четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Dunlap travels long way to land on leaderboard

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Few players have traveled a longer route to thetop of a major championship leaderboard than Scott Dunlap.

Dunlap, 37, has played the Canadian, South African and SouthAmerican tours, plus several European events, since graduating fromFlorida in 1985. He is in his fourth full season on the PGA Tour andstill is seeking his first victory in the United States.

And after shooting a 6-under-par 66 Thursday at Valhalla, he'stied with Tiger Woods for the first-round lead in the PGAChampionship.

"I wouldn't trade where I have been and what I have done for theworld," Dunlap said. "Going overseas and playing against world-classcompetition is the main reason …

'Jeopardy!' host injured while chasing burglar

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — No one needed to buzz in with a question when "Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek walked out on crutches at Google headquarters to host the National Geographic World Championship.

"The answer is, at 2:30 yesterday morning, chasing a burglar down the hall at my San Francisco hotel until my Achilles tendon ruptured and I fell in an ignominious heap to the carpeting," he explained Wednesday in the quiz show's signature answer-before-question format.

Lucinda Moyers, 56, was arrested on suspicion of felony burglary and possession of stolen property. She's accused of stealing cash, a bracelet and other items from the room where Trebek was staying with his wife, …

Stocks drop after sharp fall in July home sales

Stocks fell Tuesday after another disappointing report on the housing market renewed worries about the economy.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost about 80 points in midday trading after news that sales of previously occupied homes fell last month to their lowest level in 15 years.

The Dow briefly dipped below 10,000 for the first time in seven weeks and was down as much as 183 points earlier in the day before paring its losses. Investors seeking refuge from the latest stock swings piled back into Treasurys, sending interest rates lower. The yield on the two-year Treasury note touched another record low.

Global markets fell sharply. Japanese …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

LOAN STAR'S STATE

These aren't the best days for banks, as reduced profit margins and a credit crunch make it difficult to build capital.

But Tim Crimmins prefers to look at today's financial landscape in its proper contexr, having already endured a real downturn.

"What happened in 1990 and 1991 hadn't been seen since the 1930s, with the number of bank failures, foreclosures, and regulatory orders," said Crimmins, president and CEO of the Bank of Western Massachusetts (BWM). "That really cast a cloud over the industry, and it virtually shut down the credit markets. People had a hard time finding money to finance expansion or even the day-to-day aspects of their businesses."

At that …

Ruins Await Residents' Return in Kansas

GREENSBURG, Kan. - Rescue crews have twice searched the debris-strewn yards and splintered homes that once held Greensburg's 1,500 residents. They began a third sweep Monday to secure the area before families who lost almost everything were to be allowed back in.

Not much remained in Greenburg to go back to.

The F5 tornado, the most powerful to hit the U.S. in eight years, demolished every business on the main street. Churches lost their steeples, trees were stripped of their branches, and neighborhoods were left unrecognizable. Officials estimate as much as 95 percent of the town was destroyed. At least 10 people died in the storms.

"We've been over the town …

Tests could find ovarian cancer early

Doctors screening women for ovarian cancer were able to pick up the disease about two years earlier than normal, according to a British study published Wednesday.

Scientists have long searched for a way to identify ovarian cancer early, which kills nearly 100,000 women worldwide every year. If it is found early, nearly 90 percent of women survive.

However, most women are currently only diagnosed with the disease after it has spread, when there is only a maximum 30 percent chance of survival.

In the British study, doctors enrolled approximately 200,000 post-menopausal women aged 50 to 74 across the United Kingdom from 2001 to 2005. About 100,000 …

Buy out Edison, panel tells city

Chicago should buy Commonwealth Edison's local operation andtake over the job of providing electricity to the city, a mayoraltask force said in a report released Thursday.

As an alternative, the report said, the city could negotiate forcheaper electricity but definitely should not renew the currentcontract with Edison to provide power to the city.

Mayor Daley said through a spokesman that he would reservecomment on the report until after he has read it.

"Notice to acquire and notice to terminate" the presentagreement should be given to Edison by Dec. 31, the Mayor's TaskForce on Energy said after a nine-month study of the city'selectricity …

OPEC Cuts Oil Production by 1.2M Barrels

DOHA, Qatar - Oil cartel OPEC decided to cut production by a greater-than-expected 1.2 million barrels a day on Friday, and some members indicated it was open to further cuts.

United Arab Emirates oil minister Mohammed bin Dhaen al-Hamili made the announcement at a news conference after OPEC's oil ministers held an emergency meeting in the capital of Qatar.

Support for the move by the de facto leader of the cartel, Saudi Arabia oil minister Ali Naimi, shows the group's unity on the issue of price, said one analyst after the announcement.

"If the market doesn't stabilize, they are going to continue to cut production," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading …

European airports see traffic picking up

European airport operators said Thursday that they are seeing a "slow and gradual" recovery in air travel in October after an unprecedented fall in passenger numbers.

The Airports Council International Europe said that from January through September passenger traffic fell 7.7 percent and cargo slumped by 19.8 percent _ wiping out gains in the number of people flying over the last three years.

That decline is starting to turn around, they said. But they don't expect air travel to make a sustained recovery until mid-2010 and said current growth is coming almost entirely from low-cost airlines who are adding airplanes and routes as major carriers …

East Dundee Development Near Woods, Vintage Homes

The Reserve of East Dundee in northwest suburban East Dundee isadjacent to the 1,300-acre McGraw Woods.

"We also are within walking distance of downtown East Dundee,which has restored vintage homes included in the National Register ofHistoric Places," said Bruce McPhee, northwest division manager forKimball Hill Homes, the builder.

Kimball Hill plans 54 single-family homes. Base prices rangefrom $203,000 to $250,000. Seven two-story plans are sized from2,173 to 3,100 square feet. Houses have 3 to 5 bedrooms, 2 to 3 1/2baths and 2- or 3-car garages.

The 2,600-square-foot Poplar design, shown as a model, has abridge overlooking the family room. The Poplar, …

Prosecutor: Drop 1 Chirac corruption case

PARIS (AP) — A prosecutor's office has recommended dropping one longstanding corruption case against former President Jacques Chirac, while he is set to go to trial for a similar affair in March.

The prosecutor's office in the Paris suburb of Nanterre said Monday it has recommended dropping charges against Chirac in one of several scandals that date back to his 1977-1995 tenure as Paris mayor. An investigating magistrate must now make a decision.

Chirac, who founded the Rally for the Republic party, or RPR, reborn as UMP — President Nicolas Sarkozy's party — has for years been dogged by a series of party financing scandals, with allegations he set up a system to feed millions …

Udinese gets Bremen in UEFA Cup quarters

Udinese's reward for knocking defending champion Zenit St. Petersburg out of the UEFA Cup was a quarterfinal against Werder Bremen when the UEFA Cup draw was made Friday.

The Italian club, which has never won a major European competition, could then meet another German side in the semifinals with the winner facing either Hamburg or Manchester City, which is owned by a wealthy business consortium from Abu Dhabi and has Brazilian striker Robinho on its lineup.

"This is going to be a great game, not least because Manchester have two former Hamburg players (Vincent Kompany and Nigel de Jong)," said Hamburg general manager Bern Wehmeyer. "And our …

14 die in migrant boat journey to Spain

Fourteen migrants died trying to reach Spain's Canary Islands in a packed boat, the Interior Ministry said Wednesday.

Thirteen of the dead were found along with 46 survivors aboard the vessel after it was spotted by coastal guards shortly before 8 a.m. (0600 GMT). A further body was found several hours later some 7 miles offshore, the ministry said.

