четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Mexico rules out engine failure in copter crash

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican officials ruled out engine failure in the helicopter crash that killed the government's No. 2 official, saying Sunday that all evidence in the investigation so far points to an accident.

Civil aviation director Gilberto Lopez Meyer said at a news conference that a study of radar images led investigators to conclude that up to the last seconds of the helicopter's flight, its path did not change and conditions were normal.

Lopez said there were no signs the pilot lost control of the helicopter before it smashed into a mountainside south of the capital Friday morning.

Officials have blamed sudden foggy conditions, which they speculate forced the …

Contact lenses top cause of device problem in kids

More than 70,000 children and teens go to the emergency room each year for injuries and complications from medical devices and contact lenses are the leading culprit, the first detailed national estimate suggests.

About one-fourth of the problems were things like infections and eye abrasions in contact lens wearers. These are sometimes preventable and can result from wearing contact lenses too long without cleaning them.

Other common problems found by researchers at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration include puncture wounds from hypodermic needles breaking off in the skin while injecting medicine or illegal drugs; infections in young children with ear …

Senate gives advice and consent; U.S. becomes original CWC party

PRESIDENT BILL Clinton deposited the U.S. instrument of ratification for the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) with the United Nations on April 25, four days before the treaty's entry into force. This last-minute action, made possible by Senate approval of the resolution of advice and consent to ratification, allowed the United States to become an original party to the convention. (See Factfile, p. 41.) The multilateral treaty, signed in 1993, bans the use, production, stockpiling and development of chemical weapons and includes extensive verification measures to enforce compliance with its provisions. Parties are also required to destroy their chemical weapon stockpiles and production …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Tamil Tiger rebels kill 9 civilians in southern Sri Lanka, says defense ministry

Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels fatally shot nine civilians in southern Sri Lanka, the defense ministry said Friday, amid escalating violence following the government's withdrawal from a tattered cease-fire with the insurgents.

Police found the bullet-riddled bodies in the village of Thanamalvila, about 260 kilometers (162 miles) southeast of Colombo, said a defense ministry official, adding the three other people had been wounded.

The official, who blamed Tamil rebels for the Thursday night killings, spoke on condition of anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media.

Spokesmen for the rebels could not immediately be reached for comment. …

European Union considering Serbia budget support

The European Union may offer support for Serbia's budget to help the Balkan country counter the effects of the global economic crisis, an official said Thursday.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said the 27-nation bloc is reviewing "a proposal to put forward a budgetary support facility to help Serbia overcome the crisis."

Rehn gave no details. He said the move presents a "concrete sign of our support in these times of economic crisis."

Serbia, which has relied heavily on foreign investment and aid in the past several years, is expected to face budgetary problems in 2009 because of reduced financial influx from abroad …

Fed will allow banks to buy healthy thrifts

WASHINGTON The Federal Reserve Board voted Thursday to permitbank holding companies to buy healthy thrift institutions, a decisionexpected to accelerate the shrinkage of the savings industry and theexpansion of interstate banking.

The 6-0 vote culminated a bitter, two-year struggle amongfinancial industry groups seeking to influence the central bank'sruling.

But it also is something of an anticlimax because S&L bailoutlegislation signed into law two weeks ago authorized the Fed to makethe decision and members of Congress clearly expected it would.

Under the federal regulatory scheme, banks and savingsassociations were kept separate until 1982, when …

Rest Usually Leads to Victory in Series

NEW YORK - As if the Detroit Tigers don't have enough going for them, consider this: The last six teams that started the World Series with five or more days of rest all went on to win.

While the Tigers took an NFL-like week off after sweeping Oakland for the AL pennant, the New York Mets or St. Louis Cardinals will play Saturday night's Series opener with only one or two days of rest.

"I would love to be in their situation. I think we all would," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said before Game 6 on Wednesday night.

Following Tuesday night's 4-2 win in St. Louis, the Cardinals headed to Shea Stadium with a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series.

Going back …

Boston Globe, union reach tentative agreement

The Boston Globe and its largest union have reached a tentative agreement that will save the newspaper $10 million through salary and benefit cuts.

The Globe and the Boston Newspaper Guild issued separate e-mail statements late Tuesday announcing the agreement. The deal is scheduled to come to a vote before Guild membership _ made up of 700 editorial, advertising and business employees _ on July 20.

Under the agreement, salaries would be cut by 5.94 percent and language in contracts regarding job security would be altered.

The 23 percent wage cut will remain in place until the Guild vote. In the meantime, employees will receive a lump sum payment …

Many Welcome Return Of Patrols as Overdue

As four police officers entered the building at 4445 S. State inRobert Taylor on Tuesday, three teenagers who had been in the lobbymade a quick exit.

The officers stopped them, learned they lived in the building,and laid down the law: No more loitering would be tolerated. Gang orno gang.

Cheryl Donahue, a 20-year resident, peered up from the concretebelow as police canvassed the prisonlike hallways lining the sides ofthe building floor by floor.

