четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Lebanon Christians OK truce // But Syrian troops menace fort

BEIRUT The leader of Lebanon's Christians, Maj. Gen. MichelAoun, accepted a United Nations cease-fire call Wednesday, but Syriantroops were reported massing around his enclave and war-wearycitizens predicted that any truce would fail just as earlier onesdid.

Aoun, who heads one of Lebanon's two governments and has vowedto drive Syrian troops out, accepted the UN Security Council truceresolution "without any preconditions," a spokesman for the generalsaid.

Aoun also thanked "the international community for theresponsible position" it had adopted on the new Lebanese crisis.

The Syrian army and its Lebanese Moslem allies laid siege to theChristian enclave …

UN panel sets target to connect poor to broadband

GENEVA (AP) — A United Nations panel has given governments a target of connecting half the world's poor citizens to broadband Internet by 2015.

The U.N.'s Broadband Commission for Digital Development also says at least 40 percent of households in developing countries should be hooked up to broadband within four years.

The panel …

Starwood Hotels 3Q profit declines 64 percent

The travel slump sparked by the recession pushed profit down 64 percent at Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc., which has been cutting room rates, especially at its high-end hotels, to try to recoup business.

The owner of Sheraton and W brands, like other hotel operators, has been trimming its own costs and slashing room rates to respond to the sharp downturn in business and leisure travel as companies and consumers try to rein in costs.

CEO Frits van Paasschen conceded that Starwood's most expensive hotels have been squeezed, but he remained upbeat that business would pick up when the economy recovers. He noted half the company's hotels are …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

MORNINGLINE

Results Will you ride the CTA more often because of its newround-trip transfer policy?Yes: 89%No: 11% …

Down, but not out

COLLISION COMMENT

Moving beyond the eloquent sound bites, the issue of consumer protection will be used by both supporters and opponents.

Texas Sen. John Carona's announcement just prior to NACE that he would pre-file a bill in the state's legislature that would seek to ban insurer-owned collision repair facilities, proves that the issue is not going away any time soon. Many people believed that the failure of California's Senate Bill (S.B.) 1648 last August would put a damper on new legislation. However, the failure in California, and more importantly the lessons learned during the battle over the bill, has only firmed the resolve of opponents to insurance company …

Details of May presidential fundraising

Fundraising figures for May as released by the presidential candidates.

DEMOCRAT

BARACK OBAMA

Total receipts to date: $295.52 million, including $10.72 million for general election.

Total contributions to date: $287.5 million.

Total spending: $252.4 million.

May contributions: $21.9 million, including $687,000 for general election.

May spending: $26.8 million.

May transfers or loans: none.

Cash on hand: $43 million, including $10 million for general election.

Debt: $304,000.

Top donor states this quarter: California, $1.8 million; Florida, $1.3 …

Pressure will be on Ramirez to step up

Every club has its doomsday scenario -- the one player it mostfears losing to the disabled list. For the Cubs, that one player isAll-Star first baseman Derrek Lee.

Lee will go on the disabled list today for the first time in hiscareer, the victim of a fractured right wrist that is expected to barhim from the lineup for eight to 10 weeks. When he is set to returnby mid- to late June, who knows where the Cubs -- who have weatheredthe losses of pitchers Mark Prior and Kerry Wood -- will havepositioned themselves in a competitive National League Central?

The moment Los Angeles Dodgers speedster Rafael Furcal slammedinto Lee in a collision at first base Wednesday …

BY THE NUMBERS

The Nuclear Testing Tally 1945-2004

1,030

The United States

715

USSR/Russia

210

France

45

China

45

United Kingdom

3

India

2

Pakistan

Note:The only countries that have conducted nuclear tests after the ComprehensiveTest BanTreaty (CTBT) was signed in September 1996 are non-CTBT signatories Pakistan …

Environmental supporter to head crucial US panel

Rep. Henry Waxman, who ranks among the most environmentally minded members of Congress, has wrested the chairmanship of the powerful Energy and Commerce Committee in the House of Representatives from veteran Rep. John Dingell effective when the new Congress convenes in January.

Waxman, a liberal environmentalist and booster of health care programs, toppled Dingell Thursday on a vote of 137-122 in the Democratic Party caucus, ending a bitter fight within party ranks. The environment, global warming and health care are among the main subjects Energy and Commerce deals with.

Dingell has been the top Democrat on the panel for 28 years and is an old-school …

Improving Bath helps tourists and locals ; Chronicle Comment

Tourism is, as we know, a massive part of Bath life.

Not only do the tourists from all over the world bring millionsof pounds into our city but they also sustain thousands of jobs andhelp to ensure Bath has the facilities and attractions which alsobenefit all those who live and work here. And that is why the citymust do everything it can to embrace and support visitors.

We therefore welcome and applaud some of the ideas which emergedfrom Bath's annual tourist forum on Tuesday where the new chiefexecutive of Bath Tourism Plus Nick Brooks-Sykes, and the highly-respected travel writer Simon Calder, called on the city to lookforward and to examine afresh its …

Arab League Delegation Visits Israel

JERUSALEM - Arab League envoys paid a historic visit to Israel on Wednesday to present a plan calling for a comprehensive regional settlement, saying they were extending "a hand of peace" on behalf of the Arab world.

The one-day visit by the foreign ministers of Egypt and Jordan marked the first time the 22-member group has sent representatives to Israel. The Arab League peace plan envisions full recognition of Israel in return for an Israeli withdrawal from lands captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

The visit highlights a dramatic change of direction for the Arab body, which actively pursued Israel's destruction after the Jewish state was created in 1948. The league …

Australian fined for buckling in beer, not child

An Australian man has been fined after buckling in a case of beer with a seat belt but leaving a 5-year-old child to sit on the car's floor, police said Tuesday.

Constable Wayne Burnett said he was "shocked and appalled" when he pulled over the unregistered car Friday in the central Australian town of Alice Springs.

The 30-can beer case was strapped in between two adults sitting in the back seat of the car. The child was also in back, but …

Nasheed sworn in as Maldives president

Mohamed Nasheed, who took the oath of office Tuesday as the Maldives' first democratically elected president, is looking for ways to protect his low-lying island nation from the threat of global warming.

Nasheed, a former political prisoner was sworn in to office at a private ceremony in the capital of Male following an election victory last week that ended 30 years of single-party rule. He now leads the flattest nation on Earth _ with an average height of 2.3 meters (7 feet) above sea level _ and one considered particularly vulnerable to the perils of global climate change and rising sea levels.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has warned of significant rises in the sea level by the end of the century. Climate researchers say that many of the Maldives' 1,200 islands could disappear if the seas continue to rise.

