четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Keegan awarded damages from Newcastle over exit

Newcastle will have to pay Kevin Keegan 2 million pounds ($3.2 million) in compensation after the former manager successfully argued he was forced to resign when the club ordered him to sign a player from YouTube to please two agents.

The Premier League's independent arbitration panel ruled in its verdict released Friday that Keegan was unfairly forced out in September 2008 less than eight months into his second stint in charge at St. James' Park.

While Newcastle with have to pay 2 million pounds plus interest, the financial blow could have been greater for the club that was relegated from the Premier League in May.

Keegan claimed 8.6 million …

Savoring a Century of `the Cinema'

"As I now move, graciously, I hope, toward the door marked Exit,it occurs to me that the only thing I ever really liked to do was goto the movies. Naturally, Sex and Art always took precedence overthe cinema. Unfortunately, neither ever proved to be as dependableas the filtering of present light through that moving strip ofcelluloid which projects past images and voices onto a screen."

Gore Vidal,

Screening History We know more, much more, about Marilyn Monroe and Jack Nicholsonthan we know about Julius Caesar and Thomas Jefferson. We know whatthey looked like when they stood up and walked to a window, how theysounded when they were sad, and how they smiled when …

World Golf Glance

Site: Vilamoura, Portugal.

Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.

Course: Oceanico Victoria Golf Course (7,231 yards, 6,612 meters, par 72).

Purse: $4.19 million. Winner's share: $699,010.

Last year: England's Westwood won for the first time since September 2007, closing with a 6-under 66 for a two-stroke victory over Italy's Francesco Molinari.

Last week: Martin Kaymer won the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at St. Andrews to become the first European Tour player in 21 years to win three straight starts. The German star began the streak with a playoff victory in the U.S. PGA Championship and won the Dutch Open while preparing for the Ryder Cup.

Notes: European …

Texas, Texas A&M discuss Big 12 future

With the future of the Big 12 seemingly up for grabs, the presidents and athletic directors of Texas and Texas A&M met Thursday to discuss the future of their athletic programs after Colorado accepted an invitation to join the Pac-10 and with Nebraska weighing a move to the Big Ten.

A person briefed about the discussions said the situation was "still fluid" and the Texas schools could stay in the Big 12. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the situation, said everyone was waiting for Nebraska's expected announcement Friday.

If Nebraska also leaves the Big 12, other schools could follow. The Pac-10 …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

SNEED

Omigosh! . . . Sneed was dispatched a Navy Pier list ofwardrobe guidelines for vendors. It's enough to cause titters. Quoth the memo: "Undergarments should be worn at all times." Scoopsville . . . Sneed has learned that Ed Bedore, MayorDaley's most powerful consultant/aide, is resigning.

Tipsville: Word is Bedore, who advises Daley on ALL specialprojects and who was once the city's chief financial officer, wantsto retire. The buckshot: Bedore reportedly told hizzoner he wants pasture notperspiration, and Daley got a case of the glums. The upshot: Bedore has been Daley's point man on riverboats,airports and almost any top Daley program initiative you can …

Antidepressant-Induced Sexual Dysfunction Treated with Vardenafil

Dear Editor: The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are used to treat a wide array of psychiatric conditions (1). Patients experience fewer side effects, compared with the older antidepressants (2). However, sexual dysfunction may occur in up to 75% of patients taking antidepressants (3). I report a case in which a patient taking sertraline experienced decreased to almost nonexistent erections, with a return to his baseline functioning following treatment with vardenafil. To my knowledge, this is the first reported case of vardenafil used to treat antidepressant-induced sexual dysfunction.

Mr A, aged 32 years, was diagnosed with dysthymic disorder according to DSM-IV …

9 headless bodies found in Mexican border city

The bodies of nine decapitated men were found in a vacant lot in Tijuana Sunday, part of a wave of violence that claimed at least 23 lives over the weekend in this border city plagued by warring traffickers, authorities said.

The heads were discovered in plastic bags near the bodies in a poor neighborhood of Tijuana, across from San Diego, Baja California state police said in a statement. Three police identification cards were also found at the site.

The statement gave no motive for the killings, but they came as Mexico's drug cartels wage a bloody fight for smuggling routes and against government forces, dumping beheaded bodies onto streets, carrying out …

Guides have free trees to give away

A group of guides are on the hunt for worthy causes who wouldlike to provide a loving home for some free trees.

Glastonbury Guides were given a number of trees to plant thanksto the Woodland Trust and Sainsbury's Active Kids.

They want to hear from any local, community projects who couldbenefit from the …

Abbas Dissolves Palestinian Government

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - A beleaguered Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas declared a state of emergency and disbanded the Hamas-led unity government after the Islamic militant group vanquished its Fatah rivals and effectively took control of the Gaza Strip on Thursday.

Fearful that Hamas' momentum could spread to the West Bank, Fatah went on the offensive there, rounding up three dozen Hamas fighters. Angry militants threw office furniture out a third-story window of the Palestinian parliament building in Ramallah, then set fire to the office of three Hamas lawmakers. A Hamas activist was shot and killed in Nablus, the first person to be killed in the West Bank after days of …

Leahy to return Citigroup donation

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., will return a $1,000 campaign donation from Citigroup, the banking giant that has received $45 billion in federal bailout money.

Carolyn Dwyer, Leahy's campaign manager, says she was unaware of the donation until the Burlington Free Press asked about it.

The Burlington Free Press reports Citigroup donated $72,620 to 30 members of Congress, or party political action committees, including nine senators in the …

Punters on River Cam Do It Without a Pigskin

CAMBRIDGE, England Back around the turn of the last millenium, anenterprising Saxon built a bridge across the River Cam. The bustlingtrading center that soon sprang up here took the name of thatstructure.

So much for Cambridge's name origins. The original span is longgone and more than a dozen now cross the narrow, shallow stream. Thecommercial importance of this English town has been replaced by oneof the world's most prestigious universities.

A walk around Cambridge is a lesson in England's architecturalhistory. The 31 colleges that make up Cambridge University coverseven centuries years of learning, from Peterhouse, established in1284, to Robinson, opened in …

NKorea lambasts SKorea's new defense chief

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea lambasted South Korea's new defense chief Sunday for threatening to launch air strikes against the North and accused the South of causing "uncontrollable, extreme" tension on the peninsula.

The South's Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin told a confirmation hearing last week that jets would bomb the North if it stages another attack like the shelling on a front-line island that killed four South Koreans. Kim took office Saturday, replacing a predecessor who resigned amid criticism that South Korea's response to the Nov. 23 shelling was too slow and weak.

The North's official Korean Central News Agency issued a statement Sunday accusing the South …

Malaysia's Anwar challenges sodomy accuser to produce four witnesses under Islamic law

Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim on Wednesday challenged a young man who accused him of sodomy to produce four male witnesses, as required by Islamic law.

Anwar filed a formal complaint with the Islamic Affairs Department against his 23-year-old accuser, saying the young man had violated Islamic Shariah laws by making an allegation without foundation.