"It does your heart good to see them," said Donahue, 52.

The police patrolled in teams of four. They listened tocomplaints from residents, checked dark stairways, and knocked ondoors where loud voices …

A candidate again, Carl Lewis ready to run

WESTAMPTON, N.J. (AP) — Nine-time Olympic gold medalist Carl Lewis said he's happy he appears to have beaten the challenge of his bid to run for office in New Jersey.

Lewis said Wednesday he's looking forward to turning his attention away from the partisan politics of the race and focusing on learning the issues and campaigning for the 8th District state Senate seat. An appeals court a day earlier restored his name to the ballot.

"I'm not running for state Senate because I wanted to become a politician," Lewis said during his first public comments since the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in his favor Tuesday. "I'm running because I wanted to serve."

Republicans …

Jackson fans 12 in Diamondbacks' win over Marlins

Edwin Jackson struck out a career-high 12 in eight shutout innings to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to a 5-1 victory over the Florida Marlins on Monday night.

Stephen Drew, John Hester, and Conor Jackson each drove in a run for the Diamondbacks, who won for just the second time in 10 games.

Jackson (2-5), who went 13-9 with Detroit last season and earned a spot on the All-Star team, came in with a 1-5 record and 7.43 ERA. In addition to his struggles, he was facing a team that he was 0-3 with an ERA over 11 in four career appearances.

Manuel Gonzalez became the first Venezuelan umpire in major league baseball history, working at third base. Gonzalez, …

Bath doctor leads child fatigue research

An expert from Bath has won pounds730,000 to investigate chronicfatigue syndrome in children.

The ground-breaking research will be carried out by Dr EstherCrawley, who works at the city's Mineral Water Hospital.

She will be looking to get a better understanding of the cause,treatment and prevention of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and ME inchildren using a prestigious fellowship and funding.

The money is from the National Institute of Heath Research, whichhas awarded a clinician scientist fellowship to Dr Crawley,consultant paediatrician at the hospital - whose formal name is theRoyal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases.

Her study will be the first to look at CFS/ME in children in suchdetail.

It is a common childhood condition with one estimate reckoning itaffects two per cent of children, with youngsters aged between 10and 12 most likely to be affected.

Dr Crawley, who also works at the Centre for Child and AdolescentHealth at the University of Bristol, said: "I want to answer themany unresolved questions about the best ways to treat and managethe patients for whom I am responsible."

Research from 2000 concluded the majority of children diagnosedwith CFS first developed the illness during the autumn school term.

It is thought that the stress some children experience at school,combined with the arrival of infectious illnesses brought on by thewinter and the classroom environment can trigger the illness.

Dr Crawley will use the University of Bristol's Avon LongitudinalStudy of Parents and Children, also known as Children of the 90s,which is a database of 14,000 youngsters born in the former Avon inthe 1990s, in her research.

She will also develop and test an education package for childrenwho are missing school because of fatigue or tiredness, to see ifdevelopment of full CFS/ME can be prevented. The economic impact ofschool absences due to fatigue will also be measured.

Dr Crawley, who has been involved in the development of theGovernment watchdog the National Institute for Health and ClinicalExcellence's guidance for the condition, added: "This research iscrucial to help us to understand the risk factors and prevalence ofCFS/ME in children, and to give us an improved understanding of themost effective ways to treat and prevent the development of thiscondition.

"Current models of care for children are based on adult evidenceand there is no information on outcome, treatment or prognosis forchildren who are severely affected, or the very young."

The project will begin in the next few weeks and will be carriedout over five years.

The hospital runs the largest regional paediatric CFS/ME clinicalservice in the UK, and has a national reputation.

In Memoriam: Waldemar R. Hertwig

Waldemar R. (Wally) Hertwig, a retired research associate in Amoco Oil Design Economics, died April 1 , 201 0 in San Diego, CA. He was 89.

A native of San Francisco, Hertwig earned BS and MS degrees in chemical engineering from Columbia Univ. In 1 943, he joined Standard Oil of Indiana at the Whiting Refinery, making aviation gasoline for the war effort. He was later in charge of catalytic cracking process development, and then Ultraforming process development and Ultraforming process coordination for the Amoco refinery system.

In the 1960s, as research associate in the Design and Economics Div. of Amoco's Naperville, IL, Research Center, Hedwig moved into process evaluation, including resid hydroprocessing, tar sands upgrading, and crude replacement programs for the Mandan, Wood River, and Texas City refineries. Based on Hertwig's economics, a new resid processing unit was built at Texas City to handle high-sulfur crude; that unit was nearing startup when he retired in 1980.

A 50-year member of AIChE, Hertwig was a registered Professional Engineer in Indiana and Illinois. He is survived by a daughter (Betsie) and a son (Tom), who is also a chemical engineer. He was predeceased by his wife of 56 years, Ruth.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Springsteen: Still in love with a Jersey girl

TRENTON, N.J. -- Bruce Springsteen has turned to cyberspace torefute rumors that he and wife Patti Scialfa are splitting up.