The boat was escorted to Puerto de Arguineguin on the south of Gran Canaria island.

Two of the migrants, who appeared to be from sub-Saharan countries, were taken to a hospital on the island. The survivors included two women.

Every year thousands of Africans looking for a better life in Europe attempt treacherous journeys in overcrowded boats. Most are caught and hundreds more die along the way, either from exposure or by drowning.

The ministry said some migrants on the boat told police they had set sail from the west African country of Guinea more than a week ago.

The number of those actually making it to the Canary Islands is down considerably this year because of stepped-up surveillance of African coastal waters by local and European vessels.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Rain fails to dampen spirits as past captains turn out in force

THE Annual Knights Past Captains' Day at Carmarthen Golf Clubproved a success again despite the arrival of rain in the afternoonthat slightly dampened the spirits. Organiser Clive Evans wasgrateful to the 15 past captains who supported the event. GeorgeLaidlaw emerged victorious in the Stableford competition with afantastic 36 points, beating off the close challenge of StewartEvans and Simon Barratt who tied on 34.

Shan Lewis had a great round at Derllys Court to finish runner-up in the Playing Fields Cup. Playing off a ten handicap, Shanscored 43 points, eclipsing many other fine players.

Having completed his second year at Michigan State University,Matthew Moseley is back to play golf over the summer in the topamateur events around the UK.

After just failing to qualify for the final stages of the BritishAmateur at Hillside, he found his form at the Berkshire where, afteropening rounds of 69 and 71, he was tied for the lead. He followedthis with rounds of 74 and 73 for a 287 total to finish tied 12thoverall.

His most recent tournament has been the famous Brabazon, playedthis year over the Somerset links of Burnham and Berrow.

This is another prestigious competition and Matthew got off to agood start in tough conditions with rounds of 77 and 76, putting himahead of many notable golfers including some Walker Cup hopefuls. Hefollowed this with two more solid rounds of 74 and 75 for anothergood finish in a top-quality event.

Members Club Night on Wednesdays has continued to be a greatsuccess, helped in no small part by the good weather. So far thisyear more than 500 golfers have attended the 11 meetings, with manyexcellent scores recorded.

A pleasing feature of this fun, relaxing nine-hole event has beenthe 50+ guests taking part, all of whom have appreciated playing agolf course in such superb condition.

Various events surrounding Captains' Day took place last week.

Carl Icahn offers to buy Clorox for $76.50 per share, or about $10.2 billion

NEW YORK (AP) — Carl Icahn offers to buy Clorox for $76.50 per share, or about $10.2 billion

Rallying Predators keep Canucks from moving on

The Nashville Predators are reminding the Vancouver Canucks that it's never over till it's really over.

Once again.

The Canucks thought they learned that lesson after nearly blowing a 3-0 series lead and needing overtime in Game 7 to knock off the Chicago Blackhawks in the first round. They led Nashville 3-1 only to see the Predators win their first elimination game in six tries Saturday night to extend this Western Conference semifinal to Game 6 on Monday night in Nashville.

Vancouver is 1-4 when having a chance to eliminate an opponent this postseason. The Presidents' Trophy winners are 6-1 in their other playoff games this year.

"What more do you want to learn," goalie Roberto Luongo said Sunday before the Canucks left for a trip they had hoped to avoid. "We should know by now what it takes. When a team has their back up against the wall, that's when they are going to play their best hockey of the season. And for us to win that game we need to have that same desperation level."

Desperation is an emotion the Predators are well acquainted with this season.

This franchise was ranked 11th in the West March 10 only to finish the regular season 14-4-3. But the Predators had never won a playoff game in which they faced elimination until their 4-3 victory Saturday night.

Joel Ward, who scored only 10 goals in the regular season, scored twice in the third period to extend this series. David Legwand also had two goals for Nashville, who rebounded after losing two straight on home ice.

"After a little letdown at home, to come up here and put some pressure on them is a good feeling," Ward said.

The Predators are back home, trying to force the first Game 7 in franchise history. For a second straight week, fans met the team at the airport Sunday afternoon to welcome the Predators home.

Nashville must stare down more team history if the Predators want to play Game 7 on Wednesday back in Vancouver for the chance to reach their first Western Conference final. The first five elimination games all came on their own ice with three coming in Game 6s and two in Game 5s.

"It's not over yet," Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne said. "Obviously, we can be happy with this one, but our backs are still against the wall still. That was our best game this series. We just battled and showed heart."

This series is taking its toll.

Nashville already lost forwards Steve Sullivan and Jerred Smithson to injuries, and Nick Spaling missed most of the third period Saturday night. The Canucks returned to Nashville without Mikael Samuelsson with Victor Oreskovich likely to replace him in the lineup.

Henrik and Daniel Sedin, the NHL's scoring leaders the past two seasons, were a combined minus-7 Saturday night. That stat had Canucks coach Alain Vigneault defending his top scorers.

Ryan Kesler, who has scored four goals in three games, also had a couple inches of stitches in jagged lines below his lip. A puck deflected off his face hard enough Saturday night to knock a tooth out, but Kesler didn't count the stitches. He also doesn't plan to play with a cage to protect his face.

He said the Canucks are focusing not on their frustration but at trying to close out this series in an arena where they feel very comfortable.

"We don't feel pressure," Kesler said. "We see the opportunity ahead, and we see Game 6 as the chance to end someone's season."

The Canucks are trying to reach their first conference final since 1994. The franchise is 6-1 in series with a 3-1 lead with the lone loss coming to Minnesota in 2003. Vigneault said obviously it would have been better to finish the series Saturday night. He credited Nashville with making the Canucks pay for their mistakes.

Vigneault also noted the Predators got into the postseason with 99 points coming out of the strong Central Division.

"They're a good team, and we're in a battle right now," Vigneault said.

___

AP freelance writer Kevin Woodley in Vancouver, British Columbia, contributed to this report.

North Korean ship under US scrutiny changes course

A North Korean ship under scrutiny for more than a week by the U.S. Navy has changed course and was heading back the way it came, U.S. officials said, as Pyongyang warned Wednesday it will take military action if anyone attempts to search its vessels.

The Kang Nam 1 _ originally believed to be bound for Myanmar with suspicious cargo on board, possibly illicit weapons _ turned around and headed back north on Sunday, two U.S. officials said on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence.

The U.S. officials, speaking in Washington on Tuesday, said they do not know where the ship is going. But it was some 250 miles (400 kilometers) south of Hong Kong on Tuesday and heading north, one official said.

The North Korean ship is the first vessel monitored under U.N. sanctions aimed at punishing the regime for conducting an underground nuclear test in May.

The new resolution seeks to clamp down on North Korea's trading of banned arms and weapons-related material by requiring U.N. member states to request inspections of ships suspected of carrying prohibited cargo.

The communist nation has said it would consider interception of its ships a declaration of war. On Wednesday, North Korea's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper renewed the warning.

"Touching our ships constitutes a grave military provocation against our country," the paper said in commentary carried by the official Korean Central News Agency. "These acts will be followed immediately by self-defensive military countermeasures."

The North's warning did not specifically mention the Kang Nam 1, which the two U.S. officials said has been moving very slowly in recent days in a possible sign it was trying to conserve fuel. The resolution prohibits U.N. members from providing fuel to ships suspected of carrying banned items.

The officials said they did not know what the ship's turnaround means, nor what prompted it.

Myanmar's authorities had informed the North Korean ambassador that it would not allow the Kang Nam to dock if it was carrying weapons or other banned materials, a Radio Free Asia report said.

