federal elementary and secondaryeducation programs and authorizes new programs to prevent dropoutsand help high school students with weak skills.

Adoption of the tough anti-pornography provision was a victoryfor conservative lawmakers, who claim thousands of children have beenpsychologically hurt from calling so-called …

Calif. Wildfires Force More to Flee

SAN DIEGO - Thousands more residents were ordered to evacuate their homes Tuesday, bringing the number of people chased away by the wind-whipped flames that have engulfed Southern California to at least 270,000.

The dozen wildfires have burned more than 700 homes and set 245,957 acres - 384 square miles - ablaze, and the destruction may only be the start for the region. Tuesday's forecast called for hotter temperatures and more explosive Santa Ana gusts.

The blazes bedeviled firefighters as walls of flame whipped from mountain passes to the edges of the state's celebrated coastline, spreading so quickly that even hotels serving as temporary shelters for evacuees had to be …

Paraguay striker Santa Cruz signs for Man City

Paraguay striker Roque Santa Cruz has been reunited with manager Mark Hughes after joining Manchester City from Blackburn.

Santa Cruz signed a contract with Man City on Monday in a deal that is reportedly worth 18 million pounds ($30 million).

"It was really important that we signed him because it's an area of the squad that we have needed to address for some time," Hughes said. "The qualities Roque brings will be of great benefit. His ability in the air and his physical presence are things we have been missing. But he also has technical ability and good pace for a big man. He is a very good player and one I know well from our time at …

Keebler Survives For '93 // But Future Still in Doubt

When Keebler Co. president and chief executive officer Tom Garvinresigned in January, the fate of the Keebler International Prep Trackand Field Meet - considered by many the nation's top high schooltrack meet - was in doubt.

But the meet, which has drawn athletes from England, Ireland,the former Soviet Union and Cuba in recent years, is on for thisyear, although future Keebler meets "will be up for review after thisyear," according to Keebler invitations chairman Neal Robinson, whocoordinates the meet.

"I have no inkling one way or another" whether there will beKeebler track meets after this year, Robinson said. "But I wouldthink the event wouldn't die …

US homebuilders see stable housing market ahead

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The CEOs of some of America's biggest homebuilding companies said Thursday that they feel the housing market has stabilized.

But they were careful not to be overly optimistic even with the spring home-selling season coming up. A year ago many housing experts forecast housing would begin recovering in 2011, only to see it play out as the worst year for new home sales on records going back a half-century.

Executives at PulteGroup Inc., MDC Holdings Inc., M/I Homes Inc. and Beazer Homes USA Inc. weighed in on the housing market after their companies reported financial results for October to December.

In that period, sales of new homes rose nationally as …

Asian stocks tick higher after US stays in a lull

Asian markets inched higher early Thursday amid mixed economic news and after U.S. stocks closed with small gains following a report that companies cut their inventories.

Investors typically like to hear that inventories are depleted since that means companies will need to buy to restock. But a dip in inventories may also be a sign businesses are wary about restocking their shelves.

Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average added 94.24 points, or 0.9 percent, to 10,658.16 in early trading. The government reported Thursday that Japan's economy, the world's second biggest, expanded at a slower pace in the final three months of last year than initially estimated.

Central division: a split locker room If defense starts pointing fingers at limping offense, Bears' season can collapse

GREEN BAY, Wis.--This is no time for a crisis, no time for astorybook season to be sabotaged by an inept offense, pussy-foot play-calling, erratic quarter-backing and a morale-splitting dragon calleddissension. But suddenly, the Bears are knee-deep in muck, faced withissues that have gutted far better football teams.

It was troubling enough Sunday that the offense continued to spit,sputter, dink and dunk in this defining game against the Green BayPackers, leading to a 17-7 loss that might make the postseasonshorter than it had to be in Chicago. Yet hard as it was to watchfailed opportunities, successive overthrown end-zone lobs, typicalthree-yard dumps in third-and-eight …

Thai police: Insurgents kill 4 soldiers in attack

PATTANI, Thailand (AP) — Police in Thailand say Muslim insurgents attacked government troops protecting a school in the south of the country, killing four soldiers.

Police Lt. Gen. Satanfah Wamasing says another two soldiers were wounded in the latest attack, along with a 6-year-old boy.

Satanfah says about 15 suspected Muslim insurgents …

Like predecessors, Obama declines embassy move

WASHINGTON (AP) — Following the practice of his predecessors, President Barack Obama has invoked U.S. national security interests to notify Congress he will not move the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

The notification is necessary under a 1995 law that authorized the embassy's relocation but left the decision to presidents. Bill Clinton and George Bush submitted similar notifications to Congress. Under the law, such declarations must be made every six months.

Obama also issued them during the first two years of his administration.

The location of the embassy is sensitive in Mideast peace negotiations because both Israel and Palestinians claim it as their capital

While Clinton and Bush had indicated a commitment to moving the embassy at some point, Obama's notification does not contain that language.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Mahan hit too good a shot

No golf tournament ends without a number of players able to say "What if?" over one hole or one swing.

Hunter Mahan may have the best reason to ask that question after the U.S. Open.

Mahan's ball was sitting in the fairway after his tee shot on the par-4 16th at Bethpage Black. He was 2 under par for tournament, just one stroke out of the lead.

But a great swing produced a terrible result and effectively ended his chance at his first major championship.

"We had a good number. I think it was like 172," Mahan said. "Had an 8-iron downwind and just flushed it."

If Mahan's ball had hit any part of the green, he would have been looking at a makable birdie putt, but the ball hit the flag stick _ and hit it squarely.

"I hit that thing pretty hard and it ricocheted off the green," he said. "That happens. It's a U.S. Open. You're going to get stuff like that. The green is just fast. I thought I hit a pretty good 5-wood runner up there, but the green was pretty fast."

Instead of a chance at tying for the lead, Mahan made a bogey. Then he had another on the par-3 17th when his birdie attempt caught a ridge and left him a long par putt.

He finished tied for sixth at even par, four strokes behind champion Lucas Glover.

At least, Mahan is getting closer.

This was the third straight year he finished in the top 20 in the Open. He tied for 10th at the Masters in April.

"I feel I can win any major," he said. "I'm a good ball striker, good driver of the ball. When I get my putting up on those kind of standards, I feel I can win any tournament."

___

SAME MONEY: The total purse for the tournament was $7.5 million, the first time since 1981 there was not an increase from the previous year. Glover received $1.35 million as the champion and Fred Funk, who finished last among the 60 players making the 36-hole cut, earned $19,921.

