Thursday, March 15, 2012

Official: Ronaldo going to Corinthians

Three-time FIFA player of the year Ronaldo has agreed to play with Brazilian club Corinthians, a team spokeswoman said Tuesday.

"It's official _ he's coming," the spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to release the information. She said the player was expected to be presented by the club later this week.

Calls to Ronaldo's spokesman were not immediately answered.

Reports speculating on the former Brazil international's future suggested he would play for Manchester City, Paris Saint-Germain or an Italian club.

The 32-year-old striker ruptured a tendon in his left knee in a Serie A game with …

Nicklaus survives; Floyd falters

Course architect Jack Nicklaus squeaked through, but U.S. Openchampion Ray Floyd failed to make the field of 39 players whoadvanced through yesterday's second round of the new Internationaltournament at Castle Rock, Colo.

Floyd, who played brilliantly in the first round, picked up ontwo holes on the back nine and was eliminated.

Floyd had minus-4 points on the modified Stableford scoringsystem, which awards five points for an eagle, two for a birdie, zerofor a par, minus-1 for bogey and minus-3 for double bogey or worse.Medal scores do not count.

Nicklaus was facing the same fate until he birdied the eighthhole, his 17th of the day.

He then …

Scranton, Pa., to Host 'Office' Party

ALLENTOWN, Pa. - As Michael Scott, the clueless boss on NBC's "The Office," would say, "ain't no party like a Scranton party."

With that in mind, the city where the Emmy-winning cubicle comedy is set is hosting a weekend blowout for thousands of fans.

The inaugural "Office Convention" promises to be as quirky as the show itself, with highlights including an Office Olympics (Dunderball, anyone?), a character lookalike contest, appearances by cast and crew and performances by the Scrantones, the band that recorded the show's theme music.

"If people leave here saying, `I had a blast in Scranton,' then we've achieved our goal," said Michele Dempsey, 35, an architect …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Janet Jackson makes emotional appearance at BETs

Some of the biggest stars on the planet turned back into gushing Michael Jackson fans at the BET Awards, donning single gloves, swapping stories about their idol and singing The King of Pop's standards. One person who perhaps knew him best, though, brought the night into perspective: his sister.

"To you, Michael is an icon," a somber Janet Jackson told the crowd at the end of Sunday's show. "To us, Michael is family and he will forever live in all of our hearts."

It was a stirring emotional climax for a telecast that was completely revamped to recognize the legacy of Jackson, who died Thursday at age 50. For the most part, it was a joyous …

Today's preview

'SILVER COLLECTOR' SEEKS GOLD MEDAL

With Paul Hamm at home and Yang Tae-Young off his game, the road to the gold is finally clear for the ''Silver Collector.'' Yang Wei will try to shed his reputation as a perpetual runner-up when the heavily favored Chinese gymnast takes another crack at the all-around title that has eluded him his entire Olympic career. Only a monumental collapse likely would prevent Yang from claiming the gold, and his pursuit will be part of NBC's prime-time coverage tonight.

- Fastest 47 seconds

Alain Bernard was embarrassed Monday when Jason Lezak caught him on the final leg …

Anthony McGill returns home as guest musician with the Avalon String Quartet

Earl's World

Anthony McGiIl, principal clarinet artist, will join the Avalon String Quartet in concert April 18 for the Merit School of Music, 38 S. Peoria. The Metropolitan Opera will join the musicians as guest. The entire world witnessed McGill's performance when he joined Yo- Yo Ma, cellist, for the inauguration of Barack Obama.

Raised in the Chatham community of Chicago, McGiIl attended the Merit School and his brother. Demarre, who is a flute virtuoso, were first featured in the Museum of Science and Industry's annual Christmas concert with the All-City Elementary Choir.

THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago will blend their artistic …

Singapore PM warns Olympic protests will have 'consequences' by angering Chinese people

Singapore's prime minister warned Friday that recent protests along the Olympic torch relay have angered the Chinese public and will create "consequences" beyond the games themselves.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said the people of China are viewing the protests as an affront to their country during what should be "China's coming-out party, to celebrate its progress" and opening up to the world.

"Whatever the intentions of the demonstrators, the people of China believe they want to inflict maximum humiliation on China and the Chinese people more than the Chinese government," Lee said at a forum in Singapore, according to a …

Bowlers earn narrow win

Hampset ended their season with a four-run win over Hambrook.

The Bath side batted first and scored 190 all out in their 45overs.

Opener Steve Murphy scored 72 and was ably supported by Ed Lye(43).

In reply, Hambrook started steadily and, although they didn't losewickets, the scoring rate was pegged back by some good bowling from ALear, S Murphy and Lye.

In the end, Hambrook were bowled …

King seeks broader access to technology with computer ctr.

King seeks broader access to technology with computer ctr.

Back in the years when he was Professor of Urban Studies teaching in MIT's Community Fellow's Program, Mel King used a Socratic approach in his classes. According to a former student, they all sat in a large circle. Around him. "He was warm and engaging and didn't let people sit outside the circle."

Today at 71, Mel King, former state representative, former university professor, but still very much the creative community activist that he has always been, has a new mission -- to bring minority communities into the circle of empowerment that the new computer technology creates. And his vehicle for giving them that …

Dutch Emmy winner snubbed at home

The Dutchman who won an Emmy for his television documentary about the disappearance of U.S. teenager Natalee Holloway has been snubbed by the Netherlands' annual television awards.

Peter de Vries wasn't among the nominees for the "Golden Ring" awards for his Feb. 3, 2008 program, which was among the most highly viewed broadcasts in the history of Dutch television, with an estimated 7 million viewers in a nation of 16 million.

It was based on hidden-camera interviews with Joran van der Sloot, the Dutch youth last seen with Holloway before her disappearance in Aruba on May 30, 2005.

The program won the 2008 International Emmy for Current …

Judo club adds more medals to collection

Cheddar Judo Club's successful year continued as members broughthome a host of medals from a competition at Bradley Stoke inGloucestershire.

Jack and Louie Wagstaff, Ryan Phillips, Isabelle Morgan and HarryTownend all won bronze in their respective age and weightcategories.

And there was double gold for Toby Attwood, who was a …

Pupils can bank on reading skills

RADIO station GWR FM is encouraging more children in the area topick up a book and Read to Achieve.

The year-long project run by the Bristol-based radio station aimsto raise literacy standards in schools across the city and, in doingso, boost pupils' reading ability, confidence and self esteem.

The scheme is supported by Barclays and involves both radiostation and bank employees working with Bristol schools at readingevents and acting as "reading buddies" .

A reading buddy is someone who sits with a child while theyoungster reads from a book, giving them a helping hand when they getstuck on a tricky word.

GWR FM is inviting a different school every month to take part inreading events at locations across the city.

The most recent of these events was held at Barclays CorporateUniversity, in Stoke Gifford, last month and 35 seven-year-olds fromLongwell Green Primary School took part.

The pupils took their favourite books to read with GWR FMpresenter Simon Ross, the Black Thunder Crews and Barclays employees.

And the children also got the chance to play "bankers" in thecentre's mock training bank.

The aim of the day was to make reading fun and reinforce themessage at the core of the Read to Achieve project - It's Cool ToRead.

Longwell Green Primary School teacher Kirsti Harris said: "Thiswas a great opportunity for my class to become involved in such anexciting project.

"We hope that the reading event at Barclays and the involvement ofGWR will encourage children across Bristol to understand theimportance of reading." GWR FM's community relations officer Lin Daysaid:

"We're thrilled to be working with Barclays as we're bothcommitted to education and see reading as fundamental to children'sfutures.

"By working with Barclays we aim to reach far more children thisyear and gain the support of Bristol-based sportsmen, women andpersonalities to promote the It's Cool to Read message." Barclaysregional community manager Elaine Arnold said: "Barclays is committedto playing a leading role in the communities it serves, and we'redelighted to join forces with GWR FM in playing such a vital role inthis programme supporting young people in Bristol." Over the comingyear the radio station hopes to work with as many as 30 schools inthe Bristol area.