The former deputy prime minister has dismissed the accusation as a political conspiracy to stop him from bringing down the government. He has threatened to get enough ruling party lawmakers to defect by mid-September.

Anwar's lawyer Kamar Ainiah Kamaruzaman said that under Islamic laws whoever alleges unlawful sex must have four credible male witnesses to back their claim.

"Otherwise they cannot allege," she said. "It's a very serious allegation. You destroy someone's life."

If the Islamic Affairs Department finds merit in Anwar's complaint, the matter could be taken to a Shariah Court, where Anwar's accuser could face up to three years in jail if found guilty of making a false accusation.

Anwar has also filed a defamation suit in a civil court against the man, who used to work in his office as a volunteer.

He dropped a political bombshell last month when he told the police he was sodomized by Anwar. He is under police protection after making the allegation, which has slowed Anwar's political campaign.

Anwar's civil and Islamic suits have no bearing on a separate investigation being carried out against him by the police.

Anwar says the sodomy accusation was aimed at causing disgust against him, especially among Muslim Malays, who make up 60 percent of the country's 27 million people. Sodomy is punishable by up to 20 years in jail in Malaysia.

"This slander is a major issue particularly because it involves a sexual crime, and the attempt is of course to mislead the Muslim population to attack me and my character," Anwar told reporters after filing the complaint. "It's demeaning to me and my family."

Malaysia has a dual court system. Islamic authorities and courts govern civil matters relating to Islam, while civil courts decide issues not related to the religion.

Anwar was similarly accused of sodomy a decade ago when he was deputy prime minister and began questioning the policies of then-Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. He was convicted and served six years in prison but as freed in 2004 when the sodomy charge was overturned on a technicality.

"It has happened before in 1998. The same silly fabrication continues unabated with impunity. This is sickening to my mind," he said.

Since being freed, he has made a political comeback. His three-party opposition alliance made spectacular gains in March general elections, denying the ruling coalition their traditional two-thirds parliamentary majority.

Einstein's relativity manuscript goes on display

The original manuscript of Albert Einstein's groundbreaking theory of relativity, which helps explain everything from black holes to the Big Bang, went on display Sunday in its entirety for the first time.

Einstein's 46-page handwritten explanation of his general theory of relativity, in which he demonstrates an expanding universe and shows how gravity can bend space and time, is being shown at the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Jerusalem as part the scholarly association's 50th anniversary celebration.

"We wanted something unique that would have global significance, and fortunately we could have access to a manuscript that has never been seen in its entirety before," said the academy's president, Menahem Yaari.

Einstein was one of the founders of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

He contributed the manuscript to the university when it was founded in 1925, four years after he was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics. His will bequeathed the rest of his papers to the university upon his death in 1955.

The university is lending the manuscript to the academy for the anniversary celebration.

First published in 1916, the general theory of relativity remains a pivotal breakthrough in modern physics.

"It changed our understanding of space, time, gravitation, and really the entire universe," said Hanoch Gutfreund, former president of the Hebrew University and current chair of its academic committee for the Albert Einstein Archives, a complete collection of Einstein's papers.

"I refer to it as the Magna Carta of physics," Gutfreund said. "It's the most important manuscript in the entire archives."

Despite its central place in the canon of Einstein's work, the original manuscript has never attracted as much attention as the man himself.

According to Gutfreund, museums around the world have been content to display only a few pages of the manuscript at a time, as part of larger features on the personal and professional accomplishments of perhaps the modern era's most influential scientist.

That is partly because the contents of the general theory, especially in the original German, remain a bit obscure for nonscientists.

It took Einstein eight years after publishing his theory of special relativity _ in which he came up with the famed equation EMC2 (squared) _ to expand that into his theory of general relativity, in which he showed that gravity can affect space and time, a key to understanding basic forces of physics and natural phenomena, including the origin of the universe.

But exhibit organizers say the significance of Einstein's pages of careful script, diagrams, and perfectionist's scratches will not be lost on casual viewers. They say the display will present the manuscript in the context of the theory's legacy _ which includes everything from modern space exploration to commercial satellite and GPS technology and present-day attempts to create a universal explanation of the forces of nature, a quest that started decades ago and stymied even Einstein himself.

"The greatest challenge at the frontier of physics is to make progress on these issues, the ideas that Einstein developed, discarded, and the errors he made," Gutfreund said. "People will be able to appreciate this even if they're not able to understand the contents."

The manuscript will be on display until March 25, overlapping with the 131st anniversary of Einstein's birth on March 14.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Partial Iraqi election tallies sent for approval

Iraq's election commission announced Sunday it will send all results of the March vote to the Supreme Court for final ratification except for those from Baghdad, where a recount is under way.

Patience has been wearing thin over the delay in announcing final results more than two months after the close March 7 parliamentary election.

"The court sent a message to the commission about the possibility of ratifying results and the decision of the commission is to send all election results except Baghdad," said Qassim al-Abboudi, the election commission spokesman.

The votes from Baghdad province are being recounted after allegations of fraud by Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose coalition narrowly came in second to secular Shiite politician Ayad Allawi, whose Iraqiya bloc was heavily backed by minority Sunni Arabs.

Al-Abboudi said the decision also follows a request from al-Maliki to ratify the results aside from Baghdad. President Jalal Talabani and his two deputies made a similar request on Tuesday.

Also on hold are results for special party compensatory seats, Christian seats and those whose winners are being vetted for links to Saddam Hussein's regime by a Shiite-led panel.

Iraq's political parties have made little progress toward forming a new government since the vote more than two months ago, partly due to ongoing challenges against the results and questions over the eligibility of some candidates.

The two main Shiite parties have formed an alliance and are now disputing the right of Allawi's Iraqiya bloc, which won the most seats, to form the next government.

A spokesman for the government of the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq said Sunday that all Kurdish parties are uniting into a single electoral bloc to negotiate with the Arab parties to form a new national government.

The Kurds have already indicated they would be interested in joining a coalition with their traditional Shiite allies.

The two main Kurdish parties and several smaller groups, including the upstart Goran, or Change, Party will together control 57 seats in the national parliament.

CORRECTS size of new Kurdish alliance.

Recall news

The following recall has been announced:

____

CHEESE

DETAILS: Nazareth Classic and Nazareth Light cheese distributed by Atalanta Corp. of Elizabeth, N. J., and sold mostly in northeast retail stores.

WHY: The cheese may be contaminated with Listeria, an organism that can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Symptoms may include high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea. It may cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant women.

INCIDENTS: None reported. The potential contamination of Listeria was noted after a routine testing of a bulk of cheese by the Belgium manufacturer.

HOW MANY: Less than 70 cases.

FOR MORE: Contact Atalanta Corp. at 908-351-8000 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. EDT Monday through Friday.

Baldwin's performance heartening HRs by Ordonez, Simmons help vs. depleted Indians

Sox 6 Indians 3

CLEVELAND James Baldwin's heart is in Chicago. So after the tradedeadline passed with Baldwin staying put, he went out and pitched hisheart out.