Ibrahim Zacky, a leader of the Maldivian Democratic Party, said Nasheed has proposed creating a fund so that its people could be relocated in case the nation of 350,000 people becomes submerged. He refused to give more details of the plan.

"No other citizens in the world in modern times have changed a 30-year-old regime so peacefully. I congratulate the Maldivian citizens," Minivan News Web site quoted Nasheed as saying at the ceremony.

Gayoom, who was ousted as Asia's longest-serving ruler, did not take part in the swearing-in ceremony.

Gayoom oversaw the transformation of the Maldives from a poor fishing community into one of Asia's top luxury resort destinations but his critics accused him of ruling the country as a dictator. He had won six previous elections as the only name on the ballot, but obtained just 46 percent of the vote in last week's election.

In a televised speech on the eve of leaving office, Gayoom apologized for any injustices committed during his rule.

"I deeply regret any actions on my part, whether through an implemented policy, an executive decision or plain negligence on my part, had led to unfair treatment, difficulty or injustice for any Maldivian," Gayoom said Monday, according to Minivan News.

"From anyone who had had to face any such unfair treatment, difficulty or injustice, I sincerely seek forgiveness," he said.

Nasheed is a democracy activist who had been jailed by the prior regime. He promised to push through deeper democratic reforms after fighting for change in recent years as an exile in Britain and Sri Lanka.

Violent street protests in 2003 and resultant international pressure prompted Gayoom to start a lengthy reform program that led to his own ouster.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Baseball back in a big way

It's said there's no such thing as a bad day of fishing. That extends to a day at the ballpark, which we were fortunate enough to experience Tuesday afternoon.

Baseball is back. Thank God, baseball is back.

Since the sport last left us in October, a Sox fan became the nation's first African-American president, the economy spiraled further out of control and a Kevin James movie has become the highest grossing film so far of 2009.

It's certainly been an emotional few months. To say it's good to have baseball back in our lives is like saying Jim Thome's eighth-inning, three-run home run was "neat." The return of baseball to Chicago is everything we deserve after enduring brutal wind-chill factors, freezing rain and ousted governors.

But that's not to say everything went smoothly at the Cell Tuesday afternoon.

As we took our seats in right-center field just in time to hear Matthew Santos and Chicago native Lupe Fiasco provide an acoustic rendition of their hit "Superstar," we quickly realized that not all U.S. Cellular employees were operating at midseason form.

It was amusing to see the Sox' promotional staff tackle their first between-inning segments with mixed levels of comfort. A beer vendor serving our section even went so far as to shush one beverage-seeker who dared draw his attention while he was handing someone else a brew. By mid-April these guys should have the kinks worked out.

While a prevailing sense of optimism is nothing new on Opening Day, a culture of winning around U.S. Cellular Field has inspired higher expectations heading into a season as new as the Barack Obama-themed caps now sold in the New Era gift shop.

Maybe that's why the 37,449 fans seemed to be waiting for a big moment to erupt.

For a crowd that seemed subdued for the majority of the game, Thome's home run to the left-center bleachers interjected an immediate and tangible spirit that echoed the mantra of the team's most famous fan -- "Yes we can." Sox fans who'd been sitting on their hands for warmth lustily exchanged high-fives as chants of "Thome! Thome!" echoed just like they did after his division-clinching bomb last season.

The bundled-up crowd also didn't let an opportunity to rag on the Sox' neighbors to the north slip by. No sooner had Thome touched home plate than it was very loudly observed that the pitcher who served up the longball -- Kyle Farnsworth -- previously hurled for the Cubs.

"Once a Cub," shouted one red-faced fan, "always a Cub."

As the final out was recorded, fans frantically asked strangers if the Minnesota Twins had won the previous day. Even with 161 games remaining on the schedule, the South Siders wanted to know if they held sole possession of first place in the A.L. Central.

There's nothing like Opening Day to conjure such unbridled excitement, nothing like a baseball game to remind us of a fast-approaching summer and nothing like late-inning heroics to awaken a true fan's spirit.

Kevin Allen and Kyle Koster -- we don't know which is which -- are the authors of the Sports Pros(e) blog at suntimes.com.

Photo: Al Podgorski, Sun-Times / Fans celebrate Tuesday after the White Sox defeated the Kansas City Royals 4-2 on Opening Day at U.S. Cellular Field. ;

A postgame look at the Miami Heat

MIAMI (AP) — A look at the Miami Heat after their 101-89 win over the New Jersey Nets on Saturday:

Record: 5-2.

The Big 3: Most balanced effort yet from the Big 3. Dwyane Wade scored 29 points with 10 rebounds, LeBron James added 23 points and nine assists, and Chris Bosh scored 21 points.

Noteworthy: James scored seven points in the final 32 seconds of the third quarter, turning a still-undecided game into a runaway.

Quotable: "It's about our game right now." — Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, when asked how the Heat would respond playing the Nets for the second time in a week.

Next up: Miami hosts Utah on Tuesday.

Chopin experts debate photo's authenticity

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Chopin experts are trying to determine whether a photo that has surfaced in Poland is really of the 19th century composer.

If authentic, it would be only the third known photograph of Chopin, who lived from 1810-1849.

Wladyslaw Zuchowski, a photographer and gallery owner in Gdansk, said Thursday that he bought the daguerreotype, the earliest type of photograph, from a private owner in Scotland in December. The framed copper and silver image bears the imprinted year of 1849, when Chopin died in Paris, and the name of Louis Auguste Bisson, a French photographer who took at least one photograph of Chopin during the pianist's lifetime.

On the frame is attached a piece of paper with Frederic Chopin's name.

Zuchowski said he believes it might come from a collection gathered by Jane Stirling, a Scottish student and admirer of Chopin's. He refused to identify its previous owner or say how much he paid for it.

Zuchowski said he plans to make it available for exhibitions around the world.

Several experts expressed skepticism.

Alicja Knast, the curator of the Frederic Chopin museum in Warsaw, said there are no records suggesting that such a daguerreotype was made of Chopin, but noted that there is a market for fake images.

Malgorzata Grabczewska, a photography expert at the Polish Library in Paris, said she has doubts about its authenticity because Bisson never imprinted his name or date on his daguerreotypes, while such stamps appear on daguerreotypes proven to be fake.

