четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Today's Top Plays

Handicapper Darryl Schwartz offers his top local and intertrackselections

PHILADELPHIA: 6th race WEEKEND CALLER (PP 8) Sharp bullet work ontap for his second start; cuts back to a sprint after finishing adistant fourth last out; he needed that race and with a run under hisbelt he will be a lot sharper; my long-shot pick; Lopez rides forMartin. 7th race GOLDEN OAK (PP 3) His turf form overall has beengood; if he can get a contested early pace in front of him, he iscapable of producing a great late run; all his turf wins come at theexpense of lesser, but he is racing well; might be overlooked; Perezrides for George.

SARATOGA: 5th race JIMMY THE GOV (PP 7) He …

KOREA HOUSE

It took me about 45 seconds to fall in love Korea House. The aroma of sizzling meat, red pepper and sesame burst through the door onto the cold street, and a woman who actually looked like she might be Korean smiled over a dish she was cooking tableside. I seated myself at a spot for two and examined the settings-fresh linen, spindly silver chopsticks and a wide spoon. No fork, no cheater sticks and none of that terrifying plum sauce that looks like it comes out of a soap dispenser. Amen.

To attune my palate to the untried flavors of Korea, I went for the appetizer sampler of green tea rice cakes, pa-jon (green onion pancakes), bin-dea-ddok (mung bean pancakes), kimchee mandu …

CDC links 401 illnesses to 2007 pot pie recall

Federal investigators raised to 401 the number of cases of salmonella linked to the Banquet pot pies recalled last year by ConAgra Foods Inc.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued its final report this week on the fall 2007 outbreak and recall.

The 401 cases of salmonella were reported in 41 states, the CDC said. No deaths were reported but nearly one-third of whose who fell ill had to be hospitalized.

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Jobs fair targets welfare recipients // More than 100 interviewed

Bernadette Humprey hasn't worked for nearly a year and untilthis past week her prospects of finally getting off the publicwelfare rolls appeared bleak.

Thanks to a Project Chance Jobs Fair for welfare recipients,however, Humprey now believes her days on public aid are numbered.

Humphrey said her growing disillusionment with job hunting"turned to joy" after two "promising" interviews at the jobs fair,sponsored by the Illinois Public Aid Department at the agency'soffice at 841 W. 119th.

Humprey, mother of a 6-year-old girl, said she didn't think thejobs fair would "end up being anything" and was surprised at itsoutcome.

"I have a followup …

Tonight

Mostly cloudy. A 50 percent chance of rain. Mid-50s low.

Thursday

A 60 percent chance of rain. Highs around 70.

Friday

Mostly cloudy with scattered …

Latest 'Call of Duty' game breaks sales record

NEW YORK (AP) — By the third time around, it really shouldn't be a surprise. The latest "Call of Duty" video game set a first-day sales record this week, generating $400 million in sales in its first 24 hours in stores. That breaks the record its predecessor set this time last year.

"Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3" is the third game in the military shooter series to set such a record. Last year, "Call of Duty: Black Ops" raked in $360 million in its first 24 hours on sale. "Call of Duty, Modern Warfare 2," sold 4.7 million copies in its first 24 hours to reap $310 million

The latest installment of the …

Texas Southern defeats Alcorn State 30-20

LORMAN, Miss. (AP) — Marquis Jackson had his second sack of the game, forcing a fumble to prevent a potential game-winning touchdown late in Texas Southern's 30-20 win over Alcorn State on Saturday.

The Tigers (3-3, 3-1 Southwestern Athletic Conference) led 23-20 when the Braves (3-2, 2-1) were driving in Texas Southern territory.

Alcorn State's Brandon Bridge went to pass on fourth-and-16 from the Tigers' 35 when Jackson tallied his …

Primary Charge Separation in the Photosystem II Core from Synechocystis: A Comparison of Femtosecond Visible/Midinfrared Pump-Probe Spectra of Wild-Type and Two P^sub 680^ Mutants

ABSTRACT

It is now quite well accepted that charge separation in PS2 reaction centers starts predominantly from the accessory chlorophyll B^sub A^ and not from the special pair P^sub 680^. To identify spectral signatures of B^sub A^, and to further clarify the process of primary charge separation, we compared the femtosecond-infrared pump-probe spectra of the wild-type (WT) PS2 core complex from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with those of two mutants in which the histidine residue axially coordinated to P^sub B^ (D2-His^sup 197^) has been changed to Ala or Gln. By analogy with the structure of purple bacterial reaction centers, the mutated histidine is proposed to …

Ohio state troopers disciplined for photo prank involving homemade Ku Klux Klan costume

A highway patrolman who was photographed in a handmade Ku Klux Klan costume while on duty the day before the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday has been suspended without pay, authorities said.

A fellow trooper who transmitted the cell-phone photo of white-masked lawman has been demoted.

Craig Franklin, a 12-year veteran of the Ohio Highway Patrol, is pictured in the Jan. 20 photo with a white cone on his head, white paper mask and a white cloth covering his shoulders, according to a highway patrol report.

Franklin is otherwise in trooper uniform. A handgun holster, a radio normally issued by the patrol and other police equipment can be seen in the …

Cheesy grins as new delicatessen thrives

Owners of a delicatessan stall in Wiltshire have expanded afterjust four months.

Garry Thompson and Claire Joseph have run Trowbridge Cheese andWine, in Castle Place Market, since February.

But now the pair have moved on to a new site in White Hart Yardand launched Claire's Deli, which opened on Saturday.

"Day one was absolutely fabulous," she said.

"It totally exceeded all expectations and although we had a bit ofcheese and wine available, very few people were interested in thatbecause they all just wanted to know more about what we had.

"So many people walked in and said 'it's time that Trowbridge hadits own deli', which just made my heart …

PAYING IRAQI EX-MILITARY

Hundreds of Iraqi ex-military lined up outside a warehouse in downtown Baghdad in order to receive their long-awaited paychecks. U.S. Soldiers, with assistance from the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-led interim administration of Iraq, registered each of the former Iraqi soldiers who would be paid prior to handing them the promised paychecks.

Lt. Col. Fareed Betros, the senior Middle East advisor for the Ministry of National security and Defense, and an Army Reserve Soldier from Washington, B.C., designed and coordinated the plan to pay Iraq's ex-military in seven different cities throughout the country.

"We are paying a different rank every day. For example, …

Jailed tycoon Khodorkovsky files for parole

MOSCOW (AP) — Imprisoned Russian oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky has filed for parole, according to the text of appeal released Monday by his supporters.

A Moscow appeals court last week upheld the second conviction of Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man, keeping him behind bars until 2016 on politically tainted charges of stealing oil from his own company.

He is eligible for early release since he has served half of his 13-year sentence. It would be Khodorkovsky's second parole motion; his first was denied in 2008 by a judge who cited Khodorkovsky's refusal to take part in sewing classes while in prison, and other alleged misdemeanors including failure to hold his hands …

A touch of Vermont in the wilds of West Texas // Northeastern colors invade mountains

Some stand out like a Ferrari in a speed trap, every leaf glowinga cop-stopping red. Others blaze a more subtle bonfire orange orshimmer Fort Knox gold. A handful, still clogged with summer'schlorophyll, splash dollops of cool green into the firestorm offlaming hues.

Maples ignited by autumn - it could be Vermont at its fierybest.