___

BIG PUTT: Ricky Barnes' missed birdie putt on the 18th hole wound up costing him $250,170. Make it and he would have finished second alone at 277 and would have won $810,000. Instead, he finished in a three-way for second with Phil Mickelson and David Duval and won $559,830.

___

GRANDPA KNEW: Dick Hendley introduced his grandson Lucas Glover to golf at age 3. Six years later, he brought him to the late Dick Harmon to teach him the game. It all paid off on Monday.

"I'm floating on air," Hendley said from Greer, S.C.

He and his 29-year-old grandson talked two weekends ago.

"I watched him chip and putt and thought he was in a good frame of mind," Hendley said of Glover's Open performance. "I felt good about it all week. I didn't say anything to anybody, but I had a feeling he'd play well the way he was hitting the ball."

___

TRACKING TIGER: Since Curtis Strange repeated as Open champion in 1989, no defending champion had finished in the top 10 until Tiger Woods this year.

Woods was seeking his fourth Open title, which would have tied him for the record with Willie Anderson, Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus.

His final-round 69 put him in a tie for sixth at even-par 280. In his other defenses, he tied for 12th at Southern Hills in 2001 and tied for 20th at Olympia Fields in 2003.

When Woods won the Open at Bethpage Black in 2002, he was the only player to break par for the tournament with a 277 total. Woods had two rounds in the 60s that year, 67 in the first and 68 in the second. This year, he broke 70 three times with 69s in the second and fourth rounds sandwiching a 68.

___

SHORT ENDING: The 18th hole on Bethpage Black was the source of most concern during the weather-plagued tournament since it was the one fairway that did not drain well and faced having quite a bit of casual water on it.

For the final round, it played just 364 yards, the shortest closing hole in a major since the 2005 British Open, when the 18th at St. Andrews played seven yards shorter.

"They had to put a lot of the tees up this week just because it's so soft," Tiger Woods said. "I'm sure they probably did that on 18 because the fairways are basically under water. They had to move it up there so we were actually hitting it on the upslope."

For the tournament, the 18th played to an average score of 4.1227, the 11th-toughest hole on the course. In the final round it was the third-easiest with an average score of 3.883.

___

LOW AMATEUR: Nick Taylor, a native of Canada and a first-team All-America at the University of Washington last season, finished as the low amateur, closing with a 5-over 75 for a 288 total, one shot better than Drew Weaver of Virginia Tech, who had a final-round 74, and five ahead of Kyle Stanley of Clemson, who closed with a 75.

They were the only amateurs of the record 15 in the field to make the cut.

"I think it will do a lot," Taylor said of his second Open start. He failed to make the cut last year at Torrey Pines. "It will give me confidence of being able to play that well the first two rounds and shoot a low number on a U.S. Open course."

Taylor's 5-under 65 in the second round matched the lowest round ever by an amateur in an Open. It was definitely his highlight in the weather-delayed tournament that finished Monday.

"About four weeks," Taylor said when asked how long the tournament seemed. "It was long and it was grueling, but everybody had it, and it was just tough.

"It's happened before, and it's probably going to happen again. So I just have to get used to it, I guess."

___

AP Golf Writer Doug Ferguson and AP Sports Writer Pete Iacobelli in Columbia, S.C. contributed to this report

EU warns sink or swim in financial meltdown

The global financial meltdown is injecting a sense of urgency into a summit of European and Asian leaders that gets under way in China's capital on Friday.

EU Commission President Jose Barroso set the tone early, saying "unprecedented levels of global coordination" were needed to deal with the crisis.

"It's very simple: We swim together, or we sink together," Barroso said Thursday at a Beijing news conference ahead of meetings with top Chinese leaders.

Held every two years, the Asia-Europe Meeting _ known as ASEM _ has no mandate to issue decisions, but participants hope it will produce some degree of consensus ahead of a Nov. 15 meeting of the world's top economies in Washington to discuss the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.

That may be too lofty a goal for a 43-nation grouping whose members differ widely on their views toward international cooperation and intervention by global bodies. Free-trading Singapore and economic powerhouse Germany are attending, but so too are isolated, impoverished Myanmar and landlocked, authoritarian Laos.

On Thursday, politics threatened to complicate matters as well.

In a sign of Europe's enduring political differences with China, the European Parliament on Thursday awarded the EU's top human rights award to Chinese dissident Hu Jia, despite a warning from Beijing that his selection would seriously harm relations.

Charles Tannock, Conservative foreign affairs spokesman in the European Parliament, said awarding the Sakharov Prize to Hu shows EU lawmakers would continue to highlight the "authoritarian and repressive nature of the communist government" in China, now the EU's biggest trading partner.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said China expressed its "strong dissatisfaction to the decision by the European Parliament to issue such an award to the jailed criminal in China, in disregard of China's repeated representations."

But Liu also indicated that the award would not derail attempts to make progress on financial issues.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has pledged to use the ASEM meeting to persuade Asian nations to sign up to a plan to redraw the rule book for international capitalism, calling for a global system of regulation.

Liu echoed the need for changes to the current system.

"We need to explore the possibilities of reforming the international economic structure ... (to) stabilize the international financial markets, and ensure the stable operation of the international economy," he said.

China and other Asian economies are expected to take a major hit from a drop in exports and foreign investment, even though their banks had less direct exposure to the toxic sub-prime mortgages that are wreaking havoc on U.S. and European markets.

The EU has put up euro1.7 trillion (US$2.3 trillion) in guarantees and other emergency measures to save the banking system.

The vice president of one of China's main state-owned lenders said he expected the crisis to start to bite over the next six months.

"We shouldn't think this is going to be over soon. The key issue for Asian countries is to prevent the banking crisis from turning into a currency crisis," the Bank of China's Zhu Min said in remarks to the Asia-Europe Business Forum in Beijing.

"This is going to be a long and cold winter," Zhu said.

Even before the crisis hit last month, China's juggernaut economy was beginning to slow. Growth in the third quarter of this year was 9.9 percent, down from 11.9 percent for all of 2007. The World Bank says a further retreat is expected next year.

One of the hardest-hit countries, Pakistan, has sought help from the International Monetary Fund to avoid defaulting on billions of dollars in loans and skirt a financial crisis brought on by high fuel prices, dwindling foreign investment and soaring militant violence.

South Korea's stock market, meanwhile, has slumped to a three-year low amid heavy selling by foreign investors.

Leaders from 10 southeast Asian countries plus China, Japan and South Korea were due to hold a breakfast meeting Friday where the global financial situation would likely to be discussed, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said.

"We hope that leaders from Asian and European countries will take this opportunity to fully exchange views on how to strengthen coordination, cooperation in dealing with this issue. And we hope their discussion will be fruitful," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Henry Sanderson and researcher Bonnie Cao in Beijing contributed to this report.