To her, the face does not resemble that of a mask taken just after Chopin's death, while the composition of the picture seems to be typical of the 1850s, years after his death.

"I have no doubt that it's a daguerreotype from those times, but is it really Chopin on his deathbed, taken by Bisson?" Grabczewska said.

Another Chopin expert, Steven Lagerberg, said he believes "it is a fake, and a rather poor one at that" because the image does not resemble Chopin and because the people who sat with Chopin's body for three days after his death never mentioned the picture being taken — a procedure that would have taken hours.

"The absence of good photographs of Chopin allows this sort of fakery to be taken seriously," said Lagerberg, author of the recently published book "Chopin's Heart: The Quest to Identify the Mysterious Illness of the World's Most Beloved Composer."

____

Vanessa Gera contributed to this report.

Valérie Blass

MONTREAL

Val�rie Blass

PARISIAN LAUNDRY

The sculptural modus operandi of Val?rie Blass is hardly an unfamiliar one these days: She makes assemblages out of a wide repertoire of everyday objects and materials; the play of the Montreal-based artist's perception and invention reveals itself more through the gaps and disjunctions in the construction or, rather, the arrangement of the various parts brought together through some seemingly imponderable conjunction of chance, intuition, and will than through any immediately perceptible formal resolution. However, unlike many other sculptot-bricoleurs, Blass distinguishes herself through her predilection for using the human figure as a base reference in her work. "Every sculpture is a body and has an attitude," she once said. "I play with the capacity we have to see a face (or a body) in an abstraction" ? but also, it should be added, to see abstraction in a given face or body. In this she might be close to Matthew Monahan or Huma Bhabha, but, comparatively, they almost seem more like closet traditionalists ? their figures like cobbledtogether Frankenstein monsters trying to morph into integral humans seeking an empathetic gaze. Blass's forms, on the contrary, conjure oncewhole beings whose human character has slipped away and become lodged in the alien world of inanimate objects. Or, to put it another way, Monahan and Bhabha's work moves from irony to pathos, whereas Blass's flows in the opposite direction, from pathos to irony.

In the dozen sculptures and five collages on view in "Petit losange laqu? vein?" (Little Glossed Veined Lozenge), that irony was often directed at gender roles. In the tradition, perhaps, of Louise Bourgeois's Femme Maison ? a motif Bourgeois first addressed in the 1940s and returned to periodically thereafter ? Blass presented a Femme panier (Basket Woman) and a Femme planche (Board Woman), both 2010. The first is a headless figure whose torso is ? you guessed itmade of wicker basketry; but the "femme's" posture is twisted, too, as if to be woven into the pattern of someone's expectations. At once ingratiating and aggressive, she seems to be stepping forward like a dancer executing an oddly unstable bow, with one ceramic hand wielding a sharp gardening tool while the other hand shows off its skeleton-motif ornamentation. Nearby, the Femme planche, a stylized figure in Styrofoam rather convincingly masquerading as wood, seemed to be at once bowing in obeisance and executing everyone's favorite yoga position, the downward-facing dog; a long shovel rests on her behind, its shaft parallel to her legs and its blade pointing upward. Oddly, it's as if her body were being pulled up by the shovel rather than the shovel being held up by the body. In any case, the piece conveys a sort of slapstick indignity in a strikingly deadpan way.

Not all the sculptures were as glaringly figurative. Une somme rondelette (Round Sum), 201 1, is a wooden construction resembling a crane but painted with a dainty pattern of brickwork ? a material that could never actually be used to build a crane. But it, too, has a posture, an attitude ? as though it were a person disguised as a crane pretending to be made of bricks. The sculptures were placed on pedestals or low platforms of various heights, shapes, sizes, and colors. And yet, in the rather grand space at Parisian Laundry, the installation strategy conferred a unity on the entire show by emphasizing the isolation of each sculpture from the others ? as if each one, with its real or implied figures, represented a self-enclosed predicament, isolated by the tragicomic irrationality it embodies.

- Barry Schwabsky

Affirmations continues to struggle in tough economy

FERNDALE - As Affirmations community center manages a sharp demand for youth programs and services, the center is also dealing with the loss of $30,000 in annual support from Chrysler.

With other LGBT service organizations having to eliminate weekend hours of operation, Affirmations has become the only LGBT space in metro Detroit for youth on weekend days and evenings. To meet this need, Affirmations has voiced a need to hire a full time Youth Services Coordinator, but continued budgetary cutbacks have limited their ability to do so.

In addition to the loss of support from Chrysler, as well as the announced loss of $50,000 in support from General Motors earlier this year, Affirmations' 2009 $40,000 grant from United Way of Southeastern Michigan is in jeopardy. Donations to UWSEM fell far below projections last fall, leaving the agency with fewer funds to disperse to organizations like Affirmations. "We know the community wants Affirmations' vital programs and services to continue and we continue to be creative with our efforts and welcome new partnerships," said Affirmations CEO Leslie Ann Thompson. "On any given Friday or Saturday evening, we have met the needs of over 100 youth who show up at our door. Every attempt is being

made to maintain service levels to meet community demands."

Due to financial shortfalls, six part-time and one fulltime staff have already been laid off, senior and management staff took a 10 -percent pay cut, and 1 6 open hours of operation were eliminated in January. Effective April 1 5, an additional full-time staff member was laid off.

Pending decisions with UWSEM and other donors may force Affirmations to make additional budget cuts.

Given the recent additional cuts, Thompson is imploring the community to give whatever they can to help Affirmations stay afloat. "The downturn in the economy has affected us all," said Thompson. "Unless the economy - and giving patterns - change quickly, more cuts may be inevitable. We're looking for everyone in who can make a difference to do so, by making a financial gift."

ECB's Trichet calls for "change of culture" in banking system

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet called Wednesday for a "significant change of culture" in the financial system, calling for more transparency as banks learn the lessons of the subprime crisis.

Trichet called for banks to be more open and start thinking more in the long-term because this was the only way of "avoiding contagion, herd behavior and ... the propagation of turbulences in times of difficulty."

Major banks have run up billions in losses after many highly rated investments were shown to be based on risky assets _ U.S. housing loans to people with poor credit.

It is still unclear how far this will hurt the real economy as banks shy away from new risk, tighten conditions and raise prices for loans to businesses and home buyers.

Trichet warned that large euro banks are likely to face lower revenue as banks retrench from risk-taking _ but said the crisis has hit after several years of strong profits left banks able to cope with a downturn.

He repeated a call for banks to "promptly and fully disclose on-and off-balance sheet risk exposures."