In a posting on his official Web site, the New Jersey-born rockerwrites that he and Scialfa are still committed to each other.

"Due to the unfounded and ugly rumors that have appeared in thepapers over the last few days, I felt they shouldn't pass withoutcomment," he wrote. "Patti and I have been together for 18 years --the best 18 years of my life."

The New York Post reported Thursday that Springsteen's andScialfa's marriage was on the rocks due to his relationship with aSept. 11 widow he met.

Nigeria oil delta agency under scrutiny for fraud

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — A government agency assigned to build roads and hospitals in Nigeria's oil-rich southern delta awarded contracts, but never saw construction carried out in the endemically poor region, the country's presidency said Tuesday.

The Niger Delta Development Commission let contractors escape the responsibility of their work and collect government funds, said a statement from the office of President Goodluck Jonathan. The alleged fraud came in a region that fills Nigeria's coffers with billions of dollars in oil revenue that remain under the control of politicians and the elite with little oversight in a nation routinely considered by analysts to be one of the world's most corrupt.

In the presidential statement Tuesday, Jonathan promised to "sanitize" the commission.

"Project abandonment is totally unacceptable to us. The era of contractors taking money and not doing their work is over," Jonathan said. "If the (commission) is to act as a catalyst for development in the Niger Delta, then we must act to redeem the situation."

The presidency said it would conduct an audit of the commission's accounts and forward information it discovers to police in hopes of arresting those responsible.

The commission, founded in 2000, is charged with providing roads, electricity, hospitals and other needed facilities to the Niger Delta, a region of mangroves and swamps about the size of South Carolina. Despite 50 years of oil production there, aging cinderblock hospitals lack medical supplies and villagers drink polluted water.

A spokesman for the commission could not be reached for comment Tuesday. On its website, the commission posted a recent newspaper article that quoted Chibuzor Igwuoha, the commission's managing director.

"Everybody wants business as usual, once you deviate from what is known, even if it will bring the very best result, people will attack you first," the article quoted Igwuoha as saying.

Georgia beats Romania 25-9 in Rugby World Cup

PALMERSTON NORTH, New Zealand (AP) — Georgia beat Romania 25-9 in a World Cup Pool C match at Arena Manawatu on Wednesday.

___

Georgia 25 (Mamuka Gorgodze try; Merab Kvirikashvili 5 penalties, conversion, Malkhaz Urjukashvili penalty), Romania 9 (Danut Dumbrava 2 penalties, Florin Vlaicu penalty). HT: 12-6.

Woman claiming assault sues hospital, security firm: Says she woke to find worker fondling her

A 50-year-old Bensenville woman who claims she was sexuallyassaulted by a Central DuPage Hospital employee last winter filed alawsuit against the hospital and Levy Security Corp. on Thursday,alleging both parties conspired to obstruct justice by trying to hidethe crime from police.

"Instead of trying to help me, they were far more interested intrying to help the hospital they represented," Teressa Miranda said,tearfully recounting the alleged Dec. 27 incident while seated nextto her attorneys, Tom Leahy and Enrico Mirabelli.

Miranda said she tried to get nurses' attention by pressing thealert button when she woke up from the effects of anesthesia andfound Sean Burns' left hand on her left naked breast and his righthand on his genitals. When Miranda realized the 24-year-old patientcare technician had disconnected the system, she said, she ranscreaming for help, only to be escorted back into her room by a malenurse who commanded her "to please be quiet" and "quit disturbing theother patients."

Burns was sent home and Miranda was repeatedly interrogated byhospital and security officials who suggested she imagined theincident and overreacted, according to the lawsuit filed in DuPageCounty. She was eventually told the matter would be dealt with "in-house." Miranda's husband, a Bensenville police officer, reported thecharge to Winfield police the next day.

'SEVERAL MILLION DOLLARS' SOUGHT

The mother of three has regular operations because she suffersfrom pseudotumor cerebri, a condition that causes a dangerous buildupof fluid around the brain.

Miranda said her experiences at the hospital made her more sick."I don't know how long I was touched, abused or fondled, and all thisuncertainty just plays in my head all the time," said Miranda, whohas been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Burns, who has been charged with criminal sexual abuse, is alsonamed in the lawsuit, which lists Miranda's husband, Willie, as a co-plaintiff and asks for "not less than several million dollars" forbattery, emotional distress and negligence. Burns, of Montgomery, hassince been fired.

Mirabelli, who called the hospital's actions the "worst attemptedcover-up since Watergate," suggested the Illinois Department ofPublic Health require hospitals to report rapes to authorities beforedoing their own internal investigations.

Melaney Arnold, an IDPH spokeswoman, said the department isconsidering adding a provision requiring hospitals to notifyauthorities of sexual assaults as it revises the hospital license actcode.

