Thursday, 15 March 2012

Future of Sudan's Darfur uncertain post-referendum

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — Years before Sudan's south began casting votes for succession, the woes of Africa's largest country were defined by the ethnic bloodshed in the western Darfur region.

Now, international mediators and rights groups are calling for stronger efforts to settle the eight-year Darfur conflict, fearing that the expected breakaway of the south may push Khartoum's leaders to clamp down harder on dissent and place stricter limits on an international role in Darfur and other areas that remain under its direct control.

Human Rights Watch and other groups say violence was already increasing in the vast arid region in the lead-up to the southern referendum held …

Italians hold local elections, test for Berlusconi

Voters began casting ballots Sunday in Italy's regional elections, which are being seen as an important test of popularity for Premier Silvio Berlusconi.

The conservative leader campaigned relentlessly for the Sunday-Monday ballot, urging his supporters to vote and avert the risk of low turnout. He has seen his popularity eroded amid rising unemployment, a corruption scandal and an investigation into his alleged attempts to influence TV coverage.

The ballots were being held in 13 of Italy's 20 regions, as well as in a handful of cities, and the outcome would not have direct consequences on the stability of Berlusconi's 20-month-old government.

TV exec shaped dog show

CHESTER F. COLLIER

WELLINGTON, Fla. -- Chester F. Collier, an Emmy-winning producerbest known for shaping the Westminster Kennel Club dog show, diedfrom diabetes complications Wednesday, the organization said. He was80.

Mr. Collier was a longtime network television producer andexecutive with media outlets including CNBC and Fox News. Aspresident of Group W and Westinghouse Broadcasting, he …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Leverkusen extends contract of German national team defender

Bayer Leverkusen said Friday it had extended the contract of 20-year-old German national team defender Gonzalo Castro, the third promising youngster the club has re-signed in recent weeks.

Castro, who has four caps with Germany, joins 25-year-old Germany midfielder Simon Rolfes and 22-year-old goalkeeper Rene Adler who have committed to the club through 2012.

"This shows that we are in the position again of holding onto …

Obama bobbleheads stalled in US Customs

President Barack Obama bobbleheads that are supposed to be given away at a minor-league baseball game apparently haven't gotten the nod from customs officials.

The West Virginia Power Class A baseball team said Thursday that 1,000 of the figures have been held up at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection warehouse in Los Angeles since May 20. A U.S. Customs spokeswoman in Los Angeles said she didn't have more information on why they were stalled.

The bobbleheads are a likeness of Obama in …

Getting into shape

Mr Manu Sood is a plastic surgeon at Spire Hartswood privatehospital in Brentwood When can a tummy tuck be effective? There areseveral types of patient who can benefit. Firstly people who havelost a lot of weight, ladies who have had children and their skinhas been stretched by the pregnancy, people who have weak abdominalmuscles and people who have had a hernia and are left with a bulgeafter surgery.

Are body re-shaping procedures (such as tummy tucks andliposuction) a substitute for exercise? No. If you have body re-shaping and continue to eat badly and not exercise the faS t willcome back.

What other factors would you take into account when advising …

Man Charged With Intimidation on Flight

BUFFALO, N.Y. - A Jet Blue Airlines flight was diverted when a passenger who was refused alcohol threatened to shoot and kill the flight crew, federal officials said Friday.

Jose Roman, 26, was arrested by the FBI Thursday and charged with assaulting and intimidating flight crew and interfering with their ability to perform their duties, said U.S. Attorney Terrance Flynn in a statement.

Roman was on a flight from Houston to New York City …

Punjab wins toss and opts to bat vs. Mumbai in IPL

Kings XI Punjab won the toss and opted to bat against the Mumbai Indians in an Indian Premier League match at Kingsmead on Wednesday.

___

Teams:

Punjab: Ravi Bopara, Karan Goel, Yuvraj Singh, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, Irfan …

`Trek' star says he's no Spock

LOS ANGELES A slight smile crosses actor Brent Spiner's lips as hesays, "I am not Spock," then adds, "And I'm not Data, either."

Actually, Spiner says he's rarely recognized out of his goldenmakeup and uniform as the android Lt. Cmdr. Data he plays on "StarTrek: The Next Generation," which airs at 6 p.m. Saturdays onWPWR-Channel 50.

Spiner has escaped the close identification with his characterthat forced actor Leonard Nimoy to occasionally remind his ardentfans that he was not Mr. Spock, his role in "Star Trek" and in themovie series.

"It happens only rarely that people recognize me," Spiner says."When people do ask me if I'm Data, I say, `Sometimes.' There …

Cigar City brewing beer that tastes like Tampa

TAMPA, Florida (AP) — When a friend gave Joey Redner a taste of a beer that had been aged with Spanish cedar — the wood used to wrap and box cigars — he knew it was an idea worth stealing.

The aroma and flavor instantly reminded the then avid home brewer of his hometown's historic Ybor City and the hand-rolled cigars Tampa is famous for. And he knew that if he ever owned a brewery, his beer needed to evoke the same memories.

"It just blew me away because when I smelled it, it was like waking down 7th Avenue in Ybor City, walking past a cigar shop," said Redner, who now owns Cigar City Brewing. "It was a win/win. It was good and it really pinpointed it on the map as coming from …

Hamas marks 1 year after war, but many stay home

Hamas loyalists marked the one-year anniversary of Israel's devastating war against Gaza's Islamic militant rulers with defiant protests and a moment of silence on Sunday _ even as most of the territory's residents ignored commemoration events and some even criticized the militant group for not attending to their needs instead.

Around 3,000 Hamas supporters milled around a square in the northern Gaza town of Jebaliya, waving their group's green flags and holding up pictures of family members slain in the Israeli offensive that began on Dec. 27, 2008. Some 1,400 Palestinians were killed, including as many as 900 civilians, along with 13 Israelis.

"We …

Rape Prompts DePaul U. to Boost Security

Security will be stepped up at DePaul University's Lincoln Parkcampus after a 26-year-old student was raped in a classroom buildingas her husband attended an evening class down the hall, officialssaid Friday.

The woman was studying alone in a sixth-floor conference room inByrne Hall at 2219 N. Kenmore about 8:25 p.m. Thursday when a manentered the room and threatened to kill her, investigators said.

The man said he had a knife, but didn't display one, she toldpolice. After the attack, she hit a button on a Byrne security callbox, then walked to the university security office a block away, saidThomas Gibbons, a university spokesman.

The victim was treated …

Geithner: GOP privately agrees to hike debt limit

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says Republican leaders have privately assured the Obama administration that Congress will raise the government's borrowing limit in time to prevent an unprecedented default on the nation's debt.

Geithner told ABC's "This Week" and NBC's "Meet the Press" that Republicans told President Obama in a White House meeting last Wednesday that they will go along with a higher limit.

"I want to make it perfectly clear that Congress will raise the debt ceiling," Geithner said in the interviews taped Saturday and aired Sunday.

He said the leaders told Obama that they couldn't play around with the government's credit rating. "They recognize it, and they told the president that on Wednesday in the White House," Geithner said.

But Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said that while it was true nobody wants the country to default, it's essential to address future borrowing at the same time.

"We want cuts in spending accompanying a raising of the debt ceiling. And that is what we have been telling the White House," Ryan said. AP

Tim GeithnerFred Watkins

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Are grandparents safer drivers than mom and dad?

CHICAGO (AP) — Kids may be safest in cars when grandma or grandpa are driving instead of mom or dad, according to study results that even made the researchers do a double-take.