But this isn't New England. It's West Texas, a vast, empty,parched, barren wasteland that's generally about as colorful asmilitia fatigues.Out here, cattle wander, windmills whirl and pumps suck oil fromthe earth. Few towns survive between Pecos and El Paso, and signswarn motorists of the monotonous distance to the next gas station.Only the Guadalupe Mountains interrupt the topographical boredom.A remnant of an ancient limestone reef, the broad plateau of theGuadalupes juts like Gibraltar from the desert floor. Long bands ofnaked cliffs buttress its gently rolling cap.Breaching the palisades, a scattering of chasms slice down fromthe high country. Some tout one of them, McKittrick Canyon, as themost beautiful spot in Texas.Two thousand feet deep, the gorge winds through the mountains'eastern escarpment. Along its final few miles, a small creekemerges, providing moisture to satiate luxuriant growth. In thisoasis, geologist Wallace Pratt built a home where he and his wiferecurrently resided for several decades. He ultimately deeded thehouse and much of his land to the U.S. government, a gift thatlaunched Guadalupe Mountains National Park.Roads barely penetrate the massive preserve, but 80 miles ofwalking trails allow visitors access to its interior. Some peopleenjoy challenging the steep track that snakes to the highest summitin Texas, 8,749-foot-high Guadalupe Peak. More, however, prefersimpler endeavors, like strolling up McKittrick Canyon, especially inthe depths of autumn.The walk begins at McKittrick Canyon Visitor Center, whererangers advise hikers of park rules. It then heads up the flatcanyon bottom, eventually crossing the dry creek on a pathwayoutlined with stones. A Texas madrone towers beside the trail.The tree, common in the Guadalupes, stands 20 feet high.Cinnamon-colored bark, which peels away like paint on an old barn,covers its twisted and gnarled, multiple trunks. Shiny jade-greenleaves cap upper branches, sheltering clusters of vivid red berries.It's McKittrick's first touch of Technicolor magic.After a 20-minute ramble, the route again intersects the streambed, which now gushes with water. Rich in calcite, the peek-a-boocreek lines its base with the white cementlike substance. Wherefloods have erased the coating, the flow may dip below ground, onlyto reappear farther downstream.Ahead, the canyon narrows and deepens, and vegetation grows moredense. Maples appear, providing the first splashes of autumn yellow.Around one corner, a rock wall lines the path, and a short side trailleads to Pratt's Lodge.Frequently called Stone Cabin, the structure features floors,walls and even a roof made from native rock. Forest-green woodenshutters add a homey feel. Surrounded by trees, the site exudes anaura of sequestered tranquillity. It's easy to understand why thePratts delighted in dwelling deep in their canyon, and why ParkService volunteers love living here now. One temporary caretakerspends the season residing here with her husband.``Over 400 people hiked up Saturday and another 250 on Sunday,''she says. ``We're here to help protect the resource.''The volunteer shows guests around the one-bedroom structure andrelates a bit of its history. A pot of simmering soup fills thecabin with a tomato and basil bouquet. The aroma attracts more thanhungry humans.``Some mornings when I'm cooking,'' she says, ``I glance up andsee a deer peering at me through the window.''By day, the Peeping Bambi retreats, driven off by incominghikers. Pratt Lodge lies about 2 1/2 miles from the trailhead, andfor many, it marks an ideal destination and turn-around point.Others stride beyond.The route continues up-canyon, generally staying away fromwater's edge. In the slightly higher, cooler altitude, autumnintensifies. Fallen leaves speckle the trail. Trees rustle. Theair smells fresh, faintly perfumed with the woody scent of dryingleaves.Chinquapin oaks, a species common in the East, grow to 80-footheights. As the season advances, their toothy, oval leaves fade limegreen, then lemon yellow, providing the valley with splashes of juicycolor.More gaudy are McKittrick's bigtooth maples. These are closerelatives of the eastern sugar maples, and local Texans use the sapto make syrup.Like their Vermont cousins, the bigtooths erupt in shades ofyellow and orange, the result of chlorophyll disintegrating to exposeblond pigments from xanthophyll and carotin (the same agent thatcolors carrots).Others blush from anthocyanin, the pigment found in beets andred cabbage. Plant sugars produced in daylight become trapped atnight. Unable to circulate, they linger, tinting leaves deepcrimson.In a canyon brimming with vegetation, a patrolling rangerexpresses his worries about wildfire. ``A few years ago, we had abig burn in Dog Canyon that threatened McKittrick. If a blazestarted here on a windy day, it would devastate this enclave.''The main trail, which proceeds toward Dog Canyon, eventuallyclimbs from the valley floor. A lower spur leads to the Grotto, adamp, limestone cavity perhaps 20 feet wide and 10 feet deep.Around the corner sits a picnic area. Tables and benches madefrom stone slabs rest beneath a canopy of gilded boughs. Severalfeasting and frolicking families share the site.Shortly beyond, the route ends at a cattleman's line shack.Crudely constructed, its walls consist of rough-cut rock, chinkedwith gravel and mortared with mud. The Park Service has screenedthe building closed and posted it as being unsafe.The structure may be crude, but its grassy setting is exquisite.McKittrick Canyon veers leftward, and a lofty ridge looms ahead.Thin ribbons of dull orange highlight arroyos that plunge down thevalley's gray walls. Although a breeze barely blows at ground level,the wind pulsates high overhead. It starts softly, builds to aneerie howl, then mysteriously calms, only to repeat the pattern aminute later.A sign advises that the territory beyond is closed to all entry,and the ranger reminds everyone that he locks the parking lot gate at6 p.m. Out of trail and out of time, the walk back begins.The creek seems to gurgle louder on the return. The rangerclaims trout live here. ``They only grow to be four to six inches inlength, hardly pan sized,'' he says. ``Since much of the year, thestream intermittently dips underground, fish are confined topermanent wet sections like this one.''The journey out goes slowly. Trees warmed by afternoon lightappear to glow with more fervent intensity. It's as if autumn hasaccelerated during the day. Reds seem more lucent; golds morevivid; oranges more Sunkist.Although encircled by radiant hues, the hikers ahead stop for adrab-brown object beside the trail. They stare down. Ahairy-legged tarantula stares back.This isn't Vermont. It's West Texas.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Highest tide in 20 years floods historic Venice

Venice could use a bailout. The city built on water has too much of it.

Residents and tourists waded through knee-deep water Monday as they navigated the city's narrow streets and alleys, and its historic St. Mark's Square was inundated. Boxes of tourist merchandise floated inside the flooded shops around the square and even the city's famed pigeons sought refuge on rooftops and windowsills.

One of the highest tides in its history brought Venice to a virtual halt, rekindling a debate over a plan to build moveable flood barriers in an effort to save the lagoon city from high tides.

City officials said the tide peaked at 61 inches (156 centimeters), well past the 40-inch (110-centimeter) flood mark, as strong winds pushed the sea into the city.

Alarms went off at 6:37 a.m. to alert citizens, but many residents were taken by surprise because authorities had initially not forecast such a high water level.

In St. Mark's Square, one of the city's lowest points, tourists tried to stay dry by hopping on cafe tables and chairs sticking out of the water. The water was so high that someone rowed a small speedboat across the wide square.

"It was quite an extraordinary experience," said Michel Gorski, visiting from Brussels with his wife. "We got stuck in the hotel for half a day but we didn't suffer. We were sorry for the restaurants and stores around, but there was no panic and everyone worked really hard to clean up quickly."

Workers were unable to install the traditional raised wooden walkways used during flooding because the water rose so high the platforms would have floated away too.

"There are very few streets that are water-free," admitted city spokesman Enzo Bon.

In an ironic twist, the flooding also idled the city's water buses because their boarding platforms were underwater.

Bon had no reports of damage to the city's architectural jewels, and the Culture Ministry was monitoring the situation.

It was the fourth highest tide since 1872, when the city started keeping records. The last time Venice saw such high waters was in 1986, while the all-time record was 76 inches (194 centimeters) in 1966.

That flood forced 3,000 people to evacuate and damaged many historic buildings, but largely spared the city's art _ which had long ago been removed to upper floors because of frequent flooding by tides.

"In Venice, we know how to live with high water," said Bon. "Of course there are some problems, because today's was an exceptional event."

Giancarlo Galan, the conservative governor of the surrounding Veneto region, criticized Venice's center-left administration for failing to prepare for the flood and for allegedly stonewalling a long-planned system of barriers that would rise from the seabed to ease the effect of high tides.

The $5.5 billion project, called "Moses" after the Biblical figure who parted the Red Sea, has been under construction for years and is expected to be completed by 2011. The company building the barriers said, had the system been in place, the city would not have been flooded Monday.

Venice Mayor Massimo Cacciari insisted the city's experts had done a good job and had revised their forecasts well before the water came in. Cacciari, who has criticized the barriers, said the government-backed project would be completed.

With low tide setting in and waters receding Monday afternoon, some tourists were charmed by the water wonderland.

"The hotel had to turn off the gas and the electricity, but they made us a nice candlelit cold lunch," said Yacob Laurent, a visitor from Paris. "They gave us boots and my wife and I went for a walk. It was a lot of fun."

NYC mayor: 'No plans' for 2012 run for White House

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg insists that hiring Hillary Rodham Clinton's former media strategist is not a step toward a possible presidential run.

Howard Wolfson helped Bloomberg win a third term last year and is coming to work at City Hall as an adviser.

Wolfson has many connections to national politics, but Bloomberg says he has "no plans" to run for president in 2012.

Bloomberg, an independent, said that before. And it turned out he was seriously exploring a run in 2008 while denying any interest in the White House.