A U.S. delegation headed by envoy Philip Goldberg, meanwhile, headed to Beijing Wednesday to discuss the U.N. sanctions, the State Department said. Goldberg, a former ambassador, is in charge of coordinating the sanctions' implementation.

China's cooperation in enforcing the sanctions against neighboring North Korea, which counts Beijing as its main ally, is seen as crucial to encouraging the North back to nuclear disarmament talks the regime abandoned in April.

Pyongyang also threatened in April to launch a long-range missile. A no-sail zone remains in effect off North Korea's east coast through July 10. An announcement cited "military drills" but there were concerns the defiant nation might test-fire short- or medium-range missiles, or even a long-range missile, in further violation of Security Council resolutions.

However, there was no sign of an imminent missile launch Wednesday, an official at South Korea's Joint Chief of Staff said. He asked not to be named, citing agency policy.

In Washington, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed financial sanctions on Hong Kong Electronics, a company located in Kish Island, Iran, accused of involvement in North Korea's missile proliferation network.

That means any bank accounts or other financial assets found in the U.S. belonging to the company must be frozen. Americans also are prohibited from doing business with the firm.

Meanwhile, the North's regime has sought to whip up anti-American sentiment with a series of state-organized rallies. KCNA said Wednesday the latest anti-U.S. demonstrations were held through Tuesday in three provinces where participants condemned the U.N. resolution and what the regime calls a U.S. plot to invade the country.

Such rallies have been held since June 25, the anniversary of the 1950 outbreak of the Korean War where the U.S. fought alongside South Korea against invading troops from North Korea. The war ended in 1953 in a truce, not a peace treaty, leaving the two Koreas still technically at war.

In Beijing, the U.N. World Food Program said Wednesday it was unable to reach millions of hungry women and children in the North due to a lack of international funding, and the North's new restrictions on its staff and where it can operate.

___

Associated Press writers Pauline Jelinek and Jeannine Aversa in Washington and Henry Sanderson in Beijing contributed to this report.

Our flag stands for our freedom Our flag is a symbol to the world, to the huddled masses yearning to breathe free.

June 14 is Flag Day. We love and take pride in our flag and whatit stands for.

It stands for freedom. The red stripes are a tribute to the bloodof patriots and pioneers. The white stripes symbolize the purity ofour founding principles. The stars in the field of blue represent thebright new constellation that was formed when America was organized.

On June 14, 1777, when America was not yet a year old, theCongress enacted the first Flag Day.

Now our Pledge of Allegiance is scrutinized because of two wordswhen we recite the words: "I pledge allegiance to the flag of theUnited States of America, and to the republic for which it stands;one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

There are many symbols of America, such as the Great Seal of theUnited States, with an eagle holding an olive branch, signifyingpeace, and holding 13 arrows, signifying our ability to wage war whennecessary.

Our flag is a symbol to the world, to the huddled masses yearningto breathe free. It is an ensign to all nations whenever and whereverit is unfurled and our armed forces bring freedom to other parts ofthe world.

Our flag stands for Americanism, and we also have theresponsibility to promote freedom throughout the world. God blessAmerica, our flag and our military men and women.

Shawn Harper, Manhattan

Give immigrants a break

As a state representative, I often hear from people in my districtand across the state who have heartbreaking and compelling personalstories. Particularly moving are the stories of undocumented studentswho were brought to the United States as young children. Take thecase of Diana. Diana's mother and father brought her into thiscountry when she was 5 from their home state of Michoacan, Mexico.Like many immigrants, Diana's parents came in search of betteropportunities for their children.

Diana learned English, got involved in her church and community,worked part time to help her family and stayed away from drugs andgangs. Diana graduated with a 4.4 grade point average out of apossible 4.0. She aspires to be an architect. Yet Diana is probablyone of our state's few outstanding students who will not be pursuinga four-year degree--not because of a lack of motivation or desire onher part. Diana does not have legal immigration status, and as aresult is not eligible for in-state tuition.

There are hundreds of students like Diana in our state. In-statetuition for undocumented students makes sense because it allowstalented students to continue their education and live up to theirfull potential. It is un-American to deny students who have stayedin school and excelled the opportunity to continue their education.

Opponents of in-state tuition for undocumented students would haveyou believe that immigrants will be crowding citizens out of publicuniversities on the taxpayers' dime. This is blatantly false. If thebill passes, and even if every newly eligible student applies, itwill result in less than a 1 percent increase in college applicants.Such an insignificant increase would not affect admissions standardsand would have a negligible impact on any student's chance to beadmitted. Furthermore, changes in these policies would not give thesestudents a "free-ride." They and their families are taxpayers andtherefore should be entitled to in-state tuition rates.

Our nation can only benefit from giving these young people thesupport and recognition they deserve. We cannot allow ill-informedvoices to rob Diana and others like her of an opportunity to make ourcountry better.

Rep. Edward Acevedo

(D-Chicago)

Whose rules of engagement?

When Israel civilians were getting blown up daily by a wave ofsuicide bombers, Colin Powell was quick to condemn the Israelimilitary for firing into a Red Crescent ambulance that ran an Israelicheckpoint. According to the March 30 Sun-Times news story, "Suicidebombing stiffens resolve of U.S. troops," the "taxi driver" suicidebombing that killed four U.S. soldiers has "prompted an immediateoverhaul of the rules of engagement. Iraqi vehicles will not beallowed to pass through [roadblocks] under any circumstances. . . .If, at the count of five, the vehicle has not turned around, we willengage it."

Mr. Powell, what if the vehicle is a Red Crescent ambulance?Welcome to the Middle East. Here, in order to survive, not justIsraelis but Americans, too, are sometimes forced to overhaul therules of engagement.

Harold Witkov, Downers Grove

Daley dishonors the name

There is so much that can be said about Mayor Daley's methods inclosing Meigs Field, it is difficult to be brief. However:

First, he has dishonored the Daley name. His father may havewielded power in an authoritarian manner but generally did thingsopenly, and his father wouldn't have reneged on an agreement with thegovernor.

Second, he acted out of petulance. The feds--Homeland Security,FAA, et al.--didn't give him all that he wanted as soon as he wantedit, so he bulldozed his way to getting his way. And, like a spoiledchild who doesn't know how to share, he destroyed his toy lest anyoneelse come along to play with it.

Finally, his impatience with the feds could serve the countrywell. Our armed forces aren't moving as quickly or gaining as much asthe commander in chief thought they would. The president mightconsider putting his friend, "Blitzkrieg Richie" (a k a the Rommel ofthe runway) in charge of taking out Saddam and taking over Baghdad.

Robert D. Manewith,

West Ridge

Gang-bangers park here

It doesn't surprise me that Mayor Daley closed Meigs Field andplans to turn the land into a public park. After all, almost everymajor neighborhood park in the city is controlled by gang-bangers anddope dealers. They're running out of new territory. I'm sure thehoods will welcome the virgin area the mayor will be offering them.

Ken Dietz, Elmhurst

Arnett has right to speak

Did Peter Arnett lose his right to free speech when he became aninterviewee on Iraqi television ["NBC fires Arnett; Pentagoninvestigates Geraldo," news story, April 1]? It seems to me that aslong as he was wearing the hat of an NBC correspondent, or the hat ofNational Geographic correspondent, then he was proscribed fromwriting or saying anything that would reflect adversely on thoseinstitutions or on the United States. Granted, what he did was stupidand in poor taste, but as soon as he became a guest on TV, he couldexercise his right to free speech.

I would think that the media people would be the first to defendhim on those grounds, but it does not appear that they wish to becomea subject of an Ashcroft investigation. Very scary.

Kenneth Pichon,

Melbourne, Fla.

Peace through victory

There are two distinct and separate "peace" movements in theUnited States.