Bush Picks Mukasey As Attorney General

WASHINGTON - President Bush has settled on Michael B. Mukasey, a retired federal judge from New York, to replace Alberto Gonzales as attorney general and will announce his selection Monday, a source familiar with the president's decision said Sunday evening.

Mukasey, who has handled terrorist cases in the U.S. legal system for more than a decade, would become the nation's top law enforcement officer.

The 66-year-old New York native, who is a legal adviser to GOP presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani, would take charge of a Justice Department where morale is low following months of investigations into the firings of nine U.S. attorneys and Gonzales' sworn testimony on the Bush administration's terrorist surveillance program.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Virtual L: Southport Brown Line stop

The Southport station has finally reopened, and it's looking spiffier than ever. Not that you'll notice. You're too busy thinking about where to score your next meal and drink on this lively Lake View strip.

Best of the night life

Cullen's Bar & Grill, 3741 N. Southport

What can often be one of the busiest neighborhoods in Chicago (at least during Cubs season) turns into a quaint little getaway after stepping inside this local pub. Brogue-spewing servers, heaping portions of shepherd's pie and overflowing mugs of Guinness put this bar a notch above its Irish-themed counterparts. The bartenders know how to pour the perfect pint, and though the food might seem pricey for bar fare (entrees run about $12), the inspired comfort food, like mac 'n' cheese with aged Irish cheddar, is worth it.

Good for groups

D'Agostino's, 1351 W. Addison

It may not serve Chicago's best pizza, but D'Agostino's plays the part of the pizzeria as well as anyone. Cheap domestic pitchers and square-cut, thin-crust pies top checkerboard tablecloths. Specialties run from the artery-taxing cheeseburger, taco or Italian beef pizzas to the sun-dried tomato and vegetarian specials. The ample dining room and patio are bustling on Cubs game days, when fans enjoy beer specials and watch the plasma screens in the pub section. Larger groups can book catered affairs in the revamped party room.

Cheap eats

Take Five, 3747 N. Southport

In keeping with the clever moniker, everything on the menu costs $5, from the fish tacos to the burrito to the turkey leg. In keeping with the theme, it even offers five kinds of fries: cheese, gravy topped, chili, chili-cheese and naked. Beware that the portions aren't huge, and aside from a few daily specials, drinks aren't the cheapest either. But, hey, five bucks is five bucks, and the sprawling space, nestled beneath a high ceiling and filled with dark wood and leather booths, has an airy, comforting feel.

Where to chill

Violet, 3819 N. Southport

With its cacophonous citrus-green dining room and strong Metropolis brew, bustling Violet rubs the sleep from your eyes on a weekend morning. This breakfast and lunch spot provides tasty, creative fare without the long waits or prices of the more chi-chi brunch spots. If you're in the mood for eggs, try the Mediterranean omelet. The attractive pies, cakes and pastries in the bakery case are made in-house and may be enjoyed by the glow of the fireplace in the side room.

In-the-know spot

Newport Bar and Grill, 1344 W. Newport

There's no need to leave the premises to pass the time while your clothes get sudsy at the Saga Launder. Follow the arrows out the back door and into a corridor that bridges two unlikely worlds: the laundromat and the late-night bar. Wood-paneled walls and TVs tuned to sports set the mood at Newport. With the pool table, Golden Tee and bookcase overflowing with board games like Clue and Balderdash, there's plenty of entertainment on hand.

Big Deal

Thirsty for More?

Find thousands of specials at centerstagechicago.com/deals

downtown

Dine, 733 W. Madison: $6 house martinis

Dugan's, 128 S. Halsted: $3 Smithwick's, $2.50 Michelob Ultra

Plush, 1104 W. Madison: $5 Absolut Peach cocktails, $7 Pornstars; $12 Atlantic salmon filet

Villain's Bar & Grill, 649 S. Clark: $4 drafts

west side

Aquarius Lounge, 2459 N. Pulaski: $3 shots; $1 tostada ceviche

Club Belmont, 7844 W. Belmont: $3 Corona and Mike's Hard Lemonade

People Lounge, 1560 N. Milwaukee: $4 vodka lemonade

Silver Cloud, 1700 N. Damen: $4 pints of Bell's Oberon

north side

Fizz Bar & Grill, 3220 N. Lincoln: $2.50 PBR, $5.50 Effen cocktails

Lion Head Pub, 2251 N. Lincoln: $2 PBR, Old Style and drafts; $6.99 shrimp & chips, $1 fried Twinkies

Roscoe's Tavern, 3354 N. Halsted: $12 pitchers of Stoli pink lemonade, $3 off martinis and Manhattans

Sighting in Nevada Isn't Fossett's Plane

RENO, Nev. - Rescue crews searching for famed millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett stumbled upon another false lead Sunday when they discovered what they thought was a downed airplane - but didn't find the missing aviator.

"Once again, you had your hopes raised and dashed, just as we have," Nevada Civil Air Patrol Maj. Cynthia Ryan told reporters during a news conference.

Rescue crews spotted an object southeast of the private ranch where Fossett was staying when he took off Monday for what was supposed to be a three-hour flight. They did not say what the sighting was, only that it wasn't Fossett's plane.

At least six times during the search rescue crews have spotted wreckage they thought might be Fossett's only to learn they were from crashes years and sometimes decades ago.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

RENO, Nev. (AP) - Rescue crews were headed to another potential sighting of Steve Fossett's plane Sunday afternoon near where the famous aviator took off on Labor Day.

The sighting occurred within a 50-mile radius of the airstrip about 80 miles southeast of Reno, said Kim Toulouse, a spokesman for the Nevada Department of Wildlife assisting in the search operation.

"We have aircraft and ground forces en route to that location," Toulouse told reporters, refusing to take any questions.

At least six times during the past week search and rescue crews have spotted airplane wreckage they thought might be Fossett's only to learn they were from crashes years and sometimes decades ago.

While Toulouse declined to give the location of the new sighting, she indicated that sheriff's deputies were assisting from Mineral County, which is east and south of the airstrip on a ranch owned by hotel magnate Barron Hilton.

The 63-year-old Fossett has been missing since Monday, when he took off from that airstrip for a three-hour flight.

Search teams have spotted nearly one uncharted wreck a day since the search began Tuesday in the rugged, concealing landscape of western Nevada. To some, that is an ominous sign of how hard it will be to find Fossett.

"That's always a possibility - that he may never be found," Lyon County Undersheriff Joe Sanford said. "But I'd like to believe that with our state-of-the-art technology, the chances of finding him are much better."

That technology has included precise airborne imaging equipment and infrared scanners. A boat equipped with sonar was even used to examine the depths of Walker Lake.

The search teams tried to remain optimistic but acknowledged the futility was beginning to take a toll.

"It's not frustrating, but tiring," Nevada National Guard Capt. April Conway said.

Leaders of the search-and-rescue operation have tried to put the best face on the discoveries of previously unknown crash sites. At the very least, they say, the finds have demonstrated that crews can indeed spot small planes from the air.

The search has spread across an area of 17,000 square miles, twice the size of New Jersey. Crews will continue combing sections of that vast landscape, but on Sunday they began focusing on the territory within 50 miles of the ranch. Most crashes occur within that radius during takeoffs or landings, Nevada Civil Air Patrol Maj. Cynthia Ryan said.

"We've got close to 100 percent covered, at least in some cursory fashion," Ryan told reporters Sunday. "We have to eliminate a lot of territory."

The discovery of at least six previously unknown wrecks in such a short time has been a stark demonstration of the odds against finding Fossett's single-engine Bellanca Citabria Super Decathlon.

The Florida-based Air Force Rescue Coordination Center, which is helping coordinate the search, maintains a registry of known plane wreck sites.