Bloomberg says Wolfson was so inspired by his administration that he wanted to leave his lucrative consulting firm to work in government.

Bush Remarks to Troops

Text of President Bush's remarks to U.S. troops at Al-Asad Air Base in Iraq on Monday, as transcribed by the White House.

---

Thank you all. General, thank you very much. It's an honor to be with you.

As you know, today is Labor Day back home so I thought I'd come by to thank you for all your hard work. Every day - every day - you show bravery under incredibly difficult circumstances. Every day you're doing work on the sands of Anbar that is making it safer in the streets of America. And every day the United States of America is grateful for what you're doing. I want you to tell your families the commander in chief stopped by to say hello, and he said, I'm incredibly proud to be the commander in chief of such a great group of men and women.

I'm keeping pretty good company, as you can see. I brought out the A-Team so they could be with the folks who are making a significant difference in this war against these radicals and extremists. In Anbar you're seeing firsthand the dramatic differences that can come when the Iraqis are more secure. In other words, you're seeing success.

You see Sunnis who once fought side by side with al-Qaida against coalition troops now fighting side by side with coalition troops against al-Qaida. Anbar is a huge province. It was once written off as lost. It is now one of the safest places in Iraq. Because of your hard work, because of your bravery and sacrifice, you are denying al-Qaida a safe haven from which to plot and plan and carry out attacks against the United States of America. What you're doing here is making this country safer, and I thank you for your hard work.

The surge of operations that began in June is improving security throughout Iraq. The military successes are paving the way for the political reconciliation and economic progress the Iraqis need to transform their country. When Iraqis feel safe in their own homes and neighborhoods, they can focus their efforts on building a stable, civil society with functioning government structures at the local and provincial and national levels. And that's important, because a free Iraq, an Iraq that's an ally against these extremists and murderers will be a major defeat for the terrorists.

Earlier today I met with some of the tribal sheiks here in Anbar. It was a really interesting meeting. And at the table were the leaders of the central government, as well. They told me that the kind of bottom-up progress that your efforts are bringing to Anbar is vital to the success and stability of a free Iraq. See, Iraqis need this stability to build a more peaceful future. And America needs this stability to prevent the chaos that allows the terrorists to set up bases from which they can plot and plan attacks on our homeland.

The very people that you helped the Iraqis defeat in Anbar swore allegiance to the man that ordered the attack on the United States of America. What happens here in Anbar matters to the security of the United States.

And so I thank you for your sacrifice. I thank you for volunteering in the face of danger. I thank you for your courage and your bravery. Every day you are successful here in Iraq draws nearer to the day when America can begin calling you and your fellow servicemen and women home.

But I want to tell you this about the decision - about my decision about troop levels. Those decisions will be based on a calm assessment by our military commanders on the conditions on the ground - not a nervous reaction by Washington politicians to poll results in the media. In other words, when we begin to draw down troops from Iraq, it will be from a position of strength and success, not from a position of fear and failure. To do otherwise would embolden our enemies and make it more likely that they would attack us at home. If we let our enemies back us out of Iraq, we will more likely face them in America. If we don't want to hear their footsteps back home, we have to keep them on their heels over here. And that's exactly what you're doing, and America is safer for it.

In Anbar you're doing this hard work every day. We've all come to say thank you. We've come to tell you the American people are standing with you. They're grateful for your sacrifice. As commander in chief, I'm proud to be in your presence on this Labor Day. I ask for God's blessings on you and your family, and may God continue to bless America. Thank you.

NYC ex-model sues over use of photo in comedy film

A former model says she's appalled that her nearly decade-old bikini photo became a randy prop in the film "Couple's Retreat."

Irina Krupnik filed a $10 million defamation lawsuit Thursday in a New York City court against NBC Universal. It distributed the 2009 Vince Vaughn comedy.

Krupnik acknowledges she gave rights to the 2001 picture to a stock agency, which apparently sold it to the filmmakers. The lawsuit says a character in the movie uses her photo as a sexual aid.

Krupnik's lawsuit says she never would have allowed the picture to be transformed from "a commonplace swimwear ad to softcore pornography." The 30-year-old makeup artist says it's hurting her reputation.

NBC Universal says it had the rights to use the photo.

Leading British women all set for Bath Half showdown

The 30th anniversary of the Bath half marathon is set to see oneof the best British women's races in several years.

Louise Damen, who recently won her first senior women's title atthe English Cross-Country Championships, heads Sunday's entry as sheswitches back to the roads in preparation for next month's LondonMarathon.

Joining her on the start line for Sunday's race will be defendingchampion Michelle Ross-Cope, who won with a then sparkling personalbest of 72mins 07secs 12 months ago and later went on to race themarathon at both the European Championships and Commonwealth Games.

With 28-year-old Damen in such terrific form - and clearly inshape to attack her 2007 personal best of 70:47 set when winning theReading half - Ross-Cope will have to step up her game to retain hertitle.

The race, which is again a 15,000 sell-out, starts at 11am.

"The women's race has the look of a British championships," saidrace director Andrew Taylor.

"Michelle enjoyed the race so much last year she wanted to comeback and Louise is also booked in.

"I would say it is the strongest British women's field we havehad for many years and of course there is also the African presence,although I'm not sure how strong they are this year."

Susan Partridge of Glasgow, last year's runner-up and the 2005winner, is also returning, while Chester le Street's Alyson Dixon,who is coached by British legend Liz McColgan and ran a PB of 2hr42.50 in the 2010 New York marathon, is also making the trip downfrom the north.

Bristol & West AC member Lucy MacAlister, who has enjoyed somegood races on the course, is also entered and, in the absence ofTeam Bath's Great Britain international Holly Rush, is the favouriteto finish as top West runner.

Continued on page 99 Continued from page 108 As for the leadingTeamBath runner, that could well be Jo Thompson who ran a sparklingPB of 80:21 in the 2010 Great North Run. That is a tough act tofollow for the 52-year-old but she is a great competitor and, withplenty of support, is expected to go quicker than the 83:09 she ranin Bath 12 months ago.

The last seven winners of the men's race have come from Africaand that trend looks set to continue this year. Edwin Kipkorir, JeanNdayisenga, who is well known on the British circuit, and ZacharyKihara are all capable of claiming the top prize, especially as thetop British men seem to be giving the race a miss this year.

Steve Rose heads the TeamBath contingent with Nick Shearn, PaulCox, Paul Newman and Dave Gunstone also entered.

Send your pictures of Sunday's race to photographic@bathchron.co.uk.

More Bath Half Marathon news on pages 13-15

Jo heads home contingent

Good days again ; India's travel and tourism industry was one of the first and worst affected by the global recession. It's finally bouncing back.

Even in their heydays, aviation and hospitality performed waybelow their potential in India. Then a complex combination of pricewars, short-term overcapacity and global economic meltdown pushedthese industries into a sea of red with mounting losses, widespreadlayoffs and stalled investments. Therefore, when the first signs ofrecovery appeared around January 2010, caution preceded celebration.But as the first quarter of the year ends, there are definitivesigns of an upswing.

Foreign tourist arrivals in January-February 2010 were higherthan during the same months of 2009. A study by the World Travel &Tourism Council (WTTC) forecasts that, between 2008 and 2018, Indiawill report the highest annualised real growth of travel and tourismdemand worldwide, at 9.4 per cent. Travel and tourism accounted for5.92 per cent of GDP in 2007-08, the latest year for which figuresare available. By 2020, tourism-related activities will contributeabout Rs 8,500 billion to the GDP.

But, despite the sector's high contribution to the economy, thegovernment has proposed an outlay of just Rs 1,050 crore for tourisminfrastructure in the 2010-11 Budget. This is about 0.1 per cent oftotal government spending. Meanwhile, the industry is gaining frombetter occupancy rates, increased FTAs, a growing airline seatcapacity and reach. The hotel industry, so far focussed on the bigcities and the luxury category, is now offering greater depth andwidth (read: midmarket and budget category) and nonconventionaldestinations.