Baldwin gave up two runs and two hits in 5 2/3 innings of theWhite Sox' 6-3 victory over the Cleveland Indians on Sunday. Thatprevented him from suffering his 12th loss, which would have tied theAmerican League leaders.

Baldwin (5-11) earned his first victory in a month before 43,067fans at Jacobs Field.

"J.B. had his third (straight) good outing," Sox manager JerryManuel said. "I thought he pitched as well for four, five innings ashe has all year. He mixed up his pitches, and he got his changeupand curve over."

Until there were two out in the sixth inning, anyway. At thatpoint, Baldwin, who feared he might be traded before the deadlineSaturday, walked Omar Vizquel, gave up his second hit - a home run byRoberto Alomar - and walked Jacob Cruz.

Manuel had seen enough. He called on Sean Lowe, Keith Foulke andBob Howry to do the rest. Brian Simmons and Magglio Ordonez each hithome runs to contribute to the victory.

"I wasn't sure (Baldwin) could regroup in the sixth, so I went toget him," said Manuel, who recalled how Baldwin hung his head afterthe walk to Cruz. "If he was mad at me, I don't know. Maybe he wasmad at himself."

Baldwin, who had a 4-0 lead in the second inning after Simmons'first homer of the season, a two-run double by Chris Singleton and anRBI single by Ordonez, said he was mad at himself for walking Vizquelon a breaking pitch.

"The last thing you want to do against a team like this is putsomeone on the bag because they can put up 10 (runs) in a big hurry,"Baldwin said. "There's no room to breathe with their hitters fromNo. 1 through 9. I should have thrown a fastball. That way, maybeAlomar wouldn't have come up."

Manuel called the selection of the breaking ball "a very bad pitchat that time, a very bad decision."

He also considered Baldwin's pitch count of 100 when he took himout of the game.

The Indians stayed with their starter, Charles Nagy (12-7), foreight innings. Ordonez took advantage, hitting his 25th homer in theseventh inning to increase the Sox' lead to 5-2.

When Lowe gave up a leadoff single in the seventh, Foulke enteredthe game and gave up consecutive singles to Russell Branyan and AlexRamirez before retiring three straight. Howry pitched the ninthinning to earn his 17th save.

Manuel was reluctant to use Howry on Saturday because he hadsuffered some back strain, even though Howry had told the staff hewas available.

"Bob did some work in the weight room, with squats particularly,that helped him come back," Manuel said.

The Sox received a break during their four-run second inning whenright fielder Manny Ramirez misjudged the strong wind blowing in andbroke four or five steps back before having to come in on Singleton'stwo-run double.

The Sox needed every break they could get, having lost theirprevious two games to Cleveland 10-2 and 13-10.

They also got a break with Cleveland's lineup, which includedthree rookies. The top four players on the Indians' bench - KennyLofton, David Justice, Einar Diaz, Enrique Wilson - were injured.And Travis Fryman, Sandy Alomar Jr. and Wil Cordero are on thedisabled list.

"Never in my wildest imagination in spring training did I thinkwe'd have a lineup like this," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said.

ATP World Tour Rogers Cup Results

MONTREAL (AP) — Results Monday from the Rogers Cup, a $3 million Masters 1000 tournament played on outdoor hard courts:

Singles
First Round

Stanislas Wawrinka (14), Switzerland, def. David Nalbandian, Argentina, 6-1, 6-4.

Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, def. Erik Chvojka, Canada, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4.

Kevin Anderson, South Africa, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 6-4, 6-4.

Alex Bogomolov Jr., United States, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-2, 7-6 (4).

Thomaz Bellucci, Brazil, def. Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, 7-5, 7-6 (6).

Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, def. Juan Monaco, Argentina, 6-7 (2), 6-3, 7-6 (5).

Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Juan Carlos Ferrero, Spain, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5.

Ivan Dodig, Croatia, def. Jeremy Chardy, France, 6-3, 6-4.

Nikolav Davydenko, Russia, def. Flavio Cipolla, Italy, 6-3, 6-3.

Marin Cilic, Croatia, def. Andreas Seppi, Italy, 7-5, 6-4.

Juan Martin del Potro (16), Argentina, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 6-4, 6-0.

Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. Lu Yen-hsun, Taiwan, 7-6 (5), 6-3.

Jo-Wilfred Tsonga (13), France, def. Fabio Fognini, Italy, 6-4, 7-6 (0).

Doubles
First Round

Novak Djokovic and Janko Tipsarevic, Serbia, def. Mark Knowles, Bahamas, and Philipp Petzschner, Germany, 5-7, 6-3, 12-10 tiebreak.

Feliciano Lopez and Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Vasek Pospisil and Adil Shamasdin, Canada, 6-4, 6-3.

Tomas Berdych, Czech Republic, and Florian Mayer, Germany, def. Marc Lopez and Rafael Nadal, Spain, 6-3, 7-6 (5).

Death toll from Karachi bombing reaches 43

Authorities appealed for calm Tuesday after a bombing against a Shiite Muslim procession killed 43 in Pakistan's largest city of Karachi, setting off riots and igniting fears of sectarian unrest.

Security was tight as thousands of people gathered in central Karachi for funerals of some of those killed in Monday's bombing of a Shiite procession marking the key holy day of Ashoura.

The attack sparked riots as people rampaged through the city, setting fire to markets and stores, including the port city's largest wholesale market. More than 200 firefighters were still battling the flames 24 hours after the attack, with authorities calling for reinforcements from the city of Hyderabad, 170 kilometers (105 miles) north of Karachi, Pakistan's main commercial hub.

Two buildings with dozens of shops and offices have already collapsed and two more were in danger of falling, said the Karachi fire chief, Ehteshamul Haq.

Pakistani officials blamed unnamed "miscreants" for the violence after the attack rather than Shiites involved in the procession, possibly in an attempt to temper sectarian tensions.

"We believe that it was a planned conspiracy," said Interior Minister Rehman Malik. "Those who went violent were miscreants and not the protesters."

It remained unclear who was behind Monday's bombing, at the start of a procession of Shiites marking Ashoura, the most important day of a monthlong mourning period for the seventh-century death of the Prophet Muhammad's grandson, Imam Hussein. Minority Shiites in Pakistan have suffered frequent attacks by Sunni extremist groups who regard them as heretical.

Karachi has largely been spared the Taliban-linked violence that has struck much of the rest of the country, a fact that analysts believe is driven by the group's tendency to use the teeming metropolis as a place to rest and raise money. But the city has been the scene of frequent ethnic, political and sectarian violence.

Bomb disposal squad official Munir Sheikh said some 35 pounds (16 kilograms) of high explosive were used in the bombing. He said the intact head and torso of the suspected suicide bomber was found on the third floor of a nearby office building, where it had crashed through a window.

Residents in apartments near the blast site tossed down body parts that had been cast into their homes from the explosion, while birds dove down to pick at the flesh amid damaged vehicles and motorbikes.