"We were surprised to discover that the injury rate was considerably lower in crashes where grandparents were the drivers," said Dr. Fred Henretig, an emergency medicine specialist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the study's lead author.

Previous evidence indicates that car crashes are more common in older drivers, mostly those beyond age 65. The study looked at injuries rather than who had more crashes, and found that children's risk for injury was 50 percent lower when riding with grandparents than with parents.

The results are from an analysis of State Farm insurance claims for 2003-07 car crashes in 15 states, and interviews with the drivers. The data involved nearly 12,000 children up to age 15.

Henretig, 64, said the study was prompted by his own experiences when his first grandchild was born three years ago.

"I found myself being very nervous on the occasions that we drove our granddaughter around and really wondered if anyone had ever looked at this before," he said.

Reasons for the unexpected findings are uncertain, but the researchers have a theory.

"Perhaps grandparents are made more nervous about the task of driving with the 'precious cargo' of their grandchildren and establish more cautious driving habits" to compensate for any age-related challenges, they wrote.

The study was released online Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

Northwestern University Professor Joseph Schofer, a transportation expert not involved in the research, noted that the average age of grandparents studied was 58.

"Grandparents today are not that old" and don't fit the image of an impaired older driver, he said. "None of us should represent grandparents as kind of hobbling to the car on a walker."

Grandparents did flub one safety measure. Nearly all the kids were in car seats or seat belts, but grandparents were slightly less likely to follow recommended practices, which include rear-facing backseat car seats for infants and no front-seats. But that didn't seem to affect injury rates.

Only about 10 percent of kids in the study were driven by grandparents, but they suffered proportionately fewer injuries.

Overall, 1.05 percent of kids were injured when riding with parents, versus 0.70 percent of those riding with grandparents, or a 33 percent lower risk. The difference was even more pronounced — 50 percent — when the researchers took into account other things that could influence injury rates, including not using car seats, and older-model cars.

Kids suffered similar types of injuries regardless of who was driving, including concussions, other head injuries and broken bones.

The study does not include data on deaths, but Henretig said there were very few. It also lacked information on the types of car trips involved; for example, driving in busy city traffic might increase chances for crashes with injuries.

Schofer, the Northwestern professor, said other unstudied circumstances could have played a role. For example, grandparents could be less distracted and less frazzled than busy parents dropping their kids off at school while rushing to get to work or to do errands. Driving trips might be "quality time" for older drivers and their grandchildren, Schofer said.

___

Online:

Pediatrics: http://www.pediatrics.org

American Academy of Pediatrics car seat recommendations: http://bit.ly/rqmKhT

Elaine May gets film role

Screenwriter Elaine May will take a film role in Woody Allen'snext project, scheduled to begin shooting in New York this summer.

Allen is writing and directing the untitled picture, in which hestars opposite the previously announced Tracey Ullman, Hugh Grant andJon Lovitz.

May last appeared onscreen in the 1990 comedy "In the Spirit."

Stocks open higher after durable goods report

Stocks are higher in early trading after the government said orders for big-ticket items rose in June at the fastest pace in four months.

The Commerce Department says orders for durable goods rose 0.8 percent last month, far better than the 0.4 percent decline economists expected. The reading seems to be easing some of the market's concerns after a big sell-off Thursday in response to a weak housing report and worries about the financial sector.

The Dow Jones Industrial average is up 35 at the 11,384 level. The Dow fell more than 280 points Thursday.

Srebrenica massacre memorial to point finger at UN

Phillip Ruch's monument to Srebrenica is a huge jumble of worn shoes, more than 16,000 of them, each pair representing a victim of Europe's worst massacre since World War II.

Seen from afar it will spell out U.N. in gigantic letters.

The "Pillar of Shame" is to be raised in the hills above Srebrenica with a controversial goal: singling out the United Nations and international leaders as the ones most responsible for failing to prevent the mass killings.

Ahead of the 15th anniversary Sunday of the massacre, Ruch said he is looking forward to the debate the monument is almost certain to generate when it goes up at some point next year.

The German activist describes his project as a "warning for all future U.N. employees never again just to stand by when genocide unfolds" _ alluding to the failure of U.N. peacekeepers to protect the Srebrenica victims during the Bosnian war.

On July 11, 1995, more than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and youths were slaughtered by Bosnian Serb troops in an enclave supposedly protected by U.N. peacekeepers.

The United Nations had declared Serb-besieged Srebrenica, some 90 kilometers (60 miles) northeast of Sarajevo, a protected area for civilians. But the few hundred Dutch Blue Helmets on the ground were left short of credible weaponry or a clear mandate to protect the town.

Srebrenica fell to the Serbs after senior U.N. commanders dithered on Dutch requests for air strikes and its overwhelmingly Bosnian Muslim residents swarmed the U.N. military base, seeking refuge. But the peacekeepers allowed the Serbs to take away the townspeople when Gen. Ratko Mladic, their leader, said they would not be harmed.

The shootings began shortly after. While Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic is now being tried by the U.N. tribunal at the Hague for allegedly masterminding Srebrenica, Mladic remains at large. And the bodies, bulldozed into mass graves, keep turning up by the hundreds each year.

"Pillar of Shame" creator Ruch says worn shoes have been pouring into Bosnian collection centers since he launched his appeal for footwear six weeks ago.

They will be encased in wire mesh, in 8-meter (nearly 9-yard) tall letters spelling out U.N and placed on a hill overlooking the graves of the Srebrenica victims.

Also displayed _ in a way still to be determined _ will be names picked by Bosnian Muslims of U.N. and other international officials considered responsible for botching the task of protecting Srebrenica.

Bosnian Muslim Zlata Konakovic is so fired up by the project she donated seven pairs of shoes, including ones mailed from Washington from her son and grandson.

"I knew over 8,000 people were killed but only when you see this mountain of shoes do you get the picture of how many that is," she said.

On Sunday, as the Srebrenica commemorations start, Ruch plans to dump 8,372 collected pairs in front of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate.

In Srebrenica, the presidents of both Serbia and Croatia will for the first time pay respects to victims alongside Bosnian Muslims.

Ethnic distrust continues to plague postwar Bosnia, but the leaders' joint presence at the Srebrenica ceremonies is meant to be a powerful sign of reconciliation 18 years after the eruption of Europe's fiercest post-World War conflict.

The U.N. will not be represented. But the failure of U.N. peacekeepers to protect the Srebrenica victims is vividly etched in the collective Bosnian Muslim memory.

"They watched genocide _ live," said Srebrenica survivor Munira Subasic, who lost 22 relatives.

Then-U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in a 1999 report that the United Nations failed at Srebrenica because of errors, misjudgment and "an inability to recognize the scope of the evil confronting us." He said the U.N. treated Serbs and Muslims equally when they should have made a "moral judgment" that ethnic cleansing _ practiced mostly by the Serbs _ was evil.

An independent study by the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation cleared the Dutch troops of blame, noting they were outnumbered, lightly armed, undersupplied, and under instructions to fire only in self-defense. However, the Dutch government has accepted "political responsibility" for the mission's failure, and has given tens of millions of dollars to Bosnia, with a third earmarked for rebuilding Srebrenica.

But for most Bosnian Muslims, that is not enough.

"We are taking the United Nations to the Court of Human Rights," said Subasic, who heads the victims' association Mothers of Srebrenica.

"We will never give up."