-- Hotel occupancy rates have gone up to 65per cent overall from60per cent in 2008-09

-- Foreign tourist arrivals are up 13per cent to 10.9 lakh in thefirst two months of 2010

-- India's airlines carried 8.05 million passengers in the firsttwo months of 2010, 1.29 million more than they did during the sameperiod last yearOn the flip side, India is widely believed to be amuch more expensive destination than its Asia-Pacific counterpartslike Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore. To illustrate, a standardqueen-bed three-star Ibis Hotel room in Gurgaon will cost you $95.43(Rs 4,485). A similar three-star Ibis Hotel room with one double-bed in Bangkok would cost Rs $39.32 (Rs 1,848). A key reason forthis anomaly is the huge deficit of budget hotels. Branded budgethotels offering clean and safe rooms across the country couldtrigger exponential growth in domestic tourism. But can they bridgethe gap? Domestic and foreign brands are trying their best-in theface of archaic policies.

A hotel's promoter has to approach up to 40 different agencies toobtain 70-110 licences and clearances. Nothing is spared: thefountain, neon sign, letterbox, dustbin, the bathroom fittings- allneed approval of some kind. In Singapore, a promoter needs sixlicences from six agencies. As far as physical infrastructure isconcerned, the new airports at Hyderabad and Bangalore, along withthose being redeveloped at Delhi and Mumbai, promise better airtravel. Then, the government can encourage more low-cost airlinesand speeding up highway projects.

This BT special on Travel & Hospitality dissects the problems(shortage of hotels, sagging infrastructure), prospects (the rise ofbudget hotels) and takes a look at the years ahead.

Uganda's poor brave salty, flesh-scarring waters to make a meager living

Julius Mutwalhughuma's job is eating him alive.

Three times a week for the past 20 years, Mutwalhughuma has waded into Uganda's Lake Katwe in search of rock salt, which he sells to traders from Uganda, Congo and Rwanda.

He keeps at it even though the lake's highly concentrated, corrosive salt water has eaten away at his skin, leaving scars and open sores. After a spell in the water, his pockmarked legs sparkle with salt granules.

The scars heal but they itch, and when he scratches, the wounds reopen, Mutwalhughuma, 64, told The Associated Press. "It is very painful."

On a continent where more than 300 million live in extreme poverty, the poorest have little choice about how they make their living _ whether in the lake, or toiling deep in gold mines despite the risk of rock falls, or breathing poisonous pesticides on flower farms and rubber plantations.

The chemicals in Lake Katwe are clearly unhealthy, experts say. The government has not acted on requests to study the risks.

"No studies have been done because these people are voiceless," says Dr. Assay Ndizihiwe, a senior government health official who has worked in Katwe. "These chemicals are clearly corrosive to skin, causing scarring and nerve damage, and it's very likely they have other effects we don't yet know about."

Mutwalhughuma is among 3,000 people who work at Lake Katwe, earning around US$2 (euro1) per 100 kilograms (220 pounds) haul of rock salt. In an average week, each might harvest 15 sacks _ meaning about four times the dollar-a-day average earned by 39 percent of Ugandans.

But the physical price is high, and the protection is primitive.

The miners glue paper over open wounds. They wade into the water wearing condoms and with their legs wrapped in tire tubes.

Health experts say these offer little protection.

While the men collect the rock salt, women work knee-deep in manmade pools on the shores. These salt pans, carved into neat squares, produce granular salt harvested once every four days from the bottom of the pools. A day's labor pays 60 U.S. cents (about 40 euro cents).

The women also suffer lesions, and coat themselves in cassava paste, believing _ not on the basis of any medical evidence _ that the water causes infertility.

"If I work in deep water, it enters my uterus and I feel pain," says Valeria Masika, Mutwalhughuma's wife.

Francis Kayanja, chief clinical officer at Katwe's health center, estimates that at least 10 percent of patients who come there are ill from working in Katwe's waters.

But there aren't many alternatives for the 10,000 people living by the lake. The earth yields few crops. Nearby is another lake, less salty, but it has few fish.

Salt has been harvested from Katwe for over 500 years and the methods have not changed.

"The water is poisonous to us but how can anyone refuse to go down there? What will we eat?" said Harriet Birungi. Aged 30, she has worked in the salt pans for half her life to support her five children. "Its very tiring work because we are bent all day. The back hurts, the ribs hurt and there are wounds as well."

Her 13-year-old daughter, on holiday from school, has been working in the salt pan for one week and already has pink circular wounds on her legs.

Fees paid by the salt miners got toward health care and schooling for the lakeside people, but there isn't enough to buy protective clothing, local officials say.

So for the thousands who rely on the lake for their income, poor health is simply a fact of life.

"I never knew the risks. I just came to work here because I knew I could make some money," says Mutwalhughuma. "If I knew then what I know now, I wouldn't have come."

DeVito, Perlman waltz with `Matilda'

LOS ANGELES They're one of Hollywood's most successful couples,both careerwise and at home. He's developed from a curmudgeonly TVcharacter actor into a movie star, acclaimed director and in-demandproducer. She has four Emmy Awards and is executive-producing andstarring in "Pearl," a new fall series for CBS. They have threechildren, with whom they read books every night.

All that, and Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman get to play thescuzziest couple alive in "Matilda," the movie version of a book bysardonic children's author Roald Dahl, who also wrote James and theGiant Peach, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. As Harry andZinnia Wormwood, the parents of the precocious, telekinetic titletyke (played by 9-year-old Mara Wilson), the Wormwoods are a monumentto bad taste, anti-intellectualism and other extremes of suburbanobliviousness - everything the deceptively streetwise DeVitos aren't.DeVito also directed "Matilda," which opens Friday.

What do they have to say about the film?

Q. Why make a movie out of such a bizarre book as"Matilda"?

DeVito: Three years ago, our daughter Lucy brought it into thehouse. All her friends told her about it, she thought it was greatand we all read it together. We found it really empowering andexciting, with great parts for Rhea and I. These parents from hell -we could have a great time, stretch it out and explore all thedarkness.

Perlman: I love the extremes to which Dahl takes things. Ilove how funny they are and how kids just gravitate toward his books.They have wonderful messages, like this one's promotion of literacy.But my kids don't read Matilda and go, "Oh, that's a very empoweringstory." It's more like, "Wasn't she a neat kid?" They're extremelyimaginative stories and they don't talk down to children at all.

Q. Some may feel the darker aspects of "Matilda" - thenegligent parents, the sadistic school principal who hurls childrenover fences - might not be appropriate for kids, or even project ananti-family message.

Perlman: That's been said about "Pearl" (in which Perlmanplays a working-class widow who decides to go to college for thefirst time), too. Really, it's a very tame show, and this movie isall right for kids.

People are just getting really out-of-hand about that stuffthese days. It's kind of scary in a way; it's not that far from"Fahrenheit 451" or something, book burning. Some people want tocontrol everything so much that there's nothing left.

DeVito: The psychology of all the great fairy tales recognizedit was important to explore the darkness - without damaging anybody -to the fullest, in order to achieve any brightness and victory andbliss. Admittedly, a lot of it's there for me in "Matilda" because Ikind of like that stuff. But I've shown it to hundreds of kids whojust adore the movie. We can get overprotective about these things,although I think it's good to be the monitors of what your childrensee.

Q. Let's take a look at the views of family in films thatDanny's directed. "Throw Momma From the Train" was about killingyour mother. "The War of the Roses" was about hating your spouse.This is about awful parents.

Perlman: (Laughing) It sort of balances, y'know? If hedidn't have that outlet, I think I'd be in very big trouble. Thefamily thing is really important to us. We both spend a lot of timewith our kids, it's a priority we just make time for. Of course,it's harder to make time for each other.

DeVito: People ask me why I gravitate toward these reprehensiblecharacters like Louie De Palma (the angry dispatcher in the sitcom"Taxi") and Sam Stone, who wanted to kill his wife in "RuthlessPeople." It probably has something to do with the family I came fromin New Jersey. My mother and father stayed together for 50 years,and they probably shouldn't have. I love them, they cared for us,but they lived in their own world. My two caregivers were my oldersisters. They were real gentle and sweet and kind to me, and theystill are.

I don't know. I really can't put my finger on it. Maybe it'sme laying down on the sofa when I read a script, and somethinghappens inside. But I think it's just a coincidence.

Q. What is working together like for you?

DeVito: Rhea and I always talk about everything, whether she wasdoing "Cheers" and I was doing "Taxi," or I'm directing movies orworking with Mikey D (longtime pal Michael Douglas, his collaboratorin films ranging from "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" to "Romancingthe Stone"). She's really 100 percent with me and very supportive.And as an actress, she's really dedicated to what she does. And verychallenging.

Perlman: This was a great experience for us because he's usuallyworking on his thing and I'm working on my thing. This was a chancefor us to actually go off to work together in the same car at thesame time, spending some time together doing something we love.