The registry has 129 entries for Nevada. But over the last 50 years, aviation officials estimate, more than 150 small planes have disappeared in Nevada, a state with more than 300 mountain ranges carved with steep ravines, covered with sagebrush and pinon pine trees and with peaks rising to 11,000 feet.

"The mountains are quite rugged, and things don't always get found," said Maj. Cynthia Ryan of the Nevada Civil Air Patrol.

Once the search for Fossett is over, or significantly scaled back, inspectors from the Federal Aviation Administration likely will be sent to each of the newly discovered wrecks. They will try to identify the pilots and bring closure to their families, agency spokesman Ian Gregor said.

No human remains have been found at any of the crash sites discovered so far. But that's not a surprise, given their age and that the region is populated by coyotes and mountain lions.

News of the old wrecks has prompted inquiries from people wondering if the pilots or passengers may be long-lost family members.

"We received an e-mail from (a Florida man) and he said 'You know, that could be the wreckage of my father's airplane and it dates back to 1964.' He said if we can possibly find out any more he'd be happy to know about it," Ryan said.

Searchers are holding out hope of finding Fossett, said Sanford, the Lyon County undersheriff.

"With the resources and assets we have, I feel comfortable we'll find the plane in the near term," Sanford said. "Whether it'll be by us, a hunter or a skier, we'll find it. I like to believe the glass is half full."

---

Associated Press Writer Sandra Chereb in Minden, Nev., contributed to this report.

Muslim cleric killed in southern Russia

MOSCOW (AP) — A Muslim cleric opposed to radical Islamists has been killed in the restive Caucasus region.

Russian news agencies reported that Anas Pshikhashev was gunned down Wednesday by unidentified assailants outside his house in Nalchik, the capital of the Kabardino-Balkariya province.

The 43-year old cleric was the Kremlin-backed chief mufti of the impoverished province roiled by attacks of Islamists and police abuses.

Several pro-government Muslim clerics have been killed in the Caucasus in recent years for their support of Kremlin policies and their condemnation of militant groups.

The ethnically diverse and predominantly Muslim region has been plagued by violence stemming from two separatist wars in Chechnya.

Tests Help Mutt Owners Find Identity

LINCOLN, Neb. - Rascal's mom looked like Lassie. And his dad? Well, that's a good question. Rascal's ears make it clear that he was the product of something besides a collie, but his owners couldn't say exactly what. So Kathie Svoboda of Lincoln dabbed a swab in her pet's mouth, mailed it to a lab and, a few weeks later, unlocked the mutt's canine heritage.

Collie and cocker spaniel, as suspected, along with a twist - Shetland sheepdog.

The growing availability, and declining cost, of high-tech DNA tests are giving dog owners long baffled over the makeup of their mutts something to do besides shrug and speculate.

The tests, which cost as little as $65, are the result of several years of work by scientists who gathered a large pool of DNA samples from thousands of dogs to create a sort of genetic roadmap of breeds.

For years, owners have been able to get dogs tested to prove they are the offspring of parents that breeders said they were. In the new testing, DNA markers that help tell breeds apart are checked against the thousands of DNA samples to find out Fido's ancestry.

A new test unveiled late last month by Virginia-based Mars Veterinary uses DNA from blood samples taken by veterinarians and sent to a lab in Lincoln. Within four to six weeks the genetic puzzle is solved for the dogs' owners.

The method can test for 134 of the 157 dog breeds recognized by the American Kennel Club. The company plans to have data for all the breeds by the end of this year, said Paul Jones, a scientist in England who led the method's development.

The test Svoboda used covers 38 breeds and doesn't require a trip to the vet. It has been on the market since early this year, and its producer, Beltsville, Md.-based MetaMorphix, hopes to test for 115 breeds by year's end.

"People spend hundreds of dollars a month on accessories for their dogs," said Brad Mitchell of MMI Genomics, a subsidiary of MetaMorphix. "We kept saying, `This is going to be big, this is going to be big.'"

Mars Veterinary officials say 86 percent of mutt owners don't know which breeds are in their dogs' backgrounds and that consumer surveys they conducted show 60 percent of mutt owners would like to know.

The cost of a cheek-swab test is $65; the cost of the blood test is up to vets but could range between $100 and $200.

There are limitations. Because DNA gets more muddied with each generation, great-grandparents are the oldest relatives that can be mixed breeds themselves in order to secure a reliable answer for the mixed breed in question.

Not everybody is convinced the mutt DNA business will take off.

"I think most people interested in a mixed-breed dog wouldn't want to pay the price" for the tests, said Richard Oberst, a veterinarian and professor at Kansas State University.

Svoboda said she got Rascal tested only because her daughter was curious.

"We thought it was silly," she said.

---

On the Net:

Mars Veterinary: http://www.whatsmydog.com/

Metamorphix: http://www.metamorphixinc.com/

Phillies fall apart without Jimmy Rollins, lose 8-2 to Mike Pelfrey and Mets

Mike Pelfrey gave New York's injury-riddled pitching staff an encouraging boost, and the Philadelphia Phillies played a painfully sloppy game in the Mets' 8-2 victory in the National League on Wednesday.

The Mets ended a nine-game losing streak to Philadelphia, taking advantage of four errors that led to six unearned runs.

Handed a comfortable lead, Pelfrey (1-0) tossed five effective innings in his first start of the year.

Angel Pagan hit a two-run double for the Mets. Damion Easley, starting at second base for ailing Luis Castillo, put New York ahead 2-1 with an RBI single off Kyle Kendrick (1-1) in the third. Kendrick walked six batters in the first two innings.

The Phillies' MVP shortstop Jimmy Rollins sat out with a sprained left ankle, missing his first game since July 30, 2006.

Diamondbacks 4, Dodgers 3

At Phoenix, Eric Byrnes hit a go-ahead, two-run single in the seventh-inning off Hiroki Kuroda, and Arizona stretched its winning streak to six.

Micah Owings (2-0) allowed three runs and seven hits in seven innings as the Diamondbacks finished a three-game sweep of their NL West rival Los Angeles.

Byrnes, who went 3-for-5, ended Kuroda's afternoon with a two-out, bases-loaded single that brought in the tying and go-ahead runs in the sixth.

Kuroda (1-1), in his second start since coming to the Dodgers from Japan, gave up four runs _ two earned _ and nine hits in 5 2-3 innings.

Marlins 10, Nationals 4

At Washington, Mike Jacobs hit two homers, including one that capped a seven-run inning, to back Scott Olsen's solid pitching and help Florida beat Washington, which has lost six consecutive games after a 3-0 start to the season.

The pair of two-run shots give the first baseman four homers in the past five games.

Olsen (1-0) went 7 2-3 innings, allowing four runs _ three earned _ and four hits.

Nationals starter Jason Bergmann (0-1) managed to fool Florida for four innings. He got hit hard in the fifth, as the Marlins sent 10 men to the plate and scored seven runs, all earned.

Rockies 12, Braves 6

At Denver, Yorvit Torrealba hit a three-run home run to cap off a six-run third inning and Colorado put up its highest run total of the young season to win its third straight.

Matt Holliday had a triple and two RBIs and Ryan Spilborghs went 3-for-5 with a home run and five RBIs in a spot start.

Mark Redman (1-1) pitched five innings and allowed three runs _ two earned _ and seven hits.

Chuck James (0-1), who was activated from the 15-day disabled list before the game, gave up six runs in three innings in his first start of the season. James hit three batters.

Cubs 6, Pirates 4, 15 innings

At Pittsburgh, Felix Pie's two-run single in the 15th allowed Chicago to outlast Pittsburgh in the second extra-inning game in a row between them.

Pie's hit to left off of Phil Dumatrait (0-1) with the bases loaded scored Ryan Theriot and Alfonso Soriano, helping the Cubs win their fourth in a row.