___

Associated Press writers George Jahn in Vienna and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

E-Strategies That Worked

There have been thousands of articles written, TV hours spent, and blog comments posted about what happened in the 2004 elections. But at the end of the day, what happened is very simple: The Republicans won and the Democrats lost. More "red" voters turned out than "blue" voters in the places where it mattered most.

But why did it happen? Let me offer a perspective on how the Internet helped to decide the outcome of this election.

(Full disclosure: I am a Democrat, so it pains me greatly to write what follows - that the Bush campaign and the Republican Party outmaneuvered the Democrats in key areas, and at key times, during this past election cycle.)

The Internet played a big role in this election cycle. But Web sites and e-mail did not replace traditional methods of political involvement. Voters still needed to meet their candidates face-to-face and feel comfortable with their style of leadership. The media successfully balanced the need for breaking news stories with long, thoughtful profiles and in-depth analysis of key issues.

And each campaign still sent direct mail, aired television ads, made get-out-the-vote phone calls, held rallies, and granted interviews to generate favorable media coverage. This election was decided on the ground. The Republicans had a better-planned and executed effort to deploy volunteers to get out the Republican vote. And they used online tools much more effectively than the Democrats to get out the vote.

Back in June, President George W. Bush's campaign unveiled "Your Virtual Precinct," a tool that allowed Bush supporters to set up their own "precinct" of friends and family across the country to contact others on behalf of the president's campaign, and a peer-to-peer network designed to help supporters "spread the word about President Bush's record of accomplishment by sending letters to undecided voters in target states." The system even offered users the ability to download a walk list, complete with map and directions. Using this system, the Republicans were able to identify potential supporters, and then leverage the time and energy of their volunteers most effectively in seeking them out.

U.S. Sen. John Kerry's campaign certainly had its advantages online - fund-raising in particular. Both national campaigns successfully took full advantage of the fundraising opportunities online by quickly and inexpensively conceiving of, writing, delivering and then watching as their efforts generated significant returns. Kerry's campaign raised 60 percent of its contributions through its Web site, many from first-time donors making small contributions.

During the final week of the election, the campaign continued to send out fund-raising messages - nearly twothirds of the messages Democrats received from the campaign asked for a contribution, while only 30 percent focused on getting out the vote and just 14 percent focused on issues or current events. In contrast, of messages the Bush campaign sent during the final week, only 8 percent focused on fund-raising, while 38 percent focused on getting out the vote and 54 percent focused on issues.

The Bush campaign created a direct line to their supporters to ask them for what was most imminently needed: votes and unity on issues. The Kerry campaign sent as many messages, but asked for something far less urgent in the final days leading up to an election: money.

In messaging also, Republicans seized the opportunities online much more effectively than Democrats. They had compelling, timely and well-delivered messages that both attacked and defended against attacks, and reinforced their overall campaign messages and themes.

The Democrats, meanwhile, passed on most opportunities to deliver messages online in a targeted way - to people reading the newspaper online or perusing a health carerelated Web site, for example. The Bush campaign was said to have as many as seven million e-mail addresses in their database, compared with just 2.5 million for the Kerry campaign. But the numerical advantage alone did not deliver a victory for the president. Republican campaigns simply made better use of their audiences.

The Internet has created new opportunities for political campaigns and organizations to communicate better with their supporters. A strong Web presence and strategic use of e-mail and other online tools allows campaigns to reach supporters, donors, volunteers, and the media more effectively. These online tools must be incorporated into the overall strategy of an organization and used as a key extension of everyday activities to maximize the benefits.

Remember, Web users are not like the target audiences for television and direct mail, and they need to be approached differently. The Internet is an effective tool for educating and energizing subscribers or supporters. But if you look at it only as a tactic for raising money you are missing out.

[Author Affiliation]

Brian Reich is a strategic consultant and director of Boston operations for Mindshare interactive Campaigns (www.mindshare.net). He writes regularly for Campaign Web Review (www.campaignwebreview.corn) and National Journal's The Hotline about the impact of the Internet on politics and campaigns.

Catholic Church 'street talk' not speaking to needs of nuns

Carol Marin's article "Church inquisition a warning to nuns" on July 25, is further evidence of the "Catholic Church street talk." And that street talk is saying that the Holy Spirit must be under lock and key in the basement of the Vatican.

How else can one explain that the Vatican would declare that on the same list, both ordination of women and pedophilia are grave sins? How else can one explain the inquisition of the religious women's lifestyle while the male hierarchy of our church allows Cardinal Law to live in the lap of luxury.?

How else can one explain that the male hierarchy of our church says we do not have enough money to care for the retirement needs of the women religious, who have dedicated their lives to the service of the Gospel (thank God for our generous, appreciative, ever-so-grateful laity who certainly do more than their part in the religious care), but then you come up with a million-plus to investigate the religious?

How else can you explain that the male hierarchy would tell the religious that they have to help pay for the costs of the investigation and then tell the women religious that the report will not be shared with them? The "Catholic Church street talk" is also saying that if the women of our church went on strike, our church would collapse. And this is so very true!

We ought to pay a king's ransom to free the desperate needed Holy Spirit.

Oops, I, like our male hierarchy, must have forgotten the King did pay the ransom by his death on the Cross.

The Rev. Larry McNally

Ascension Parish, Oak Park

Photo: Ezra Shaw, Getty Images / Where's the love for Catholic Church's stalwarts?

On the Calendar

Nov. 14-25 Meeting of states-parties to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, Geneva

Nov. 17-18 International Atomic Energy Agency Board of Governors meeting, Vienna

Nov. 21-22 IAEA forum on existing nuclear-weaponfree zones and their potential relevance to the Middle East, Vienna

Nov. 28-Dec. 2 Annual meeting of states-parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention, The Hague

Nov. 28-Dec. 2 Meeting of states-parties to the Anti- Personnel Landmine Ban Convention, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Dec. 5-22 Biological Weapons Convention review conference, Geneva

Penguins Finally Beat Panthers in Igloo

PITTSBURGH - These Pittsburgh Penguins must be for real. They're even beating the Florida Panthers.

Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 32 shots, and the Penguins ended a nearly five-year home losing streak against the Panthers by winning 3-0 Tuesday night.

And they did it without any goals from Sidney Crosby or Mark Recchi.

Michel Ouellet, Dominic Moore and Ryan Whitney scored as Pittsburgh won its fourth in a row and sixth in seventh games. Crosby and Recchi combined for eight goals and 19 points in three games, with Recchi getting six goals and 10 points before being shut out by Florida.

"We got some big saves, especially in the third when they were pressing pretty hard," Crosby said, pointing to Florida's 13-4 shots advantage during the final period. "That's what your goalie needs to do, buy you time and make it tough on teams to get back when you have a lead."

Crosby did extend his point streak to seven games (4 goals, 10 assists) by helping set up Whitney's ninth goal of the season. The power-play goal came midway through the second period after Florida held off Pittsburgh during a pair of 5-on-3 advantages that lasted two minutes. Crosby has an NHL-leading 79 points in 46 games.

"It was kind of disappointing that we gave them a goal after working so hard and doing a good job with the 5-on-3," Florida coach Jacques Martin said.

Fleury got his third shutout of the season and fifth of his career, and against an opponent that had won seven in a row in Pittsburgh since March 5, 2002. The Panthers had won 14 of 15 overall against Pittsburgh.

"We said before the game it was about time - we were all sick of hearing, 'Why can't you beat these teams from Florida?'" Whitney said. "It was a huge game in that aspect and in the standings, too."