R&D UPDATE: MICROBIAL FUEL CELLS

Bacteria that are able to grow on an electrode can learn how to communicate with it - i.e., get better at transferring electrons from the cathode to the anode. Based on this premise and Darwin's theory of natural selection, researchers at Ghent Univ.'s (Ghent, Belgium; http://labmet.ugent.be) Laboratory of Microbial Ecology and Technology have increased the power output of microbial fuel cell systems from about 0.6 W/m^sup 2^ using an anaerobic inoculum to 4.31 W/m^sup 2^ of electrode surface (664 mV, 30.9 mA) with a selected microbial consortium.

Korneel Rabaey and Willy Verstraete of Ghent Univ.'s faculty of bio-engineering first inoculated the fuel cell with anaerobic, methane-generating sludge (nourished by a biodegradable food source) to ensure a broad-spectrum inoculum. "Those bacteria that were able to transfer electrons to the graphite electrode most efficiently gained a selective advantage, because they could get more energy by losing electrons in that way," explains Rabaey.

Over the course of 70-80 d, analysis of the microbial community via a denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), a molecular technique that reveals how many different types of bacteria are present and which ones are dominant, showed that these bacteria did dominate the population, says Rabaey. Consequently, the fuel cells' power output increased, peaking after 92 d of enrichment. Some of the bacteria produced a highly efficient redox mediator that may have facilitated electron transfer, but Rabaey and Verstraete have yet to figure out how to identify the bacteria that are responsible for electron transfer.

Next, the team will decrease the reactor volume (i.e., achieve the same power outputs with smaller "battery" sizes) by adding other redox mediators that further assist electron flow. "Preliminary tests of this strategy have proved promising," says Rabaey. To charge a mobile phone, for instance, the system would need about 1.6 g of glucose at the current efficiency.

Witness: Cuban militant worried about interview

EL PASO, Texas (AP) — A government witness at the trial of an ex-CIA operative says the man was more worried that an interview with the New York Times would damage his standing with U.S. authorities than about slipping into the country illegally aboard a yacht.

Luis Posada Carriles faces 11 counts of perjury, obstruction and immigration fraud for lying during immigration hearings about how he reached the U.S. in 2005.

Prosecutors also say Posada lied about his role in a series of 1997 Havana hotel bombings which killed an Italian tourist — even though he admitted it in an interview with the Times.

Government informant Gilberto Abascal testified Tuesday that the Times interview weighed on Posada's mind, even aboard the yacht sneaking him into the U.S.

Police: Bomb kills 5, wounds 12 in Iraq

Police say at least five people have been killed and 12 wounded in a bombing west of Baghdad. It's the second blast in less than two weeks to strike the Abu Ghraib area.

The Interior Ministry officer says a roadside bomb exploded near a string of car repair shops near Abu Ghraib. But a local police officer says a car bomb exploded in a garage.

The officials gave the casualty toll on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information.

The mainly Sunni area has seen a sharp decline in violence following a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida in Iraq. But attacks continue. A suicide bomber killed 33 people in the area on March 10.

Canucks beat Avs to clinch playoff spot

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Alex Burrows tied it midway through the third period, Henrik Sedin put Vancouver ahead 2:18 later and the Canucks came from behind to clinch a playoff spot with a 4-2 victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Wednesday night.

Henrik added a second goal into an empty net with 1:14 left as the NHL-leading Canucks won their seventh straight game to become the first team to secure a playoff berth.

Maxim Lapierre also scored and rookie Cory Schneider made 27 saves to help Vancouver wrap up the Northwest Division, and with it a top-three playoff seeding in the Western Conference.

Daniel Sedin added two assists to extend his lead in the NHL scoring race with 92 points. He set up Burrows atop the crease to jam the puck in midway through the period and made a blind drop pass to twin brother Henrik, who snapped the winning goal through a screen and goalie Brian Elliott.

Erik Johnson and Matt Duchene scored goals 1:27 apart in the first period as Colorado lost its ninth straight game (0-8-1), and now has just one win in the last 20 (1-17-2).

The Avalanche got top center Paul Stastny back after missing the last game with a hurt back, and puck-moving defenseman Jean-Michael Liles returned after sitting out two games with a leg injury. But they spent most of the second half of the game relying on Elliott, who finished with 36 saves.

Despite that, Elliott was unable to secure his first win in six appearances in the Colorado crease since being acquired from Ottawa for goalie Craig Anderson on Feb. 18, falling to 0-5-1.

Elliott was at his best as the Avalanche was outshot 15-5 in the second period, allowing only Lapierre s goal and making a couple of big saves on one-time chances for Manny Malhotra and Raffi Torres. He sprawled across to rob Christian Ehrhoff on a backdoor one-timer 2:28 into the third. But he had little chance on the final two goals after the Canucks rallied quickly after Colorado captain Adam Foote left the game limping from a Ryan Kesler shot off the foot.

The Canucks lost Malhotra early in the second period after being hit in the head by the puck. Malhotra dropped to the ice leaving a trail of blood, but skated quickly to the medical room on his own.

Liles assisted on Johnson s power play goal midway through the first period, but most of the credit belonged to Ryan O'Reilly and David Jones for a double screen that prevented Schneider from seeing the glove-side point shot. Duchene ended a 10-game goal drought a couple shifts later with a centering pass to Mark Oliver that went in off the skate of Canucks defenseman Sami Salo.

NOTES: Vancouver C Henrik Sedin played his 800th NHL game, and Alain Vigneault coached his 400th with the Canucks. D Sami Salo played despite leaving Monday's game after taking a hard slap shot off the left elbow, so the Canucks sent D Yann Sauve back to Manitoba of the AHL one day after calling him up. Colorado RW Milan Hejduk missed a second straight game with a shoulder injury but is with the team and could return on the final two games of the four-game trip to play what will be his 900th career game. Liles' leg injury meant no Avalanche player appeared in all 82 games for a second straight season. St. Louis was the last NHL team that happened to, in 2003-04 and 2005-06.

Production Stops on at Least 6 Sitcoms

Production has stopped on at least six sitcoms filmed before live audiences because of the Hollywood writers strike.

"Back to You," starring Kelsey Grammer and Patricia Heaton, will not return from a planned hiatus on Wednesday. said Chris Alexander, a spokesman for 20th Century Fox Television.

Star Julia Louis-Dreyfus said production has also stopped on her CBS show, "The New Adventures of Old Christine."

In addition, the sitcoms "Til Death," which airs on Fox, and "Rules of Engagement," "Two and a Half Men" and "The Big Bang Theory," all on CBS, will also end filming, according to people familiar with production of the shows who were not authorized to be quoted and requested anonymity.