Fears that banks are still concealing major losses lead to a bank run on Bear Stearns Cos. that saw the bank's fire sale to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

"I would call for a further significant change of culture at the national, European and global level," Trichet told the European Parliament's economy committee. "I would sum up this cultural change with two words: transparency and anti-cyclicity."

More openness was essential to make sure all market players have a clear picture of what is happening while regulators need to look at financial rules that tend to amplify booms and busts, he said.

He also said financial supervisors should tell banks how to value complex investments that may run up huge losses in the wake of the subprime crisis.

Guidance from auditors and supervisors "is warranted" to improve structured product valuations for illiquid assets, he said. Regulators also need to make sure that banks have enough capital and liquidity to deal with sudden shocks.

Trichet said the role of the euro-zone's central bank was to preserve confidence.

"The solid presence of public institutions like central banks is decisive," he said. "We are the master of our own interest rates, we will do what is necessary."

His words were a defense of the ECB's refusal to cut interest rates _ in line with the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of England _ as the financial system froze as banks became fearful to lend money and take on new risks in the wake of last year's subprime crisis.

They were also a shot against politicians like French President Nicolas Sarkozy who have criticized the ECB's independence and its reluctance to be swayed by governments' concerns about slowing growth and the strong euro.

Trichet said he was "concerned by excessive exchange rate moves" as the euro zone's key lending rate of 4 percent attracts bank depositors and helps keep the currency at a higher value to the U.S. dollar.

But he said the ECB would "absolutely not" change its guideline for euro inflation to stay just under 2 percent even though it hit a record high of 3.3 percent in February.

He also warned that current high price levels will go on for longer than expected and a tight labor market may lead to pay hikes that may cause a price spiral. Inflation was based on higher food and energy prices and would be "more protracted" than expected, he said.

Further price rises for oil and agricultural products would add to high demand and low supply of goods to build pressure for higher inflation _ and new problems could emerge if a rash of pay hikes pushes up prices again.

"Wage growth may be stronger than currently expected as well as the pricing power of firms, notably in market segments with low competition," he warned.

He said it was imperative that all _ governments and trade unions _ meet their responsibility to the greater economy to restrain the "wage-setting" negotiations that could trigger these second-round effects that would worsen inflation.

Uncertainties over economic growth are "unusually high," he said, insisting the euro economy was basically sound and more investments and higher spending should help feed the economy's expansion.

Comic's a tonic for patients

Laughter really is the best medicine for a group of patients inBath.

Members of the Positive Living Support Group were entertained bycomedienne Rose Lunt.

The group, which has been running for 12 years in associationwith an NHS pain management programme, meets monthly and organisesevents to help people forget about their illnesses. It has 61members.

Mrs Lunt performed a one-woman show about her life and talkedabout her career on the stage.

Group member and event organiser Robert Eastaugh said: "We werein fits of laughter - it took our minds off our pain and suffering."

Mr Eastaugh added: "Everybody who comes has been suffering withillness, but when we meet up for a cup of tea and a biscuit weforget about everything. We want to have fun in our lives and thatis so important."

The group holds meetings at the Pain Clinic at the RUH. For moreinformation contact Mr Eastaugh on 0117 986 1645.

Bonus features for And When They Shall Ask released

More than a quarter-century after the Mennonite Media Society released And When They Shall Ask, a docu-drama telling the story of the Russian Mennonite experience from 1788 to the present, a new DVD version of the film, complete with bonus features, had its release at the Winnipeg Convention Centre on Oct. 24.

Bonus features include interviews with the film's producer, writer and composer, and others discussing the importance of the title and reflecting on certain important scenes in the film; explanations of the music; an interview with Jake Sawatzky telling his story about finding bread during the famine; and general behind-the-scenes information.

The film and the new bonus features were created in response to a lack of a tangible way to reflect on Mennonite history. According to co-producer Toni Dueck, a co-director of the media society, "Now there is a document that relates to their history in a medium that relates to today. It asks, Are we learning from our history?' It is a story that belongs to everyone, not just Mennonites," she said.

And When They Shall Askhas been aired several times by the CBC in Canada, and by PBS and the Discovery Channel in the U.S. It has won awards at film festivals in Toronto and Chicago, and the Angel Awards in Hollywood.

David Dueck, co-producer and co-director of the media society, said he hopes the new version will stir the interest of younger audiences to learn from their ancestors and their history, a history they may not know a lot about.

The DVD release event also included the release of the new CD by the Canzona Choir, Lasst die Herzen Immer Fr�hlich, featuring German hymns that are well known in the Mennonite tradition. Canzona, conducted by Henry Engebrecht, performed many of these hymns at the media release, and was joined by the audience in song several times.

[Sidebar]

The Canzona Choir released its newest album, Lasst die Herzen Immer Fr�hlich, at the DVD media release, where it performed many of the songs on the album.

[Author Affiliation]

STORY AND PHOTO BY RACHEL BERGEN

National Correspondent

WINNIPEG, MAN.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Palestinian Lawmakers Back New Coalition

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - The new Hamas-Fatah coalition won overwhelming parliamentary approval Saturday, clearing a final formal hurdle before taking on the challenge of persuading a skeptical world to end a crippling yearlong boycott of the Palestinian government.

After the 83-3 vote was announced, lawmakers jumped up for a standing ovation. In all, parliament has 132 members, but 41 are in Israeli detention. Hours later, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas swore in the 25-member Cabinet.

Presenting the government's program ahead of the vote, Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas said the coalition wants to set up a Palestinian state in the lands Israel occupied in the 1967 Mideast War. He said the Palestinians affirm the right to resist occupation, but will also seek to expand a truce with Israel.

The platform fell short of international conditions for acceptance, including explicit recognition of Israel and renunciation of violence.

Israel reiterated Saturday that it will not deal with the new government, while a senior U.N. official signaled flexibility. "This is a significant step in the right direction," said Alvaro de Soto, special U.N. coordinator for the Middle East, who attended the session. "We will be watching with interest to see how this program is implemented."

Moments after the new government was approved, Norway - a key player in Mideast peacemaking and a steadfast contributor to the Palestinian Authority - said it would normalize relations with the Hamas-Fatah coalition.

The swearing-in ceremony was held simultaneously in Gaza City and Ramallah in the West Bank, with a video link, because Israeli travel bans prevented the government ministers from gathering in one place.