With a 24-17-8 record, the Penguins are an NHL-best 25 points ahead of their pace of last season, when they were 11-29-9 en route to winning only 22 games. They are in playoff contention for the first time since Mario Lemieux's comeback season six years ago.

"With that personnel over there, it was only a matter of time before they got going," Florida's Bryan Allen said. "Fleury played well, especially in the third period, and sometimes that's the biggest factor."

The Penguins returned from one of their best road trips in years, beating Dallas 4-3 in a shootout Friday and Phoenix 7-2 on Saturday, but didn't experience the letdown some teams have in the first game at home following a western swing.

"We wanted to make sure we come back here focused," Crosby said. "We didn't come back overconfident. We came back with a strong work ethic and tried to play the way we did in those two games on the road."

Ouellet got the game's first goal late in the first period, squeezing a backhander between goalie Ed Belfour's right shoulder and the goal post. Evgeni Malkin knocked down Jordan Staal's pass with his right hand in the neutral zone before threading a cross-ice pass onto Ouellet's stick to the left of the net.

Moore made it 2-0 as the Penguins' checking line scored 2 1/2 minutes into the second period. Jarkko Ruutu went into the corner to chase down Ronald Petrovicky's dump-in and fed Moore in front for another backhander that got past Belfour.

"The first two periods, I think we were a little slow, a step behind and that cost us the game," said Olli Jokinen, who had four goals as the Panthers won the first two games between the teams. "They've got a lot of players in here the last few years and it's paying off."

Notes:@ The Penguins have a 22-7 scoring edge during their winning streak. ... Florida has won only six of 27 road games. ... The Penguins have gotten 13 of 14 points in their last seven games. ... The crowd of 15,405 ended a streak of eight consecutive Penguins home sellouts. ... Petrovicky has an assist in each of his last two games after not previously having one all season. ... Mike Tomlin, the new Steelers coach, was among those in the crowd.

Monday, 12 March 2012

What earnings reports have revealed about ads

Here are highlights of recent quarterly earnings reports from selected Internet, media and advertising companies and what they say about the state of spending on advertising:

Oct. 14: Google Inc. says its average cost per click rose 3 percent from a year ago, meaning companies paid more to place ads. People clicked on ads 16 percent more than they did in the same period last year. Executives also indicate that display advertising accounted for nearly 10 percent of ad revenue in the quarter, and mobile advertising was almost 4 percent. Those figures helped justify two of Google's biggest acquisitions — of DoubleClick Inc. and AdMob.

Oct. 15: Gannett Co. reports a 37 percent rise in third-quarter earnings on Friday, helped by a jump in broadcasting revenue. A recovering auto industry and political campaigns heading into midterm elections poured money into Gannett's 23 television stations. That, plus an increase in advertising on the company's websites, helped the biggest U.S. newspaper publisher halt declining revenue for the first time since 2006.

Oct. 19: The New York Times Co. and McClatchy Co. both report that print advertising fell compared with a year ago, when ad sales had already taken a big plunge from 2008 levels. And neither company was able to draw enough new business from its digital operations to make up for the losses in print.

Yahoo Inc. says search advertising revenue fell 7 percent from last year to $331 million. But Yahoo generated slightly more revenue from each search in the third quarter, the first time that has happened in two years. The company fared much better in its stronghold, the "display" advertising category that covers banner and full-screen ads, sometimes featuring video. Revenue in this segment climbed 17 percent to $465 million.

Oct. 27: IAC/InterActiveCorp, the Internet company run by billionaire Barry Diller, says its third-quarter revenue jumped 25 percent because of growth in its search business, which makes the majority of its revenue from online advertising. The results further show that the online advertising market is continuing to bounce back from a slump that hurt IAC throughout most of last year.

Comcast Corp. says its programming unit, which includes the E! cable TV channel, saw revenue grow 8.7 percent during the third quarter because of strong advertising sales at its channels and strong viewership at E!.

Oct. 28: Microsoft Corp says its online revenue, which comes primarily from search advertising, edged up 8 percent to $527 million. That segment widened its operating loss in the quarter to $560 million, however, as the company continued to spend money on chasing Google Inc., the No. 1 search provider.

Wednesday: Time Warner Inc. says advertising revenue grew 9 percent, driven by growth in its networks and magazine units. Providing more evidence that the advertising freeze has begun to thaw, the company again raised its adjusted earnings outlook for 2010.

AOL Inc. says advertising revenue dropped 27 percent. AOL attributed much of the drop to reductions in its European operations, the sale of social network Bebo in the second quarter and overall declines in search and display ad revenue. The company has been trying to shed unprofitable businesses even if they contribute to higher revenue.

News Corp. reports growth in advertising revenue throughout the company. Ad revenue at domestic cable channels including Fox News Channel grew 16 percent because of higher prices and more ads bought. Ad revenue at international cable channels grew 27 percent because of better ad markets and viewership. Ad revenue grew 22 percent at Fox television stations and 13 percent at News Corp.'s newspapers, which include The Wall Street Journal.

Among earnings reports coming up:

Thursday: CBS Corp.

Friday: Washington Post Co.

Nov. 11: Viacom Inc., Walt Disney Co.

Stepping Out

Lois Silverman says there are a lot of misconceptions - some might call them myths - about businesses run by women.

For starters, there's the notion that most of these businesses were started by the women's husbands and fathers, said Silverman, founder and chairwoman of the Commonwealth Institute, the Boston-based non-profit group that provides assistance to women entrepreneurs and CEOs. Then there's the perception that these are all service businesses, ranging from staffing companies to advertising agencies.

And then there's the widely held belief that most women start their own businesses because they hit a glass ceiling in the corporate world and become frustrated with the progress of their careers - or lack thereof.

These attitudes, though mostly off the mark, have been allowed to thrive because until lately, there was little known about women business owners and CEOs, said Nan Langowitz, faculty director for the Center for Women's Leadership at Babson College.

"It's a very understudied population to say the least," said Langowitz, who, along with Silverman, authored what is considered the first comprehensive analysis of woman-run businesses in Massachusetts.

And their research, which identified the top 100 woman-led companies in the state based on total revenues, may serve to dispel many of those myths, said Silverman. She told BusinessWest that women are starting businesses not because they're frustrated, necessarily, but because they have the same desire for achievement and independence that men do.

In short, women are starting their own businesses because they have the confidence and, increasingly, the wherewithal to do so, said Dianne Fuller Doherty, director of the Mass. Small Business Development Center's Western Mass. office. "Women today have grown up watching other women run their own businesses," she said. "It wasn't like that a generation ago."

And while service companies do make up nearly 22% of woman-led businesses, a surprising 19% of the ventures are in the high-technology field, while 14% are in construction. And fewer than 25% of the businesses now run by women are considered family businesses passed on to them in some form.

The study reinforces trends that women are starting new businesses at a higher rate than men, said Nangowitz, and it shows that women still face a good number of challenges, including a lack of female mentors and, in some cases, limited access to capital.

BusinessWest looks this month at the landmark study and the broader subject of women making the transition from employee to employer.

The Latest Word

Kitty Axelson-Berry says she didn't wake up one day and decide that she wanted to start her own company. But over a period of time after she left her job as managing editor of the Valley Advocate, she came to the conclusion that she simply didn't want to work for someone else anymore.

"I just didn't feel enthusiastic about going back into the work environment," she said. "I did apply for a few jobs, but my heart wasn't in it. When I kept asking myself, 'what's next?' I decided I would find a way to work for myself."

And she did, creating an industry as much as she did a business.