Meanwhile, hospital officials said they did all they could toassist Teressa Miranda. "We believe Central DuPage Hospital respondedappropriately," a hospital statement said Thursday. A spokesman withChicago-based Levy Security refused comment.

rhussain@suntimes.com

Deals to be found ; There are great deals on offer for first-time buyers at Tamarinds in Colchester

First-time buyers are urged to take a closer look at theincredible deals on offer at Tamarinds in Colchester, where theycould own a brand new two-bedroom apartment for as little as Pounds106,246 - over Pounds 34,000 less than the price of a similarly-sized second-hand property in the area.

Taylor Wimpey's amazing Easystart initiative gives first-timebuyers the chance to secure selected apartments at Tamarinds forjust 85% of the price - and with full purchase prices at thisstunning development already thousands of pounds better value than atypical two-bedroom home in the CO4 postcode area, this offer isbound to be popular with property seekers.

Under this scheme, all the purchaser has to do is find a depositfor as little as 5% - just Pounds 6,250 - and Taylor Wimpey willhelp arrange a mortgage covering 80% of the price.

The housebuilder will then provide the remaining 15% equity inthe form of an interestfree loan to boost the down-payment on theproperty, which can be repaid in up to three instalments over a 10-year period.

Michael O'Leary, regional sales and marketing director for TaylorWimpey, says: "Our fabulous two-bedroom apartments at Tamarinds arealready incredibly good value for money - our full purchase pricesare between Pounds 5,000 and Pounds 15,000 lower than comparableproperties in the area.

"And with Easystart, first-time buyers who might otherwise beunable to raise enough money for a deposit on their first home cansecure the home of their dreams for 85% of the purchase price - andbag the bargain of a life-time as well."

The stylish two-bedroom apartments available at Tamarinds are theideal choice for individuals or couples in search of their firsthome. Each apartment benefits from a spacious lounge/dining room andopen-plan kitchen, an en suite master bedroom, a well-proportionedsecond bedroom and a main bathroom. Selected plots have attractivebay windows to living areas and many homes feature Juliet balconies.All have an allocated parking space. Prices range from just Pounds124,995 to Pounds 134,995.

Like all new homes at Tamarinds, the apartments available now arecompleted to a high standard specification, including centralheating, double-glazing and fitted kitchens with integrated oven,hob and hood. The development enjoys an exceptional location, withineasy reach of both Colchester town centre and the beautiful ruralEssex landscape, which inspired old masters from Constable toGainsborough.

To find out more about Easystart apartments at Tamarinds, visitthe sales centre and show home in Tufnell Way, off Bergholt Road,Colchester, open Thursdays to Mondays from 10am to 5.30pm.Alternatively, the sales executive can be contacted on 0845 0264072.

Information on all Taylor Wimpey developments across the regionis available by calling 0845 672 7794, or by visitingwww.taylorwimpey.co.uk

City urges state to pass gender violence act

City urges state to pass gender violence act

Just hours after the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 vote, ruled that rape victims can't sue their attackers in federal court, Leslie Landis, a spokesperson for the mayor's administration, Monday urged Illinois lawmakers to pass the Gender Violence Act.

Landis, who is project manager for the Mayor's Office on Domestic Violence, told the Chicago Defender that the Gender Violence Act, introduced by Rep. Sara Feigenholtz (D-12th) should be approved by state lawmakers.

"We now need to make this pass," Landis said. "It is vital that we pass this legislation so victims (of rape) have the right to sue their attacker in state court."

However, that wasn't how the High Court saw this issue for the justices ruled against a part of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act and virtually said it's an issue that should be considered at the state's level.

Landis said Illinois, in having such an Act introduced, "is in the vanguard" on the issue of rape victims suing their attackers.

However, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who gave the majority decision, said: "Gender-motivated crimes of violence are not, in any sense of the phrase, economic activity. Thus far in our nation's history, our cases have upheld commerce clause regulation of intrastate activity only where that activity is economic in nature."

He said if Congress "may regulate gender-motivated violence, it would be able to regulate murder or any other type of violence, (and) family law and other areas of traditional state regulation.

"The Constitution requires a distinction between what is truly national and what is truly local. The regulation and punishment of intrastate violence that is not directed at the instrumentalities, channels or goods involved in interstate commerce has always been the province of the states."

Referring to the petitioner, former Virginia Tech student Christy Brzonkala who sued two football players she claimed raped her in a dormitory room, Rehnquist said "if accepted, (Brzonkala's) reasoning would allow Congress to regulate any crime as long as the nationwide, aggregated impact of that crime has substantial effects on employment, production, transit or consumption."

Still referring to Brzonkala's allegations, the justice added: "If the allegations here are true, no civilized system of justice could fail to provide her a remedy for the conduct of respondent (Antonio) Morrison (whom she sued accusing him and James Crawford, another student athlete of allegedly raping her).

"But, under our federal system that remedy must be provided by the commonwealth of Virginia, and not by the U.S."

The justice added: "Gender-based violence in the 1990's was shown to operate in a manner similar to racial discrimination in the 1960's in reducing the mobility of employees and their production and consumption of goods shipped in interstate commerce.

"Violence against women may be found to affect interstate commerce and affect it substantially.