It was not immediately clear how many of the shows might already be finished.

Network officials referred calls to companies producing each show.

Watching the bottom line from a downtown high-rise

From her eighth-floor office looking over Lancaster's Penn Square, Carol Aubitz is making sure everything counts.

The numbers are crunched and re-crunched as she searches for the precise niche for each of her clients.

Her three employees, Laurie Rogers, Tom Henman and Barb Royer, are just as exact, mulling over the minutia of their work.

Aubitz's Excelsior Direct Marketing moved up "in the clouds" in Lancaster city's venerable Griest Building, bucking the business trend of moving out of cities and into business parks. Excelsior bucks conventional wisdom with its business practices, too.

For instance, Aubitz, who took control of the company

in 1996, has given away her company's hard work for free.

Excelsior acts as the marketing force behind Lancaster Downtown Investment District and the city of Lancaster holiday events. This included spreading the word about the Dec. 3 Christmas tree lighting by Mayor Charlie Smithgall and the tuba concert. The firm placed advertisements in papers, on flyers and on the radio to urge people to celebrate the season at the city's downtown events - all pro bono.

"It's important to support the city," Aubitz said. "Without a strong city, everything else around it crumbles."

It's easy to complain about the bad things a city does and not do anything to make things better, reasons Aubitz. That's why she has lent a hand in the efforts to bring more people downtown,

"We would be lost without (Excelsior)," said Jan Beitzer, DID's executive director. "The way everything is turning out has been great."

And that's what Aubitz says Excelsior is all about.

"We won't win any industry awards for flash and glitz or how good looking a publication we create is," Aubitz. said. "But if they start giving the awards out for results, that's when we'll be interested in winning awards."

Aubitz, a 25-year veteran of marketing with a journalism degree from Columbia University, said her company can project how well a business will perform and the best months for a business. She said her forecasts are within 10 percent for the past 19 years.

She specializes in direct marketing for her 16 clients, who come from Central Pennsylvania, California and Canada, and finds the exact niche they need to maximize

their businesses.

To do this, Aubitz said Excelsior gets into the science and psychology of what motivates the customer. Twenty percent of the customers bring in 80 percent of the business for a company, Aubitz said. She targets that 20 percent.

This philosophy has benefited her company, too. In 1998, Excelsior had $1.2 million in revenues. It surpassed that number in late October of this year.

"In the end, it's only the results that count," Aubitz said.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Congressman may support tax cuts

DAILY MAIL POLITICAL EDITOR

RACINE - When congressional Republican leaders try to undoPresident Clinton's vetoes of their bills to phase out the federalestate tax and repeal the so-called marriage tax penalty, they'llprobably have the support of 2nd District Democrat Bob Wise. "Ivoted for them before," Wise said Monday when asked about the bills."I'll most likely vote to override the president."

It takes the votes of two-thirds of members in both houses ofCongress to override a presidential veto. An override of one or bothtax measures would hand congressional Republicans a significantpolitical victory over Democrats in the home stretch of this year'selection campaigns.

"It's not about victories," said Wise, who is giving up his seatin Congress to run for governor. "It's about doing what you think isright."

The House of Representatives is set to go back into sessionWednesday, and a vote on overriding Clinton's veto of the estate taxlegislation is one of the first matters that members will address.The House's Republican leadership has scheduled a vote for eitherThursday or Friday.

Wise was one of 65 House Democrats in June who voted for theRepublican bill to phase out the federal tax on estates; 135Democrats opposed the measure. It reportedly would cost $105 billionover the next 10 years, and $50 billion a year thereafter.

In July, Wise and just 50 other House Democrats voted for aRepublican bill to repeal the marriage penalty - the quirk in thetax code that makes 25 million married couples pay more in taxesthan they would if single and filing separately. The bill, acompromise between separate GOP versions from the House and Senate,would cost $282 billion over 10 years.

President Clinton vetoed both bills, arguing they would depletetoo much of the projected federal budget surplus and leave no moneyto pay for protecting Medicare and meeting other needs.

Wise, campaigning Monday at the annual United Mine Workers LaborDay rally, said he believes the surplus would be sufficient to allowthe tax cuts without threatening Medicare.

A spokesman for Wise's Republican opponent, Gov. Cecil Underwood,questioned Wise's statement that he would "likely" vote to override.

"It sounds like his heart isn't really in it if he has to wonderabout giving tax relief to West Virginia families," Rod Blackstonesaid. "I thought an election year convinced him he needed to."

Blackstone and other Underwood supporters have accused Wise ofsupporting tax cuts only as a campaign ploy. The 2nd DistrictDemocrat has opposed tax cuts in the past.

But Wise said Monday that his earlier opposition came before thefederal budget was balanced.

Writer Paul Owens can be reached at 348-1701 or by e-mail atpowens@dailymail.com.

Public guardian wants out of abducted teenager's case

Cook County Public Guardian Patrick Murphy filed a motion Tuesdayseeking to be removed from representing a girl who was abducted byher mother and kept from her father for nine years.

Saying he can take the case no further, Murphy, who has beenactive in the highly publicized case since December, also saidTuesday he believes the girl-now 15-will eventually end up back withher mother, Joli Taylor. He drew that conclusion despite the fact themother now faces a felony kidnapping charge in her former hometown,Midlothian, for allegedly abducting the girl in 1991.

"I'm unhappy about it," he said. "It's just reality."

Mother and daughter lived in Arizona for the last decade.

In a motion filed in Cook County Circuit Court Tuesday, Murphyberated Taylor for refusing to participate in therapy sessions withthe girl, who is with a foster family. Therapists say the girl willnot recover emotionally if Taylor does not cooperate, Murphy said.

The mother has falsely told the girl she was abused by her father,Michael Reichart of Arlington Heights, Murphy alleged. Murphy'smotion included a statement from the girl's court-appointed evaluatorwho said he had seen no evidence the abuse took place.

Murphy said he cannot share that information with the girl withoutfear of further damaging her emotionally. Because he can no longerhelp the girl, he should no longer remain on the case, the motionsaid.

A hearing is set for May 1.

Vincent Hill and new firm settle with Merrill Lynch

A prominent local business figure has settled his differences with his former employer, but not before being involved in a short, intense legal conflict which culminated in U.S. District Court in Harrisburg issuing a restraining order against him.

Vincent J. Hill Sr. of Harrisburg quit his job at Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. of Camp Hill on Aug. 7 at 3:30 p.m., according to Richard Conway, senior vice president at Salomon Smith Barney, Harrisburg.

Hill started working at Salomon Smith Barney later the same day at 4:15 p.m. He is currently employed there as second vice president-investments and as a financial consultant, Conway said.