She eventually hit on a concept that would blend her writing and editing talents with a passion for history. Her business, Amherst-based Modern Memoirs, which she started in 1994, creates personal histories of individuals. For rates ranging up to $35,000, she will create a detailed history of a person or family.

Getting the business to turn a profit has been a struggle, but Axelson-Berry has succeeded in part because she has helped create interest in her concept and grow it as an industry. She founded the Association of Personal Historians, which now has a membership of well over 200, and has worked hard to earn press for this profession in outlets ranging from The Wall Street Journal to The Today Show.

She's learned most lessons about running a business the hard way, but has relied on groups that offer help to small business owners, particularly the SBDC.

Axelson-Berry's story is similar to that of many women business owners and CEOs, said Doherty, who told BusinessWest that a blend of desire, confidence, and even technology is allowing more women to go into business for themselves.

"It's a combination of a number of factors," she said of the reasons why more women are becoming business owners. "In a way, it's part of a natural progression. Women needed the desire, the skills, and the confidence to know they could do it. They now have all these things, so they're taking that next step."

Silverman concurred, adding that among the ingredients, desire and confidence are perhaps the most critical, not only in the decision-making process, but also in the factors that eventually determine the success of the ventures they start.

The Babson/Commonwealth Institute report revealed a great deal about woman-owned and -managed companies, she said, replacing conjecture with some of the first hard data on the subject.

Through interviews with the leaders of more than 200 woman-led companies across the Commonwealth, researchers were able to put together a profile of female business owners, identify their motivations, and list their challenges and the factors that matter most in operating their companies. Among the highlights:

* The top 100 woman-led companies contributed $4.8 billion to the economy in 2000. The company at the top of the list, Cumberland Farms, led by CEO Lily Bentas, had $1.6 billion in revenues.

* The average size of the 212 companies surveyed is $24 million, and they employ 172 people on average.

* More than three-quarters (76%) of the companies surveyed have been in business for more than seven years, and 31% have been operating for more than 20. Nearly half were started within the past decade.

* 21% of the businesses surveyed provided professional services, while 15% were in high technology, a surprising 14% in construction services, 12% in travel, and 6% in manufacturing. Among those in the Top 100, 23% were in technology, 21% in professional services, and 17% in construction.

* As expected, most of the companies in the top 100 are in the Greater Boston area; however, eight are from Western Mass.:

- (24) Realty World Sawicki, Amherst, managed by Ernestine Sawicki, $37 million;

- (38) Bassett Boat Co. Inc., Springfield, Diane Bassett Zable, $20 million;

- (54) Lewbar Imports Inc., West Springfield, Susan Pollack, $12 million;

- (68) ANH Inc., Amherst, Betty Kravetz, $8.4 million;

- (74) Country Jeep, Feeding Hills, Sandy Cosenzi, $7.9 million;

- (77) NEPM, Wilbraham, Kathryn Selvia, $7.4 million:

- (100) New England Pallets and Skids Inc., Ludlow, Cynthia A. Kawie, $5 million;

- (100) Randall Farms Inc., Ludlow, Karen Randall, $5 million.

Taking Charge

Pollack, who operates the Mercedes dealership started by her father, told BusinesslAlest that women generally don't receive ample credit when they take over a family business. The perception is that the business was handed to them and they did little to earn the title they possess.

But succeeding generations in familyowned businesses often preside over periods of strong growth and expansion and often are not recognized for those efforts, especially when those managers are women, she said.

And if those women managers are married, and their husbands are at all involved in the business, he is generally assumed to he the one in charge, she continued, listing yet another of the problems women face in the business world.

But things are improving, said Pollack, who operates in an industry dominated by men.

"For years, people thought I was a secretary here," she said. "Getting an office helped somewhat, but a lot of people are still surprised to find out I'm the president of the company."

Pollack said she became involved in the business somewhat by chance - she had just received her MBA and was mulling whether to attend law school when she accepted her father's invitation to help the office manager install a new computer system and then operate it. "And I never left."

But she had always worked at the dealership "hen she was young and anticipated that she would someday manage it. "I think I always wanted to be in business," she said. "I had that desire to manage a business and do something with it."

And according to the Babson/Commonwealth Institute study, she's not alone in that regard. Indeed, one of the more revealing aspects of the study was the question of motivation for starting one's own business, said Silverman.

At the top of that list is the desire for personal achievement and autonomy, she said. "Women want to see things grow. They want to start something and see it succeed. In that respect, they're no different from men."

As for autonomy and independence. those factors are important for all women, but especially those trying to balance a career and a family, she said. "They don't mind working 80 hours a week, but they want it to be their 80 hours.'*

Both Silverman and Doherty downplayed the glass-ceiling theory about Women starting their Own ventures, and the study backed up that view. More than half of the chief executive owners surveyed reported that hitting a glass ceiling was "barely or not at all important" as a motivation for deciding to start their businesses.

Doherty acknowledged that some women are frustrated in their efforts to move up the corporate ladder, but said there are usually other reasons that prompt them to venture into entrepreneurship. And in Western Mass., few women are even in a position to experience a glass ceiling.

But Mary Fitzer, a West Springfieldbased consultant and therefore an entrepreneur in her own right, said frustration with the corporate culture is, indeed, a factor for many women - and men - who decide they want to work for themselves.

"A lot of people are frustrated by the slow pace of change in a large organization; they're tired of seeing their good ideas not go anywhere," she said. "That's why some of them decide they want to be in charge of their own fate."

For many women, the obstacle is more of a sticky floor than a glass ceiling, she said. "It's not that they can't advance," she said, "it's that there's no place to advance to."

Another factor in the equation is continued layoffs and downsizings in the corporate environment, Fitzer said, especially in the current economic slowdown.

"Many people - both women and men - don't want to put themselves in a dependent position," she said, noting that unlike a generation ago, many people have the wherewithal to remove themselves from the corporate equation.

Indeed, many women have taken early retirement packages and used those funds to start their endeavors, while the proliferation of two-income families has given many couples a cushion that might allow either spouse to venture into entrepreneurialism.

Technology has also played a critical role in the growth of woman-owned businesses, said Doherty. The advent of the personal computer, E-mail, and wide-area networks has allowed many people to work in the home. This gives women challenged by decisions about whether to pursue a career or a family the opportunity to do both.

Western Mass., with its high quality of life, has become a haven for telecommuters, she said, many of whom are running their own businesses out of their homes.

Both Langowitz and Doherty said that another key factor in the rise of entrepreneurship among women is role models.

A generation ago, there were few women who owned businesses and equally few in top-level positions, said Langowitz. As the number of women business owners and managers has grown, younger generations see entrepreneurship as a viable option, not a lofty dream.

Doherty said her husband and first daughter went to the same law school. Her husband's class had three women, while her daughter's was half female. "That's a huge change," she said. "Most all of the women in my daughter's class have gone on to become lawyers, executives, or business owners. They're all role models for the next generation."

Once they're in business for themselves, women display a great deal of resourcefulness that can help them stay in business, said Doherty. "They're not afraid to ask questions, and they're not afraid to seek help," she explained. "Men can be resourceful, too, but women are definitely more inclined to seek out help and to use the resources available to them."

The Bottom Line

While technology, role models, and early retirement packages have all helped prompt women to choose the entrepreneurial route, Axelson-Berry says the biggest factor - and in many cases the biggest challenge - is confidence.