Twice the Pirates tied the Cubs with home runs to extend the game. Jason Bay hit his first of the season to lead off the ninth against Kerry Wood, who blew his first save. Adam LaRoche then broke out of an 0-for-25 slump by homering off of Kevin Hart (2-0) with Bay aboard in the 14th to tie the game at 4.

That came after ex-Pirate Aramis Ramirez had given the Cubs the lead with a two-run shot, his second, in the top of the inning. Ramirez had three hits and scored two runs.

Cardinals 6, Astros 4

At Houston, Albert Pujols hit his first two homers of the year and St. Louis beat Houston to take its third straight series.

Pujols also had a RBI single and Rick Ankiel added two RBIs.

St. Louis opened the season with series wins over Colorado and Washington before taking this one 2-1. They won three consecutive series' just once last season.

Reds 12, Brewers 4

At Milwaukee, Adam Dunn and Corey Patterson each hit two-run homers, Brandon Phillips scored twice off a pair of heady baserunning plays and Cincinnati scored 10 straight runs in a victory over Milwaukee.

Phillips compensated for allowing two unearned runs that cost Cincinnati the lead in the fifth when he let a grounder go through his legs.

Buddy Lewis, top crime reporter

Walford J. Lewis, 80, who was known as Buddy Lewis, dean ofpolice reporters, when he retired after his 47-year career inChicago, died Friday at Ingalls Memorial Hospital in Harvey.

Mr. Lewis, who worked at the old Chicago Daily News, was a topcrime reporter known for attention to detail and patience.

"His ability to get all the details of a story was legendary,"said Robert G. Schultz, who was the Daily News city editor when Mr.Lewis retired in 1971.

"He was accurate and thorough, and typically he would often havemore detail than the reporter who was on the scene simply because hehad so many contacts," Schultz said.

Mr. Lewis, a resident of Dolton, grew up on Chicago's SouthSide. He graduated from Hyde Park High School and at 17 began hiscareer at the Daily News in 1924.

He worked his way up a colorful ladder at the Daily News,starting as an assistant secretary to the managing editor and movingon to picture chaser, which required him to pick up photos of peoplein the news. At the same time, Mr. Lewis took night courses at theMedill School of Journalism of Northwestern University.

In 1930, Mr. Lewis took over the Daily News night police beat andworkedout of police headquarters, 11th and State, until retiring. Heoutlasted several police commissioners and editors and ushered intothe business countless new faces.

"Through it all, Buddy Lewis's hallmark was patience," wroteDonald Zochert in a 1971 Daily News article on Mr. Lewis'sretirement. "It took patience to show a green kid how to get a story,who to ask, what to ask, how to ask it, what a fact is and what afact isn't."

Mr. Lewis was known as honest, tenacious and fair. Manyreporters remember fondly Mr. Lewis's trademark signout, which was toask the city desk and rewrite bank for a good night. In response,reporters would answer up and down the rewrite bank, "You've got agood night, Bud."

Despite the hard news he covered daily, he kept an eye forbeauty, working tirelessly on his garden.

A veteran of World War II, Mr. Lewis served in the U.S. Army inthe Middle East, Africa and Europe.

He is survived by his wife of 50 years, Jeannette; a daughter,Mary, and a sister. There will be no services.

Fontenot and Soriano Homer to Lift Cubs

CHICAGO - A couple of Wrigley Field's passionate fans made it stressful for the home team Friday, reaching over the ivy-covered walls for balls that were in play.

The Chicago Cubs avoided a Bartman-like flashback and got sixth-inning homers from Mike Fontenot and Alfonso Soriano off David Wells to beat the San Diego Padres 4-1.

"When you come to the ballpark to watch the game, if the ball goes over and you catch the home run, that's a home run," said Chicago right fielder Cliff Floyd, who missed a leaping catch Friday because he said a fan touched the ball.

"If it stays in the ball park, you got to get the opportunity to catch the ball, especially your home boys," Floyd said. "If it's them, maybe you reach over. But if it's us, I need the opportunity to catch the ball. It hit me in the shoulder. I'm glad it didn't hit me in the face."

Both plays recalled the 2003 NL championship series, when fan Steve Bartman interfered with a foul ball in the eighth inning of Game 6, the Cubs collapsed and went on to lose the series to the Florida Marlins.

Cubs first baseman Derrek Lee, who was 4-for-4, hit a long liner to left in the fifth that bounced off the fence on top of the wall as a fan stretched for the ball. Replays were inconclusive if the fan had touched the ball and Lee headed into second with a double. Piniella came out to argue for a home run, but after the umpires conferred, Lee remained at second. Wells then retired the next two batters.

Umpires said after the game that Lee's ball did not clear the wall.

"I didn't know whether the fan touched the ball or not. And so I left it in play. And then looking at the replay, the guy touched it," second base umpire Paul Naubert said. "Lou thought it was gone."

San Diego tied the game 1-1 in the top of the sixth. Hiram Bocachica doubled and scored when Adrian Gonzalez hit a high fly to right that Floyd leaped for but couldn't catch when the fan reached over the wall before the ball landed in the ivy.

Gonzalez made it to third with a triple and both Piniella and Floyd argued. But Gonzalez remained at third. The fan was escorted from his seat before Ted Lilly (5-4) retired the next two batters.

Floyd said he expressed his displeasure to the fan. "I talked to him and let him know it's not right," he said. "If they get more runs than that, we're in a hole."

First base umpire Mike Everitt did not rule fan interference because he did not see the fan touching the ball. After watching the replay, it still wasn't clear."

"Cliff was telling us that the fan interfered with it and he could have caught the ball. He wanted spectator interference and a catch on the ball. There is no way he could have caught the ball," crew chief Gerry Davis said.

Asked why some fans still reach out for balls, Piniella said; "You know what? Did you ever have a couple of beers and catch a ball? What can I say?"

The Padres had some problems earlier this season when umpires changed an apparent homer by Josh Bard to a double.

"If you watch enough baseball this happens across the landscape of the game," Padres manager Bud Black said

Lilly, who was ejected after two-thirds of an inning in his previous start against Atlanta for hitting Edgar Renteria with a pitch, allowed six hits over eight innings.

Ryan Dempster worked the ninth for his 15th save in 17 opportunities.

Wells (3-4) went six innings, giving up 10 hits and four runs.

Fontenot hit a two-run homer and two outs later Soriano connected on a long solo shot, his 11th of the season. Soriano watched the ball sail out and went the first couple of feet up the base line backward.

Wells wasn't watching Soriano, but said he would look at the tape to see just what he did after the homer.

"I hope he didn't do it. If he admired it, file it. I don't show people up," Wells said.

Mark DeRosa, who made two standout defensive plays in the top of the fourth, led off the bottom half with a double. Michael Barrett's single moved him to third and Fontenot put the Cubs up with a sacrifice fly.

Notes:@ Lee's three doubles were a career high. ... Geoff Blum started at second for the Padres because Marcus Giles was ill. ... Chase Headley was called up from Double-A San Antonio and started at third base for San Diego.

Principal enters plea to shoplifting charge

MORGANTOWN - Aurora Elementary School Principal Edna Rothwell haspleaded no contest to stealing $34.58 in items from the MorgantownWal-Mart store last year.

Rothwell, of Westover, entered the plea in Morgantown MunicipalCourt on Thursday.

Morgantown Assistant Staff Attorney Brent Burton said witnessessaw Rothwell hide a doll in her coat and found other items in herpurse that she had not paid for.

Morgantown Municipal Judge Stephen Higgins ordered Rothwell to payWal-Mart $69.16, double the value of the items. He also ordered afine and court costs of $153.

Preston County School Superintendent John Lofink said the PrestonBoard of Education is aware of the charge, but has not decided whataction, if any, to take against Rothwell.

The state schools superintendent can revoke a person's teachingcertificate for "untruthfulness, immorality" and other offenses.

"A conviction for shoplifting may have an effect oncertification," said Rebecca Tinder, an attorney for the state schoolboard.