"Today's majority, however, finds no significance whatever in the state support for the act based upon the states' acknowledged failure to deal adequately with gender-based violence in state courts, and the belief of their own law enforcement agencies that national action is essential."

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Bush Commutes Libby Prison Sentence

WASHINGTON - President Bush spared former White House aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby from a 2 1/2-year prison term in the CIA leak investigation Monday, delivering a political thunderbolt in the highly charged criminal case. Bush said the sentence was just too harsh.

Bush's move came just five hours after a federal appeals panel ruled that Libby could not delay his prison term. That meant Libby was likely to have to report soon, and it put new pressure on the president, who had been sidestepping calls by Libby's allies to pardon Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff.

"I respect the jury's verdict," Bush said in a statement. "But I have concluded that the prison sentence given to Mr. Libby is excessive. Therefore, I am commuting the portion of Mr. Libby's sentence that required him to spend thirty months in prison."

Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald disputed the president's assertion that the prison term was excessive. Libby was sentenced under the same laws as other criminals, Fitzgerald said. "It is fundamental to the rule of law that all citizens stand before the bar of justice as equals," the prosecutor said.

Libby's attorney, Theodore Wells, said in a statement that the Libby family was grateful for Bush's action and continued to believe in his innocence.

Bush's decision enraged Democrats and cheered conservatives - though some of the latter wished Bush had granted a full pardon.

"Libby's conviction was the one faint glimmer of accountability for White House efforts to manipulate intelligence and silence critics of the Iraq war," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. "Now, even that small bit of justice has been undone."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Bush's decision showed the president "condones criminal conduct."

Unlike a pardon, which would have wiped away Libby's criminal record, Bush's commutation voided only the prison term.

The president left intact a $250,000 fine and two years' probation for his conviction of lying and obstructing justice in a probe into the leak of a CIA operative's identity. The former operative, Valerie Plame, contends the White House was trying to discredit her husband, a critic of Bush's Iraq policy.

Bush said his action still "leaves in place a harsh punishment for Mr. Libby."

Libby was convicted in March, the highest-ranking White House official ordered to prison since the Iran-Contra affair roiled the Reagan administration in the 1980s. Arms were secretly sold to Iran to gain freedom for American hostages, with the money funneled to anti-communist guerrillas in Nicaragua in spite of a congressional ban. Bush's father, former President George H.W. Bush, issued pardons for six former officials shortly before leaving office in 1992.

Testimony in the Libby case revealed the extraordinary steps that Bush and Cheney were willing to take to discredit a critic of the Iraq war.

Libby's supporters celebrated the president's decision.

"President Bush did the right thing today in commuting the prison term for Scooter Libby," said House Republican Whip Roy Blunt of Missouri.

"That's fantastic. It's a great relief," said former Ambassador Richard Carlson, who helped raise millions for Libby's defense fund. "Scooter Libby did not deserve to go to prison and I'm glad the president had the courage to do this."

Already at record lows in the polls, Bush risked a political backlash with his decision. President Ford tumbled in the polls after his 1974 pardon of Richard M. Nixon, and the decision was a factor in Ford's loss in the 1976 presidential election.

White House officials said Bush knew he could take political heat and simply did what he thought was right. They would not say what advice Cheney might have given the president.

On the other hand, Bush's action could help Republican presidential candidates by letting them off the hook on the question of whether they would pardon Libby.

Bush said Cheney's former aide was not getting off free.

"The reputation he gained through his years of public service and professional work in the legal community is forever damaged," Bush said. "His wife and young children have also suffered immensely. He will remain on probation. The significant fines imposed by the judge will remain in effect. The consequences of his felony conviction on his former life as a lawyer, public servant and private citizen will be long-lasting."

A spokeswoman for Cheney said simply, "The vice president supports the president's decision."

The White House said Bush came to his decision in the past week or two and made it final Monday because of the ruling of the appeals panel, which meant Libby would be going to prison soon.

The president's announcement came just as prison seemed likely for Libby. He recently lost an appeals court fight that was his best chance to put the sentence on hold, and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons had already designated him inmate No. 28301-016.

Bush's statement made no mention of the term "pardon," and he made clear that he was not willing to wipe away all penalties for Libby.

The president noted Libby supporters' argument that the punishment did not fit the crime for a "first-time offender with years of exceptional public service."

Yet, he added: "Others point out that a jury of citizens weighed all the evidence and listened to all the testimony and found Mr. Libby guilty of perjury and obstructing justice. They argue, correctly, that our entire system of justice relies on people telling the truth. And if a person does not tell the truth, particularly if he serves in government and holds the public trust, he must be held accountable."

Bush then stripped away the prison time.

The leak case has hung over the White House for years. After CIA operative Valerie Plame's name appeared in a 2003 syndicated newspaper column, Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald questioned top administration officials, including Bush and Cheney, about their possible roles.

Nobody was ever charged with the leak, including Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage or White House political adviser Karl Rove, who provided the information for the original article. Prosecutors said Libby obstructed the investigation by lying about how he learned about Plame and whom he told.