But it was a little scary for me at first. Is he going to likewhat I'm doing? We hadn't really worked together in thatdirecting-acting capacity for a while. But once it got started, wewere both on the same track and feeling comfortable, it was reallyfun.

Q. Rhea, why go back to the sitcom grind with "Pearl"?

Perlman: It's actually the best situation to be in as an actressbecause it's a wonderful, creative job and you don't have to travelall over the place, get up at 4 in the morning and come home at 10 atnight. Y'know, your kids see you, and they know where you are.

Q. How do you like producing?

Perlman: It's interesting, especially if there's some projectthat you really love and feel that you can help get done. But Iguess acting is the main thing I'm interested in. Also, I feel thatthere's a thing like working too much, in terms of your time. Thereare other things I like to do in life.

Q. Danny's company, Jersey Films, has had great successproducing the likes of "Pulp Fiction" and "Get Shorty." What's yourapproach to producing?

DeVito: The idea behind Jersey Films is to embrace youngfilmmakers and get their work made. It's a wonderful thing to doyour best to make it as comfortable as possible for the artists towork, try to make sure no outside influences try to steer them oneway or another. Try to support them and contribute any way you can -make it a good working environment, that's the main thing.

Bob Strauss is the film critic of the Los Angeles Daily News.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Turner, Illini go on a switch hunt Hayden among group moving from 'O' to 'D'

RANTOUL, Ill. -- Knowing they faced the difficult challenge ofimproving a defense that gave up 39.6 points per Big Ten game lastfall, Illinois coach Ron Turner gathered his defensive assistantsover the winter and handed them his offensive roster.

The board is open," Turner said. You can draft anybody you wantexcept E.B. Halsey from the offense."

When the draft was over, Kelvin Hayden, Illinois' top receiverlast fall, was penciled in at cornerback. Morris Virgil, who hadaveraged 6.8 yards per carry in limited rushing duty the previous twoseasons, was a strong safety. James Cooper, an obscure tailback,moved to cornerback. And 6-7, 270-pound Chris Norwell, who had been atight end in a promising group of freshman offensive linemen, was adefensive tackle.

Hayden and Virgil, both seniors, are projected starters. Norwell,a redshirt freshman, will see extensive duty up front as a keyreserve if he doesn't win a starting job. Cooper, a junior, has shownsigns he'll be a top reserve at cornerback.

In an age when specialization and year-round preparation are therule, can they become successful defenders this quickly?

They can, and they're expected to," Turner said. They all playedboth ways in high school. They've all done it. It's a differentlevel, but they're good football players. And they'll get better asthey go."

Hayden, who had 10 interceptions as a freshman at Hubbard HighSchool, is especially enthusiastic about the switch.

Me and Morris talk about how when we get a pick, we're just goingto do what we did on offense," he said.

Hayden thinks his move should help not only a defense that hadonly two interceptions last season, but also his pro prospects.

That's everybody's dream," he said. I'm trying to put myself inthe best situation. For now, though, I'm just focused on this year.It's a new day, a new attitude."

After falling behind Halsey and others on a crowded tailback depthchart last fall, Virgil got an early taste of safety duties when heshifted to a depleted defense in the middle of the 2003 season.

When I got switched last season, I didn't set my mind to safetyfor a while because then I moved back to running back," Virgil said.But when the season was over, I talked with coach Turner, and hesaid, I want you to be our starting strong safety.' Once he gave methat goal, I put my mind to accomplishing that. It was a chance toplay."

Norwell also is enthusiastic about the switch.

On defense, you just react," he said. That suits me real well."

The offensive crossovers are making strides on defense, said MikeMallory, the Illini's new defensive coordinator and a standoutlinebacker at Michigan in the early '80s.

I don't want to say there was uneasiness," Mallory said, but ittook some time to get comfortable. We tried to keep things basic atfirst, so they could work on their technique. You can see themgetting more and more comfortable."

After going through some undeniable highs and painful lows usingthe tricky schemes of Mallory's predecessor, Mike Cassity, theIllinois defense likes the idea of getting back to basics.

We've simplified things," Turner said. We're going to do less, andwe're going to do it better. Most importantly, we're going to tacklemuch better."

Count Halsey among those who believe the new defenders can hit theground running.

There's no question those guys can make the switch," he said.They're athletes."

A match made in heaven? Career development theories and the school-to-work transition

This article discusses the major contributions (Krumboltz & Worthington, 1999; Lent, Hackett, & Brown, 1999; Savickas, 1999; Swanson & Fouad, 1999) to this special issue of The Career Development Quarterly on the application of career development theories to the school-to-work transition. Common thematic elements in these 4 articles include a focus on the individual who faces the transition from high school to work and an emphasis on the developmental aspects of the transition. The article concludes with a cautionary recommendation that theory-building efforts derived from the individual experiences of work-bound youth ought to be included in theoretical and intervention initiatives to facilitate the school-to-work transition.

The four articles in this special issue reflect sophisticated thinking by some of the leading scholars in our field. One might suggest that the synthesis of the major theoretical perspectives in career development with the challenges of the school-to-work movement is a match made in heaven. As a whole, the articles by Savickas ( 1999), Krumboltz and Worthington (1999), Swanson and Fouad (1999), and Lent, Hackett, and Brown ( 1999) are thoughtfully written, innovative, and far-reaching in their implications. In fact, a significant part of my reaction to these papers affirms the belief that a careful integration of the school-to-work transition with the four bodies of theory detailed in these articles represents a great opportunity for both work-bound youth and for the continued vitality of the theoretical foundation of our discipline. However, when I consider these articles in light of the knowledge I have gained in my recent research into the school-to-work transition (Blustein, Phillips, JobinDavis, Finkelberg, & Roarke, 1997), my reactions become more complex and equivocal. In this discussion, I seek to reconcile these views to create space for applications of existing theories as well as new perspectives derived from the contemporary experiences of work-bound youth.

COMMON THEMATIC ELEMENTS

Much of the school-to-work literature, although rich with ideas from sociology, economics, and education, tends to downplay the experience of the individual (Worthington & Juntunen, 1997). The advantage of the articles in this issue, however, is that, taken together, they emphasize the psychological experiences of youth who are making the transition from high school to work.

In contrast to the human capital theory assumptions that underlie many of the policy-based initiatives undertaken in this decade (Sweetland, 1996), career development theory emphasizes that individuals have the potential to exercise some agency in the school-to-work transition, assuming that certain psychological and social factors are in place (Krumboltz & Worthington, 1999; Lent et al., 1999; Savickas, 1999; Swanson & Fouad, 1999). The explicit application of existing career development theories, therefore, provides scholars with the conceptual tools they need to understand more fully the antecedents and consequences of an active and involved approach to the school-to-work transition.

In each of these articles, the focus on the individual reveals important insights about how work-bound youth can optimize their influence in a process that is very much dominated by broader social and economic forces. Savickas's (1999) thoughtful conclusions about the importance of awareness, information, and planning are generally consistent with a growing body of literature on the school-to-work transition that has emerged from other scholarly arenas, such as sociological analyses and narrative studies of working-class youth (Borman, 1991; Evans & Heinz, 1994). Swanson and Fouad ( 1999) present an excellent synthesis of the challenges of the school-towork transition from the perspective of person-environment (PE) fit theories. In contrast to the evident focus on the environment in current discourse on the school-to-work transition (Worthington & Juntunen, 1997), both the developmental and PE Fit theories encourage balanced perspectives that focus on the space between the individual and the context.

Krumboltz and Worthington ( 1999) present an excellent application of social learning theory to the school-to-work transition that highlights the inherent flexibility and elasticity of human experience. In an era when genetically based theories are receiving considerable public exposure (e.g., Hernstein & Murray, 1994), I applaud Krumboltz and Worthington as well as the social cognitive theory of Lent and his colleagues (1999) for underscoring the inherent flexibility of human behavior.

The social cognitive perspective advanced by Lent et al. ( 1999) is one of the most influential new theoretical perspectives in career development. Lent and his associates used social cognitive and social learning theory to propose a model that can account for a wide array of individual and social factors in the career choice and development processes. For example, these theorists' emphasis on self-efficacy beliefs provides a rich explanatory construct for researchers along with some tangible implications for practitioners. Self-efficacy beliefs may furnish work-bound youth with a critical internal psychological structure that will help them confidently negotiate the transition from school to work.