The most vocal are the minority who advocate peace throughappeasement. They believe that by allowing Saddam Hussein to remainin power that they can achieve a peace of sorts, in which Saddamwould be allowed to continue to torture and oppress his people inpeace, assemble his weapons of mass destruction in peace, and spreadterror throughout the world in peace.

The real peace movement, however, is the patriotic majority whoadvocate peace through victory. They believe that the only way topeace is to destroy Saddam and his army, liberate Iraq, and rebuild ademocratic, free Iraq.

Fortunately for the United States, the peace through appeasementmovement is being ignored, and George W. Bush is leading the countryto real peace through victory.

Robert Graham, Naperville

Don't blame the teachers

As a member of an organized labor union, I find the Rev. MichaelPfleger's letter ["Put students first," April 3] offensive. He blamesthe teachers for the children's inability to read and therefore wouldlike to see teacher accountability as part of their contract with theBoard of Education.

His argument is flawed in that the problem with learning in thepublic school system is more complex than poor teaching wouldsuggest. Let him ask any educator how much time and support are givenfor teaching as opposed to the bureaucratic nonsense imposed uponteachers' instructional time by their individual administrations.Finally, the reverend wouldn't be so quick to fire so many unionemployees if they were paying tithes at his church. Solely blamingteachers for poor student performance is as ridiculous as blamingpastors for our continuous sins.

When talking about accountability, there is plenty of blame to goaround.

Benjamin F. Stroud, Oak Park

MY TWO CENTS

"The problem with learning in the public school system is morecomplex than poor teaching would suggest. Solely blaming teachers forpoor student performance is as ridiculous as blaming pastors for ourcontinuous sins." --Benjamin F. Stroud

Charges against Blake could bring death penalty

Besides murder, Blake was charged with solicitation of murder,conspiracy and the special circumstance of lying in wait. UnderCalifornia law, a special circumstance gives means prosecutors canseek a death sentence--a decision they say has not been made inBlake's case.

Blake's bodyguard, Earle Caldwell, 46, was charged with conspiracyto commit murder in what prosecutors said was a plot that began atleast three months before the slaying. Among other things, Caldwellwas accused of keeping a list of items needed for the hit, includingduct tape, lye and shovels.

Both men pleaded innocent, saying nothing in court except whenasked for their pleas.

Bonny Lee Bakley, 44, was killed last May as she sat in Blake'scar outside a Los Angeles restaurant where the couple had just dined.

Blake, who won an Emmy for his portrayal of a detective in the1970s TV show "Baretta," has said his wife was shot after he returnedto the restaurant to retrieve a gun he accidentally left behind.

He was carrying the weapon, he said, to protect Bakley fromthreats she had received.

Prosecutors, however, said the 68-year-old actor fired the handgunthat killed his wife.

They also say he planned the hit, asked two people to kill Bakleyand considered having her body buried in the desert. Blake allegedlychecked out two remote places to kill Bakley--a town outside SequoiaNational Park and an Arizona community--in the weeks before theslaying next to a construction site.

In a criminal complaint, prosecutors said Blake drove Bakley todinner and parked behind a trash bin a block from the restaurant.

When the couple returned to the car, Bakley sat in the passengerseat. Prosecutors say Blake "lowered the windows, got out of the car"holding the keys and shot his wife twice with a 9mm handgun he latertossed in a trash bin.

Before the slaying, Blake asked two people to kill his wife andshowed them a gun, the complaint said. In one case, Blake allegedlysaid that Caldwell "would have already dug holes for burial."

Prosecutors said the bodyguard, at Blake's request, kept a list ofitems for use in the murder that read: "2 shovels, small sledge,crowbar, 25 auto, 'get blank gun ready,' old rugs, duct tape, Draino,pool acid, lye, plant."

AP

Blacks participate in 'Fantasia'

Blacks participate in `Fantasia'

by Earl Calloway

"Fantasia/2000," the greatest of Walt Disney's animated masterpieces continues to be a big draw in the world's theaters. The classic was begun with Leopold Stokowski and Walt Disney collaborating on how to merge music and motion which resulted in this masterpiece.

There were probably no Blacks participating in the 1940 version, that situation changed with "Fantasia/2000" because there are many involved in the technical aspects and three are featured, Pixote Hunt as Director/Art Director, "Symphony No. 5" serves as director of Beethoven's popular symphony, for which he created an abstract piece in pastels illustrating a battle between the forces of good and evil.

He also directed and designed the sets for the live-action interstitial segments of the film. He has been with Disney since 1979. His first assignment was an effects animator on 1981's "The Fox and the Hound."

Because of his association with Michael Jackson, as producer and writer for some of the singer's super-hits, Quincy Jones is known to many generations. The trumpet player, producer and composer serves as a Host in "Fantasia/2000." Since he was born in Chicago and became a musician, he has developed into a magnificent composers, arranger, conductor, TV producer, record company executive and publisher of VIBE magazine.

Early in his career, he performed with many great jazz giants. Jones is currently celebrating 50 years as a musician. He studied composition with Nadia Boulanger in France and said that he goes to classical concerts and operatic performances so that he will be conversant with all kinds of musical styles.

James Earl Jones, a native of Arkabutla, Mississippi, raised in Manistee, Michigan and an alumni of the University of Michigan, overcame a speech impediment to earn critical acclaim as one of the world's most significant Shakespearean actor and has that special artistic perception to penetrate into the essence of characters he interprets to the effect that he loses his individual persona.

In Disney's "Fantasia/2000", Jones serves as a host. He has won two Tony Awards as best actor for his roles in "Fences" and "The Great White Hope." It was as a classical actor that he was ushered into prominence on Broadway after his appearances in "Richard III," "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and "Much Ado About Nothing."

In "Fantasia/2000", the concert film there are many classical compositions by Beethoven, Shostakovich, Respighi, Gershwin, Dukas, Saint-Saens, Elgar and Stravinsky. This tremendous musical and visual spectacular work of art features the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the direction of James Levine.

The entire production was under the personal supervision of Roy Edward Disney, vice chairman of the Walt Disney Studios, who serves as chairman of Walt Disney Features animation.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (Pixote Hunt)

Evans signs for 4 more years with Man United

Manchester United defender Johnny Evans has signed a four-year deal to stay at Old Trafford until at least June 2014.

The 22-year-old Northern Ireland international centerback has impressed as backup to Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic, who have both been sidelined with injuries this season.

Evans had two spells on loan to Sunderland in recent seasons but United manager Alex Ferguson says he is a star of the future having already played 64 games for the club since his debut in September 2007.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Immigration agents raid US van shuttle businesses

Federal agents arrested nearly 50 shuttle operators and smugglers Thursday accused of using vans to transport thousands of illegal immigrants from the Mexican border to Phoenix in what was billed as one of the government's largest-ever human smuggling busts.

Investigators said the operators of four shuttle services in Tucson and a fifth in Phoenix created their businesses solely to help immigrant smugglers move their customers to Phoenix under a veil of legitimacy. The shuttle operators are accused of giving illegal immigrants fraudulent receipts to make the trips look legitimate and coaching them on what to say if the vans were pulled over by police.

"They are in knee-deep. They know exactly what's going on," said John Morton, assistant secretary of Homeland Security for U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement.

Arrests were made in Phoenix, Tucson and two other Arizona towns along the border, Nogales and Rio Rico. Investigators also made arrests in Tennessee, and Mexican authorities detained people in the border state of Sonora. In all, 47 people were in custody, including the leaders of three smuggling operations.