The coalition replaces a government led by the Islamic militant Hamas, which carried out dozens of suicide bombings against Israel and swept parliamentary elections last year. Hamas' ascent to power drew down bruising international sanctions meant to pressure it to recognize Israel and accept past peace accords.

The incoming Palestinian finance minister, Salam Fayyad, said the new government will not be able to function for long unless the aid boycott ends.

Fayyad told The Associated Press he hopes he can meet with foreign officials to explain the Palestinians' financial situation. "We do face a very serious and crippling financial crisis," he said. "Without the help of the international community, it is not going to be possible for us to sustain our operations."

The new government "respects" previous international agreements reached by the PLO and calls for peace talks to be conducted by Abbas, a moderate who leads the Fatah party. Any future deal could be submitted to a national referendum, suggesting that Hamas would not have veto power.

Haniyeh said the government wants to expand a cease-fire with Israel, yet also "affirms that resistance in all its means" is a Palestinian right.

In his speech to parliament, Abbas said Saturday that the Palestinian people "reject violence in all its forms" and seek a comprehensive, negotiated peace.

Abbas said the Palestinians extend their hand to Israel "to achieve the peace of freedom and equality," and urge it to make a "mutual commitment ... to stop all violence."

The two speeches underscored that even though the ideological gaps between Hamas and Fatah are narrowing, fundamental differences remain.

Later Saturday, Abbas is to swear in the coalition, formed after months of stop-and-go negotiations interrupted by periods of deadly factional fighting that claimed more than 140 lives.

Brushing aside international misgivings about Fatah joining forces with Hamas, Abbas has said it is the only way to avert a civil war in the West Bank and Gaza.

Haniyeh also addressed these misgivings in his speech.

"The challenges are many, and so are the difficulties," he said. "Those who wait for mistakes are many. ... All are waiting to see what the national unity government will offer, will it be up to the challenge."

Israeli government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said Israel will deal with Abbas, but not with the new government unless it recognizes the Jewish state. "Israel has openly stated in its government program a two-state solution, (two states) alongside each other," Eisin said.

International reaction toward the Palestinian government has been generally cautious.

Russia has been the most positive, saying the new Palestinian government has taken international demands "into account."

The British Foreign Office called the formation of a national unity government "a step in the right direction." But a spokesman stopped short of endorsing the new government's platform.

The U.S. was more subdued. White House spokesman Tony Snow indicated Thursday that there would be no change in the Bush administration's refusal to deal with the Palestinian government unless its platform changed.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit on Saturday urged an end to the international boycott, saying the new government was a "precious opportunity to resume the peace process."

Seuss put `War' before whimsy Kids' cartoonist had political side

NEW YORK Dr. Seuss' flights of fancy created some of the mostfamous characters in children's books, including the Grinch and theCat in the Hat. But few fans know that the whimsical doodler alsodepicted far more frightening figures - Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin.

Theodor Seuss Geisel (Dr. Seuss' real name) drew cartoons for PM,a progressive New York daily, in the early 1940s, scribbling some 400drawings that took aim at Americans' complacency about fascism andurged Washington to enter World War II.

Some 200 of them will be published in Dr. Seuss Goes to War (theNew Press, $25) by Richard Minear, a historian with the University ofMassachusetts. Most have not appeared in print for nearly 60 years.

The cartoons are filled with a familiarly Seussian stable ofcreatures - birds with human faces, charmingly sinister dragons, sad-sack dachshunds, wide-eyed fish, dodo birds, woodpeckers, ostrichesand talking cats.

Seuss also used comically improbable gizmos to get his anti-isolationist message across. Props in the wartime cartoons includeda steam-powered typewriter, an impossibly large tuba and a RubeGoldberg-style contraption that uses turtles and a baby carriage in afoot-dragging, seven-step effort to put out a fire.

Those chuckle-inducing images appear alongside caricatures of someof the 20th century's most feared leaders.

Seuss' Hitler is alternately hapless and haughty. BenitoMussolini is depicted as an overweight, unshaven buffoon withdelusions of grandeur. Josef Stalin groans while carrying a dozensuitcases labeled "Our War Load" and, in another sketch, offers up apig-on-a- platter dinner called "Roast Adolf."

"Dr. Seuss made these drawings with the fire of honest indignationand anger that fuels all real political art," Pulitzer Prize-winningcartoonist Art Spiegelman, creator of the "Maus" series, wrote in anintroduction to the book, coming out in October. "If they have aflaw, it's an absolutely endearing one: They're funny."

Seuss began working for PM in early 1941 and produced severalcartoons a week until January, 1943, when he left to join an Armypropaganda unit headed by Hollywood moviemaker Frank Capra.

PM was influential but short-lived, publishing from 1940 to 1948.The daily paper, which catered to left-leaning intellectuals,campaigned hard against isolationism, racism and anti-Semitism, andurged the United States to throw its weight into the fight againstfascism.

Seuss, who died in 1991 at age 87, used the artistic genius thatwould make him a children's favorite to try to unite Americansagainst Hitler and the Axis powers. He approached these grownupsubjects with his trademark irreverence.

"There's a lightheartedness, a sense of humor . . . a wonderful,overflowing creativity" in the cartoons, Minear said. But he addedthat Seuss "had very serious concerns that underlay the whimsy andthe fantasy."

His drawings attacked Hitler, Mussolini and Japan's wartimeleadership, but also delved into domestic politics. He was tirelessin his broadsides against those he believed were out to divideAmericans or profit from the war.

Among his favorite targets were aviator Charles Lindbergh, whopublicly opposed U.S. involvement in the war, the anti-Semitic priestCharles Coughlin and the isolationist group America First.

"He called 'em as he saw 'em, and most of the time he was on theside of the angels," Spiegelman wrote.

Although Seuss won fame with sweetly screwball drawings and catchyrhymes, his venture into political cartooning should not surprisethose familiar with his children's books, which often carriedserious, politically liberal messages.

His 1984 best seller The Butter Battle Book spoofed the nucleararms race, The Lorax urged environmental preservation and TheSneetches is often read as a plea for racial tolerance.

Minear said the PM cartoons might help readers find deepermeanings in other Seuss classics.

The dictatorial title character of Yertle the Turtle, he said, wasbased partly on Hitler, an interpretation confirmed by Seuss. Thebook's ladder of turtles appeared first in a PM cartoon, stacked intoa victory "V."

Despite the strong convictions behind the PM cartoons, Minear andSpiegelman both wonder whether humor can ever be a meaningful weaponagainst a foe as horrid as the Nazi war machine.