Monday, March 12, 2012

UN official urges Albania to probe organ claims

A U.N. human rights expert on Tuesday urged Albania to fully cooperate with a probe into claims Serb civilians were killed in the country for their organs during the 1999 war in Kosovo.

The Albanian government has raised "a barrier of formal obstacles" to the investigation by Europe's top human rights watchdog, Philip Alston said on a visit to Albania.

Serbian officials say up to 400 Kosovo Serbs vanished without a trace during that period, and some fear a few dozen may have fallen victim to an organ operation.

Kosovo and Albania have strongly denied the allegations of organ trafficking, which first surfaced in a book by former U.N. war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte.

Alston, a special rapporteur for the UN Commission on Human Rights, said that in nine days of talks he heard Albanian top officials dismiss the charges as "ridiculous."

But he said the officials did not offer meaningful cooperation into the Council of Europe probe launched last year by Swiss Senator Dick Marty.

Marty has not yet issued his conclusions. A UN probe in 2004 found no proof to back up the claims but Serbia has insisted on reopening the investigation.

"Given the strength of the belief, at the highest level, that (the claims) are unfounded, it would be in the government's best interest to facilitate an independent and objective investigation by one or other of the international entities currently focused on the issue," Alston told The Associated Press.

"If you are innocent, you say 'Come into my house and check it.'"

Alston's meetings also focused on whether effective action is being been taken to prosecute those responsible for unlawful killings, including blood feuds, domestic violence, and communist-era human rights abuses.

Alston said Albania has made significant progress, but urged more direct commitment.

Blood feuds resumed in Albania after the fall of the former communist regime in 1990. Their number has since declined and often involve disputes between criminal gangs.

OUT & ABOUT

The future of the gay rights movement will be the focus of theChicago Collegiate Pride Fest 2002, 3-10 p.m. Saturday at the ChicagoCultural Center.

A highlight will be the 5 p.m. discussion of the direction themovement should take on the national level, featuring a faceoffbetween Urvashi Vaid, former director of the national Gay and LesbianTask Force's Policy Institute, and Rich Tafel, founding president andexecutive director of the Log Cabin Republicans.

A $5 donation is requested. The Cultural Center is at 77 E.Randolph. For information, call Pride Fest committee chairPatrick Finnessy at (312) 413-9862.

Two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging of the skin stratum corneum pH gradient

ABSTRACT Two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging is used to identify microdomains (1-25 (mu)m) of two distinct pH values within the uppermost layer of the epidermis (stratum corneum). The fluorophore used is 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5-(and6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF), whose lifetime tau (pH 4.5, tau = 2.75 ns; pH 8.5, tau = 3.90 ns) is pH dependent over the pH range of the stratum corneum (pH 4.5 to pH 7.2). Hairless mice (SKH1-hrBR) are used as a model for human skin. Images (<=50 (mu)m x 50 (mu)m) are acquired every 1.7 (mu)m from the stratum corneum surface to the first viable layer (stratum granulosum). Acidic microdomains (average pH 6.0) of variable size (~1 (mu)m in diameter with variable length) are detected within the extracellular matrix of the stratum corneum, whereas the intracellular space of the corneocytes in mid-stratum corneum (25 (mu)m diameter) approaches neutrality (average pH 7.0). The surface is acidic. The average pH of the stratum corneum increases with depth because of a decrease in the ratio of acidic to neutral regions within the stratum corneum. The data definitively show that the stratum corneum acid mantle results from the presence of aqueous acidic pockets within the lipid-rich extracellular matrix.

INTRODUCTION

Within the 10-20 cell layers of the uppermost epidermis (stratum corneum) of human skin, the hydrogen ion concentration decreases 100-1000-fold (Ohman and Vahlquist, 1994). The surface of the skin is acidic, ranging between pH 4.5 and pH 6 depending upon body site, sex, and species, forming what is termed the acid mantle (Dikstein and Zlotogorski, 1994; Ohman and Vahlquist, 1994). In contrast, the first viable epidermal layer (stratum granulosum) below the stratum corneum, ~10 (mu)m below the surface, reaches neutrality. Current research shows that pH greatly influences the barrier nature of the stratum corneum. Thus, understanding both the effect of pH and its origin upon the skin barrier is synonymous with improving topical drug delivery and understanding barrier-influenced diseases like dermatitis and icthyosis. To determine how pH affects barrier function, a method for detecting pH in the stratum corneum on the subcellular level is first needed.

Tape stripping has allowed measurements of pH as a function of stratum corneum depth using a flat electrode (Ohman and Vahlquist, 1994, 1998). These measurements have determined that pH increases with each deeper corneocyte layer showing that a pH gradient exists between the surface and the deepest stratum corneum. There are two drawbacks to tape-stripping measurements. First, it is intrinsically destructive. Once perturbed, the skin naturally undergoes barrier recovery, which may in turn alter the pH of the stratum corneum. Therefore, such measurements do not necessarily measure the pH at equilibrium. Second, using a flat electrode on the stratum corneum provides a bulk measurement of pH over an extended area (square centimeters). The electrode method cannot identify at the subcellular level those compartments, such as the extracellular matrix and/or intracellular spaces, that contribute to the dramatic pH differences observed across the stratum corneum.

Microscopy in conjunction with pH-sensitive fluorescent probes offers a method to determine pH with the required spatial resolution (Hanson et al., 2000). In general, these fluorophores report their local pH through a shift in excitation spectrum and change in the intensity/spectrum of emission as the probe changes between an acid and a base form. These spectral changes are often accompanied by a change in the fluorescence lifetime (Rink et al., 1982; Szmacinski and Lakowicz, 1993). Quantitative use of these probes in a cellular environment presents many challenges. Purely optical absorbance methods for determination of pH are generally not used because of difficulties in measuring the spectrum of a necessarily dilute stain against a complex cellular background absorption. Emission intensity methods have more than adequate sensitivity of detection for probe concentrations thought not to disturb normal cell behavior; however, because of inhomogeneous labeling, simple intensity measurements cannot be used to determine pH in the cellular environment. In such cases, either excitation ratio or emission ratio methods can be used. For lamp-based systems it is possible to rapidly change excitation filters to facilitate ratio imaging of samples that are not opaque.

In this work, three-dimensional information upon skin with subcellular resolution is desired. This suggests the use of confocal microscopy techniques. In this case, the availability of suitable laser lines poses a difficulty. In addition, it is difficult to change between laser lines rapidly, and it is difficult to retain the exact depth of focus of the different excitation wavelengths. These problems make excitation ratiometric methods cumbersome and unattractive. Emission ratio methods are also possible in the case of acquiring data within the relatively thin (~15 (mu)m) stratum corneum. However, for thicker samples, quantification using emission ratio imaging is complicated by wavelength-dependent inhomogeneous absorption and scattering as the fluorescence light leaves the skin sample in its path to the detector (Jacques, 1996). More specifically in the case of measuring pH within the stratum corneum, a single probe is not commercially available to date to detect pH over the pH range of the stratum corneum by emission ratio methods. Multiple probes would be required to determine pH by this method within the stratum corneum.

Fluorescence lifetime imaging offers a solution to these problems and is compatible with confocal microscopy. The lifetime is independent of probe concentration and inhomogeneities in excitation and emission light paths. Scatter will delay the emitted light in reaching the detector, but this effect is negligible (picoseconds) compared with typical fluorescence lifetimes (nanoseconds) for the tissue penetration in this study.

When working with bulk tissue, the penetration of the excitation light must be considered. Two-photon excitation using near-infrared light and without a confocal pinhole in the emission path has been shown to allow sectioned imaging at greater depths into a tissue sample compared with ultraviolet confocal excitation (Masters et al., 1997). Because in two-photon microscopy no pinhole is used, subsequent scatter of the fluorescent emission does not result in rejection by the confocal pinhole as in one-- photon excitation.