Hill is active in the Capital Region Chamber of Commerce. He was recently nominated for a three-year term on its board of directors.

His legal trouble began Aug. 10, when Merrill Lynch sued Hill in federal court. Merrill Lynch argued Hill had unfairly taken customer lists and violated a confidentiality agreement.

Merrill Lynch's lawyers did not comment. Harrisburg lawyer Harvey Freedenberg of McNees, Wallace & Nurick said, "I am under strict instructions to refer questions to (lawyer Joseph A. Dougherty)." Dougherty of Rubin & Associates in Paoli did not return repeated telephone calls.

In a sworn affidavit, Fred DePalma, resident manager of Merrill Lynch's Camp Hill office, stated Hill signed a legal document in which he agreed not to compete for Merrill Lynch's customers for 90 days after quitting.

Hill had access to more than 675 accounts representing more than $32.1 million in assets under management. The accounts generated more than $220,000 in 1998 commission revenues alone, DePalma stated.

And Hill's new employer paid him "an up-front cash bonus of up to $90,000 and other incentives totaling as much as $200,000," DePalma stated.

On Aug. 10, U.S. District Justice William W. Caldwell issued a temporary restraining order against Hill. The order stated Hill violated the securities firm's rights to its confidential proprietary information and that the company would suffer "irreparable harm" if Hill were permitted to use the information for his own benefit and for the benefit of his new employer.

Caldwell also enjoined Hill from soliciting business from Merrill Lynch clients and from disclosing or transmitting client information.

The next day, Merrill Lynch filed a $25,000 bond with the court in Harrisburg in accordance with Caldwell's order.

But apparently Hill resolved his legal difficulty.

According to his lawyer, Philip Murren of Ball Skelly Murren & Connell, Camp Hill, the case was settled on Aug. 13 or Aug. 14. While he refused to disclose the terms of the settlement, citing confidentiality provisions, Murren said the temporary restraining order had been extended to Aug. 25. "Now it's only a question of Mr. Hill being fully free of the TRO (temporary restraining order) on Aug. 25," he said.

Conway said the restraining order does not preclude Hill from doing business and the company was "extremely happy" to have him as part of its team.

"He's very well respected and is a tremendous addition to our office," Conway said.

Conway said it is "not unusual in our industry for these suits to be settled quickly."

Linde 2008 net profit falls 25 pct to euro717 million

German industrial gases company Linde AG said Tuesday that net profit for 2008 fell by a quarter as demand dropped, particularly in the final months of the year, due to the global economic crisis.

The Munich-based company said net profit for the full year fell to euro717 million ($903 million) from euro952 million in the same period a year ago.

Sales in 2008 rose nearly 3 percent to euro13 billion from euro12.3 billion in 2007.

Linde engineers and builds chemical and gas plants and produces gases, including hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and argon, for the medical, industrial and scientific fields.

Linde did not provide fourth quarter earnings figures in its statement, nor did it give an outlook for the current year, but said it would provide more earnings information on March 16.

"We have achieved our targets in full, although even we began to feel the effects of the global recession at the end of the year," Wolfgang Reitzle, the company's chief executive, said in a statement.

Despite the downturn late last year, Reitzle noted the company saw good demand for its products and services in emerging markets, especially Asia, as well as in parts of Europe.

The company has said in the past it aims to have operating profit of more than euro3 billion by 2010, though that goal may be difficult to achieve now as building and production sector businesses are particularly hard hit by the global recession.

Linde shares were 2.3 percent higher to euro51.12 in Frankfurt afternoon trading.

___

On the Net:

http://www.linde.com

Somali ambulance workers risk death in city of war

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — A lull during fierce fighting gave Hassan Mohamud Mohamed time to hire a boy to wash the blood from his vehicle.

The break didn't last long. Mohamed is an ambulance driver in a city filled with war, and as the boy scrubbed the hatchback of the green-and-yellow checkered minivan, a call for help came in.

"Stop!" Mohamed yelled at the boy, who hadn't quite finished cleaning. Mohamed jumped in the driver's seat. "I'll be back."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — An Associated Press writer and photographer spent a recent day riding in one of Mogadishu's few ambulances to experience Somalia's war through the eyes of a first responder.

___

Ambulance drivers risk their lives to try to save people hit by the mortar fire, artillery shells and random gunfire that have been ricocheting around this crumbling seaside city for almost 20 years. In 2009, two drivers were killed — one when a mortar round landed on an ambulance and a second when another ambulance was hit by tank fire.

The city lurches between quiet periods, when shoppers fill markets, to heavy warfare where no place is entirely safe. Since Saturday, 23 people have been killed and almost 90 wounded, Mohamed's ambulance service said.

Mogadishu's Lifeline Africa Ambulance Service has seven vehicles and 11 staffers who are each paid $100 a month. The ambulances are austere, carrying only stretchers, bandages and blood-clotting medicine. The staff is made up of drivers and their assistants, none with any formal medical training. On a recent Saturday — not a particularly busy day by Mogadishu standards — an Associated Press writer and photographer accompanied Mohamed on his run.

As the ambulance approached a government checkpoint, the lone soldier on guard pointed the barrel of his gun at the vehicle.

"Is this a real ambulance or the suicide bombers' one?" the alert and suspicious soldier asked Mohamed. For nearly 10 minutes, he prevented Mohamed from moving before deciding it was a real ambulance.

Twenty minutes later, Mohamed pulled up to a woman screaming outside a five-room bungalow made of cheap bricks.

"My son is dead!" she cried out as she held her hands on her head. She berated Mohamed, saying he arrived too late.

A mortar shell had landed on the house and the woman's 10-year-old son was killed. No one else was hurt, another woman standing on the road said. Mohamed drove away.

Sometimes drivers like Mohamed head into scenes of sheer chaos and panic. They try to pick up only the wounded who can be saved, but crowds of relatives and neighbors often shove dead bodies into the ambulance alongside the living. Sometimes six people are crammed into a space meant for only one or two.

"People are in hysterical situations," ambulance driver Mohamed Hussein said. "So everyone wants to save his loved one before others. Sometimes it is hard to distinguish the dead from the wounded."

The service began two years ago and is funded by Nation Link — a Somali telecommunications company — as well as donations from local and expatriate Somalis. Before then, many of Mogadishu's war victims died where they fell or while being carried to the hospital, often bleeding to death.

The difficulty of the job has been compounded by rumors that insurgents planned to use ambulances to attack government and African Union bases. In addition, a militant group donated two ambulances, a gift that raised government suspicions.

"The distrust of our service in the government-controlled part of the capital is high," said Ali Muse, director of the ambulance service. When ambulance drivers are stopped at checkpoints, "the delay makes us lose people," Muse said.