More than 800 agents from nine law enforcement agencies were involved in the bust. Dozens of agents in Phoenix _ some wearing black hoods over their faces _ swarmed a shuttle business early Thursday in a strip mall in a heavily Latino neighborhood.

No one answered phone calls at two of the accused shuttle businesses, Sergio's Shuttle in Phoenix and Saguaro Roadrunner Shuttles in Tucson. There were no Tucson phone listings for the other three accused shuttle services.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement touted the bust as the largest human smuggling case in the agency's seven-year history.

The raids occurred amid a heated debate over immigration in Arizona, the busiest illegal gateway into the United States for several years.

Arizona is on the verge of approving a sweeping anti-immigration law that would make it a crime under state law to be in the country illegally while requiring local police to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are here illegally.

Jennifer Allen, director of the Border Action Network, a Tucson-based immigrant rights group, said the show of force by federal agents will ultimately hurt the cooperation they get from immigrant communities because residents will be less inclined to call authorities when they witness crimes.

"If communities are afraid to call the police to let them know about criminal activity, criminal activity is going to go right to those neighborhoods," Allen said.

Morton said investigators gathered evidence that will show the shuttle operators knew they were moving illegal immigrants, despite the claims of many other shuttle operators in the past that they were performing a legitimate service.

"It's a calculated farce," Morton said of the five shuttle services.

Investigators say smugglers would guide immigrants from the Mexican border 65 miles (105 kilometers) north to Tucson so that they could walk around Border Patrol checkpoints. Once in Tucson, the immigrants would get into shuttle vans would take them to Phoenix via Interstate 10, a route that is patrolled by police but doesn't have checkpoints.

Immigration agents said the five shuttle businesses didn't perform legitimate transportation services, such as bringing customers to airports.

"They didn't advertise at all, because they didn't need to, they had a built-in clientele," said Matthew Allen, the chief of investigations for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Arizona.

Forty-five percent of all immigrant arrests by U.S. Customs and Border Protection are made in Arizona, and smugglers use Phoenix as a hub for moving illegal immigrants across the country.

The nation's fifth-biggest city has plenty of highways to move people around, growth that makes it easier for smuggling operations to blend into neighborhoods, and countless "drop houses," where immigrants are hidden and smuggling fees are collected before smugglers bring their customers into the country's interior.

Smugglers have long gotten crucial help from some seemingly legitimate businesses that supply them with cars, lodging, plane tickets and other services.

The accomplices have included landlords and rental agents who provide homes for smugglers to hide immigrants; taxi drivers near the border who bring immigrants to the closest cities; used-car dealerships that let smugglers register vehicles under false names; and travel agencies that sell blocks of plane tickets for immigrants.

'Endgame' in sight

'ENDGAME'

- In previews; opens April 10 and runs through June 6

- Steppenwolf Theatre, 1650 N. Halsted

- Tickets, $20-$77

- (312) 335-1650; www.steppenwolf.org

Actor William Petersen laughs as he recalls his first attempt at performing the work of Samuel Beckett, that 20th century Irish writer whose plays alternately baffle, bemuse and mesmerize both the actors who attempt to bring them to life, and the audiences who try to find their way into their spare, tragicomic mindscapes.

As Petersen recounted it: "Decades ago, when the old Remains Theatre was on Clark Street, Amy Morton and I did a production of 'Waiting for Godot' directed by Sheldon Patinkin. To begin with, Beckett wouldn't have liked the idea that Amy was playing a male character. But aside from that, the whole thing was so bad that Amy's dad offered us $200 if we agreed never to do Beckett again."

Fast forward about 30 years and Petersen is back in the Beckett game, co-starring with Ian Barford in a Steppenwolf Theatre production of "Endgame" directed by Frank Galati.

Set in a gloomy room with a pair of small, high windows, the play, first produced in 1957, homes in on the relationship between two men -- Hamm (Petersen), a blind, impotent bully unable to stand, and Clov (Barford), his younger servant, who is unable to sit. Also on stage are a ghostly but funny husband and wife pair, Nell (Martha Lavey) and Nagg (Francis Guinan), who are confined to trash bins.

"Endgame," whose title refers to the final portion of a chess game when very few pieces are left on the board, has long intrigued Galati, who, when he was still acting, played both Hamm and Clov.

"It's such a deep and timeless play that you can keep returning to it, like a great piece of music," Galati said. "You can never exhaust it, never tire of its beauties, its terrors, its melodies."

The director admits that Beckett's work, which captured a certain state of mind that emerged from the devastation of World War II and the subsequent threat of nuclear obliteration, goes in and out of favor. But he points to a resurgence of interest in recent seasons and such productions as Brian Dennehy in "Krapp's Last Tape" at the Goodman Theatre, the 2009 Broadway revival of "Godot" that starred Nathan Lane and Bill Irwin, and an acclaimed 2009 London production of "Endgame" by the Complicite company.

"When we began rehearsals, I told my actors that if I had to sum up what this play is about, I would say it was a family comedy, and that got their attention," said Galati, noting that Clov might well be Hamm's adopted child. "It's also about the tyranny of family life -- the power struggles, the bondage of love. It's a very cruel play, and a darkly funny one. As Nell says at one point: 'Nothing is funnier than unhappiness.' And the key to making it all work is to achieve the right tempo during its 75 minutes."

"We've been talking in musical terms all through rehearsals," Petersen said. "Both Hamm and Clov and Nell and Nag have their little duets. The play is a very elliptical piece that demands a whole new skill set, but it also is full of emotion because at its core it's about how people live their lives knowing they are going to die."

Barford confesses he and Petersen have often left a day of rehearsals with their heads hurting.

"I've never done Beckett before, Barford said. "There is a different kind of discipline and rigor needed to do his work. For example, I'm the only character in the show who moves, so I must be very aware of my spatial relationships to the others."

Barford added, "At times, with all its repetition and echoes, this play almost feels like a confounding mathematical problem. It's certainly not the hockey game mentality of 'August: Osage County,' in which I played for so long. I don't think Beckett wanted to leave his audience in raptures. And I don't think actors get the same kind of immediate sense of audience reaction that comes when a character shouts, 'I'm in charge now!'"

NEWS & NOTES

A CLOSER LOOK AT CHICAGO'S THEATER SCENE

ALBANY PARK SERVES UP AN INSPIRED 'FEAST'

Food is a crucial element in every culture. And cooking has always been one means by which immigrants have managed to retain some connection to the homes they left behind. So it makes perfect sense that the Albany Park Theatre Project -- whose sophisticated teen ensemble is drawn largely from the vast cultural stew of Chicago's "immigrant gateway" neighborhood -- has turned its attention to the kitchen for its latest work, "Feast," which runs tonight through April 24 at the Eugene Field House's Laura Wiley Theatre, 5100 N. Ridgeway.

Collectively created by its performers, the show is an anthology of short plays based on interviews with home cooks, restaurant owners, street vendors, grocers, butchers, fishermen, farmers and migrant workers. Along the way, as the writer-performers shopped and cooked together, and shared heirloom recipes, issues of hunger, exploitation, entrepreneurship, migration and adaptation also were brought to the table. At least four recipes are referred to during the show, too: One for tamales (whose ingredients remain a secret), two from the Philippines (a sour soup and a seafood dish), and one for a special Peruvian dessert with the lovely name of "Suspiro de Limena" ("A Woman from Lima Sighs"). It's a sort of dulce de leche topped with a port wine-flavored meringue.

Tickets: (773) 866-0875, or go to www.aptpchicago.org.

Photo: William Petersen (left) and Ian Barford star in the Steppenwolf Theatre production of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame." Photo: Frank Galati directs a rehearsal of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" at Steppenwolf Theatre. Photo: Stephany Perez is part of the cast of "Feast."