Even after starting her business - she brings on her first fulltime worker this month - and forming a professional association to help grow it, she still struggled to say, with a firm dose of confidence, what she did for a living. "When you can do that, when you can spit it out with confidence, then you're on your way," she said.

Such confidence, along with the desire to succeed and achieve a large measure of independence, is prompting more women to take the road less traveled. And as they do, the myths about women in business are quickly being dispelled.

Monday's Sports Scoreboard

All Times Eastern
American League
Chicago White Sox 8, Detroit 2 F
National Football League
Pittsburgh 23, Baltimore 20 F OT
National Hockey League
Columbus 7, Chicago 1 F
Washington 3, New Jersey 2 F
Toronto 4, St. Louis 3 (SO Toronto 2-1) F 2OT
Phoenix 5, San Jose 1 F
Top 25 College Football
No games today.
WNBA Basketball Playoffs
Detroit 75, New York 73 F
Major League Soccer
No games today.

Manmade Flood Unleashed in Grand Canyon

Four arcs of water unleashed from a dam coursed through the Grand Canyon on Wednesday in a flood meant to mimic the natural ones that used to nourish the ecosystem by spreading sediment.

More than 300,000 gallons of water per second were released from Lake Powell above the dam near the Arizona-Utah border. That's enough water to fill the Empire State Building in 20 minutes, said Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne.

"This gives you a glimpse of what nature has been doing for millions of years, cutting through and creating this magnificent canyon," Kempthorne said after he pulled the lever releasing the water from Glen Canyon Dam, upstream from Grand Canyon National Park.

The water gushed from two of four giant steel tubes in parallel arcs into the Colorado River. By afternoon, water poured from all four tubes, creating a churning pool beneath the sheer, sandstone canyon walls rising hundreds of feet.

The water level in the Grand Canyon rose 2 to 15 feet in some places. After the flood ends Friday, officials hope the water will leave behind sediment and restore sandbars as it goes back to normal levels. Officials have flooded the canyon twice before, in 1996 and 2004.

Before the dam was built in 1963, the river was warm and muddy, and natural flooding built up sandbars that are essential to native plant and fish species. The river is now cool and clear, its sediment blocked by the dam.

The change helped speed the extinction of four fish species and push two others, including the endangered humpback chub, near the edge.

Shrinking beaches have led to the loss of half the camping sites in the canyon in the past decade. Since Glen Canyon Dam was built, 98 percent of the sediment carried by the Colorado River has been lost, Grand Canyon National Park Superintendent Steve Martin said.

Martin said manmade floods need to occur every time there's enough sediment to do so _ about every one to two years depending on Arizona's volatile monsoon season.

"The science is really clear that's what we need to do," Martin said.

The Grand Canyon Trust, a Flagstaff-based group that has been critical of the federal Bureau of Reclamation's management of the dam, also is calling for more regular high flows.

"The power industry is driving the Bureau of Reclamation more than anything else, as opposed as to what's best for the canyon," trust spokesman Richard Mayol said.

Scientists will document habitat changes and determine how backwater habitats are used by the chub and other fish. Another study will look at how higher water flows affect the aquatic food base.

___

On the Net:

Grand Canyon National Park: http://www.nps.gov/grca

Bureau of Reclamation: http://www.usbr.gov

Live Poultry Market Not for Fainthearted

NEW YORK - When his turn came to pick a Thanksgiving turkey among the birds squawking and flapping in their Manhattan lair - some snow-white, others pitch-black - Onnie McIntyre chickened out.

"I can't do it," said the R&B guitarist. "It could be my pet." McIntyre made a face as he walked away from the line at the Manhattan Live Poultry market, which is selling about 500 live turkeys for this holiday (at least, they started out alive).

Hundreds of other New Yorkers have not been so skittish, turning to the city's many live bird markets this week for their Thanksgiving fare. They swear by the taste, saying a live turkey is far better than the frozen, store-bought variety.

"People say that once you eat a live turkey, you can never go back again," said Felix Nickpon, who had come to the live poultry butcher for the first time, as had McIntyre.

"I thought the smell would be worse, but it ain't that bad," joked Nickpon, a real estate professional and Manhattan native from the Upper West Side.

Thousands of turkey, chickens and other fowl are killed every day at hundreds of live poultry markets around the country, with roughly 90 such places in the New York City area alone. Most of the nation's live poultry markets are concentrated in large urban areas with big immigrant populations, such as Miami, Los Angeles and New York.

Once the turkeys are chosen by customers, the birds are snatched up by a butcher who binds their feet and hangs them upside down from a scale. Then comes the unmentionable (hint: it has to do with a blade). The bird then goes into a rotating machine that strips its feathers. And customers walk out with their Thanksgiving turkey in a plastic bag, fresh as fresh can be.

At this tiny market under a tin roof in Spanish Harlem, some of the clients buying Thanksgiving turkeys this week were well-heeled New Yorkers. Others were immigrants accustomed in the ways of live poultry markets in their homeland. Here and there, a turkey feather sailed slowly down on the boisterous crowd waiting just outside the small slaughter room.

For Jose Morocho, a 14-year-old native of Ecuador, slaughtering animals and eating them are natural, side-by-side activities foreign to most Americans. "The turkeys were made to eat," he said.

The market operates year-round, also offering live items like hens, ducks, pheasants, pigeons and rabbits. The market caters to many Latino and Middle Eastern customers, and is called "Halal Vivo" - a half-Arabic, half-Spanish phrase meaning "halal live."

They operate under strict Muslim "halal" laws of animal slaughter - similar to "kosher" - which requires that the animal's main artery be cleanly severed, with minimal suffering and all blood drained. "It's a sacrifice to Allah," said owner and ethnic Yemeni Kaleb Omar, 25, running around in a long white apron. "We say slaughter, not kill - murderers kill."

The turkey costs $1.89 a pound, compared with about $1 for a widely sold supermarket brand like Butterball. The white ones were raised on farms in Pennsylvania, the black, "wild" ones outdoors on upstate New York farms, said Omar, who got the turkeys through a middleman in Brooklyn.

One 35-pound bird breathing upside down from the scale was too much meat for Morocho's Thanksgiving family gathering of seven - his father, a construction worker, plus four brothers and two sisters. Their mother had died, so 20-year-old sister Rosa, a Hunter College business student, would take on most of the cooking, getting up at 3 a.m. to put the turkey in the oven, then completing the feast with some rice, beans and salad.

The family, on its sixth Thanksgiving trip to the live market, got a 27-pound black bird.

"We'll share it with family, we'll feed them, and we'll enjoy," said Rosa Morocho.

With the strong odor of the market and the flying feathers - some stuck to the humid tiles of the slaughter room - this was hardly an experience for the fainthearted.

But McIntyre - who initially got spooked by the bird slaughter - had a change of heart.

After walking away, McIntyre took the advice of "the guy in line behind me. He told me, 'You've gotta get the fresh one. The frozen ones are there for months.'"

McIntyre went back and chose the smallest turkey, a white 20-pounder. "I didn't look the animal in the eye. And I didn't look when they killed it."

Former D.C. Chief Named Philly's Top Cop

A former District of Columbia police chief was tapped on Thursday to become Philadelphia's next police commissioner, taking over a department trying to stem a rise in murders and a series of shootings targeting police.

Mayor-elect Michael Nutter chose former District of Columbia police Chief Charles Ramsey for the top job. He replaces commissioner Sylvester M. Johnson, who is retiring at the end of the year.

"We need a strong leader who has the presence, the record and the passion to make a difference on the streets of Philadelphia," said Nutter, who takes office in January.