A government official did not return calls for comment, but a spokesman for the African Union troops admitted the AU force is sometimes suspicious of the ambulances. "They (the militants) can use anything, including ambulances, donkeys, wheelbarrows, trucks and fuel tankers, to carry out their attacks," said Maj. Barigye Bahoku, the AU spokesman.

Not long after Mohamed drove away from the woman who criticized him for being late, another emergency call came in to his ambulance. He was to drive to the Bakara market, in a neighborhood controlled by al-Shabab, a group that pledges fealty to al-Qaida and controls all but a few blocks of Mogadishu. It wants to impose harsh Islamic rule in Somalia, which hasn't had a fully functioning government since 1991.

The al-Shabab-controlled district is too dangerous for journalists, so Mohamed dropped off the AP reporter and photographer, who waited under a concrete wall while shelling boomed in the background.

A half-hour later, Mohamed was back, having been delayed again by government and militant checkpoints.

In the back of the ambulance lay a woman with blood pouring out of her clothes. She groaned in pain. A teenage boy who was with her said she was caught in the crossfire at the market while buying food for her children.

During heavy fighting, Muse and his team sometimes work 24 hours or more, to the point of exhaustion. He wishes for more training for his staff and better facilities and equipment.

"But believe me, we still like the feeling of being able to help people when they need us," Muse said.

When night falls, saving lives becomes almost impossible. A shoot-to-kill mentality takes over after dusk, with government troops and militants both opening fire on sight.

Driver Abdullahi Ahmed said he has a good job "but it also traumatizes me."

"We wash the blood off our hands and get back in the ambulance. Siren screaming, lights flashing, we huddle on the floor of the ambulance, we pack it with people with different injuries, some of them very critical," he said.

Violence between al-Shabab militants and pro-government forces spiked in September. Elmen, a human rights organization, says 185 people were killed last month. More would have died if not for the ambulance service.

"This service has helped a lot and saved many lives," said Mohamed Yusuf, the director-general of Medina Hospital, one of three in Mogadishu. "I remember that a handcart used to be the only way to take the wounded to the hospital. Some people were using stretchers to rush the wounded to the hospital and many died on their way because of blood loss."

A TRUSTWORTHY POLITICIAN? Harper's record belies pledge to curb business election spending

Stephen Harper suggests that trust is the most important political issue facing Canadians. If so, Canadians should be very wary of the promises the Conservative leader is making about introducing tougher election spending limits if he becomes Prime Minister. Harper has spent much of his political life fighting the very idea of putting limits on corporate spending in elections, strongly opposing efforts to ban corporate donations to political parties. For him, now, to champion such legislation stretches his credibility and our trust to the breaking point.

The irony in this flip-flop is hard to match. If legislation banning corporate money from the political process had been in place since 1984, when it was first attempted, the sponsorship scandal might never have happened. Yet, ever since entering politics, Harper has done everything he could to ensure that corporate largesse would continue to play a distorting role in Canadian democracy.

The policies of the Reform Party-co-written by Harper and Preston Manning-consistently opposed legislation banning third-party spending as unconstitutional, and opposed legislation preventing corporations from contributing to political parties. During Harper's political hiatus from 1998 to 2002, he headed up the corporate-funded National Citizens Coalition (NCC), arguably the most virulently right-wing of Canada's pro-business lobby groups. Generally, he kept a low profile-keeping the NCC's anti-Medicare and anti-Asian immigration policies on the back burner, pursuing instead the NCC's attack on election-spending legislation as "gag laws."

An NCC court challenge killed the 1984 legislation, and another struck down a similar 1993 federal law restricting third-party spending. The latter was a response to recommendations of the 1992 Lortie Royal Commission on Electoral Reform that found millions of dollars in corporate money spent in the 1988 free-trade election had a definite impact. The commission also found that 93% of Canadians supported such legislation. Harper was not impressed. He and the NCC were in court in B.C. fighting that province's election-spending reforms, claiming corporate spending (and NCC spending) had no effect on election outcomes.

Perhaps Harper had forgotten that the NCC helped him get elected to Parliament in Calgary in 1993, spending $50,000 for attack ads against Conservative Party MP Jim Hawkes, Harper's former boss.

Harper also attacked new laws in Manitoba that banned corporate and union contributions to political parties, capped individual contributions at $3,000, and limited explicitly partisan third-party spending during elections to $5,000. It was legislation designed, in part, to keep big corporate money out, but Harper called it "the most dangerous and oppressive gag law in Canadian history."

On May 18, 2004, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favour of federal legislation restricting third-party election spending. When replying recently to Harper's new-found dedication to eradicating corporate influence, Public Works Minister Scott Brison accused Harper himself of being an unregistered lobbyist when he was with the NCC. He later retracted the statement when the NCC insisted that it was a public advocacy group that does not lobby politicians. But Brison apologized too soon. NCC Vice-Pr�sident Gerry Nicholls's claim that the organization is not a lobby group is hard to swallow. NCC founder Colin Brown took Ontario Conservative Premiers Bill Davis and John Robarts on chartered flights to the Masters Golf tournament in Augusta, Ga. The NCC was given a special meeting with Finance Minister Michael Wilson in 1984 to lobby him on deficit cuts.

In 1994, NCC head David Somerville formally lobbied Finance officials on reforming the capitalgains tax. The NCC presents position papers to public hearings. Harper knows the NCC lobbies-because in May, 1995, he argued in the House Affairs Committee in support of the NCC, which was demanding a seat at the table when public policy was discussed. An organization has to spend 20% or more of its budget on such activity before it has to register as a lobbyist. But the NCC refuses to reveal where it gets its money or how it spends it, so we have no idea how much it spends on lobbying.

Stephen Harper's proposed "Federal Accountability Act" is just part of the Conservative leader's desperate attempt at a political makeover. Polls show that Canadians do not trust Harper, nor do they like his policies. Given his long and sorry history of defending corporate money in politics, there is every reason to mistrust him still. Sensing power slipping though his fingers, Harper is abandoning his principles for power.

[Sidebar]

"Harper has spent much of his political life strongly opposing efforts to curb corporate donations to political parties and attacking election-spending legislative reforms as 'gag laws'."

[Author Affiliation]

(Murray Dobbin is a Vancouver-based journalist, author of several best-selling books, including Preston Manning and the Reform Party, and an elected member of the CCPA's Board of Directors.)

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Report evaluates Russian nuclear weapons security

A FEBRUARY 2002 annual report to Congress from the National Intelligence Council concludes that Russia maintains "adequate" control over its nuclear weapons but warns that although "nuclear [weapons complex] security has been slowly improving over the last several years, risks remain."