Plame believes Libby and other White House officials conspired to leak her identity to reporters in 2003 as retribution against her husband, Joseph Wilson, who criticized what he said was the administration's misleading use of prewar intelligence on Iraq.

Attorney William Jeffress said he had spoken to Libby briefly by phone and "I'm happy at least that Scooter will be spared any prison time. ... The prison sentence was imminent, but obviously the conviction itself is a heavy blow to Scooter."

A White House official notified the trial judge, U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton, of the decision. Walton, a Bush appointee who served in the White House under the president's father, had cited the "overwhelming" evidence against Libby when he handed down his sentence. A courthouse spokesman said Walton would not comment.

---

Associated Press writer Matt Apuzzo contributed to this report.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

[ SPIN CONTROL ]

Bjork, "Vespertine"

(Elektra) rock *;*;*;1/2

Comparisons between Bjork's fifth album and the work of Sigur Rosare inevitable, and not just because they're the only twointernationally renowned alternative-rock stars that the tiny frozennation of Iceland has ever produced.

The lovably wiggy diva has been moving slowly but surely in thedirection of Sigur Ros' icebergs-in-the-moonlight ambient Muzak forseveral albums now. To date, it's been a disappointment; her last twoefforts were pale shadows of 1995's masterful "Post." But on"Vespertine," she finally manages a credible fusing of her ebullientvocals and enigmatic, electronic backing tracks.

This is not to say that "Vespertine" is as good as Bjork at herfull-throttle best--the flashes of anger in her early solo effortsand the Sugarcubes are still missed. But she has surpassed Sigur Rosat their own game. Few voices in modern rock are as potent asBjork's, an instrument that is worthy of the opera-house settings ofher upcoming tour.

Jim DeRogatis

Stereolab, "Sound-Dust"

(Elektra) rock *;*;*;1/2

Since 1996's "Emperor Tomato Ketchup," avant-garde popstersStereolab have been more interested in rhythm than melody, and that'sbeen a loss. The best of their early work (almost everything before'96) paid attention to both, and the group's jams were as memorablefor their hypnotizing beats as for their insidiously catchy hooks.

The balance is restored on "Sound-Dust." Though the space-ageloungesters are still favoring fractured, funky, or jazzy rhythmsover the insistent "motorik" rock of their early days, the groovesare paired here with great, big, hum-along horn lines and thepatented joyous vocal "la-la-la's" of Laetitia Sadier and MaryHansen, restored to their righteous place at the front of the mix.

Recorded in large part in Chicago with longtime collaborators JohnMcEntire and Jim O'Rourke, "Sound-Dust" could stand with Wilco's"Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" as one of the most inventive pop discs of 2001(provided that the latter ever gets released), evidence that in theright hands, the more esoteric ideas of the "post-rock" movement canindeed be incorporated into darn catchy tunes.

Jim DeRogatis

The Butthole Surfers,

"Weird Revolution"

(Hollywood) rock *;1/2

The Butthole Surfers' first release in five years is a majordisappointment for anyone for anyone who ever admired the Austin, TXmadmen in their psychedelic heyday, when they delivered subversiveweirdness with unaffected glee and accidental pop smarts to rivaltheir obvious mentor and predecessor, Roky Erickson.

The newest from the Buttholes sounds like the work of a completelydifferent band, and it isn't even all that new. Earlier versions ofmany of these tracks were set to appear on the followup to the alsodisappointing "Electric Larryland," but Capitol pulled that discweeks before its release, and the litigious Buttholes wound up in aprotracted fight with the label. Now they're back on Disney'scorporate music arm (of all places!), but there's little reason foranyone to care.

Inspired by the alternative/industrial hit "Jesus Built My Hotrod"(and the cash that it must have generated), lead Butthole GibbyHaynes tries to clone that dismissible novelty on most of these 12tracks, leaning on canned electronic rhythms, hokey vocal effects,kitschier than usual pro-drug lyrics, and a celebrity cameo from KidRock on the opening track and single, "Shame of Life."

Nothing is sadder than an aging oddball desperately trying to sellout--especially when nobody is buying.

Jim DeRogatis

Al Kooper, "Rare + Well Done: The Greatest and Most ObscureRecordings 1964-2001"

(Columbia/Legacy) *;*;*;1/2 Rock

As a multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, composer, arranger andproducer, Al Kooper has shaped the direction of modern rock as fewartists have during the last 40 years. From the day he bluffed hisway into the keyboard job on Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" tohis "Super Session" hit jam album to his seminal brass-rock groupBlood Sweat & Tears and more recently his impressive soundtrack andproduction credits, he's never followed a predictable course.

Longtime observers might have guessed that when the endlesslyinventive Kooper compiled his two-CD career retrospective, he'dchange the "greatest hits" package concept, just as he realigns theplaying field for everything else he does. Disc one includes 18unreleased tracks recorded since 1964, plus his first single, from1965. The second disc captures the highlights of his prolific earlyyears.