Ramsey is a Chicago native who worked in that city's police department for 31 years before going to Washington. He oversaw the District's 3,800-member force from April 1998 until he was forced out in December with the election of a new mayor. He has worked as a consultant since his departure.

Ramsey, the public face of the investigation into the 2001 disappearance of government intern Chandra Levy, was the District's longest-serving police chief in more than three decades.

He was credited with overhauling the department, increasing spending for training and tightening policies on deadly force. He was also praised for cutting crime in many neighborhoods.

Ramsey assumes the mantle in Philadelphia as the city grapples with increasing levels of gun violence and a spate of police shootings, including the slaying of a police officer earlier this month.

"We've got a very good police department here ... with a lot of committed men and women," Ramsey said, "and my job is just to lead them in the direction that's going to make our streets safer."

Ramsey said to fight crime he wants to use more "stop, question and frisk" searches, add hundreds of police officers to the city's 6,500-member force, and increase the use of surveillance cameras in problem areas.

__

On the Net:

Philadelphia Police Department, http://www.ppdonline.org

Mayor-elect Michael Nutter: http://www.nutter2007.com

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Pakistan presses on with offensive vs. militants

Pakistani paramilitary forces destroyed a handful of militant centers and uncovered alleged torture cells as they pressed ahead Sunday with an offensive against extremists near the Afghan border, officials said.

A spokesman for Pakistan's top Taliban commander promised Sunday that militants would retaliate against the government, and were suspending efforts to reach and implement peace deals.

The operation in the Khyber tribal area is a shift for Pakistan's new government, which has sought to reduce violence through the peace deals. But with extremists increasingly threatening Peshawar, a major northwest city, and ambushing supply convoys bound for U.S.-led coalition troops in Afghanistan, the government turned to its troops.

The paramilitary Frontier Corps killed one attacker but encountered relatively little resistance since launching the operation Saturday, officials said.

Troops, backed by tanks and armored personnel carriers, quickly cleared militants out of Khyber's Bara region, said Muhammad Siddiq Khan, a local official. They then moved into areas outside Bara.

The troops destroyed at least four militant centers and uncovered a privately run jail, said Habibullah Khan, additional chief secretary for the Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

"The criminals were running a parallel administration in the area," Khan said. "They were kidnapping the people, trying them and punishing them and the government is fully determined not to allow anyone to run a parallel administration."

Khan said the jail contained what he called "torture cells" with special equipment, but offered no details.

Rehman Malik, head of the Interior Ministry, said forces destroyed a radio station used by the militants to broadcast propaganda.

Khan said the operation would continue for several more days and insisted it was not aimed at any particular militant group.

The semi-autonomous tribal areas, where the federal government has long had limited authority, are home to many militant groups, some of whom are engaged in feuds.

On Saturday, authorities blew up the headquarters of militant leader Menghal Bagh, who had apparently fled. The operation was also expected to target Haji Namdar, whose Vice and Virtue Movement is suspected of attacks against coalition soldiers in Afghanistan.

Baitullah Mehsud, the top Taliban leader in Pakistan, said he was suspending talks between his allies and the government. His spokesman, Maulvi Umar, said the Taliban would avenge any government use of force in the tribal areas and other border regions. He said the government was not honoring its commitment to peace efforts.

"The government should not ruin the country just to please the Western world and should immediately halt the operation in Khyber agency," Umar told The Associated Press on Sunday. "If it is not stopped it will bear very grave results."

American officials have complained that peace deals with militants will simply give them time to regroup and plan new attacks, including across the border in Afghanistan.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Sunday defended the deals, but warned that authorities will use force "if (the groups) backtrack from their agreements and damage state property."

Gilani said the government was forced to take action because it faced an "immediate problem" from militants near Peshawar and in the Swat Valley.

Afghan officials welcomed the operation in Khyber and reiterated their suspicion that a surge in violence in Afghanistan was partly due to the lack of pressure on militants in Pakistan's tribal areas.

"We endorse this operation, we want this operation to be continued and we want this operation to be successful," Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said.

NATO spokesman Brig. Gen. Carlos Branco said "everything that can minimize the threat in Afghanistan is good for us."

Maj. Gen. Alam Khattak, head of the Frontier Corps, has hinted this would not be the only operation against militants and other officials said the Swat region could be next.

On Sunday, a remote-controlled bomb blast killed two soldiers on a foot patrol in Swat's Matta area, a former militant stronghold, army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said.

Pro-Taliban fighters have battled security forces in Swat in recent months, despite a peace deal between militants and the new provincial government.

___

Associated Press writers Sadaqat Jan and Zarar Khan in Islamabad and Stephen Graham in Kabul contributed to this report.

Murdered backpacker laid to rest.(News)

HUNDREDS of mourners turned out yesterday for the funeral of murdered British backpacker Kirsty Jones.

Around 850 people from all over Britain attended the service for the 23-year-old Liverpool University graduate who was found raped and strangled at a hostel in Chiang Mai in Thailand on August 10.

The 900-year-old St Bilo's church in the village of Llanfilo, just three miles from the farm where Kirsty grew up, was packed and hundreds more mourners listened in silent contemplation outside.

On the order of service her parents wrote: ''You are our night, our day, our shining star. We love you so much Kirst, wherever you are. You touched so many hearts along the path you trod.

''Sleep easy now darling, go backpacking with God.''

The Rev Canon Dr Peter Dixon said: ''We have come to celebrate Kirsty's life. To rejoice for what she has been and in a real sense what she still is.''

He told Kirsty's parents Glyn and Sue: ''You have shown great courage and I know Kirsty was and still is so proud of you. We all want long lives, but just as important is quality of life and Kirsty did in her 23 years what most of us have done in 93 years.''

Mr Dixon said the graduation picture of Kirsty shown around the world after her death encompassed her life.

It showed a successful student with bright shining eyes ready to make her mark on the world.

Also among the mournLocal Liberal Democrat MP Richard Livsey and Assembly member Kirsty Williams were also present.

Murdered backpacker laid to rest.(News)

HUNDREDS of mourners turned out yesterday for the funeral of murdered British backpacker Kirsty Jones.

Around 850 people from all over Britain attended the service for the 23-year-old Liverpool University graduate who was found raped and strangled at a hostel in Chiang Mai in Thailand on August 10.

The 900-year-old St Bilo's church in the village of Llanfilo, just three miles from the farm where Kirsty grew up, was packed and hundreds more mourners listened in silent contemplation outside.

On the order of service her parents wrote: ''You are our night, our day, our shining star. We love you so much Kirst, wherever you are. You touched so many hearts along the path you trod.

''Sleep easy now darling, go backpacking with God.''

The Rev Canon Dr Peter Dixon said: ''We have come to celebrate Kirsty's life. To rejoice for what she has been and in a real sense what she still is.''

He told Kirsty's parents Glyn and Sue: ''You have shown great courage and I know Kirsty was and still is so proud of you. We all want long lives, but just as important is quality of life and Kirsty did in her 23 years what most of us have done in 93 years.''

Mr Dixon said the graduation picture of Kirsty shown around the world after her death encompassed her life.

It showed a successful student with bright shining eyes ready to make her mark on the world.

Also among the mournLocal Liberal Democrat MP Richard Livsey and Assembly member Kirsty Williams were also present.

Murdered backpacker laid to rest.(News)

HUNDREDS of mourners turned out yesterday for the funeral of murdered British backpacker Kirsty Jones.