Senior health official Hashim Raza said the death toll increased to 43 on Tuesday. Many among the dozens wounded were critically hurt, and several died overnight and on Tuesday morning.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but Malik on Monday pointed his finger at a cluster of militant groups, including the Pakistani Taliban, al-Qaida, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Jaish-e-Mohammad, that he said have a joint goal to destabilize Pakistan.

Pakistani authorities say sectarian groups have teamed up with Taliban and al-Qaida militants waging war against the government in a joint effort to destabilize Pakistan. More than 500 people have been killed in attacks since mid-October when the army launched a major anti-Taliban offensive in the country's northwest.

Malik, who visited Karachi on Tuesday, said authorities were still trying to determine whether the attack had been carried out by a suicide bomber, as he had said Monday.

"The investigation is still going on to determine whether it was a suicide attack or some improvised explosive device was used," said Malik, who appealed for calm and said he had ordered an investigation into who was behind the rioting.

"If anyone is trying to cripple Karachi, then he is also trying to cripple Pakistan," the minister said.

Karachi Mayor Mustafa Kamal said that hundreds of shops had been destroyed, with damages estimated to run into millions of dollars.

Malik said a joint committee consisting of police, intelligence agencies and local business people has been set up to determine the cause of the rampage and the extent of the losses.

Malik appealed to the Shiite community to cancel processions for the next two days.

Monday's bombing was the third explosion in as many days to hit Karachi, although authorities attributed a blast that wounded 30 on Sunday to a buildup of gas in a sewage pipe. Protests broke out after that blast too, with Shiites torching at least three vehicles.

On Saturday, another blast near a Shiite procession wounded 19 people.

___

Associated Press Writer Munir Ahmad in Islamabad contributed to this report.

SKorea Promotes Bicycles to Ease Traffic

South Korea is turning to an old-fashioned solution for dealing with its always-clogged roads: encouraging people to ride bicycles.

The Home Affairs Ministry announced a campaign Monday to promote bicycle use as a way to cope with traffic, pollution and soaring oil prices. The ministry said it will seek to increase the number of bicycle-only roads and bicycle racks, along with revising related ordinances.

"The important role of bicycles as a commuting means for students and workers over short distances has disappeared due to a sharp increase in the number of automobiles following rapid growth in the national economy and income in the late 1970s," the ministry said.

Promoting more bicycle use is also aimed at promoting a healthy society, it said.

The ministry said it expects one in every four South Koreans to own a bicycle by 2015, up from about one in every seven. About 60 percent of Japanese, 74 percent of Germans and 75 percent of the Dutch own a bicycle, according to the ministry.

Trial mystery: How did Blagojevich get elected?

Who says Illinois politics is a tough business? The trial of Rod Blagojevich shows that even a foul-mouthed clotheshorse can be elected to the state's highest office. Twice.

Wiretap tapes played in court portray Blagojevich as dim and lazy. He was so disconnected that he had never heard of the United Way. He was so detached from his job that it was a big deal for him to spend eight hours at the office _ eight hours a week, that is. This is a guy so strange that even Joan Rivers thought he was full of it.

Anyone who knows Blagojevich only from his reality TV appearances or the obscenity-laced recordings played at his trial must be asking a fundamental question: How did this guy ever win two terms as governor?

The answer is an only-in-Illinois mix of luck, skill, blind partisanship, scandal fatigue and the power of money.

Blagojevich was a little-known three-term congressman from Chicago when he ran for governor in 2002. He was politically astute enough to see that in a Democratic primary crowded with Chicagoans, voters in the rest of the state were the key to victory. He struck alliances with downstate leaders and courted voters energetically.

And, in a tactic that would reappear in later elections, he sullied the reputation of his chief rival. He portrayed Chicago schools chief Paul Vallas, known for his innovation and effectiveness, as a corrupt bureaucrat who wasted taxpayer money.

Blagojevich won the primary, and that's where his good luck kicked in.

He was running for the office being vacated by Republican Gov. George Ryan, who was mired in scandal. The Republican nominee turned out to be Jim Ryan, who had no particular link to the incumbent but still shared a last name and party affiliation. That was enough to sink Jim Ryan with an electorate itching for change.

Blagojevich was elected, the first Illinois Democrat to win a governor's race since 1972, and immediately began practicing his own brand of leadership.

He clashed with legislators, even publicly mocking them at times. His agency directors began shuffling money from one department to another with little regard to rules or budgets. He launched programs that had been rejected by lawmakers and, no matter how much the state budget crumbled, refused to consider raising income taxes.

Blagojevich also began a series of shady maneuvers that made headlines and caught the eye of federal prosecutors, like giving state jobs and contracts to campaign donors.

As the 2006 election approached, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald publicly confirmed Blagojevich was under investigation. Blagojevich fundraiser and political adviser Antoin "Tony" Rezko was indicted less than a month before the election.

Voters couldn't claim ignorance this time, yet Blagojevich won a second term, with nearly as many votes as he had gotten four years earlier.

Perhaps they were a bit "numb" about corruption allegations, said Illinois House Minority Leader Tom Cross, a Republican from Oswego, southwest of Chicago. Voters are genuinely outraged now, he said, but four years ago, they may have felt that allegations were par for the course.

"There was an element of, 'That's just what happens in Chicago, ha ha ha,'" Cross said.

Blagojevich was aided again by luck and a strategy of savaging his opponent, along with a Democratic tide that saw the party win every statewide election that year.

The Republican nominee, state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, was a longtime GOP leader, so it wasn't hard for Blagojevich to dig up video of her with disgraced former Gov. George Ryan. She was also a colorful, shoot-from-the-hip candidate given to gaffes.

Blagojevich, having used the power of his office to raise colossal amounts of political money, was able to launch a barrage of negative ads. By the time he was done, most voters probably thought Topinka was married to Ryan and on the verge of being carted off to an asylum.

Blagojevich also kept an influential black legislator, Rev. James Meeks, from running for governor as an independent by promising a huge increase in education funding. He never delivered the money.

"I think Rev. Meeks found out the same thing that everybody else who crawls into bed with Blagojevich finds out: You don't get what you're promised," said Brian McFadden, who ran Topinka's campaign.

The governor had the backing of fellow Democratic officials. Virtually all of them were willing to hold their nose and support Blagojevich despite widespread doubts about his competence and honesty.

House Speaker Michael Madigan, who had publicly clashed with Blagojevich and later would refuse to be in the same room with him, co-chaired his re-election committee. Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn, a lifelong ethics watchdog, vouched for his running mate. Even a rising star named Barack Obama praised Blagojevich.

"We've got a governor in Rod Blagojevich who has delivered consistently on behalf of the people of Illinois," Obama said.

Edwin Eisendrath, who got 29 percent of the vote when he challenged Blagojevich in the 2006 Democratic primary, said voters had plenty of reason to mistrust Blagojevich, but they also had Democratic leaders telling them he was OK. They, not the voters, bear most of the responsibility, he said.