A number of fluorescein-derived dyes are available for measurement at near physiological pH. For this work we have chosen to use 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5-(and-6)-- carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) with a pK^sub a^ of 7.0 (Rink et al., 1982; Szmacinski and Lakowicz, 1993; Haughland, 1998). The emission from BCECF has a maximum at 535 nm. The broad tuning range of the mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser used in this study allows selection of an excitation wavelength that minimizes contributions from autofluorescence.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

CONCLUSIONS

Two-photon fluorescence lifetime-resolved imaging microscopy was selected because it affords submicron spatial resolution and submillimeter depth penetration into tissue using one excitation wavelength. This technique provides an excellent method for imaging cellular processes on the submicron scale within all layers of the epidermis.

The primary issue in determining pH in the skin accurately has been one of calibration (Hanson et al., 2000). Lifetime imaging circumvents this difficulty because lifetime measurements are independent of concentration, which allows for a straightforward calibration. Intensity measurements are difficult to calibrate because the pH-sensitive dyes are unevenly distributed. This is because of the heterogeneous environment and efficient barrier properties of the stratum corneum. As Fig. 4 a shows, a region of bright intensity may indicate either a neutral pH or simply the presence of a greater number of dye molecules relative to another area within the skin. Ratiometric measurement techniques can circumvent the issue of uneven dye distribution. The dye, BCECF, that we have used in our lifetime-resolved experiments, has been used to detect intracellular pH differences using intensity excitation-ratio measurements (Rink et al., 1982). Because the excitation spectrum of BCECF spectrally shifts with pH, a fluorescence emission intensity ratio can be formed by exciting at two wavelengths. However, this is experimentally inconvenient; with two-photon FLIM only one excitation wavelength is needed. This avoids the movement of the excitation beam within the focal plane that results when excitation wavelengths are changed, which is a serious problem in ratiometric methods. The ratiometric measurements have also proven to be difficult to calibrate within the skin (Turner et al., 1998). However, with the development of new probes that spectrally shift over the entire pH range of the stratum corneum, emission ratio imaging of stratum corneum pH may prove comparable in ease of use to two-photon FLIM.

Several mechanistic theories have been published to explain the origin of the stratum corneum acid mantle. Passive mechanisms proposed to date include the accumulation of the ultraviolet chromophore trans-urocanic acid (Krien and Kermici, 2000), sweat by-products lactate and lactic acid (Patterson et al., 2000), or acidic free fatty acids (Lieckfeldt et al., 2000). These mechanisms differ from active pathways (sodium/hydrogen antiporter) that may influence pH by actively regulating the hydrogen ion concentration. We are currently using two-photon FLIM to determine the effect of active and passive mechanisms upon the origin of acidic microdomains within the stratum corneum.

The Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics at the University of Illinois is supported by National Institutes of Health PHS P41-RR03155. K.H. is supported by the Cancer Research Foundation of America and the Skin Cancer Foundation.

[Reference]

REFERENCES

[Reference]

Alcala, J. R., E. Gratton, and D. M. Jameson. 1985. A multifrequency phase fluorometer using the harmonic content of a mode-locked laser. Anal. Instr. 14:225-250.

Christophers, E. 1971. Cellular architecture of the stratum corneum. J. Invest. Dermatol. 56:165-169.

Clegg, R. M., and P. C. Schneider. 1996. Fluorescence lifetime-resolved imaging microscopy: a general description of lifetime-resolved imaging measurements. In Fluorescence Microscopy and Fluorescent Probes. J. Savik, editor. Plenum Press, New York. 15-33.

Dikstein, S., and A. Zlotogorski. 1994. Measurement of skin pH. Acta Dennatol. Venereol. (Stockh.). 185:18-20.

[Reference]

Ephardt, H., and P. J. Fromherz. 1989. Fluorescence and photoisomerization of an amphiphilic aminostilbazolium dye as controlled by the sensitivity of radiationless deactivation to polarity and viscosity J. Phys. Chem. 93:7717-7725.

Fushimi, K., and A. S. Verkman. 1991. Low viscosity in the aqueous domain of cell cytoplasm measured by picosecond polarization microfluorimetry. J. Cell Biol. 112:719-725.

Hanson, K. M., N. P. Barry, E. Gratton, and R. M. Clegg. 2000. Fluorescence lifetime imaging of pH in the stratum corneum. Biophys. J. Annu. Meet. Abstr. B588.

Haughland, R. P. 1998. Handbook of Fluorescent Probes and Research Chemicals. T. Z. Spence, editor. Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR.

[Reference]

Jacques S. L. 1996. Modeling light propagation in tissues. In Biomedical Optical Instrumentation and Laser-Assisted Biotechnology. A. M. Verga Scheggi, editor. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Amsterdam. 21-32.

Jameson, D. M., E. Gratton, and R. D. Hall. 1984. The measurement and analysis of heterogeneous emissions by multifrequency phase and modulation fluorometry. Appl. Spectrosc. Rev. 20:55-106.

Knuttel, A., and M. Boehlau-Godau. 2000. Spatially confined and temporally resolved refractive index and scattering evaluation in human skin performed with optical coherence tomography. J. Biomed. Optics. 5:83-92.

[Reference]

Krien, P. M., and M. Kermici. 2000. Evidence for the existence of a self-regulated enzymatic process within the human stratum corneum: an unexpected role for urocanic acid. J. Invest. Dermatol. 115:414-20.

Lakowicz, J. R. 1999. Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy. Kluwer/ Plenum, New York.

Lieckfeldt, R., J. Villalain, J. C. Gomez-Fernandez, and G. Lee. 1995. Apparent pKa of the fatty acids within ordered mixtures of model human stratum corneum lipids. Pharmacol. Res. 12:1614-7.

Luby-Phelps, K., S. Mujumdar, R. Mujumdar, L. Ernst, W. Galbraith, and A. Waggoner. 1993. A novel fluorescence ratiometric method confirms the low solvent viscosity of the cytoplasm. Biophys. J. 65:236-242.

MacKenzie, I. C. 1969. Ordered structure of the stratum corneum of mammalian skin. Nature. 222:881.

Masters, B. R., P. T. C. So, and E. Gratton. 1997. Multiphoton excitation fluorescence microscopy and spectroscopy of in vivo human skin. Biophys. J. 72:2405-2412.

[Reference]

Ohman, H., and A. Vahlquist. 1994. In vivo studies concerning a pH gradient in human stratum corneum and upper epidermis. Acta Dermatol. Venereol. (Stockh.). 74:375-379.

Ohman, H., and A. Vahlquist. 1998. The pH gradient over the stratum corneum differs in X-linked recessive and autosomal dominant icthyosis: a clue to the molecular origin of the acid skin mantle. J. Invest. Dermatol. 111:674-677.

Patterson, M. J., S. D. Galloway, and M. A. Nimmo. 2000. Variations in regional sweat composition in normal human males. Erp. Physiol. 85: 869-875.

[Reference]

Rink, T. J., R. Y. Tsien, and T. Pozzan. 1982. Cytoplasmic pH and free MgZ+ in lymphocytes. J. Cell Biol. 95:189-196.

Schaefer, H., and T. E. Redelmeier. 1996. Skin Barrier: Principles of Percutaneous Absorption. Karger, Base], Switzerland. 48-49.

So, P. T. C., T. French, W. M. Yu, K. M. Berland, C. Y. Dong, and E. Gratton. 1996. Two photon fluorescence microscopy: time-resolved and intensity imaging. In Fluorescence Imaging and Microscopy. X. F. Wang and B. Her-man, editors. John Wiley and Sons, New York. 51-374.

[Reference]

Szmacinski, H., and J. R. Lakowicz. 1993. Optical measurements of pH using fluorescence lifetimes and phase-modulation fluorometry. Anal. Chem. 65:1668-1674.

Turner, N. G., C. Cullander, and R. H. Guy. 1998. Determination of the pH gradient across the stratum corneum. J. Invest. Dermatol. Symp. Proc. 3:110-113.