Around 850 people from all over Britain attended the service for the 23-year-old Liverpool University graduate who was found raped and strangled at a hostel in Chiang Mai in Thailand on August 10.

The 900-year-old St Bilo's church in the village of Llanfilo, just three miles from the farm where Kirsty grew up, was packed and hundreds more mourners listened in silent contemplation outside.

On the order of service her parents wrote: ''You are our night, our day, our shining star. We love you so much Kirst, wherever you are. You touched so many hearts along the path you trod.

''Sleep easy now darling, go backpacking with God.''

The Rev Canon Dr Peter Dixon said: ''We have come to celebrate Kirsty's life. To rejoice for what she has been and in a real sense what she still is.''

He told Kirsty's parents Glyn and Sue: ''You have shown great courage and I know Kirsty was and still is so proud of you. We all want long lives, but just as important is quality of life and Kirsty did in her 23 years what most of us have done in 93 years.''

Mr Dixon said the graduation picture of Kirsty shown around the world after her death encompassed her life.

It showed a successful student with bright shining eyes ready to make her mark on the world.

Also among the mournLocal Liberal Democrat MP Richard Livsey and Assembly member Kirsty Williams were also present.

Monday, 5 March 2012

Slot machine pays out 10 times too much

BRIDGEPORT, Ind. -- Gamblers raked in nearly half a milliondollars in two days on a slot machine that multiplied by 10 theamount of money that players put in, a newspaper reported.

Caesars Indiana lost $487,000 before a player notified officialsof the problem with the machine, the Courier-Journal of Louisville,Ky., reported Friday.

Kathryn Ford of Louisville, Ky., realized something was wrong July23 when she and her husband sat down at two of the machines, calledExtra Money.

When she put in a $20 bill, the machine registered it as $200. Shetried another $20 bill and the same thing happened, she …

Adept Technology expanding in Korea.(Assembly Lines)

LIVERMORE, CA -- Robotics manufacturer Adept Technology Inc. is expanding its presence in South Korea through a marketing agreement with the Korean automation and robotics company Han Shin PowerTechLtd. (Seoul, South Korea).

Korea is currently the fourth largest robot market in the world, with demand in a number of labor-intensive and quality sensitive applications, such …

SEXUALITY ISSUE IN STORE SUIT.(BUSINESS)

Byline: -- Bloomberg News Service

MINNEAPOLIS -- The owners of a feminist bookstore involved in a trademark infringement dispute with Amazon.com want the online company barred from asking about their sexual orientation.

Amazon Bookstore said such matters are irrelevant and its owners should not have to answer such questions, posed during pretrial depositions last month.

``We were outraged by it,'' said Barbara Wieser, the store's general manager. ``What does our sexual …

Jeep expands in Europe as Fiat, Chrysler integrate

BALOCCO, Italy (AP) — A new rollout of Jeep models for Europe shows the deepening integration between Fiat and Chrysler, CEO Sergio Marchionne said Tuesday, the same day the Italian automaker revealed it had increased its ownership of the once-bankrupt U.S. company to 30 percent.

Marchionne, who heads both companies, said that because Jeep is one of Chrysler's most marketable products outside the United States, it will be key to helping it return to health. Jeep represents 50 percent of Chrysler's international volumes.

"This is the only true international brand that Chrysler has," Marchionne said at Fiat's test track near its Turin headquarters, where three Jeep models were …

Award-winning poetry

Tasting the Dust, poems by Jean Janzen

Award-winning poet.

In her new collection of poetry, Jean Janzen demonstrates powerfully why she received The Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

[Graph Not Transcribed]

Janzen's poems send us to explore the mystery of our connections to this earth, our dust and its dust. These poems show us with certainty what we sense persistently--that we are unequivocally physical and yet undeniably spiritual, so ephemeral and yet so bound.

Jean Janzen, a well-known poet from Fresno, California, conducts readings of her poetry around North America and teaches several university …

Police probe a case of his taken identity. (Tar Heel Tattler).(Mark Conrad Rendina accused of identity theft)

Mark Conrad Rendina fancies himself a Star Wars Jedi knight, rocketing to the rescue of planets and princesses. At least that's how the 33-year-old UNC Chapel Hill grad student portrayed himself on his Web site.

So you can imagine his surprise when he was arrested at Raleigh-Durham International Airport in May and charged with stealing his former UNC mentor's identity. Obi Wan Kenobi never had to put up with that kind of humiliation.

Prosecutors say The Force isn't with Rendina. In fact, they have accused him of attempting to morph into Walker Long, an award-winning researcher who advised Rendina on his master's thesis in public health and collaborated with …

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Labia museum?(News)

Professor HC Bredekamp has presented a spirited defence (August 12) of his team's performance in livening up the Cape's cultural scene. Clearly he rates it highly. Some might differ.

It would be wrong to judge a national institution's worth solely on the basis of performance. Equally important are other matters such as morality and respect for the law. In this respect neither Iziko nor the departments of arts and culture and of public works can claim even an average rating.

Iziko seems to have a mental block regarding respect for contractual obligations.

Some years ago at a meeting including Prof Bredekamp and other members of the Iziko council, a …

VOORHEESVILLE TO VOTE ON NEW LIBRARY PLANS.(Local)

The Voorheesville library will be moved to more spacious quarters if voters Thursday approve plans for a new $890,000 public library at Prospect Street and Depot Road.

The library, housed in a former Presbyterian church on South Main Street since 1943, has outgrown its facilities, according to librarian Nancy Hutchinson.

It must be expanded to keep pace with Voorheesville's population growth, she said.

"Voorheesville's been growing. We've tried to grow along with them and anticipate their needs. There's many more information needs than people had before," she said.

Voters in the Voorheesville School District will be able to go to the polls …

BEARS, BULLS DEBATE EFFECT OF NETSCAPE ON MARKET'S FUTURE.(BUSINESS)

Byline: PATRICIA LAMIELL Associated Press

NEW YORK Is the stock market's glass half-full or half-empty? Netscape Communications' spectacular initial public offering this past week was used to argue both sides of the question.

Bears brandished the deal as a sign that the market has become too speculative, while the bulls said it confirmed that the sky is the limit for technology issues, a proven market leader.

``The feeding frenzy, such as we saw in Netscape, has in the past been one of those classic signals that a correction of some importance is close,'' said James Solloway, research director at Argus Research.

But he added, ``I could …

PTEN gene therapy and caffeine combine to check cancer cell growth.

2003 DEC 29 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- PTEN gene therapy and caffeine combine to check cancer cell growth.

"The tumor suppressor phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted from chromosome 10 (dPTEN) gene is a negative regulator of the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) signaling pathway. Overexpression of PTEN in cancer cells results in cell-cycle arrest and cell death through inhibition of PI3K. Caffeine, a xanthine analogue, is well known to enhance the cytocidal and growth-inhibitory effects of DNA-damaging agents such as radiation, UV light, and anticancer agents on tumor cells by abrogating DNA-damage checkpoints through inhibition …

Ingram back running, still doubtful

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram has not returned to practice for No. 1 Alabama and while Nick Saban said the injured running back is unlikely to play against No. 18 Penn State on Saturday, the coach isn't necessarily counting his star out.

"If there is anybody in the world that can play without practicing, it's probably Mark," Saban said after Wednesday's practice. "He's a student of the game, he watches everything, understands everything, knows everything and he's a tremendous competitor. He has a lot of experience, but we would never put him in that situation."

Ingram had left knee surgery last week, but Saban said he was able to do some running the …