Jobless benefit claims jump

WASHINGTON Nearly half a million laid-off workers filed newjobless claims three weeks before Christmas, the government saidtoday, suggesting at best a stagnant economy and at worst a reneweddecline.

Among the states, Illinois racked up the third-highest total ofnew claims with 19,300.

But in a rare bright spot in an otherwise gloomy picture, theCommerce Department said record exports shrank the nation'smerchandise trade deficit by 2.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted$6.73 billion in October.

For the week ended Dec. 7, Americans filed a seasonally adjusted493,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, 79,000 more than theweek before, the Labor Department said.

"It's consistent with this evidence that the economy is justsort of hanging in there somewhere between stagnation and slightslippage," said economist Robert Dederick of Northern Trust Co. inChicago. "The expansion has stalled and the risks are all on thedown side."

An even more pessimistic Bruce Steinberg of Merrill Lynch said,"I think the economy is declining right now. I don't think we'rejust stalled out."

Economists were cheered by the better-than-expected trade reportbut warned that economic sluggishness abroad will restrain U.S.export sales through much of next year.

In a move likely to further dampen European growth, Germany'scentral bank today raised two key interest rates by half a percentagepoint. The Bundesbank is trying to head off inflationary pressuresas Germany borrows heavily to finance its unification.

Despite the over-all trade improvement, the deficit with Japanjumped 11 percent to $4.64 billion, the biggest imbalance sinceFebruary, 1989.

President Bush today met with business leaders accompanying himon a trip to Asia later this month. Bush hopes to prod Japan intoopening its markets to American goods.

"That means the same three words: jobs, jobs and jobs," Bushsaid.

Among the executives meeting with the president was GeneralMotors Corp. Chairman Robert Stempel, who announced Wednesday that GMwould shut 21 factories and eliminate 74,000 jobs over the next fouryears.

The number of new unemployment claims during the first week ofDecember matched the 493,000 filed during the first week of Novemberand approached the levels last seen during the depths of therecession earlier this year. It brought the total number of peopledrawing benefits to 3.48 million.

The initial-claims level hit an eight-year high in March of540,000 and then shrank to around 400,000 in July before starting toclimb again.

Analysts had expected an increase in the latest report, becausethe occurrence of Thanksgiving the previous week had left workerswith one less day than usual in which to file claims. But the 79,000rise was about double what they were predicting in advance.

Economists caution against reading too much into week-to-weekfluctuations in the highly volatile claims numbers. But they havewatched with concern as the four-week running average has creptsteadily higher since midsummer.

The average during the latest four-week period was 449,000, upfrom 443,500 the previous four weeks. The five states with thelargest increases in initial unemployment insurance claims for theweek ending Dec. 7 were California, 30,900; North Carolina, 19,700;Illinois, 19,300; Pennsylvania, 16,000, and Ohio, 10,400.

The early December jump could be a harbinger of bad news whenthe unemployment figures for the entire month are released Jan. 10.The level was 6.8 percent in November and analysts fear that it couldreturn to the 7 percent it hit earlier in the recession.

Meantime, the Veterans Affairs Department said it was cutting ahalf percentage point from the maximum rate on VA-guaranteedmortgages, lowering it to 8 percent effective tomorrow. That is thelowest since May, 1977.

"The drop in the rate will have the practical effect ofstimulating the economy and boosting the housing industry by allowingmore veterans to qualify for loans," said VA Secretary Edward J.Derwinski.

Spain's San Sebastian film festival opens

The San Sebastian Film Festival opened Thursday with a star-studded retinue including Woody Allen and Meryl Streep due to stroll the elegant promenades of the seaside city in Spain's northern Basque region.

A total of 15 films, most of them European, will compete for the Golden Conch award at the 56th edition of the fete _ a gathering proud of its product, even if it lacks the crowds of the film festivals in Venice and Cannes.

The chairman of the jury is American director Jonathan Demme, known for such films as "The Silence of the Lambs" and "Philadelphia."

Streep, a two-time Oscar winner, and Spanish actor Antonio Banderas will receive lifetime achievement awards, while Allen and Javier Bardem have come to plug the new Allen movie, "Vicky Cristina Barcelona."

Festival director Mikel Olaciregui said San Sebastian feels somewhat of a rivalry with the Venice Film Festival, in part because they are close together on the calendar, but does not seek only to draw big crowds of fans as do the Italian event or the Cannes Film Festival.

"The festival is not for everyday citizens, but rather for the industry and the media. The public is important, but the ones who validate the event are the performers themselves," Olaciregui said in an interview.

He said that since movie attendance is down these days, the nine-day festival reflects this by catering mainly to insiders. "The festival is adapting to the changes and I think our formula is perfectly valid," he said.

The festival features the world opening of "The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas," based on the book by Irish novelist John Boyne about the Holocaust as seen through the eyes of a child. The film is being presented outside the main competition.

John Malkovich will be in San Sebastian to represent the latest movie by the Cohen brothers, "Burn After Reading."

"It is clear that a lot of the movies come with their teams, and that is always an important ingredient," Olaciregui said.

Korean director Kim Ki-duk will present a film called "Dream," about a person whose nightmares become reality the very next morning.

Most of the films will be screened at the city's elegant Palacio Kursaal convention center. The festival's traditional 100-meter red carpet will switch to fuchsia, the shade chosen to represent this year's event.

Ferraro son pleads not guilty

MIDDLEBURY, Vt. (UPI) John A. Zaccaro Jr., son of former vicepresidential candidate Geraldine A. Ferraro, pleaded not guiltyyesterday to a new charge of selling cocaine to undercover police.

The charge, which comes two months after Zaccaro was firstcharged with possession of a regulated substance with intent to sell,is considered more serious and carries a maximum sentence of fiveyears in jail and a $10,000 fine. He also pleaded not guilty to theprevious charge.

After entering his plea yesterday in Vermont District Court,Zaccaro, 22, a senior at Middlebury College, left the court with hismother and father, New York real estate agent John A. Zaccaro Sr.

His mother, a former New York congresswoman who was DemocratWalter F. Mondale's running mate in 1984, did not comment.

Police said the new charge stemmed from the alleged sale ofone-fourth gram of cocaine to an undercover police officer for $25.

The officer, Laura Manning, was wired to a microphone when shewent to Zaccaro's apartment near the Middlebury College campus to buythe cocaine, police said.

Zaccaro was released on his own recognizance.

Fisipe presents new "courtelle" high-performance fiber

Fisipe, a company that specializes in the production of acrylic fiber, continues its ambitious strive for innovation, and presents its new "Courtelle" high-performance fiber, a product based on research by its R&D department.

The main properties of "Courtelle" high-performance fiber, when applied to open-end spinning, worsted, cotton, Repco and Wildman systems are: improved performance of spinning and weaving processes, a reduction in lint and dust levels and less shrinkage in spinning and weaving.

In open-end spinning, "Courtelle" high-performance fiber allows high speeds to be achieved, has an optimum level of softness and significantly reduces lint formation.

In worsted and cotton spinning, processability is better, the hand is soft, there is less formation of lint with the same diagram, and better performance is achieved in Raschel process.

As for the Repco system, properties include first soft finish oil, better processability and an increase of RKM and yarn elongation.

With the Wildman process for pile articles, it improves the carding and weaving processes, it is easier to increase the percentage of crimping, and softness is high.