[Author Affiliation]

Kerry M. Hanson,* Martin J. Behne,^ Nicholas P. Barry,* Theodora M. Mauro,^ Enrico Gratton,* and Robert M. Clegg*

*Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics, Department of Physics, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois 61801, and ^Dermatology Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Department of Dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94110 USA

[Author Affiliation]

Submitted January 8, 2002, and accepted for publication May 1, 2002. K.M.H. and NT .B. contributed equally to this work.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Kerry M. Hanson, Laboratory for Fluorescence Dynamics, University of Illinois, 1110 W. Green Street, Urbana, IL 61801. Tel.: 217-244-5620; Fax: 217-244-7187; E-mail: khanson@uiuc.edu.

U.S. benefits paid to 1,200 dead vets

WASHINGTON The Veterans Affairs Department has paid benefits tomore than 1,200 deceased veterans, including about 100 dead a decadeor more, the General Accounting Office says. The agency pegs thepotential annual loss from the erroneous payments at $5.7 million.

Auditors for the congressional investigating agency said thedepartment could have reduced the erroneous payments by matching VAbenefit payment files with death information maintained by the SocialSecurity Administration.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Edward J. Derwinski, agreeing withthe GAO's findings, said the department intended to follow thatprocedure.

The GAO, in a report to the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee,said, "We found that in April, 1989, VA paid compensation or benefitpayments for 1,212 veterans whom Social Security Administrationrecords reported had died at least four months earlier.

"About 100 had been dead 10 years or more."

Veterans Affairs pays out more than $14.7 billion a year indisability compensation and pension benefits to more than 2.8 millionveterans and nearly 1 million surviving spouses and other dependents.

The GAO said the department has relied on voluntary reporting ofdeaths as a basis for ending benefits.

The Social Security Administration goes much further, however,receiving reports of deaths from many sources and buying deathcertificate information from states.

The congressional agency said that by matching VA's benefitpayment file with Social Security files containing information on 39million deaths, it identified 1,212 veterans who were sent benefitsand were reported dead. Erroneous payments to these veterans'accounts could amount to $5.7 million annually, it said.

NHL Playoff Scoring Leaders

GP G A PTS
Ovechkin, Was 12 10 7 17
Crosby, Pit 11 9 7 16
Getzlaf, Ana 11 3 13 16
Malkin, Pit 11 6 8 14
Backstrom, Was 12 3 11 14
Franzen, Det 9 7 6 13
Staal, Car 12 9 3 12
Semin, Was 12 5 7 12
Zetterberg, Det 9 6 5 11
Ryder, Bos 9 5 6 11
Savard, Bos 9 5 6 11
Havlat, Chi 11 5 6 11
Kessel, Bos 9 6 4 10
Perry, Ana 11 6 4 10
Jokinen, Car 12 6 4 10
Lidstrom, Det 9 3 7 10
7 tied 9

Azerbaijan says has gas to fill Nabucco pipeline

Azerbaijan's state oil monopoly said Thursday that the Caspian country has enough natural gas to fill a pipeline meant to help Europe reduce its dependence on Russian supplies.

The feasibility of the Nabucco pipeline _ which would run from the Caspian via Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and end in Austria _ has been questioned by some experts who say there is not enough gas around the Caspian to fill it.

But Khoshbakht Yusifzade, president of Azerbaijan's SOCAR oil monopoly, said the country's gas reserves will make the project a reality. "Azerbaijan has sufficient reserves to fill the Nabucco pipeline," Yusifzade said.

He added that Azerbaijan's gas reserves stand at more than 2 trillion cubic meters.

Azerbaijan produced 23 billion cubic meters of gas in 2008, and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said last month that the country would double the gas production in the next few years.

Last year, Azerbaijan also exported 78 million tons of oil to Russia, Georgia, and Europe.

European Union officials and businessmen gathered in Budapest last month to kickstart construction of Nabucco, which the EU and the United States back as a viable alternative to Russian gas supplies to the continent.

Russia supplies Europe with about a quarter of its oil and gas needs.

Industry experts repeatedly noted that the project is economically unsound. Even its backers acknowledged that it will be extremely difficult to find enough gas to fill the pipeline to its annual capacity of 31 billion cubic meters.

Even that amounts to only a small fraction of the gas consumed annually by the European Union. Nabucco's supporters hope that Central Asian countries _ like Turkmenistan _ will join the project at a later stage.

However, Russia's gas monopoly Gazprom currently buys out most of the gas Turkmenistan produces.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Ex-Merc head likes `immigrant model'

Name: Jack Sandner

Title: CEO

Company: FreeDrive

Passion: His family and understanding people

Growing up in Chicago's Bridgeport neighborhood, Jack Sandnerbecame a streetfighter in order to survive. A straight-A student andaltar boy, Sandner traded in his textbooks for a hard hat and boxinggloves at age 16. Sandner eventually graduated with honors from highschool, Southern Illinois and Notre Dame Law School.

He is best know for helping modernize the Chicago MercantileExchange before stepping down as its chairman in 1997. Sandnerserves simultaneously as CEO for FreeDrive and RB&H FinancialServices (his trading firm), special adviser to the Merc, …

Toms breaks out of slump with 67 to take Wachovia lead

Fans looking for big names to follow at the Wachovia Championship had plenty of options despite the absence of defending champion Tiger Woods.

While Woods was home recovering from arthroscopic knee surgery, Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh, Masters champion Trevor Immelman and Rory Sabbatini were all the course Thursday. So was Adam Scott, the rising Australian who won last week at the Bryon Nelson Championship.

But it was Scott's playing partner who shined in the first round. David Toms, who has virtually disappeared in the past two years, charged to a 5-under 67 to take a one-shot lead at the tournament he won five years ago.

"I played today with …

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Talk show queen Feltz gets real...(FEATURES)

Byline: EMMA POMFRET

AS a woman who describes her personal life as "one hell of a rollercoaster ride", outspoken presenter Vanessa Feltz is well-qualified to relate to the extraordinary guests on her new ITV1 talk show, Vanessa's Real Lives.

"Not strictly through my own design, my personal life has been incredibly public, and so everybody thinks that they know me -- actually they probably do because I don't think that I've got any hidden depths that anyone doesn't know about," Vanessa says.

"I lost my mum when she was 57. Then my husband left which was just diabolical. I lost my show under very public and humiliating circumstances, not to mention having to start dating again when I didn't want to and certainly didn't think I'd have to at a ridiculously old age, …

Talk show queen Feltz gets real...(FEATURES)

Byline: EMMA POMFRET

AS a woman who describes her personal life as "one hell of a rollercoaster ride", outspoken presenter Vanessa Feltz is well-qualified to relate to the extraordinary guests on her new ITV1 talk show, Vanessa's Real Lives.

"Not strictly through my own design, my personal life has been incredibly public, and so everybody thinks that they know me -- actually they probably do because I don't think that I've got any hidden depths that anyone doesn't know about," Vanessa says.

"I lost my mum when she was 57. Then my husband left which was just diabolical. I lost my show under very public and humiliating circumstances, not to mention having to start dating again when I didn't want to and certainly didn't think I'd have to at a ridiculously old age, …

Monday, March 5, 2012

VEILED STEROIDS: Athletes risk contamination through supplements

The HP Women's Challenge will be coming to Idaho soon, and Boise's top woman cyclist will not be racing this year. Brooke Blackwelder was suspended from racing until Jan. 17, 2003, for testing positive for a steroid byproduct. She failed a random test administered after the June 17 stage last year.

While Blackwelder is the first American woman to test positive for 19norandrosterone since the substance was prohibited, cycling and other competitive sports across the world have seen an increase in athletes testing positive for 19-norandrosterone and the active steroid nandrolone. Blackwelder and other athletes are defending their innocence, maintaining that contaminated sports …

PRODUCTS - MEDICAL TAPE FROM LECTEC

LecTec Corp has recently added to its product line with the introduction of its newest medical tape, Isosilk, suitable for applications where the tape has to be strong and stick firmly to the skin. It is manufactured with the company's solvent-free tape manufacturing …

SOME AREA NATIVES FARE WELL ON SCREEN.(TV/Radio)

Byline: Janet Trinkaus

Besides Scott Valentine, Russell Todd and Joe Alaskey, other Capital District people have landed TV roles.