Russia maintains "adequate security and control of its nuclear weapons, but a decline in military funding has stressed the nuclear security system," the report states. The document characterizes an unauthorized or accidental use of a Russian nuclear weapon as "highly unlikely," given "current technical and procedural safeguards."

However, the report qualifies this positive assessment, …

Latin American stocks falling early on

Most Latin American stocks fell in early trading Thursday in the wake of worse-than-expected economic data in the U.S. and despite a big interest-rate cut in Brazil.

Brazil's Ibovespa stock index fell 1.2 percent to 38,100 and Mexico's IPC index dropped 2 percent to 19,100, while Colombia's IGBC dipped 0.1 percent to 7,460 and Argentina's Merval index fell 0.8 percent to 1,054. Chile's IPSA index was up slightly, however, rising 0.1 percent to 2,473.

Analysts say Thursday's declines in Brazil were largely because the market had already priced in a rate cut. Brazil's central bank on Wednesday cut the benchmark …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Sony to Launch Its Own Virtual Worlds

SAN FRANCISCO - Capitalizing on the popularity of social networks and online worlds, Sony will launch its own virtual universe and another 3-D game built almost entirely by players.

"Home" is a real-time, networked world for the PlayStation 3 in which players create human-looking characters called avatars. They can buy clothing, furniture and videos to play on a virtual flat-screen television in their virtual apartments.

The concept is strikingly similar to Linden Lab's "Second Life," a Web-based phenomenon with nearly 4.5 million residents. But Sony's world will feature heavy doses of video games for avatars to play, as well as virtual arcades, music, movies and other …

Kinney relates to customers.(Kinney Drugs)(Brief Article)

GOUVERNEUR, N.Y. -- It was a good year for Kinney Drugs, according to president and chief executive officer Richard Cognetti.

The retailer broke ground for 10 stores in 1999, opening seven units (three in New York and four in Vermont). The other three stores--in Carthage, N.Y., Messina, N.Y., and Derby, Vt.-- debuted earlier this year. The additions, Cognetti says, are in. keeping with Kinney's plans to maintain a young store base.

"About 35% of our chain is five years old or less," he comments. "Our goal five years from now is to have the whole chain 10 years old or less."

With more relocations and remodelings planned this year, Kinney should be on track to …

Doing business overseas and online: World Business Exchange - a lucrative connection.

It was a full house that led Roosevelt and Cathy Roby to start a home-based enterprise. With 10 young children on hand, they simply couldn't afford a babysitter. The Robys needed a way to earn a living and stay close to their Santa Monica, Calif., home.

Roosevelt, now 52, had worked as a diesel mechanic, but his continued efforts to get into his company's union were fruitless. It was Cathy, 46, a hair stylist, who encouraged him to start his own business. That was about 10 years ago.

After researching the home-based business market, the couple founded the REIS Network (Researched Entrepreneurial Ideas Specialists Group). The company produces and distributes audio …

SOFTENED SPA CITY CAFE LAW PRESENTED TO CITY COUNCIL.(Local)

Byline: Yancey Roy Staff writer

A committee presented a softened sidewalk cafe ordinance to the City Council on Monday, just six weeks after restaurateurs protested tighter restrictions.

The proposed rules, governing size, design and operating hours, would pertain to new applicants. The major change is that existing cafes would not come under scrutiny, said Joe Dalton, president of the Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce. He worked with city Planner Geoff Bornemann as well as a committee of others to draft the ordinance.

The council, though taking no formal action, seemed to be pleased with the proposal, with one exception. Public Works Commissioner …

Druse pilgrims cross to Syria from Golan Heights

About 400 Druse clergymen from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights crossed into Syria on Thursday for an annual pilgrimage.

The clerics, in traditional uniforms of white turbans, black robes and bushy mustaches, walked across a 300-meter buffer zone between Israeli and Syrian checkpoints at the Quneitra border crossing.

For the first time, about a dozen women joined them, to visit relatives in Syria.

But the group was smaller than planned, because Israel turned down applications from other pilgrims, said Medhat Saleh, head of Golan affairs in the Syrian Cabinet. He did not specify how many other Druse were denied entry, or for what reason.

The art of spending

Chicago author and Esquire senior editor Bill Zehme explains theessence of Frank Sinatra's inimitable style in his new book The WayYou Wear Your Hat: Frank Sinatra and the Lost Art of Livin.' Thesecond of three daily excerpts defines the rules of money, accordingto the Chairman of the Board.Tightwads, he disdained. Occasionally, while drinking, he amusedhimself by putting together his El Cheapo All-Time All-Star baseballteam. Rudy Vallee was always pitcher. Even friends like Cary Grantand a Bob Hope and Fred MacMurray usually made the lineup. Of onewho was parsimonious, he would say, quoting comedian Joe E. Lewis,"He has an impediment in his reach." This, of course, was never …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

BARBADOS: Solid waste management program (BA0025)

Implementation of an integrated solid waste management program including institutional and operational aspects, as well as collection, transportation and final disposal of solid waste. Estimated total cost: $35 million. In identification stage. Amount of loan: $35 million. Anticipated …

Titan announces 20th anniversary.

AIRLINE INDUSTRY INFORMATION-(C)1997-2008 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD

Titan Airways, a VIP charter specialist based in London-Stansted, has announced that this year is its 20th anniversary.

The company was founded in 1988, by Gene Willson, the managing director.

Titan has …

`PEEPING TOM' CALL LEADS TO MAN'S ARREST.(CAPITAL REGION)

ALBANY -- A city man who police said is a registered sex offender was arrested Tuesday night after a woman reported he was peering in her front window.

Police went to the 800-block of Lancaster Street after receiving a call that a man was on the front porch of a home looking at a woman sitting inside in a nightgown, said Detective James Miller, public safety spokesman.

Edward First, 31, of Western Avenue, was spotted by officers Gordon McLean and …

GODDARD JUST KEEPS ON RUNNING.(Sports)

Byline: Maureen Kelly

If there is such a thing as the sophomore jinx, Cheri Goddard doesn't know about it. Goddard, in her second year at Villanova University, is blazing the trails in the world of college cross-country.

The former Saratoga High School standout is in top form and will run in the NCAA Championship Meet Monday at the Pine Lakes Golf Course in Knoxville, Tenn.

The Wildcats are the No.1-ranked team in the nation and have won the NCAA championship two consecutive years. They haven't lost a meet since 1988.

At the Big East Championship Meet Oct.20, Villanova took the top four places with Nnenna Lynch

in front, followed …

Raven Industries reports 13 percent 3Q profit drop

Raven Industries Inc., which makes reinforced plastic sheeting and products for precision farming and navigation, on Thursday reported a 13 percent drop in third-quarter profit but said higher operating margins helped offset lower sales.