This new specialty is the latest in the range of Fisipe products, which all share the well-known "Courtelle" fiber, offering new features and advantages:

"Courtelle Flat": Natural softness for pile articles

"Courtelle Sun" (UV protector): UV ray protective fiber

"Courtelle Matis": natural looking fiber

"Courtelle Micro": softness and breathability

"Courtelle Bicomponent": wool look

"Courtelle" with "Teflon": water-and stain-repellent fiber

Fisipe's efforts in the field of research together with the intensification of the launch of new products rank Fisipe among the three largest acrylic fiber producers in the world, as well as one of the top firms in the quality image of its articles.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Gonzales Aide to Invoke Fifth Amendment

WASHINGTON - Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' liaison with the White House will refuse to answer questions at upcoming Senate hearings about the firings of eight U.S. attorneys, citing her Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, her lawyer said Monday.

"I have decided to follow my lawyer's advice and respectfully invoke my constitutional right," Monica Goodling, Gonzales' counsel and White House liaison, said in a statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The revelation complicated the outlook for Gonzales, who is traveling out of town this week even as he fights to keep his job.

In an interview with NBC News, Gonzales said Monday he was …

`Shrek' sequel may be formulaic but get ogre it, it's fun.(Arts and Lifestyle)

Byline: James VERNIERE

"Shrek 2"

Rated PG. At AMC Fenway, Loews Boston Common and suburban theaters.

Three stars (out of four)

Mathematically, the formula for "Shrek 2" might be rendered as: "Shrek" + "Meet the Parents" = "Shrek 2." This new installment is often very amusing, thanks to a droll script by co-director and co-writer Andrew Adamson ("Shrek") and others and a terrific roster of supporting players. It's not, however, particularly original. Too much money is at stake in the summer movie season for originality.

As most know, Shrek (the voice of Mike Myers) is the big, green ogre who, against all odds, won the hand of Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) in the first screen adaptation of the late William Steig's New Age fairy tale. Fiona, it turns out, had her own inner ogre just dying to get out. Shrek and his bride have been enjoying marital bliss in their swamp home, shaving together, wallowing in mud baths and engaging in farting contests.

But Fiona demands they visit her parents, the King (John Cleese) and Queen (Julie Andrews) of Far Far Away, and establish a relationship with them, even though her father is the one who had her imprisoned in a tower guarded by a dragon. Shrek is reluctant, certain his in-laws will hate his ogre-hood.

Meanwhile, Donkey (a priceless Eddie Murphy) has been matrimonially attached to the aforementioned Dragon - although they have had a falling out - and he tags along with Shrek and Fiona. The plot involves a conspiracy by Fairy Godmother (Jennifer Saunders) to get rid of Shrek once and for all and replace him in a rehumanized Fiona's heart with her conceited son Prince Charming (Rupert Everett). All of this is slow to start, and Fiona is a bit of a scold. Shrek, too, cuts a lackluster figure compared to his hilarious cohort Donkey and truly memorable newcomer Puss In Boots (Antonio Banderas).

Spoofing his own image as Zorro, Banderas brings tremendous style and panache to the film's second half in the role of a wisecracking, sword-wielding tabby killer-for-hire who can also all of a sudden turn on the big-eyed, lost kitten charm.

Far Far Away is a fairy tale version of Beverly Hills, where such stars as Rapunzel, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White reside in palatial homes. The palace itself bears a striking resemblance to the Magic Kingdom, but the digs at Disney are milder and funnier this time.

A clever and funny musical production number - billed as "The Fairy Godmother's Song" and featuring the singing of Saunders - actually rivals numbers in "Beauty and Beast." Andrews makes a charming, regal queen, and as for Cleese, all I can say is "All Hail King Basil Fawlty." A plug for familiar-looking medieval fast food is especially tiresome, and a few scenes feature a burly, cross-dressing bartender.

"Shrek 2" answers the question: How far can a jealous Fiona toss a lusty mermaid? Among the funniest bits is a risque joke involving Pinocchio's undergarments. A reference to "Charlie's Angels" is a nonstarter thanks to how quickly those films wore out their welcome, and a joke about Diaz's reputed boytoy Justin Timberlake is utterly lame. Some of the film's other references are so old they're paleolithic, including the "Hawaii Five-O" and "Rawhide" theme songs.

As with the first film, the moral of `Shrek 2" is finding love for who you are, which is innocuous enough.

Scenes set in the Fairy Godmother's magical sweatshop are reminiscent of Pixar's "Monsters, Inc." A beautifying magic potion turns Shrek into a burlier version of Treat Williams, while Donkey is transformed into a white stallion, which shows you how benignly insensitive Hollywood remains. A CGI Joan Rivers is as annoying as the real thing. But "Shrek 2" is worth seeing, if only to catch Donkey and Puss In Boots sing a duet of "Livin' La Vida Loca" and learn that, in olden times, pepper spray required the use of a pepper mill.

("Shrek 2" contains slightly risque humor.)

`Shrek' sequel may be formulaic but get ogre it, it's fun.(Arts and Lifestyle)

Byline: James VERNIERE

"Shrek 2"

Rated PG. At AMC Fenway, Loews Boston Common and suburban theaters.

Three stars (out of four)

Mathematically, the formula for "Shrek 2" might be rendered as: "Shrek" + "Meet the Parents" = "Shrek 2." This new installment is often very amusing, thanks to a droll script by co-director and co-writer Andrew Adamson ("Shrek") and others and a terrific roster of supporting players. It's not, however, particularly original. Too much money is at stake in the summer movie season for originality.

As most know, Shrek (the voice of Mike Myers) is the big, green ogre who, against all odds, won the hand of Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) in the first screen adaptation of the late William Steig's New Age fairy tale. Fiona, it turns out, had her own inner ogre just dying to get out. Shrek and his bride have been enjoying marital bliss in their swamp home, shaving together, wallowing in mud baths and engaging in farting contests.

But Fiona demands they visit her parents, the King (John Cleese) and Queen (Julie Andrews) of Far Far Away, and establish a relationship with them, even though her father is the one who had her imprisoned in a tower guarded by a dragon. Shrek is reluctant, certain his in-laws will hate his ogre-hood.

Meanwhile, Donkey (a priceless Eddie Murphy) has been matrimonially attached to the aforementioned Dragon - although they have had a falling out - and he tags along with Shrek and Fiona. The plot involves a conspiracy by Fairy Godmother (Jennifer Saunders) to get rid of Shrek once and for all and replace him in a rehumanized Fiona's heart with her conceited son Prince Charming (Rupert Everett). All of this is slow to start, and Fiona is a bit of a scold. Shrek, too, cuts a lackluster figure compared to his hilarious cohort Donkey and truly memorable newcomer Puss In Boots (Antonio Banderas).

Spoofing his own image as Zorro, Banderas brings tremendous style and panache to the film's second half in the role of a wisecracking, sword-wielding tabby killer-for-hire who can also all of a sudden turn on the big-eyed, lost kitten charm.

Far Far Away is a fairy tale version of Beverly Hills, where such stars as Rapunzel, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White reside in palatial homes. The palace itself bears a striking resemblance to the Magic Kingdom, but the digs at Disney are milder and funnier this time.

A clever and funny musical production number - billed as "The Fairy Godmother's Song" and featuring the singing of Saunders - actually rivals numbers in "Beauty and Beast." Andrews makes a charming, regal queen, and as for Cleese, all I can say is "All Hail King Basil Fawlty." A plug for familiar-looking medieval fast food is especially tiresome, and a few scenes feature a burly, cross-dressing bartender.

"Shrek 2" answers the question: How far can a jealous Fiona toss a lusty mermaid? Among the funniest bits is a risque joke involving Pinocchio's undergarments. A reference to "Charlie's Angels" is a nonstarter thanks to how quickly those films wore out their welcome, and a joke about Diaz's reputed boytoy Justin Timberlake is utterly lame. Some of the film's other references are so old they're paleolithic, including the "Hawaii Five-O" and "Rawhide" theme songs.