There may be a couple of clunkers in the mix, but the gorgeouslyremastered versions of "I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know" and "ICan't Quit Her," two of the best love songs ever written, are worthpurchasing alone. And that's just the jumping-off point.

Jeff Johnson

"Buffalo Springfield"

(Atco/Elektra/Rhino) *;*;*; Rock

Yes, four discs is a bit much (reprising this seminal band's firsttwo albums on disc 1 is a stretch), but there are many gems on thisset that focuses on the first, and most notable, collaborationbetween Neil Young and Stephen Stills. If nothing else, this one'sworth it just to listen to the Young demos that become softened andsanitized when studio time comes.

A must for Young afficianados and for anybody interested in alt-country.

Jeff Wisser

Dickey Betts Band, "Let's Get Together" *;*;*; Rock

Dickey Betts can be taken out of the Allman Brothers Band, but youcan't take the Allman Brothers Band out of Betts. At least that's thecase based on this new release.

From Matt Zeiner's Gregg Allmanesque vocal growl on "Immortal" tothe double lead guitars on "Dona Maria" to the jazz inflections on"One Stop Be-Bop, it's clear that Betts misses his formercompatriots. At the same time, however, it's obvious that he is themaster of myriad musical virtues. Pick this up, if only in memory ofElizabeth Reed.

Jeff Wisser

BOJ Leaves Interest Rate Unchanged

TOKYO - Japan's central bank left its key interest rate unchanged at 0.5 percent Thursday after wrapping up a two-day policy board meeting.

The decision matched expectations of analysts who predicted the Bank of Japan didn't want to risk rattling markets or the public by tightening credit before July 29 parliamentary elections. The BOJ's governing board voted 8-1 on the decision.

Some analysts think the central bank will raise rates in August, after the elections. The bank last raised its benchmark interest rate in February, lifting it from 0.25 percent.

Japan is emerging from a decade-long slowdown in recent years, although deflation - a state of falling prices - remains a risk. The country's core consumer price index for May fell 0.1 percent, the fourth straight monthly decline.

Bank of Japan Gov. Toshihiko Fukui has maintained that if the outlook for the economy is convincingly solid, raising interest rates is possible even if consumer prices are falling slightly.

Separately Thursday, the BOJ issued its monthly economic report, saying that "Japan's economy is expected to expand moderately."

The economy is moving in line with its forecasts for expansion and rising prices, it said, suggesting that the BOJ could be preparing for another rate hike.

Palin's pastor urges flock to pray for the media

A little sermon about _ and for _ the messenger seemed to Pastor Larry Kroon an appropriate message on Sunday morning.

"It's been an interesting week," laughed Kroon, pastor at the Wasilla Bible Church, as he welcomed attendees. The nondenominational congregation where Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin and her family worship was carrying on services as usual this Sunday, but with a few extra guests.

In just more than a week since presidential candidate John McCain picked Alaska's governor to be his running mate, Palin's hometown of 9,000 has been inundated with journalists from around the world. For days now the media have delved into her terms as city council member and mayor here, and questioned residents and questioned them again for background on the state's most famous politician.

Kroon began services asking any reporters who might be in the crowd to respect church members' opportunity to worship.

"This isn't the place to be fishing for interviews," he said.

He then asked the 300 congregants at the first of two morning services to pray for all of the candidates for president and vice president, and to be thankful that all four are willing to provide the nation with their public service.

He urged churchgoers to "pray for the press." Kroon said the media are to be "cherished and respected," citing 19th century philosopher Alexander de Tocqueville's works describing a free press and freedom of religion as essential pillars of democracy.

Kroon said he's done a series of national media interviews during the hectic past week since his church was thrust into the national spotlight _ a significant event for a relatively low-key congregation who sit in folding chairs in the large and new church, down a dirt road at the edge of town.

He urged congregants to do their own thorough research and investigations when deciding who to vote for. He added that it was wrong for anyone to have judged Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama's former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., without first reading what Wright actually said.

Chrysler earnings take 24.4% dive

HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. - (AP) Chrysler Corp. said yesterday itsfirst-quarter earnings fell 24.4 percent from a year ago, a dropChairman Lee Iacocca blamed on buyer incentives and lost production.

In the first three months of 1987, the No. 3 domestic automakerearned $269.7 million, or $1.24 per share, down from $356.9 million,or $1.57 a share, in the first quarter of 1986. Revenues totaled$6.12 billion, up 4.3 percent from $5.87 billion a year ago.

"We spent nearly $600 million for plant modernization andupscale products in the first quarter," Iacocca said. "By pouring alot of money back into our car and truck businesses, we're assuringthe future competitiveness and profitability of Chrysler."

Iacocca said Chrysler also spent heavily to "match ourcompetition, or go them one better," in offering extended warrantiesand other buyer incentives.

Chrysler's first-quarter sales were up nearly 4 percent overlast year to $6.03 billion from $5.8 billion. The automaker said itsold 570,002 cars and trucks, 2.4 percent from 556,771 a year ago."Increased sales and market share show our ability to compete,"Iacocca said.