Another important common theme of these four articles is the acknowledgment that the school-to-work transition is a developmental process with both life-span and life-space dimensions (Super, Savickas, & Super, 1996). Regarding the life-span dimension, we, as career development theorists and practitioners, have been encouraged to look at the transition as entailing far more than a simple choice point in the later part of high school. Although this observation will certainly be music to the ears of the followers of the life-span, life-space developmental position, it also suggests a very welcome infusion of this very basic assumption of Super and his associates (Super et al., 1996) into the fabric of our major theories.

In addition, the authors of these articles were clear that the transition occurs in a highly complex and textured life space. Although the precise nature of the context varies among these theoretical perspectives, they share the view that the transition can be significantly facilitated or inhibited by one's access to supportive individuals and institutions.

Despite the intuitive and logical appeal of these four articles and the theoretical integrations they make, the articles raise some questions about the assumptions embedded in a direct application of traditional theories to the school-to-work transition.

QUESTIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

In short, I am concerned that by relying solely on existing theories, we may be inadvertently relegating the experiences of the workbound to the margins of our analyses. Moreover, we may be making some general assumptions about work-bound youth that are not necessarily based on contemporary empirical observations. The major elements of my argument are as follows:

1. Much as we would do as counselors, we need to be aware of the differences between ourselves and our research participants and find some meaningful, experience-near way of crossing that space. One of the hallmarks of recent inquiry into the school-to-work transition is the focus on understanding the way in which work-bound youth make sense of their experiences (Blustein et al., 1997; Borman, 1991; Evans & Heinz, 1994). Thus, depending exclusively on an existing array of theoretical ideas may result in a loss of information; more importantly, such an approach may inadvertently result in scholars and practitioners missing an opportunity to build ideas from the voices of work-bound youth and working-class adults, whose input into policy and educational reform efforts to date has been minimal at best.

2. There are some bodies of work that have in fact included a significant proportion of working class participants, such as Super's Career Pattern Study (Super & Overstreet, 1960) and many of the studies cited by Savickas (1999), but these were conducted at a time when economic options were far different than they are today; the possibility of obtaining a reasonably well-paying job with some security in a production-oriented industry is far less likely today than it was 40 or 50 years ago. The differences in the social and economic characteristics of the context are dramatic, thereby calling into question the applicability of assumptions drawn from a different era.

I am not proposing an either-or solution. I am deeply committed to ensuring that we conduct the sort of psychological research and inquiry that intentionally builds on the experiences of those on the margins of this country's socioeconomic structure. Yet it is also important to create new knowledge on the shoulders of our rich intellectual heritage. In this context, these four articles represent critically important contributions that should inform the next generation's research and theoretical innovation. However, by also grounding our theory development efforts in the experiences of workbound youth, we are more likely to acquire a knowledge base that is intimately connected to the targets of our efforts.

More precisely, I suggest that our efforts need to encompass two fronts: On one hand, examining the empirical validity of the ideas presented in these articles makes eminent sense. Yet at the same time, we need to use theory-building, qualitatively oriented strategies to develop ideas and inferences that emerge out of an experiencenear, empathic connection to work-bound youth. For example, in a recent review of the school-to-work literature (Blustein, Juntunen, & Worthington, in press), we found that many of the most important new ideas resulted from theory-building, discovery-oriented methods, which may not have emerged if the investigators had elected to define all of their constructs and theoretical premises a priori (e.g., Borman, 1991; Evans & Heinz, 1994).

The school-to-work transition offers vocational psychology a vast opportunity to be useful to a very large cohort of our population, and to reinvigorate itself with new ideas and methods. The work that needs to occur does not exclude theory-building or theory-testing studies; in fact, I believe that the synthesis of these perspectives offers the vocational counseling field the critical blend of intellectual rigor and cultural and social sensitivity needed to develop the most compelling theoretical perspectives, and, ultimately, the most useful interventions.

[Reference]

REFERENCES

[Reference]

Blustein, D. L., Juntunen, C. L., & Worthington, R. L. (in press). The school-towork transition: Adjustment challenges of the forgotten half. In S. D. Brown & R. W. Lent (Eds.), Handbook of counseling psychology (3rd ed.). New York: Wiley.

Blustein, D. L., Phillips, S. D., Jobin-Davis, K., Finkelberg, S. L., & Roarke, A. E. (1997). A theory-building investigation of the school to work transition. The Counseling Psychologist, 25, 364-402.

[Reference]

Borman, K M. (1991). The first real"job: A study of young workers. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

Evans, K. & Heinz, W. R. (Eds.). (1994). Becoming adults in England and Germany. London: Anglo-German Foundation.

Hernstein, R., & Murray, C. (1994). The bell curve: The reshaping of American life by differences in intelligence. New York: The Free Press. Krumboltz, J. D., & Worthington, R. L. (1999). The school-to-work transition from a learning theory perspective. The Career Development Quarterly, 47, 312-325.

Lent, R. W., Hackett, G., & Brown, S. D. (1999). A social cognitive view of schoolto-work transition. Career Development Quarterly, 47, 297-311. Savickas, M. L. (1999). The transition from school to work: A developmental perspective. Career Development Quarterly, 47, 326-336.

[Reference]

Super, D. E., & Overstreet, P. L. (1960). The vocational maturity of ninth-grade boys. New York: Teachers College Press.

Super, D. E., Savickas, M. L., Super, C. M. (1996). The life-span, life-space approach to careers. In D. Brown & L. Brooks (Eds.), Career choice and development (3rd ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Swanson, J. L., & Fouad, N. A. (1999). Applying theories of person-environment fit to the transition from school-to-work. The Career Development Quarterly, 47, 337-347.

Sweetland, S. R. (1996). Human capital theory: Foundations of a field of inquiry. Review of Educational Research, 66, 341-359. Worthington, R. L., & Juntunen, C. L. (1997). The vocational development of non-college-bound youth: Counseling psychology and the school-to-work transition movement. The Counseling Psychologist, 25, 323-363.

[Author Affiliation]

David L. Blustein

[Author Affiliation]

David L. Blustein is an associate professor in the Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology at Boston College, Chesnut Hill, Massachusetts. Correspondence regarding this article should be sent to David L. Blustein, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, Boston College, Campion Hall, Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 (e-mail: Blusteid@bc.edu).

AP Interview: Official's talk of mileage tax nixed

President Barack Obama will not adopt a policy to tax motorists based on how many miles (kilometers) they drive instead of how much gasoline they buy, his chief spokesman said Friday.

Press secretary Robert Gibbs commented after Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told The Associated Press that he wants to consider the idea, which has been proposed in some states but has angered many drivers.

"It is not and will not be the policy of the Obama administration," Gibbs told reporters, when asked for the president's thoughts about the policy and LaHood's remarks.

Gasoline taxes that for nearly half a century have paid for the federal share of highway and bridge construction can no longer be counted on to raise enough money to keep the nation's transportation system moving, LaHood told the AP in an interview Thursday.

"We should look at the vehicular miles program where people are actually clocked on the number of miles that they traveled," the former Illinois Republican lawmaker said Thursday.

LaHood spokeswoman Lori Irving said Friday that the secretary was speaking of the idea only in general terms, not as something being implemented as administration policy.

Most transportation experts see a vehicle miles traveled tax as a long-term solution, but Congress is being urged to move in that direction now by funding pilot projects.

The idea also is gaining ground in several states. Governors in Idaho and Rhode Island are talking about such programs, and a North Carolina panel suggested in December the state start charging motorists a quarter-cent for every mile as a substitute for the gas tax.

A tentative plan in Massachusetts to use GPS chips in vehicles to charge motorists by the mile has drawn complaints from drivers who say it is an Orwellian intrusion by government into the lives of citizens. Other motorists say it eliminates an incentive to drive more fuel-efficient cars since gas guzzlers will be taxed at the same rate as fuel sippers.

Besides a tax, more tolls for highways and bridges and more government partnerships with business to finance transportation projects are other funding options, LaHood, one of two Republicans in Obama's Cabinet, said in the interview Thursday.

"What I see this administration doing is this _ thinking outside the box on how we fund our infrastructure in America," he said.

Corruption Claims in R.I. Senate Race

PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Four years after a public corruption investigation brought down Providence Mayor Vincent "Buddy" Cianci and other officials, the issue has resurfaced in a contentious Senate race.

On Friday, former U.S. Attorney Margaret Curran - credited with convictions in the investigation code-named "Operation Plunder Dome" - endorsed Republican Sen. Lincoln Chafee over Democratic challenger Sheldon Whitehouse.