As with the first film, the moral of `Shrek 2" is finding love for who you are, which is innocuous enough.

Scenes set in the Fairy Godmother's magical sweatshop are reminiscent of Pixar's "Monsters, Inc." A beautifying magic potion turns Shrek into a burlier version of Treat Williams, while Donkey is transformed into a white stallion, which shows you how benignly insensitive Hollywood remains. A CGI Joan Rivers is as annoying as the real thing. But "Shrek 2" is worth seeing, if only to catch Donkey and Puss In Boots sing a duet of "Livin' La Vida Loca" and learn that, in olden times, pepper spray required the use of a pepper mill.

("Shrek 2" contains slightly risque humor.)

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Canadian Christians must resist earth degradation. (Editorial).

Give Canadians a bit of moral leadership and they respond in spades.

That was the hope-filled conclusion one could come to last week when the Prime Minister's Office was deluged with positive responses to his television interview that was aired on Sept. 11 in the CBC documentary "Untold Stories: Canada on Sept. 11."

In this program, Jean Chretien said that the greed and the endless desire of the western world helped to plant the seeds of hatred and resentment underlying the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and that the growing gap between the rich and the poor was exacerbating feelings of anger, hopelessness and antipathy.

"I think the Western world is …

Looking back.(Capital Region)

On this date in ...

1908: Thomas Torley, a left fielder on the Knickerbocker ball team, was injured. During the fifth inning, he made such an effort to get the ball that he stumbled on a brick on the field and went down head over heels. He was unconscious for a while. His face was badly lacerated and his thumb broken.

1958: A 2-year-old boy, playing near a window on the second-story at his grandmother's …

CONFLICTING VISIONS OF HUMAN NATURE WORK TO KEEP IRELAND ASUNDER.(RELIGION)

Byline: Andrew Greeley

OXFORD, England -- A fundamental religious, moral, and political question in the West has been whether human nature is good or bad. Is humankind by itself able to do anything worthwhile, or is the only virtue humans display totally dependent on some external force?

The debate does not exist anywhere else in the world. It is a secular version of the great debate that raged in the late fourth and early fifth centuries between St. Augustine and the philosopher Pelagius.

It occurs to me, as I attend a conference here about Ireland, North and South, that Ireland could be the last place in the world where Pelagians and Augustinians …

FBI investigating ads offering Maine Indian scalps

The FBI is trying to find the person who posted online advertisements saying he had two-century-old "Maine Indian scalps" that he wanted to sell to white people.

The FBI executed a search warrant last month at Yahoo Inc. for information related to two e-mail addresses linked to the Craigslist postings, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Portland.

It is illegal to traffic in Native American remains. Kirk Francis, chief of the Penobscot Indian Nation, had reported the ads to state and federal officials and said he has reason to believe they were real.

The seller offered six scalps and related artifacts from a private …

Uncle Sam wants you!

Uncle Sam is looking for a few good chemical engineers. And, unlike the last time he wanted you, it does not involve spending six weeks at Camp Pendleton or Parris Island.

The federal government occasionaLly seeks technical professionals with specific skills to serve on official advisory committees and boards. These committees and boards include the National Science Board, EPA's Science Advisory Board, and the Advisory Committee on Nuclear Waste, to name a few. Individuals selected generally …

MISREADING THE CHINESE CHARACTER: IMAGES OF THE CHINESE IN EUROAMERICAN DRAMA TO 1925.(Review)

MISREADING THE CHINESE CHARACTER: IMAGES OF THE CHINESE IN EUROAMERICAN DRAMA TO 1925. By Dave Williams. Asian Thought and Culture No. 40. New York: Peter Lang, 2000. $54.95

In Misreading the Chinese Character, Dave Williams analyzes a series of plays written for performance in the United States which feature one or more Chinese characters. Williams begins his study with the first such play, Arthur Murphy's The Orphan of China, presented in Philadelphia in 1767, and terminates it in the mid-1920s when "the rise of the cinema greatly and permanently weakened the stage as a site of image production." As his title suggests, the author indicts the playwrights for having misread and purposely misrepresented true Chinese character--though he admits that "representing the Chinese with complete accuracy, even had the Euroamericans desired to do so ... would have been impossible."

For the theoretical underpinnings of his study, Williams turns to Edward Said, from whom he adopts the perspective of "the Other" marginalized by representatives of the hegemonic …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Multi-spectralband filter radiometer.(Apparatus & Consumables: Product News)

Four-channel multiplexed technology allows Gigahertz-Optik's X1-1 hand-held optometer to simultaneously operate and display multiple detector measurements of the XD-450X 3-Cell Detector series. Each detector is traceably calibrated and …

NO RETRIAL FOR L.A. COPS.(Main)

Byline: Alan Dershowitz

As a civil libertarian who believes in the Bill of Rights, I cannot be enthusiastic about the prospect that the four policemen who were acquitted by a California state jury of assaulting Rodney King may now be tried again for the same acts by the federal government. The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that no person shall "be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." To place the four policemen on trial again in the federal courts would seem to violate both the letter and spirit of the "double-jeopardy" clause. (The cop who had a hung jury on one count may be retried, without compromising the protection against double jeopardy.)

But the Supreme …

Australian PM angered by leaks ahead of election

Australia's fledgling prime minister attempted Wednesday to limit the fallout from damaging leaks apparently stemming from senior government ranks saying she was angered by the disclosures but would not let them distract her from next month's elections.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard ousted former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in a sudden internal coup in the center-left Labor Party last month, and anonymous sources later told the media that she had reneged on a secret pact to allow Rudd more time to try to lift the government's poor opinion ratings.

Then Tuesday, media reports said Gillard, as Rudd's deputy, had argued in confidential Cabinet meetings against …

Maoist rebels kidnap 7 workers in eastern India

PATNA, India (AP) — Police say they have launched a rescue operation for seven road construction workers kidnapped by Maoist rebels in eastern India.

They say dozens of rebels seized the workers on Friday as they were building a bridge in Bihar state's southeastern Jamui district.

Police official Puskar Anand said Saturday that the district's borders have been sealed and authorities …

Joseph Anderson Jr.(News)(Brief Article)

* Graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1965.

* Won 2 Silver Stars, 5 Bronze Stars and 3 Army …

Glue Dots follows metrics to ensure postevent e-mails stick.(NetMarketing)(Glue Dots International)

Byline: KAREN J. BANNAN

Glue Dots International is a small company with a big reach. Its pressure-sensitive glue products are sold to industrial manufacturers as well as large craft stores across the country. The company sells through a network of distributor representatives who work with customers and create orders. To help those distributors identify new leads, Glue Dots attends seven to nine trade shows throughout the year. It also passes on leads generated by its Web site.

But Jenny Stagliano, Glue Dots International's marketing communications manager, said there was a problem with this practice: The company had no way of making sure distributors followed …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

TYSON'S FATE IN THE HANDS OF A JUDGE.(SPORTS)

Byline: JOSEPH WHITE Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- The two men Mike Tyson attacked at a fender bender think the former heavyweight champ shouldn't go to jail. The prosecutor feels otherwise.

The opinion that counts is that of Judge Stephen Johnson, who on Friday will determine whether Tyson's latest comeback is done after just one fight.

Johnson will sentence the fighter on two counts of second-degree assault. That will prompt a decision in Indiana on whether Tyson violated his probation for a 1991 rape conviction.

``If he goes to jail here, it's much, much more likely he'll go to jail there,'' said Paul Kemp, Tyson's lawyer.