Steve Fisher, who graduated from Albany Academy in 1973, will appear in the Jan. 15 episode of "Miami Vice," playing Sheena Easton's public relations man in California.

Fisher, who also appeared as the master of ceremonies at a porno film festival in an earlier episode of "Miami Vice," was a stand-up comic in New York for three years while he did public relations. He also appeared at the Colonie Coliseum and the Gideon Putnam Hotel as well as Rockwell's, Justin McNeil's and the Performing Arts Loft in Albany. He and his wife, a writer, went to …

STATE WORKER SLAIN OUTSIDE ALBANY APARTMENT.(Local)

Byline: Joe Mahoney Staff writer

Lovie E. Williams, a state worker and union shop steward, waved goodbye to her daughter Thursday, walked out of her temporary home at the Lincoln Square high- rise housing project and climbed into her sedan parked just a block from police headquarters.

She never made it to the office.

At 6:30 a.m., moments after she slid behind the wheel of the blue 1983 Buick, two shots rang out on Warren Street, ending the life of the 48-year-old widow. As Williams' body slumped across the front seat of the car, a man clutching what appeared to be a handgun was observed loping away by at least one witness, police said.

Detectives said Thursday night the motive for the killing was not apparent and …

NBA Standings

All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB
y-Boston 57 15 .792 _
Toronto 37 35 .514 20
Philadelphia 37 36 .507 20 1/2
New Jersey 31 42 .425 26 1/2
New York 20 52 .278 37
Southeast Division
W L Pct GB
x-Orlando 47 …

Zesty Menu Spices Gandhi India

GANDHI INDIA (STAR) (STAR) 2601 W. Devon Phone: (312) 761-8714. Hours: Lunch buffet everyday 11:30 a.m. to3:30 p.m.; Dinner Sunday through Thursday, 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.; Friday andSaturday, 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Prices: appetizers, $1.25 to $5.95;entrees, $2.50 to $7.45; desserts, 90 cents to $1.25. Ambience:Subdued, simple, clean. Credit cards: American Express, CarteBlanche, Discover, Diners Club, MasterCard, Visa. Reservations:Accepted. Parking: On the street or in the city lot across thestreet. Good for kids? yes RECOMMENDED DISHES: Pakora, chicken tikka, siekh kebab, boti kebab, masala dosa, chickenmakhani, rogan josh, piazi kulcha, pooree

I've been eating at …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

New Environmental Medicine Research Reported from L. Lipworth and Co-Authors.(Report)(Brief article)

"Extended cancer follow-up among 77,943 aircraft workers. Comprehensive exposure information enabled detailed classification of trichloroethylene (TCE), perchloroethylene (PCE), mixed solvents, and chromates exposure among these workers," scientists in Salt Lake City, Utah report (see also Environmental Medicine).

"Exposure to TCE, PCE, mixed solvents or chromates was not associated with increased cancer risk overall or for most cancer sites. Elevated rates compared with the general population were seen for non-Hodgkin lymphoma for PCE exposure, and colon and testicular cancers and multiple myeloma for mixed solvents exposure. Internal cohort analyses, however, showed no …

Student not surprised by Ecuador crash.

DAYS before the bus crash in Ecuador in which five young British women died, Bridlington student Lauren Dearing returned from a three-month working holiday in the country.

Although she was shocked to hear about the accident she said she was not surprised because of the dangerous drivers and poor roads.

Lauren, who was on a gap year, said: "I went on all of the routes they took because I travelled most of the country.

"As soon as I heard I wasn't surprised, the roads were pretty dangerous, a lot of the roads are on cliff tops and the buses go faster than the cars and they over-take them.

"I wouldn't let this stop people going on gap years and …

UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS.(SPORTS)

AMSTERDAM VS. CBA When: Tonight, 7:30. Where: CBA, Colonie Records: Amsterdam (1-0), CBA (1-0) Last meeting: Amsterdam defeated CBA 35-6 last year behind the running of Darien Ward (two touchdowns, 114 yards rushing). Outlook: This will be the first game played on CBA's new lighted field and the Brothers will be sky high. But Amsterdam appears solid on both sides of the ball. The game could be a battle of running backs -- Ward for Amsterdam and P.J. DeGuire for CBA. BETHLEHEM VS. SHAKER When: Tonight, 7. Where: Shaker High, Latham Records: Bethlehem (1-0), Shaker (1-0) Last meeting: Shaker defeated Bethlehem 58-19 in 1999. Outlook: Shaker looked …

Releasing a CD is reason to party: 5 Tucson bands are inviting you to join in on the fun.

Byline: Sarah Mauet

Nov. 9--Need proof that Tucson's music scene is on the up-and-up? Just look at all the CD release parties for local musicians that are planned for the next few weeks. Whether you're into gritty rock, polished pop or hardcore scream-o, Tucson bands have something new for you.

Not sure what to choose? Here's a rundown of the upcoming CD release parties, complete with band background, album description and live show information. Now get out there and support your local music scene.

The Beta Sweat "Let's Shake Some Dust" (CD and LP) Band: The band (then known as the Sweat Band) won the 2005 Tammie for Best New Band or Artist and represented the Old Pueblo at the South by Southwest Music Festival this spring, the first local band in recent memory to make it to the Austin festival. Drummer Jake Bergeron formed Mudhouse Records, a label to promote local music, and "Let's Shake Some Dust" is its first album. Album: The band used the empty Rialto Theatre as a recording space this summer, and the spaciousness is evident immediately in the mostly live recording: After each gritty rock song, you half expect to hear …

Padres 2, Giants 1

Padres 2, Giants 1
San Francisco @ San Diego @
ab r h bi @ ab r h bi
Rownd cf 4 0 3 0 Eckstn 2b 4 0 0 0
Frndsn ss 3 0 0 0 Hairstn cf 3 0 0 0
Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 0 0 0
BMolin c 4 0 0 0 Kzmnff 3b 4 1 2 1
Winn rf 4 1 2 0 Headly lf 3 0 0 0

Asian and Pacific Leaders Pledge to Control Shoulder-Fired Missiles

NEWS BRIEFS

Leaders of countries from Asia to the Western Hemisphere pledged Oct. 21 to better control the international trade in shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles that could be used by terrorists against civilian and commercial aircraft.

Promoted by the United States, the nonbinding pledge came at the end of a two-day Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Bangkok, Thailand. APEC's 21 members include China, Japan, and Russia, all three of which produce shoulder-launched anti-aircraft missiles, collectively referred to as Man-Portable Air Defense Systems (MANPADS). The United States also manufactures and exports MANPADS.

APEC members stated they would …

No cause for hope in Hanoi.(Vietnam's economic condition.)(Brief Article)

Attempts to be positive about Vietnam are stymied by the bare, unpalatable facts

One would like to be optimistic about Vietnam's economic future. In the early 1990s when foreign investment in Vietnam started to gain momentum there was great enthusiasm both within Vietnam and the foreign investment community.

Today, that enthusiasm has waned. Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City are confronted on a daily basis by recently completed hotels which have yet to host a guest and abandoned building sites begging for renewed interest. Foreign capital has retreated from Vietnam and private domestic capital is yet to show its potential. The state continues to subsidise …

Cement imports from Cuba.(JAMAICA)

Minister of Industry, Commerce & Investment Karl Samuda said that 5,000 tons of cement would arrive in Jamaica from Cuba within the next two weeks, to ease the current shortage, reports JIS (Oct. 4, 2007). Representatives from the Ministry, the Airports Authority of Jamaica and the Port Authority of Jamaica visited Cuba a week earlier to …