Chafee has accused Whitehouse of not doing enough to root out corruption, claiming he did not successfully prosecute a single public official during his eight years as U.S. attorney and attorney general. Chafee held a news conference this week to display a photo of Whitehouse and Cianci together.

Cianci, 64, is serving a 64-month sentence for racketeering conspiracy and is due to get out next year. Prosecutors had cast him as the head of an administration plagued by corruption.

Whitehouse counters that he launched an investigation that was the precursor to Plunder Dome, dubbed "Operation Crocodile Smile," when he was U.S. attorney, a job he held from 1994 to 1998 before serving four years as attorney general.

Curran said it's no surprise Plunder Dome has become a political football.

"It's natural that a case as significant as that would continue to generate media interest, that someone might decide it's relevant," she said at a news conference with Chafee to announce her endorsement.

Although Chafee often clashes with fellow Republicans and did not vote for President Bush in the last election, Whitehouse has spent most of his campaign talking about problems with the Republican Party. It's a message Whitehouse hopes will resonate in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans more than three to one, and in a year when Democrats hope to gain a majority in the Senate.

Curran did not criticize Whitehouse, once her boss at the U.S. attorney's office, and made a point to say she was not campaigning against him.

Madrid opera house boss hopes to attract more fans

The future director of Madrid's Teatro Real said Thursday he would work to make it one of the world's great opera houses and win more people over to the art.

"I aim to fascinate the public," said Gerard Mortier, 65, in his first meeting with the media since being appointed last week as the Teatro Real's artistic director from January 2010.

"One of the first things I've noticed about Madrid is that the opera house faces the royal palace and has its back to the city," he added. "I hope to keep the theater facing the palace but for it also to embrace the city and bring in the people."

The signing of Mortier, who runs the Paris Opera, is seen as a major coup for the opera house that has struggled for years to match the level of its competitors in other major cities. But the Belgian musician denied the Madrid theater was second division.

"No, I don't think so. The Teatro Real has enormous potential," said Mortier. "I hope we can make three or four house productions each year that they can be exported," he said. "We have to define the specific character of this theater."

He said the Teatro Real needed time because it has only been in its current form since 1997, when it reopened after nearly a decade of refurbishment.

The theater itself says it has big hopes.

Gregorio Maranon, president of the Teatro Real's management board, said Mortier's signing "stems from our search for excellence and our aim to improve every day and to occupy a prominent position among the leading international opera institutions."

Mortier will replace both artistic director Antonio Moral and musical director Jesus Lopez Cobos, whose contracts expire in 2010.

Mortier said it was too early to give details of his first program, but insisted 35 percent of the operas would be from the 20th century, although he would not forget the classics.

"This may sound like a cold shower to some people but it shouldn't be. My experience is that the public reacts effusively to modern opera. Twentieth-century opera helps us understand classical opera as well as modern music," he said.

He said he also hoped to attract more younger people to the opera and to emulate what he called the Paris Opera's feat of bringing down the average age of opera-goers from 58 to 42.

One of the world's most renowned opera directors, Mortier had been due to take over as general manager and artistic director of the New York City Opera next season. But he pulled out recently for financial reasons.

"New York was a very tough challenge for me. I worked there for two years, but in the end they decided to cut the budget by 40 percent and I knew that was it," he said.

Mortier said he planned to continue with his policy of working with several musical directors and not just one.

"I like to work a lot with groups of musical directors. I was criticized a lot for this in Paris but in the end people saw I was right. A variety of musical directors brings out the strength of the choir and orchestra."

He said he could not give details of possible signings because negotiations were still going on.

Much emphasis, he said, would be placed on strengthening the Madrid theater's choir, adding that for him singing was one of the most important aspects of opera and life.

"I love singing. It is what guides me in opera," said Mortier. "I experienced it with Fidelio in Paris and the final choruses. I firmly believe that through singing and art, the world can be changed," he said.

Madrid's position as a link to Latin America is another area he hopes to exploit. Mortier said he looked forward to working with Buenos Aires' Colon Theater in Argentina and the Bellas Artes in Mexico.

Mortier said he planned to travel around Spain for four months when he finishes in Paris next July, in order to meet performers and singers and get a better feel for the country.

NABC tells coaches NCAA will nix Pump Foundation

The National Association of Basketball Coaches says this will be the last year coaches can have financial relationships with the Harold Pump Foundation.

The foundation is a charity run by brothers David and Dana Pump.

The two are known as power brokers in college basketball, sponsoring basketball camps and summer leagues. The NABC says a directive from the NCAA expresses concern about "funneling of money" issues in men's basketball recruiting.

Calls to Double Pump Inc. in Westwood, Calif., were not immediately returned Friday.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Setting the record straight: Fresh vs. frozen

myth: Fresh vegetables are more nutritious than frozen or canned.

truth: Most "fresh" vegetables are trucked great distances and stored for long periods. Modern freezing processes, however, are performed so quickly that there's little time for nutrient loss. Canned food isn't bad either. Half-ripe fruits ripen en route to market. …

Henin says she can be better than before

Former world No.1 Justine Henin believes she has matured during her 20-month break from tennis and can be a better player when she makes a return to the sport next week.

Henin, 27, told a news conference Tuesday she "grew up" during her absence from the court and can eclipse the standard …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Smith's Lawyer Says He's Newborn's Dad

NASSAU, Bahamas - A lawyer for Anna Nicole Smith said Tuesday that he was the father of the reality TV star's newborn girl, who has been the couple's one "ray of hope" as they have grieved the death of her 20-year-old son in the Bahamas.

Howard K. Stern, who was with the family in the hospital the night that Daniel Smith died, told CNN's "Larry King Live" they had named their daughter Dannie Lynn Hope.

"Right now we have to somehow get through what we're going through," he said. "And I'll tell you, our baby is the one ray of hope."

Daniel Smith, 20, died Sept. 10 while visiting his mother as she recuperated from giving birth three days earlier. Authorities have …

Turning bad news into good returns.(Brief Article)

Legg Mason Funds' Michael Ray looks to profit from the market slide

Michael Ray isn't afraid of the current market. The vice president and head trader for Legg Mason Funds Management uses an investment strategy that seeks to make the best out of what most people would consider a bad situation.

                                                  Est. 5.-Yr. Company                       P/E on Projected    Annual EPS Exchange: Symbol   Price(*)    2001 Earnings       Growth  Ford Motor Co.     $24.28         19.20%            6.3% NYSE: F  Kroger Co.          25.47         16.6(**)          15.6 NYSE: KR  J.P. Morgan    Chase & Co.      44.51 … 

wonder emporiums; Hands-on adventures await children at museums around the region.(Life-Discovery)

Byline: JENNIFER GISH - Staff Writer

Need something to do with the kids during that day off from school or looking for a more educational birthday party setting than the place that serves up pizza next to an animatronic mouse?

Perhaps young scholars can quickly calculate museum density in the Capital Region. In the meantime, let's just say the institutions are bountiful. From imaginative play to hard-core science, kids can learn and have fun any time at these area museums:

The Children's Museum of Science and Technology

What: A hands-on museum with interactive exhibits exploring the natural world, space and physics. Boasts the largest live-animal collection in the Capital Region with more than 100 creatures under its roof. Includes "dome shows," which are …

PACKWOOD REFUSES TO BACK DOWN.(Main)

Byline: Associated Press

Sen. Bob Packwood said Monday that it would be up to the Senate, not his Oregon constituents, to decide whether he should remain in office despite allegations of sexual misconduct.

The Republican senator said he would not resign even if an overwhelming majority of Oregonians wanted him to.

"Whether or not you are effective in the Senate pretty much depends on how you make the arguments. That's the ultimate body that will decide whether I am effective," Packwood said at a news conference.

He pointed out that Oregon's other senator, Republican Mark O. Hatfield, was reprimanded by the Senate Ethics Committee for …

No. 1 FLORIDA 24, No. 2 OKLAHOMA 14

Florida 0 7 7 10_24
Oklahoma 0 7 0 7_14
Second Quarter
Fla_Murphy 20 pass from Tebow (Phillips kick), 14:02.
Okl_Gresham 6 pass from Bradford (Stevens kick), 11:49.
Third Quarter
Fla_Harvin 2 run (Phillips kick), 4:21.
Fourth Quarter
Okl_Gresham 11 pass from Bradford (Stevens kick), 12:13.
Fla_FG Phillips 27, 10:45.
Fla_Nelson 4 …

Vaughn denies killings; His lawyer enters plea of not guilty in slayings of wife, 3 children

With his hands cuffed and his legs shackled, Christopher Vaughnpleaded not guilty Friday to charges he fatally shot his wife andthree young children in the family's SUV in rural Will County.