"It's their job," Eisendrath said. "It's not the people's job to get there first."

Now, of course, Blagojevich's public image has gone from "another shady politician" to "nutty criminal defendant."

He appeared on "Celebrity Apprentice" and was exposed as someone who couldn't use a computer but happily wasted time proclaiming his innocence to everyone he met. Even comedian Joan Rivers, a quirky person used to colorful characters, said she found him a bit much.

Tapes and testimony at his federal corruption trial reveal him spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on clothes, showing up at the office only a few hours each week, and profanely ranting at the people of Illinois and just about everyone else.

The tapes also show Blagojevich endlessly speculating about what he could get in exchange for appointing an Obama ally to the U.S. Senate. At one point he ponders being named ambassador to India. Was Blagojevich worried about having the expertise to serve in one of the world's most complex and dangerous regions?

No, he wanted to know about quality of jogging paths in New Delhi.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Copa Libertadores Glance

San Luis (Mexico) vs. Nacional (Uruguay) (Nacional advances after San Luis withdrawal)

Chivas Guadalajara (Mexico) vs. Sao Paulo (Brazil) (Sao Paulo advances after Chivas withdrawal)

Tuesday, May 5

Palmeiras (Brazil) 1, Sport Recife (Brazil) 0

Wednesday, May 6

Universidad San Martin (Peru) 1, Gremio (Brazil) 3

Thursday, May 7

Deportivo Cuenca (Ecuador) 2, Caracas (Venezuela) 1

Estudiantes (Argentina) 3, Libertad (Paraguay) 0

Universidad de Chile (Chile) 1, Cruzeiro (Brazil) 2

Thursday, May 14

Defensor Sporting (Uruguay) 2, Boca Juniors (Argentina) 2

Second Leg

Tuesday, May 12

Sport Recife (Brazil) 1, Palmeiras (Brazil) 0 (1-1 aggregate; Palmeiras advances 3-1 on penalties)

Caracas (Venezuela) 4, Deportivo Cuenca (Ecuador) 0 (Caracas advances 5-2 on aggregate)

Wednesday, May 13

Gremio (Brazil) 2, Universidad San Martin (Peru) 0 (Gremio advances 5-1 on aggregate)

Thursday, May 14

Cruzeiro (Brazil) 1, Universidad de Chile (Chile) 0 (Cruzeiro advances 3-1 on aggregate)

Libertad (Paraguay) 0, Estudiantes (Argentina) 0 (Estudiantes advances 3-0 on aggregate)

Thursday, May 21

Boca Juniors (Argentina) 0, Defensor Sporting (Uruguay) 1 (Defensor Sporting advances 3-2 on aggregate)

Fatty fare faulted

A new study published in the July 18, 2003 issue of the British medical journal The Lancet reopens the question of whether women who eat high-fat diets increase their risk of breast cancer.

The study-which followed 13,070 women who kept dietary records from 1993 to 1997-found that those who average more than 90 grams of fat a day have roughly double the risk of those who eat just 37 grams. That finding will be controversial because it contradicts previous large studies that found no link between what women eat and their risk of this common cancer. The Cambridge University researchers behind the new study say their design was better because it used a more precise method of measuring women's typical diets.

Bosnian president angry over Plavsic release

Bosnia's top official canceled a diplomatic visit to Sweden on Wednesday, angry that the Swedish government chose to grant Bosnian Serb war criminal Biljana Plavsic an early release from jail.

Plavsic, the former Bosnian Serb president, was freed Tuesday from a Swedish prison after serving two-thirds of an 11-year jail term for crimes against humanity during Bosnia's 1992-1995 war.

More than 100,000 people were killed during the conflict, most of them by Bosnian Serb forces.

President Zeljko Komsic said he will not go to Stockholm because although Swedish law offers the possibility of early release, the government had to actively make that choice. Komsic, chairman of Bosnia's three-person presidency, was supposed to meet King Carl XVI Gustaf during a four-day visit starting Nov. 4.

"The Swedish government wanted to do it, it was not forced to do it," Komsic said in a statement.

Other Muslim Bosniak and Croat officials as well as the media expressed outrage over the early release and the fact that Plavsic flew from Sweden to Belgrade on a Bosnian Serb government jet bought with tax money from some of her victims, who still live in the Bosnian Serb republic.

Plavsic was warmly welcomed in Belgrade by Bosnian Serb Prime Minister Milorad Dodik.

Komsic also called the behavior of the Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt "unacceptable and compromising for the Swedish government." Bildt, he said, testified at the U.N. war crimes tribunal to Plavsic's benefit, visited her in jail in Sweden and took part in the decision for her to be released early.

Komsic had urged the Swedish government and parliament last September not to grant the early release, saying it would be a mistake to show this kind of mercy shown to a person who committed the worst crimes against humanity.

A headline in the Sarajevo daily Dnevni Avaz said "Victims paid for the flight to Belgrade," and the daily Oslobodjenje had a photo of Dodik holding Plavsic by the hand with a headline "Flown by Dodik's plane to freedom."

In Belgrade, Dodik defended his decision to send a government jet to pick up Plavsic, saying "it was a moral thing to do." He said Plavsic will remain in Belgrade for now but stay out of political life.

"She has served her time in jail, and she's now a free person," Dodik said.

Plavsic, 79, is the only woman among the 161 people indicted by the International Criminal Court for the former Yugoslavia.

She had pleaded guilty to a single count of persecution _ a crime against humanity _ as part of an ethnic cleansing campaign to drive Muslims and Croats out of Serb-controlled areas of Bosnia. Her guilty plea was part of a plea bargain to have other charges, including genocide, dropped.

Plavsic was then transferred to Sweden to serve her sentence.

___

Associated Press writers Jovana Gec in Belgrade contributed to this report.

Clinton says US transferring no-fly zone to NATO

WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the United States is taking the next step in military operations against Libya by transferring command and control of the no-fly zone to NATO.

Clinton says all 28 nations in the alliance agreed Thursday to protect Libyan civilians, enforce the U.N. arms embargo on the North African country and support humanitarian aid efforts there.

She also praised the United Arab Emirates for becoming the second Arab country after Qatar (GUH'-tur) to send planes to help the mission. The U.A.E. will deploy 12 planes.

Clinton said she will travel to London next week to coordinate the strategy and military operation against Moammar Gadhafi's regime.