"They're a little like taking a peashooter against a tank,"Spiegelman said of the cartoons.

For Seuss, though, fantastical visions were indispensable, even atthe grimmest moments.

"It's a way of looking at life through a distorted telescope, andthat's what makes you laugh at the terrible realities," he once said.

"Without whimsy, none of us can live."

Viola Davis joins Denzel Washington in 'Fences'

Oscar nominee Viola Davis will join Denzel Washington in the revival of August Wilson's "Fences," arriving on Broadway in April.

"Fences" will open April 26 at the Cort Theatre with preview performances beginning April 14, producers Carole Shorenstein Hays and Scott Rudin announced Tuesday. The production will be directed by Kenny Leon.

Davis will play Rose, a woman, who, according to the actress, "unknowingly gives up her dreams and her power for love." Washington _ winner of Academy Awards for "Training Day" and "Glory" _ will portray her husband, the patriarchal Troy Maxson. The pivotal role of their son is still to be cast.

In "Fences," Wilson "explores the life ... of the everyday man," Davis said in an interview. "But ... he places all of those struggles (within the context) of African-American men who also are facing the obstacle of race in America, which is a double whammy."

She said "Fences," part of Wilson's 10-play cycle about the black experience in 20th-century America, is also about the most basic of human issues: "hope, love, dreams, fatherhood and death."

The original 1987 production of "Fences" starred James Earl Jones as Troy, Mary Alice as his wife and Courtney B. Vance as their son. It won both the Tony Award for best play and the Pulitzer Prize for drama and had the longest run of any Wilson play on Broadway, more than 500 performances.

Washington, who last appeared on Broadway in 2005 as Brutus in a revival of "Julius Caesar," said, "I met August Wilson at his home in Seattle on a rainy afternoon and it made a big impression on me. I asked him how he writes his plays and he said, 'I close my eyes and the characters start talking to me.'"

The actor said he remembered "just being blown away by James Earl Jones and Mary Alice in the original production," which won both the Tony Award for best play and the Pulitzer Prize for drama. It had the longest run of any Wilson play on Broadway, more than 500 performances.

Davis has appeared on Broadway in two Wilson plays _ "Seven Guitars" and "King Hedley II" _ and was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance in the film version of John Patrick Shanley's "Doubt." She won a featured-actress Tony Award in 2001 for her work in "King Hedley II."

"August would always sit in rehearsals with his eyes closed and his head down while the actors spoke," she said. "If you missed one word, his eyes would pop open, he would grab a script and look at it, then look at the actor and start pointing, 'Ah, you missed a word, you missed a line and messed up the whole rhythm.'"

"But if you got it right, you could see how he enjoyed it," she said. "It was like someone enjoying a great piece of music."

Wilson died of liver cancer in 2005.

Leo Wolinsky named editor of Daily Variety

Former Los Angeles Times editor Leo Wolinsky has been named editor of Daily Variety.

Variety Group editor Tim Gray announced Wolinsky's hiring Tuesday.

Wolinsky will be responsible for editorial content in the New York and Los Angeles print editions in the newly created position.

He spent 31 years at the Times and rose from reporter to managing editor and executive editor.

Wolinsky supervised coverage of the 1992 Los Angeles riots and the 1994 Northridge earthquake, helping the Times earn two Pulitzer Prizes. Before his departure last year, he was associate editor of features and entertainment coverage.

Wolinsky will begin his new job in January.

Cowboys Lead Redskins 24-10 in 4th Qtr.

IRVING, Texas - Terrell Owens had as many dropped passes as he did catches through three quarters of his home debut with the Dallas Cowboys, including a missed chance at a touchdown. The Cowboys still led the Washington Redskins 24-10 after Drew Bledsoe threw a 40-yard TD pass to Terry Glenn on the first play of the fourth quarter. Patrick Crayton caught a 4-yard TD pass and Marion Barber scored on a 1-yard run before halftime.

Everybody was ready to see what Owens had in store for his first TD celebration at home for the Cowboys. And it looked like it was going to happen quickly, until the ball slipped out of his hands in the back of the end zone on their first drive.

That was the first of Owens' three drops, to go along with three catches for 19 yards.

The video screen at Texas Stadium already had flashed the word "Touchdown" and the fans were cheering - except Owens bobbled the 8-yard pass from Bledsoe. Cornerback Mike Rumph then swatted the ball away, making sure Owens wouldn't recover to make the catch.

Mike Vanderjagt, playing in his first game for Dallas, kicked a 26-yard field goal on the next play.

Only two passes were thrown Owens' way in the third quarter. Carlos Rogers stepped in front of the first one and almost came down with an interception, then was called for pass interference on the Cowboys' first play from its 1 after Roy Williams' interception.

A play after Rogers' near interception, Julius Jones fumbled when the ball was stripped by Sean Taylor at the Dallas 39. Williams' second interception of the season ended the threat.

Owens insisted during the week he hadn't figured out how to celebrate his first TD at Texas Stadium, where six years ago he stomped on the midfield star logo twice after touchdowns while playing for San Francisco.

Going into the fourth quarter, everybody was still waiting.

When Owens dropped a pass on a third-down play for the second time in the second quarter, even a few boos cascaded from the stands. Owens was also flagged for two penalties, a personal foul for an illegal block on the Cowboys' first offensive snap, and later for an illegal formation.

The Cowboys went ahead 17-3 when Barber scored on fourth down after being stuffed at the 1 for no gain on the previous two attempted leaps into the end zone.

Washington got that score right back when Rock Cartwright returned the ensuing kickoff 100 yards. That was the first kickoff return for a TD against Dallas since 1993.

John Hall added a 39-yard field goal for the Redskins.

After the initial penalty against Owens, Dallas got to the Washington 30 before he caught a 12-yard pass. He quickly popped up and indicated first down, and the Cowboys got an extra 9 yards after Cornelius Griffin was flagged for piling on during the tackle.

Vanderjagt then kicked his first field goal. Vanderjagt, the NFL's most accurate field goal kicker, was signed during the offseason to solve the Cowboys' kicking woes, but was inactive for the opener even though coach Bill Parcells said he was recovered from a groin injury.

Crayton's 4-yard TD on the second possession gave the Cowboys a 10-0 lead, just like in the season opener they lost 24-17 at Jacksonville.

Washington also lost its opener, but after the New York Giants beat Philadelphia in overtime earlier Sunday, three NFC East teams will be 1-1 - and the other will be 0-2 - heading into Week 3.