The plea came as the 32-year-old Oswego man made his firstcourtroom appearance in Will County to face first-degree murdercharges for the June 14 shootings in Channahon Township.

Vaughn, clad in blue jail fatigues, didn't speak during the briefhearing before Will County Judge Daniel Rozak.

Instead, defense attorney Gerald Kielian entered the not guiltyplea on behalf of Vaughn, who was clean-shaven and had a new, shorthaircut.

Vaughn's parents, residents of the …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Banks Shouldn't Try to Herd Customers to Web Channels.

If you have been to any Internet seminar or have read books or magazines on electronic commerce, you probably have seen "The Cost Chart." This simple bar chart illustrates a powerful message: "Use e-commerce to move a customer from a higher- to a lower-cost channel and save a bundle of money."

Some of us working in the banking industry have a feeling of deja vu as we look at the Web as a cost-reduction strategy. Is moving expensive branch transactions to the Internet the same as what banks expected from automated teller machines and call centers? Absolutely.

History has shown us that customers are not cattle that can be "corralled" into a more cost-effective …

Altered gene expression in highly purified enterocytes from patients with active coeliac disease.(Research article)

Authors: Suzanne Bracken [1]; Greg Byrne [1]; Jacinta Kelly [1]; John Jackson [1]; Conleth Feighery (corresponding author) [1]

Background

Coeliac disease is a permanent intolerance to dietary prolamins from wheat, barley and rye. Ingestion of these proteins in susceptible individuals gives rise to an inflammatory lesion in the small intestine characterised by crypt hyperplasia and villous atrophy [1]. While progress has been made in understanding the mechanisms by which prolamins activate the immune system, the molecular events that ultimately lead to the intestinal lesion are, as yet, ill defined.

Coeliac disease has a strong HLA association with approximately 95% of coeliac patients expressing the HLA-DQ2 molecule [2]. A large population-based study showed the disease concordance rate between monozygotic twins to be 75% [3]. This rate is considerably higher than that for other multifactorial diseases such as Crohn's disease [4] or insulin dependent diabetes mellitus [5]. However, in the study by Greco

et al , the concordance rate for coeliac disease in HLA-matched dizygotic twins was found to be only 11% [3]. Thus, while the evidence points to a very strong HLA genetic contribution to coeliac disease, other non-HLA-linked genes must play a role.

Additional linkage studies have been performed in coeliac disease in an attempt to identify susceptibility loci other than the 6p21 HLA locus. Evidence has been found for linkage with the non-HLA loci 2q33, 5q31-33 and 19p13 [6] and candidate gene association studies within these loci have concentrated on genes known to be immunologically relevant to disease pathogenesis. Recent genome-wide association studies have identified a region harbouring IL-2 and IL-21 as a further potential genetic susceptibility region predisposing to celiac disease [7, 8]. However, so far no gene has been conclusively proven to confer a risk of coeliac disease. Hence, a hypothesis-free approach to selecting genes for study, as employed here, may be useful.

Much research in coeliac disease has focused on the role of T-cells and the pro-inflammatory cytokines they produce [9, 10, 11, 12, 13]. It has been suggested that the direct effect of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-[gamma] and TNF-[alpha] may contribute to the characteristic coeliac lesion [9]. Members of the metalloproteinase (MMP) family have been implicated in coeliac disease pathology. These enzymes are capable of tissue remodelling by degradation of proteins in the extracellular matrix and basement membrane. Several studies have demonstrated elevated levels of MMP expression in the coeliac lesion [14, 15, 16].

It has been proposed that dysregulated differentiation of epithelial cells in the small intestine may also play a role in the generation of the coeliac lesion. Diosdado

et al have suggested that stem cells in the villous crypt proliferate, but do not receive the signal to differentiate leading to the development of undifferentiated, hyperplastic crypts and subsequently, villous atrophy [17]. It has recently been reported that gliadin can directly cause up-regulation of several epithelial cell surface molecules such as HLA-DR, ICAM-1 and MICA [18]. Furthermore, other studies have reported increased expression of several cytokines in the epithelium of patients with active celiac disease including IL-15, MIF, TNF-[alpha] and iNOS [19, 20, 21]. Thus, the intestinal enterocyte is emerging as a potential contributor to coeliac disease pathogenesis and must be studied further.

The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the epithelial cell in coeliac disease, employing a gene microarray based technique. This allowed for the analysis of the simultaneous expression of thousands of gene transcripts, in a hypothesis-free manner [22]. Epithelial cells were isolated from biopsies taken from coeliac patients with active disease and compared to controls, thereby examining the gluten-induced inflammatory environment of the coeliac lesion. In the study, 102 genes were found to have significantly altered expression. Further studies using RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry were used to validate altered expression of gap junction protein alpha 4 and small proline rich protein 3.

Results

Microarray analysis of coeliac duodenal epithelial cells

DTT/EDTA treatment was employed to strip the epithelial layer from patient intestinal biopsies. Magenetic cell sorting was then used to deplete CD3

+ cells, and enterocyte suspensions with purities of 98-99% were routinely obtained (Figure 1). Using Atlas Glass Human 3.8I oligonucleotide micoarrays (BD Biosciences Clontech, UK), we analysed the gene expression profile of a homogeneous population of duodenal epithelial cells taken from patients with active coeliac disease, in comparison to control patients. Of the 3,800 genes present on the array (all of which have been previously annotated), 3549 had sufficient data across the five experiments for comparison. Many of these genes showed fold-change ratios with little or no deviation from 1. Thus, to focus on only differentially expressed genes, the list was filtered on a fold-change of 1.25-fold. A fold-change of 1.25 has been described in previously published microarray experiments [23, 24] and has been shown to indicate reliable differences in gene expression [23]. This filtering yielded a list of 1,256 genes with which to perform analysis. Of these 1,256 genes, 827 were up-regulated and 429 were down-regulated. A p-value of 0.05 was used as a cut-off to distinguish significantly expressed genes, which yielded a gene list of 102 (68 up-regulated and 34 down-regulated) genes which are presented in Table 1. These 102 genes were grouped according to functional categories, including protein transport, ion transport, proliferation, differentiation, anti-apoptosis/survival, structural, adhesion, metabolism, transcription, protein biosynthesis, signal transduction, cell cycle and DNA repair, and immune response and inflammation (categories of genes and up/down-regulation are summarised in Figure 2 and Table 2 respectively).Figure 1: Flow cytometric analysis of purified epithelial cells . A: Size versus granularity plot. B and C correspond to the population of cells within gate 1; and demonstrate control antibody and BerEP-4 expression, respectively. D and E correspond to the population of cells within gate 2; and demonstrate control antibody and CD3 expression, respectively. [figure omitted]Figure 2: 102 differentially expressed genes organised by category. [figure omitted]Table 1 caption: Differentially expressed genes. [table omitted]Table 2 caption: Summary of microarray results by gene category. [table omitted]

Verification of Selected Genes by Real-time PCR

In order to corroborate the microarray gene expression results genes were selected for validation by real-time RT-PCR using the same patient samples. Miron

et al have demonstrated that the popular strategy of selecting genes with the greatest fold-increase generally fails as a global validation strategy while a random selection of genes for validation (10-25 genes) is a more robust technique [25]. We therefore used random-stratified sampling as a gene selection method. Ten genes representing a range of p-values were randomly selected for quantitative RT-PCR analysis.

The RT-PCR expression values were calculated from a standard curve and the mean of the values calculated for the coeliac samples was divided by the mean for the control samples to give a ratio. The RT-PCR ratios were then compared to the microarray ratios (Table 3). Eight of the ten genes showed up-regulation of expression in coeliac disease with both microarray and real-time RT-PCR analysis. One gene showed up-regulation of expression in coeliac disease with microarray analysis and non-differential expression with real-time RT-PCR. One gene showed down-regulation of expression in coeliac disease with microarray analysis and up-regulation of expression with real-time RT-PCR analysis. Thus, 80% of the genes tested in this study were found to be validated, which compares well to a reported average RT-PCR confirmation rate of 70% [26].

Table 3 caption: Comparison of fold-changes obtained for genes by microarray and by TaqMan RT-PCR [table omitted]

Immunohistochemical Analysis

Two of the genes validated by real-time RT-PCR, were selected for …