PLUS SPORTS

Braves, Blauser Agree on 3-Year Deal Shortstop Jeff Blauser and theAtlanta Braves agreed today on a $10 million, three-year contractthat gives him the chance to earn about $1.5 million more inperformance bonuses. Blauser was to take a physical in Atlantatoday and then report to the Braves' spring training camp at WestPalm Beach, Fla. Blauser, who had a $3.75 million salary lastseason, made the All-Star team in 1993 when he hit .305 with 15 homeruns and 73 RBIs. Deal Likely to Pay Oates $10 Million Center Adam Oates and theBoston Bruins have agreed in principle on a 5-year contract thatwould pay him about $10 million. Harry Sinden, president andgeneral manager of the NHL club, met Tuesday with Brian Cook, thelawyer who represents Oates, to iron out final details. Thecontract would run through the 1998-99 season and would pay Oates aprorated $1.85 million for the current season; $1.95 million nextseason; $2.05 million for 1996-97; $2.15 million for 1997-98, and,depending on his production that season, the same amount for 1998-99.Oates, 32, said he will have surgery on a finger on his right handafter this season. He hurt the finger last May in a playoff gameagainst Montreal. Michigan Athletes Face Charges Three University of Michigan footballplayers and basketball player Willie Mitchell are expected to becharged with separate criminal offenses, authorities said. "Thethree football players have been suspended from the team and did notplay in the spring game last Saturday," athletic director JoeRoberson said. "Willie Mitchell is still with the team because hissituation is not nearly as clear at this time." Campus police wereinvestigating whether Mitchell stole a staff parking permit and drovewith a suspended license, the Detroit Free Press reported today. Thenewspaper cited a source familiar with both investigations.Mitchell won the 1994 Mr. Basketball award honoring the top highschool player in Michigan and is expected to contend for a startingposition at forward this fall. Neither Roberson nor Sgt. PhilScheel, an Ann Arbor police spokesman, would identify the footballplayers. But, Scheel said, "There will be three individualsarraigned this morning on credit card fraud charges." Scheel saidthe football players allegedly found a credit card at a party onMarch 31 and a day later used it to buy gas and make purchases at twostores in a mall. They were turned down at a third store becausethey couldn't produce proper identification, he said. Footballcoach Gary Moeller will decide the length of the suspensions,Roberson said.

Group: Former Kenyan official derailing ICC probe

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The International Criminal Court's investigation into Kenya's postelection violence three years ago took a hit this week when a Kenyan government-funded rights group accused a former Cabinet minister of trying to derail the upcoming trials.

The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights said Friday that William Ruto should be investigated for allegedly persuading three men in a witness protection program to recant statements they made implicating him in the violence. The men's statements have not been taken up by the ICC, but at one point this year they had been considered as witnesses for the tribunal, which sits at The Hague.

Though ICC judges have authorized prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo to investigate the Kenya case, no charges or indictments have yet been made. Moreno Ocampo has said Kenya's case amounts to crimes against humanity and he expects, before the end of the year, to charge up to six suspects who bear the greatest responsibility.

Friday's demand by the commission caps almost two weeks during which the ICC investigation has consistently made the headlines in Kenya because of the actions of Ruto, who was higher education minister until last month.

Ruto has been trying to clear his name since he was first implicated in a report on the violence that the commission released in August 2008 and which has become a reference for all subsequent investigations, including the ICC one.

In a surprise move, on Nov. 3 Ruto went to The Hague at his own expense after volunteering to record a statement with the ICC. There he spent some 30 hours giving his version of events to ICC investigators.

Upon returning home earlier this week, he claimed the commission bribed witnesses to implicate him. The day after Ruto returned, the three men who had earlier cooperated with the government-funded commission signed sworn statements recanting the allegations they had made against Ruto.

In their statements, copies of which The Associated Press has obtained, they claimed they implicated Ruto because the commission bribed them to do so. They said the commission paid their rent in an up-market area of the Kenyan capital, gave them a monthly stipend and promised to relocate them outside the country in exchange for their false testimony. They claimed one of the organization's commissioners, Hassan Omar Hassan, coached and coerced them to name Ruto in their statements.

But Hassan said what the men claimed as bribes are standard payments for the commission's witness protection program. He said Ruto may be trying to derail the ICC process by discrediting potential witnesses.

During a news conference Friday, Hassan said the three men sought the commission's protection after it released its report into the violence that saw more than 1,000 people killed between December 2007 and February 2008, during the most tumultuous two months Kenya had experienced since independence from Britain in 1963.

Though the men's testimonies did not form part of the commission's report, it took them under its witness protection program because they had testified to police and a separate government inquiry and felt threatened.

Hassan said they are only recanting their statements now because they found out two weeks ago they were not going to make the ICC's witness list and so were unlikely to be relocated abroad.

The ICC rejected their testimonies because the three men are suspected to be aiding or working for government agencies including the government's spy agency, Hassan told the AP in a separate interview.

Another commission member, Fatuma Ibrahim, defended Hassan against the allegations that he had coached or coerced the three men.

"When impunity is well entrenched in a country, it will fight back by throwing mud at those who are fighting it," he said.

Calls made to the three men seeking comment went unanswered.

Ndungu Wainaina of the Nairobi-based International Center for Policy and Conflict said Kenya is not the first case where witnesses have recanted their statements during international investigations.

He gave the examples of the ICC's investigation into crimes committed in Sudan's Darfur region, a tribunal investigating Sierra Leone's civil war and another investigating Rwanda's genocide.

"The stakes are high and many of them tend to recant once they know the consequences of their testimony. Some of them tend to be induced by the suspects," said Wainaina, the center's executive director.

"Many recant when their safety or security is not guaranteed," he said. "Others give information with intention of getting benefits from it and along the way they realize it's not going to be like that and recant."

Wizards' Arenas will miss at least first 2 games

ORLANDO, Florida (AP) — Gilbert Arenas will miss at least the first two NBA regular-season games for the Washington Wizards with a strained tendon in his right ankle.

Arenas was in a walking boot and missed his fourth straight practice on Wednesday. Wizards coach Flip Saunders says Arenas will be reevaluated by doctors but will be out for Thursday's game at Orlando and Saturday's at Atlanta.

Arenas injured the ankle during training camp, then later missed two preseason games with a strained right groin. He is attempting to come back from last season's 50-game suspension for a felony gun conviction.

Arenas also faked an injury earlier this preseason before actually getting hurt.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

A healthy spread ; Stand-alone health insurers are making a mark, writing novel policies that cover everything from joint families to a visit to the dentist.

In October 2007, Delhi-based businessman Chander Amla bought afamily floater health insurance policy from Royal Sundaram GeneralInsurance, which extended a combined cover of Rs 3 lakh to him, hiswife and daughter.

Two years later, he felt that the amount was not sufficient tocover the rising medical costs and asked the insurance company toraise the sum insured. He was particularly worried about the Rs1,500 per day room rent cover during hospitalisation.

"The average daily room rent in a reputed hospital is muchhigher. Also, the policy covered only illnesses that requirehospitalisation of more than 24 hours. There are so many day-careprocedures now that do not require hospitalisation for more than aday," says the 60-year-old Amla. After his several calls to thecompany went unheeded, an insurance broker advised him to buy MaxBupa's Heartbeat policy. It appeared to match his needs better, withan individual cover of Rs 3 lakh for him and his wife. "In the MaxBupa plan, there is no room rent cap. Moreover, the policy coversmedical expenses that do not require hospitalisation for more than24 hours," he says.

Indeed, stand-alone new private health insurance companies suchas Max Bupa, Apollo Munich Health Insurance and Star Health andAllied Insurance are making their presence felt by unveilingradically different products, for individuals and families alike,and in the process offering comprehensive cover across age groups.