Industry leader General Motors Corp. last week reported a 23.1percent drop in its first quarter earnings from the same period of1986. Ford is expected to release its results this week.

Authors criticize agency's e-book deal with Amazon

A literary agency's decision to publish e-editions of "Lolita," "Invisible Man" and other classics and sell them exclusively through Amazon.com received a mixed response from the Authors Guild, which represents thousands of published writers.

In an e-mail sent Monday to authors, the Guild defended the Wylie Agency's right to sell e-books of older works without the publisher's permission, but also criticized excluding Amazon's competitors and worried about "serious potential conflicts of interest" when an agent becomes a publisher.

"The most obvious of these (conflicts) is the possibility of self-dealing to the detriment of the agency's client, the author," the Guild's message said. "A major agency starting a publishing company is weird, no matter how you look at it."

The Wylie Agency, where clients include the estates of Saul Bellow and John Updike and such living authors as Philip Roth and Salman Rushdie, launched a publishing house called Odyssey Editions last week, featuring e-books of 20 acclaimed contemporary works, including Roth's "Portnoy's Complaint" and Updike's four "Rabbit" novels. The e-books will be available only through Amazon, an arrangement that enraged publishers and rival sellers.

"Authors should have access to all responsible vendors of e-books. Moreover, Amazon's power in the book publishing industry grows daily," the Guild says. "Few publishers have the clout to stand up to the online giant, which dominates every significant growth sector of the book industry: e-books, online new books, online used books, downloadable audio, and on-demand books."

The rapidly growing e-market has started and intensified a catalog of disputes among authors, agents, publishers and retailers.

_Many of the books published by Odyssey originally were released by Random House, Inc. Publishers, notably Random House, have claimed the rights for most books from the pre-digital era, saying such contractual phrases as "in book form" or "in any and all editions" cover e-books. Authors and agents say that the rights for those works belong to them, unless the contract specifically states otherwise.

_Authors and agents believe royalties for e-books should be 50 percent. Most publishers offer 25 percent, a prime cause for Wylie and other agents to seek other ways of releasing e-works.

"Large agencies have refused to sign e-rights deals for countless backlist books with traditional publishers, even though they and their clients, no doubt, see real benefits in having a single publisher handle the print and electronic rights to a book," the Guild said. Despite the differences, publishers have managed to add to their digital backlists.

"Random House continues to successfully reach agreements with hundreds of authors, author estates, and their agents," said Random House spokesman Stuart Applebaum. Upcoming e-books include novels by Cormac McCarthy and Anne Tyler and the first e-edition of "The Diary of Anne Frank."

_Publishers, authors, agents and booksellers all have worried about Amazon, including its preference for selling popular e-books for $9.99, far below the price for hardcovers. Several major publishers _ but not Random House _ have reached agreements with Apple to sell books on the iPad, for sometimes as high as $14.99.

In its e-mail alert, the Authors Guild noted that Random House announced it would conduct no new business for English-language books with the Wylie agency until the dispute was resolved, but apparently took no action against Amazon beyond sending a letter disputing its right to sell the books.

"That Random House, by far the largest trade book publisher, has retaliated against the powerful Wylie Agency but not against Amazon, which must be equally culpable in Random House's view, tells you all you need to know about where power truly lies in today's publishing industry," the Guild said.

"Random House immediately registered its concerns with Amazon over their legal right to sell the e-books in question," Applebaum said. "But it was the Wylie Agency _ not a retailer _ which instigated an exclusive e-bookselling arrangement for several of our authors' books, making them our direct competitor, which is unacceptable to us and to many booksellers."

___

Random House is owned by Bertelsmann AG.

Polish, Jewish leaders light 1st menorah in Poland's parliament for Hanukkah

Officials lit a menorah in the Polish parliament's lower house on Monday in celebration of Hanukkah, in what was believed to be a first for the parliament building.

Rabbi Shalom Stambler and Deputy Parliament Speaker Jaroslaw Kalinowski jointly lit a candle, which was then used to light seven candles on a pre-World War II menorah decorated with the crowned eagle _ a symbol of the Polish state.

The lighting "symbolizes freedom and independence that should be spread across Poland and across the world," said Stambler, of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. "I am very happy and very grateful for being able to light this first ever Hanukkah light at the parliament building in history."

There was also a separate menorah lighting ceremony at the presidential palace, for the second consecutive year.

Before the war, Poland was home to a Jewish community of nearly 3.5 million, but around 90 percent died during the war under the Nazi occupation. The Jewish population is estimated at around 30,000 today.

While Poland has been accused of widespread anti-Semitism in the postwar era, recent governments have been making a point of reversing the image.

Hanukkah, an eight day celebration that began Dec. 4, commemorates religious freedom and the successful fight against oppression. It also celebrates how a one-day supply of oil, which the Jews found when recapturing the Temple in Jerusalem from Syrian-Greek occupiers, miraculously lasted for eight days.