The diversified manufacturer, based in Sioux Falls, S.D., reported a profit of $7.3 million, or 40 cents per share, in the three months ended Oct. 31 compared to $8.4 million, or 46 cents per share, in the third quarter of 2008.

Revenue fell 20.3 percent to $60.1 million from $75.5 million in the year-ago period.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were looking for a profit of 38 cents per share on $62.9 million …

Sabres Hang on for 4-3 Win Over Leafs

TORONTO - The Buffalo Sabres ended their rare losing skid and regained the top spot in the NHL. Daniel Briere, Ales Kotalik and Chris Drury had a goal and assist each, and Sabres held on for a 4-3 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night.

Dmitri Kalinin also scored for the Sabres, who avoided their first three-game losing streak of the season. Buffalo leads the NHL with 63 points, one more than idle Anaheim and 19 ahead of Northeast Division-rival Toronto.

Buffalo has lost consecutive games only twice this season.

"We're not use to losing," Briere said. "Two games for us felt like a long time. Now we'll be able to relax and get back to the same game …

BUSH ADMINISTRATION REBUFFS EUROPE ON CLIMATE CHANGE.(backs out of Kyoto agreement)(Brief Article)

Bush administration officials have rejected a plea from European negotiators for the U.S. to fulfill its commitment to the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement to reduce greenhouse gases. Bush's decision to pull out of the Kyoto talks prompted criticism last month by European regulators who say they will go forward with the protocol without the U.S. (p. 35).

EPA administrator Christine Todd Whitman says the Bush Administration is optimistic it "can develop technologies, market-based incentives, and other innovative approaches to global climate change." The protocol is unfair …

Beat the Cowboys.

The battle against rogue traders is now being stepped up with a new 'beat the cowboys' advertising campaign on local radio and on buses.

East Sussex County Council's Trading Standards Service has been running its approved trader 'Buy With Confidence' scheme since May 2004 and the initiative has almost 280 East Sussex businesses signed up.

The scheme supports honest traders and helps to protect people from being ripped off by rogue traders.

ESCC plans to increase awareness about the scheme with an advertising campaign that will include bus and local radio advertising across the County. The Council hopes that the campaign will lead to more businesses …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

DEVILS ARE COMING TO TOWN.(SPORTS)

ALBANY -- The New Jersey Devils will open their National Hockey League exhibition schedule Sunday, Sept. 14, against the Washington Capitals at Pepsi Arena.

This will be the sixth straight year the downtown arena has been host to an NHL game. Last year's local NHL exhibition, which matched the Devils and Detroit Red Wings, drew 4,705.

Tickets will go on sale later this month.

Cup headed to Glens Falls: The Detroit Red Wings announced that the Stanley Cup will be on display Sept. 8 and 9 at the Glens Falls Civic Center.

Further …

Stocks slide after investors focus on Europe woes

Another wave of selling hit stocks Wednesday in response to growing fears that Europe has no quick fix for its debt crisis.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell about 67 points after having been down as much as 186.

The extent of investors' worries became clear after the euro bounced off a four-year low but stocks still fell. The euro has been driving stock trading for weeks.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index, widely considered one of the best measures of how the stock market is doing, neared a 10 percent drop from the 2010 trading high it reached last month. That would mark the first time the market has had what's known as a …

Witnessing for peace along Canada-U.S. border

Langley, B.C.

Concerned about the increasing militarization of American border watchers, 18 members of Ploughshares Fraser Valley-including a number of Mennonites-recently gathered at five sites along the Canada-U.S. border to call attention to the presence of self-appointed "vigilantes" called Minutemen.

Since 2005, the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps has actively advocated such measures as building high fences along the borders of the United States. Sporting signs like "Stop the Invasion," and claiming to protect the U.S. from illegal aliens, terrorists and smugglers, volunteers with the Washington State Minuteman group have regularly posted themselves along the Canadian …

ALL EYES ON CANADA'S ROCHETTE.(Sports)

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- While hockey represents the very soul of Canada, for millions of viewers the Winter Olympics comes down to one galvanizing moment: women's figure skating long program.

It's four minutes of grace under the extreme pressure of making the impossible look as elegant as it is athletic. The best will take home gold, silver and bronze medals tonight at Pacific Coliseum tonight in a competition with a riveting storyline.

South Korea's Kim Yu-na is favored to win gold in what would be her country's first medal in Olympic figure skating, men or women. She'll be pushed by Japan's Mao Asada. The two rivals finished 1-2 in Tuesday's short …

WILLIAM W. GLASSER, SR.(CAPITAL REGION)

AVERILL PARK -- William W. Glasser, Sr., 86, of Rt 43, died on Thursday at his residence after a long illness. Born in the Bronx he was son of the late John and Julia Cambeis Glasser. Mr. Glasser had resided in Averill Park for over 65 years and was a self employed plumber. He was a Navy veteran of World War II and was a member of the Sgt. Walter Adams VFW Post in Averill Park and was a communicant of St. Henrys Church, Averill Park. Survivors include his wife Violet Cieniawa Glasser of Averill Park; his children, William W. Glasser, Jr. of Averill Park, Paul Glasser of Averill Park, Robert J. Glasser of Saratoga, Patricia Ruckh of Wheaton, III, Joseph Glasser of West Sand …

Opposition seeks show of strength at Friday prayer

Tens of thousands of opposition supporters massed at Iran's main Islamic prayer service Friday, attempting a show strength at one of the country's most important and symbolic political platforms. Police fired tear gas at others as they headed to the prayers.

The opposition is seeking to show their movement remains vibrant even after the crackdown put down huge anti-government protests that erupted after Iran's disputed June 12 presidential election.

Since the turmoil began, the main Friday prayers at Tehran University have been a stage for hard-line clerics to lay down the line of Iran's supreme leader. But for the first time since the election, Friday's sermon is being …

EVs and hybrids top consumer group's list; 2011s are graded under 2013 EPA sticker system.

Byline: Neil Roland

The Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Volt electric vehicles, as well as an assortment of Ford, Honda and Toyota hybrids, would receive top fuel economy and emissions ratings if 2011 models were graded under the EPA's new window-sticker system, a consumer group said.

The EPA last month approved new mpg and pollution labels to go on vehicles in the 2013 model year.

One feature of the new stickers will be a 1-to-10 rating -- with 10 the best -- for fuel efficiency and tailpipe emissions, calculated by comparing the particular model to other new vehicles.

The Consumer Federation of America said 11 of the 1,052 models, or 1 percent, would get the …