"Today, we have products with a lifelong policy renewal feature -covering you from cradle to grave," says Antony Jacob, CEO, ApolloMunich, a 74:26 joint venture between the Apollo Hospitals Group andGermany-based Munich Re. The penetration of health insurance inIndia is abysmal - only about one per cent of the population iscovered under any form of health insurance according to the NationalCouncil of Applied Economic Research (NCAER). Contrast this with theUnited States where 85 per cent of the population is covered orChina at 77 per cent. This, say these private companies, is becauseproducts and services are not fully designed to meet the uniquerequirements of Indian families. "So far, the insurance products inthe market have ignored the needs of Indians. But now, the purehealth players are launching products keeping the customers inmind," says Jacob.

Max Bupa

What's new: Family First Only product with comprehensive coverageof joint or extended families

Insurance cover: Rs 1-5 lakh individual cover plus Rs 3-15 lakhfor the whole family

Benefits:

-- Unlike existing family fl oater policies, an individual cancover extended family as well (up to 13 members)

-- Includes maternity benefi ts and newborn baby care

-- No involvement of third-party administrators as companyexecutives personally manage the claims

Consider the example of Max Bupa, owned 74 per cent by Max Indiaand 26 per cent by Britainbased Bupa. It entered the market in April2010 and recently launched a plan, Family First, that covers anextended Indian family of up to 13 members, including parents,spouse, children, brothers, sisters, and even in-laws, grandparentsand grandchildren through one policy.

It offers individual insurance cover for each insured person -ranging from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 5 lakh - apart from a floatinginsurance cover that is available to all family members. This is abig departure from the industry norm where family floater productscover only nuclear families with a maximum of two adults and twochildren.

In addition, the maximum sum insured in usual floater policies isRs 10 lakh, whereas Max Bupa Family First gives coverage of up to Rs15 lakh.

"The product has been designed keeping in mind the needs of jointfamilies. It is the first time that individual cover and familyfloater cover have been combined in the same policy," says DamienMarmion, CEO of Max Bupa Health Insurance. The plan has other uniquefeatures. It offers maternity hospitalisation and newborn baby cover- features that were till recently available only under groupmediclaim Max Bupa, which is connected to over 600 hospitals acrossthe country, was also the first insurer to introduce "single-ageband pricing" products.

Here the company determines the premium solely on the basis ofthe individual's age. "So, it helps avoid a sudden spike in premiumwhen an individual crosses a particular age limit," says Marmion whothinks that although Max Bupa's policies are 15-20 per cent costlierthan somewhat similar products by its competitors, customers areready to pay.

Another fleet-footed entrant is Apollo Munich, which flagged offoperations in August 2007. Health insurance policies issued by non-life insurers typically do not offer cashless treatment at OPDs, oroutpatient departments, and health check-ups. Apollo Munich'sproduct Maxima has started offering, for the first time in India,cashless inpatient and outpatient treatments. The plan is availablefor both individuals and family, which can include two adults andtwo kids. While the sum insured on inpatient treatment is Rs 3 lakh,the limits on OPD expenses varies between Rs 5,000 and Rs 7,000 atany of the over 1,500-odd pharmacies, diagnostic centres andconsultants empanelled by Apollo Munich.

Apollo Munich

What's new: Maxima Only product that covers cashless OPDexpenses, health check-ups, eye and dental care

Insurance cover: Rs 3 lakh in the case of both individual andfamily fl oater

Benefits:

-- Medical expenses that require hospitalisation of less than 24hours are covered

-- Half the unused OPD entitlements can be carried forward to thenext year

-- No age limit for policy renewal"Forget the big diseases, weoffer insurance even for allergies, sore throat and cracked lips.The aim of this product is to shift the focus from curative topreventive coverage," says Jacob. Maxima was launched in August andthe company is expecting to sell over 5,000 policies by the end ofthe financial year. Star Health and Allied Insurance, which startedoperations in 2006, also has a first to its credit. It has launchedthe first health product for diabetics (Diabetes Safe) that coversthe cost of hospitalisation of up to Rs 5 lakh. Diabetes often leadsto trouble in the kidneys and the eyes, and can cause crippling footulcers. India has the world's largest population of diabetics: 51million and counting.

"Any person diagnosed with Type II Diabetes can take this policybetween 26 and 65 years of age and can get renewals till age 70,"says V. Jagannathan, Chairman and Managing Director of Star Healthand Allied Insurance, which also has a product for HIV positivepatients. Star Health, which is available at more than 4,600hospitals, also has top-up health policies that give extensivemedical coverage and are cheaper than the regular policies. Forinstance, a Star Super Surplus top-up of Rs 7 lakh costs around Rs7,500 per annum for an individual while a regular Oriental Insurancepolicy of Rs 3 lakh costs Rs 8,500 annually.

In India the public sector still accounts for 58 per cent of thehealth insurance market. But the private companies are makinginroads, and the stand-alone ones among them have taken 12 per centof the total market. Clearly, the growing competition will mean thatthe customer will truly be king in the future and is likely to bespoilt for choice.

Senate Candidates Take On Domestic Issues; Debate Is Only One Planned in N.Va.

Virginia Sen. George Allen (R) and Democratic challenger JamesWebb turned to domestic issues yesterday as they sparred during adebate in Northern Virginia over health care, the economy,transportation and stem cell research.

At their second meeting in two days, Allen urged voters to returnhim to the Senate because he's a familiar face ("you know me") witha record of service. Webb, a former Marine and secretary of the Navywho has never run for office, countered that the country is"breaking apart" and needs fresh blood in Washington.

More than 600 people jammed a hotel ballroom in Tysons Corner forthe hour-long debate, the only time Allen and Webb are scheduled tosquare off in Northern Virginia before the Nov. 7 election. Theevent, sponsored by the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, wasmoderated by George Stephanopoulos of ABC News and televised byNewsChannel 8 and C-SPAN.

The debate -- as well as one Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" -- brought a new intensity to the Virginia campaign, but politicalobservers said neither event was likely to alter a close race.

"I don't think we saw any changed dynamics," Rep. Thomas M. DavisIII (R-Va.) said. "But seven weeks is an eternity in politics."

At times the candidates' responses got heated. One of thejournalists who asked questions forced Allen to defend his mother,while Webb again was dogged by charges that he is insensitive towomen in the military. The candidates also argued over how best tofight the war in Iraq and whether the United States should involveIran in Iraq's future.

Allen sought to convince the audience that the Iraq war is onlypart of the race. "My friends, this is not a one-issue campaign,"said Allen, a former governor and state legislator. "There are manyissues important for the security, safety and prosperity of thiscountry."

Anger about the war has turned the race into one of the mostclosely watched in the nation. But yesterday's matchup also gave thecandidates an opportunity to talk about local and domestic issuesthat are often deciding factors for voters.