Brunell, who threw TD passes of 70 and 39 yards to Santana Moss in the final four minutes of a 14-13 victory at Dallas last September, was 7-of-18 for 64 yards after three quarters. Moss had one catch for 7 yards.

Colgate-Palmolive CEO 2010 pay package at $14.2M

NEW YORK (AP) — The CEO of Colgate-Palmolive Co. received a compensation package valued at about $14.2 million in 2010, a 2 percent decrease from a year earlier.

An Associated Press analysis of regulatory filings shows Ian Cook's salary of $1.15 million was the same as in 2009.

But the filings show Cook, who also serves as chairman and president, received a performance-related bonus of about $3.4 million, down from $3.5 million in 2009. His stock options award was also worth less when granted than a year ago.

The AP's executive pay calculation, based on a regulatory filing, aims to isolate the value the company's board placed on the CEO's total compensation package. The figure includes salary, bonus, incentives, perks and the estimated value of stock options and awards.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Rome's new CD release 'Do It' reaches higher dimensions, shows growth

Rome, the young vocalist whose ambition is to become a significant recording attraction has released his new CD Do It on JTJ Empire Records/Bayside Distribution. This release follows his platinum single from his first album recorded for RCA Records in 1997. After RCA Records had made drastic changes in its company, the singer went independent.

Rome is an exceptional singer who has been involved with special college choirs and groups at Oakwood College in Huntsville where he attended. He is a native of Benton Harbor, MI and during the late `90s began a very lucrative career. Now he is beginning his recording career again. That is probably why this album is titled Do It. When some …

Oil tumbles below $77 as hurricane fears ease

Oil prices tumbled below $77 a barrel Tuesday in Asia on signs Tropical Storm Alex would likely miss most of the rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, leaving supplies undisrupted.

Benchmark crude for August delivery was down $1.69 to $76.56 a barrel at late afternoon Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 61 cents to settle at $78.25 on Monday.

Alex gained strength and appeared on track to become a hurricane Tuesday before it makes landfall very near the Mexico-U.S. border sometime late Wednesday, said the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida.

The tropical storm's center wasn't expected to …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Get ready for sunrise at noon. (Afterwords).(Brief Article)

Someday the sun may rise at noon, warns an ad in Popular Science, and what a worrying prospect that might be. Getting up with the sun in such circumstances may suit some people, but not us busy go-getters on whom the world depends for its supply of self-returning golf balls and electrically operated windscreen wipers for reading glasses. The answer is to buy an 'atomic timepiece' (which to the uninitiated looks suspiciously similar to a clock). This is important because unless a leap-second is added every 18 months, in a thousand years or so the …

Around the region.(Capital Region)

TODAY

BENEFITS & GALAS

Hold Everything auction, Hubbard Hall, 25 E. Main St., Cambridge When: 7 p.m. Cost: $5 Contact: 677-2495 or http://www.hubbardhall.org Notes: An auction on containers of all kinds - from a chest of drawers to a flower pot. To benefit the Hubbard Hall operating fund.

COMMUNITY

The Saratoga Springs Rotary Club Home and Garden Show, Saratoga Springs City Center, 522 Broadway, Saratoga Springs When: 5-9 p.m. Cost: $6; ages 5-12, $1; children younger than 5, free Contact: 339-3248 or http://www.sarato

gahomeshow.com Notes: With exhibitors, informative sessions and door prizes.

ENTERTAINMENT

PERRY WORKS TO BUILD DEFENSE WITH COMMERCIAL PRODUCTS.(MAIN)

Byline: ERIC SCHMITT - New York Times

During the buildup for the Persian Gulf war, the Air Force placed an emergency order for 6,000 radio receivers built by Motorola. But the urgent wartime deal struck an impasse over a bureaucratic hitch: the company lacked the accounting records the Pentagon required to insure that it was receiving the lowest-available price.

An American officer resolved the problem with an unusual solution, persuading the Japanese government to buy the receivers and donate them to the Air Force. Still, the situation typified the kind of military red tape that drives William J. Perry crazy.

While Perry may not be the …

Chennai vs. Bangalore Result

Chennai Super Kings beat Bangalore Royal Challengers by 92 runs in an Indian Premier League match at St. George's Park:

___

Result:

Chennai 179-5 (Matthew …

HECK

Perhaps you noticed the revelation that occurred in last Wednesday's Idaho Statesman, but if not, here's a resurrection: As part of some nerdy book-thing or another, our esteemed Governor-turned-Cabinet-head Dirk Kempthorne was asked, "If you could save just one work of literature, what would you save? Why?" Kempthorne replied: "The Bible is literally the Word of God ... It is a source of inspiration, wisdom and love. It's a foundation of modern society-a foundation that spans numerous cultures and faiths. I don't know why you wouldn't protect it with your life."

I admit that my first response to this quote was an eye-roll-or more accurately, a "I know you dream of riding America's …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Instant CEO.(Brief Article)

WHEN THE E-MAIL MESSAGE ARRIVED last January, I stared at it in disbelief. She could not be dead, not Bobbi. I spoke to her on the telephone only three weeks before. She was kind and encouraging. It was late in the evening when Bobbi called me, her voice deep and strained. We discussed the resume that I had submitted months earlier for the position of executive director of the North Natomas Transportation Management Association (TMA), Sacramento, California. I felt guilty talking about the possibility of interviewing for a new job, since my length of employment in my new position, at a highly respected organization, was a mere 10 weeks.

As the dedicated consulting …

Lanark Market gates are back.

Restored to their best

FOLLOWING refurbishment, the historic old Lanark Market gates in Hyndford Road have this week been restored to their best.

Site owners County Properties have responsibility for the gates, listed structures and …

WELL-SUITED CHOCOLATES.(FOOD)

Byline: DOUG BLACKBURN Staff writer

It may be the day before Valentine's Day but from what we can tell, Scharffen Berger chocolates are perfectly suited to any occasion or time of year.

Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker, based in California's Bay Area, was founded seven years ago by longtime friends Robert Steinberg (former family physician) and John Scharffenberger (ex-winery owner).

Because they make …

ECONOMIC TRANSITION TEAM TAKES SHAPE.(Main)

Byline: New York Times

Robert B. Reich, the head of President-elect Bill Clinton's economic transition team, has made assignments to a dozen advisers to help frame specific economic proposals for the new administration, several advisers said Wednesday.

Several advisers said in interviews that Reich had asked the following people to oversee work in specific areas and present firm policy proposals by the middle of December:

Lawrence H. Summers, a Harvard economics professor on leave to be chief economist at the World Bank, will oversee work on economic policy, including tax policy and whether fiscal stimulus is needed. Summers is often mentioned as a …

Former top aide takes stand at Blagojevich trial

A key aide who was by the side of former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich through most of his political career took the stand in his corruption trial Wednesday to testify against his old law school roommate.

Alonzo Monk is considered a key witness. Prosecutors say he was part of a tight group around Blagojevich who pressed companies for campaign cash on Blagojevich's behalf. Monk pleaded guilty to conspiring to shake down a racetrack owner for a large campaign contribution and is testifying as part of the plea deal.

In his early testimony, Monk acknowledged that he was testifying in the hopes of getting a lighter sentence and talked about how he met and became …

Markets give Irish bailout thumbs down

LONDON (AP) — The euro slid to a new two-month low against the dollar and stocks tumbled Monday, as investors continued to worry that Europe's debt crisis was spreading despite the €67.5 billion ($88.4 billion) bailout of Ireland.

The euro was down 1.4 percent at $1.31 after earlier hitting $1.3065, its lowest level since September 20. Investors concluded that Sunday's bailout of Ireland by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund has done little to stop Europe's debt crisis from moving swiftly onto another country.

Although Portugal is widely considered to be the most at risk for outside help given the size of its debts relative to its economy, the big worry in …

Why the market is rough sailing.(Commentary)(Brief Article)

Byline: Paul Winston

I have just returned from the annual Rendez-Vous de Septembre, at which the world's reinsurers gather to determine which way the wind is blowing.

After years of doldrums created by soft pricing, even the barest puff in their sails would make most reinsurers ecstatic. And this year, the winds of the hard market continue to howl. This kind of wind, however, is so strong only the most skilled sailors in the most seaworthy boats will be able to ride it out. Others may lose their course, sink, have to jettison cargo or be rescued. Already this is happening.

For insurance buyers, who are passengers on the reinsurance ships, hardening rates and shrinking …

Man accused of shaking baby over video game.(State)

EAST ROCKAWAY - A Long Island man has been accused of violently shaking his 4-month-old daughter because her crying interrupted his video game.

Nassau County Police Detective Lt. Kevin Smith says 20-year-old Kevin Calender, of East Rockaway, was playing a video game Thursday afternoon when the infant began crying. Smith says the baby's crying upset Calender and he shook the infant forcefully until she went …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

12% DROP IN CATERPILLAR DRAINS DOW.(BUSINESS)

Byline: NOELLE KNOX Associated Press

NEW YORK -- Prices were mixed on Wall Street Friday as the stock market was unable to settle on a clear direction after Thursday's big rally. A profit warning from Caterpillar pushed blue chip stocks lower, but the Nasdaq composite managed another record high close as technology issues advanced.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 31.81 to 11,003.89, losing ground after a 152-point gain on Thursday. The Dow ended the week, which included a big rally on optimism about stable interest rates, with a gain of 234.57, or nearly 2.2 percent.

Broader market indexes were mixed. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 2.94 …

Produce emulsions of consistent, predictable quality.(Focus On Handling Bulk Solids)

The Quadro Ytron Z Emulsifier (photo, top left) gives the user predictable control over high-shear processes such as coarse dispersion and wet grinding, fine solids dispersion, and immiscible-phase emulsifying and homogenizing. Incorporating up to three sets of toothed rotor-stators and engineered to extremely fine radial …

AMS PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES

Franco Einaudi and W. Lawrence Gates are the 2005 candidates for AMS president-elect; the candidates for AMS councilor are Joseph D'Aleo, Kelvin Droegemeier, Jenni Evans, Chester Koblinsky, Richard Passarelli, Marcia Politovich, Alan Shaffer, and John Zillman. To help the membership select its leaders, the Society asked the candidates to answer the following question, "What do you see as the challenges facing the Society, and how would you address them if elected?" Following are their responses, along with a brief biographical sketch of each.

FRANCO EINAUDI

I am deeply honored to be asked to run for president of the American Meteorological Society. This is a critical (and …

Italian Emak books 6.2% Y/Y rise in 2010 revenue.

(ADPnews) - Jan 31, 2011 - Italian gardening equipment maker Emak SpA (BIT:EM) generated revenues of EUR 206.9 million (USD 282.3m) for 2010, up 6.2% on the year, the company said at the end of a board meeting on Monday.

Emak, which examined the preliminary sales figures for 2010, said its …

PROS TRACK E-MAILS WITH EASE.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: KIM KOMANDO Gannett News Service

So, you sent an evil e-mail to the CEO. You changed the ``From:'' line to a clever alias or used a Yahoo! or Hotmail account to be anonymous.

Even though you changed your e-mail address, your computer is identifiable. All computers on the Internet have an Internet Protocol (IP) address. It's all in the e-mail's header. This information is suppressed, so most people never see it. But it can be shown, and it contains the route taken by an e-mail. That route includes the originator's IP number.

Let me give you a real-world example. In July, a well-meaning fan started blitzing radio stations with e-mails. He was …

NKorea deploying troops, weapons near Pyongyang

North Korea is deploying troops, artillery and tanks near Pyongyang in apparent preparation for a massive military parade marking key national events later this year, South Korea said Tuesday.

The military buildup near the capital began in mid-July amid high tensions on the peninsula, South Korea's Defense Ministry said in a report submitted to a parliamentary committee.

"Preparation for a massive national event is under way" in North Korea and the move is presumably related to a key Workers' Party meeting in September and the 65th anniversary of the party's founding in October, it said.

North Korea would likely use the military assets to …

Explosion at urea plant kills 29.(Brief Article)

An explosion at TotalFinaElf's AZF plant in Toulouse, France, has killed at least 29 people.

The plant makes chemicals, fertilisers and industrial explosives, including urea and ammonium nitrate, which is thought to have caused the explosion.

The plant produces 320,000t/a of urea. Christine Francis, an analyst from fertiliser consultancy Fertecon, said 'The loss of …

EDUCATION SECRETARY DETAILS BUSH PLAN.(Main)

Byline: Associated Press

U.S. Education Secretary Lamar Alexander said Friday that school choice and tuition vouchers would play a key part in the Bush administration's latest efforts to boost education reform.

"The President believes parents should have the broadest choice in where they send their children," Alexander said during a news conference.

He added that he has not heard a worthwhile argument against the proposed voucher system, which would give parents tax dollars to allow them to choose schools for their children.

Alexander, in his fourth week as education …