"We are breaking apart in a way we have never had before," Webbsaid. "The people at the top of society have never had it so good. .. . The middle class, with the rising cost of health care andstagnation of income levels, is in great danger right now."

Allen discussed his plans for health savings accounts, supportfor small businesses and efforts to invest in technology. He oftenstressed the contrast in experience, portraying himself as "somebody[who] has the concrete, verifiable record for performance withactual plans on ideas that can actually, tangibly have an impact onpeople's lives."

Webb criticized Allen for voting against minimum-wage increasesand said the Republican-controlled Congress has failed to providehealth insurance to an estimated 46 million Americans.

Allen said he supports legislation that makes it easier for smallbusinesses to band together to buy health care for their employees.Webb countered that Allen's solution is insufficient, saying thefederal government should move toward a system in which health careis expanded to everyone.

Turning to stem cell research, Allen defended his vote this yearto oppose federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, sayinghe can't support a procedure that destroys a human embryo. Webb saidhe supports federal funding because he doesn't believe an embryo isa human life.

Although many in the audience of business leaders support higherstate taxes for transportation improvements, neither candidate waswilling to wade into that thorny issue. The Virginia GeneralAssembly will take up transportation spending next week.

Allen and Webb said the state should make it easier for privatecompanies to build and maintain for-profit roads. But severalaudience members said they wished Allen and Webb had talked moreabout solutions to the region's traffic woes.

"That, to me, is the issue in Northern Virginia," said state Del.Thomas Davis Rust (R-Fairfax), who has proposed tax increases to payfor road and transit fixes.

Both candidates said they support federal legislation to allowgun owners to carry weapons between states. Webb, who is trying toreach out to Republican-leaning rural voters, noted that he has apermit to carry a concealed weapon.

The candidates had several sharp exchanges, such as on their tiesto southwest Virginia, an area that sometimes has been key toDemocratic wins.

"I've been coming to southwest Virginia since George Allen was aCalifornian," said Webb, who has relatives in that area. Allen shotback that he started his law career in the region. "For me, it's aplace in my heart, not a place on a map."

Allen hammered Webb for saying Sunday that solving hostilities inthe Middle East would require the help of neighboring countries,including Iran and Syria. Allen said involving Iran, which sponsorsterrorism, in Iraq's future "wouldn't make Iraq more secure, norwould it make Americans more secure."

Webb responded by noting that the United States has a longhistory of talking to its enemies, including China and Russia duringthe Cold War.

Both candidates were forced to address character issues that havedistracted their campaigns. Webb gave his most direct apology yetfor a 1979 magazine article opposing women in combat that some womensaid was offensive.

Allen couldn't escape additional questions about his calling ayoung Webb aide of Indian descent "macaca," a slur in some cultures,including France. A panelist asked Allen, who says the word was madeup, if he might have learned "macaca" from his mother, who is partFrench Tunisian. The panelist also asked whether his mother wasJewish.

"I hope you are not bringing my mother into this," Allen said.

Senate Candidates Take On Domestic Issues; Debate Is Only One Planned in N.Va.

Virginia Sen. George Allen (R) and Democratic challenger JamesWebb turned to domestic issues yesterday as they sparred during adebate in Northern Virginia over health care, the economy,transportation and stem cell research.

At their second meeting in two days, Allen urged voters to returnhim to the Senate because he's a familiar face ("you know me") witha record of service. Webb, a former Marine and secretary of the Navywho has never run for office, countered that the country is"breaking apart" and needs fresh blood in Washington.

More than 600 people jammed a hotel ballroom in Tysons Corner forthe hour-long debate, the only time Allen and Webb are scheduled tosquare off in Northern Virginia before the Nov. 7 election. Theevent, sponsored by the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, wasmoderated by George Stephanopoulos of ABC News and televised byNewsChannel 8 and C-SPAN.

The debate -- as well as one Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" -- brought a new intensity to the Virginia campaign, but politicalobservers said neither event was likely to alter a close race.

"I don't think we saw any changed dynamics," Rep. Thomas M. DavisIII (R-Va.) said. "But seven weeks is an eternity in politics."

At times the candidates' responses got heated. One of thejournalists who asked questions forced Allen to defend his mother,while Webb again was dogged by charges that he is insensitive towomen in the military. The candidates also argued over how best tofight the war in Iraq and whether the United States should involveIran in Iraq's future.

Allen sought to convince the audience that the Iraq war is onlypart of the race. "My friends, this is not a one-issue campaign,"said Allen, a former governor and state legislator. "There are manyissues important for the security, safety and prosperity of thiscountry."

Anger about the war has turned the race into one of the mostclosely watched in the nation. But yesterday's matchup also gave thecandidates an opportunity to talk about local and domestic issuesthat are often deciding factors for voters.

"We are breaking apart in a way we have never had before," Webbsaid. "The people at the top of society have never had it so good. .. . The middle class, with the rising cost of health care andstagnation of income levels, is in great danger right now."

Allen discussed his plans for health savings accounts, supportfor small businesses and efforts to invest in technology. He oftenstressed the contrast in experience, portraying himself as "somebody[who] has the concrete, verifiable record for performance withactual plans on ideas that can actually, tangibly have an impact onpeople's lives."

Webb criticized Allen for voting against minimum-wage increasesand said the Republican-controlled Congress has failed to providehealth insurance to an estimated 46 million Americans.

Allen said he supports legislation that makes it easier for smallbusinesses to band together to buy health care for their employees.Webb countered that Allen's solution is insufficient, saying thefederal government should move toward a system in which health careis expanded to everyone.

Turning to stem cell research, Allen defended his vote this yearto oppose federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, sayinghe can't support a procedure that destroys a human embryo. Webb saidhe supports federal funding because he doesn't believe an embryo isa human life.

Although many in the audience of business leaders support higherstate taxes for transportation improvements, neither candidate waswilling to wade into that thorny issue. The Virginia GeneralAssembly will take up transportation spending next week.

Allen and Webb said the state should make it easier for privatecompanies to build and maintain for-profit roads. But severalaudience members said they wished Allen and Webb had talked moreabout solutions to the region's traffic woes.

"That, to me, is the issue in Northern Virginia," said state Del.Thomas Davis Rust (R-Fairfax), who has proposed tax increases to payfor road and transit fixes.

Both candidates said they support federal legislation to allowgun owners to carry weapons between states. Webb, who is trying toreach out to Republican-leaning rural voters, noted that he has apermit to carry a concealed weapon.

The candidates had several sharp exchanges, such as on their tiesto southwest Virginia, an area that sometimes has been key toDemocratic wins.

"I've been coming to southwest Virginia since George Allen was aCalifornian," said Webb, who has relatives in that area. Allen shotback that he started his law career in the region. "For me, it's aplace in my heart, not a place on a map."

Allen hammered Webb for saying Sunday that solving hostilities inthe Middle East would require the help of neighboring countries,including Iran and Syria. Allen said involving Iran, which sponsorsterrorism, in Iraq's future "wouldn't make Iraq more secure, norwould it make Americans more secure."

Webb responded by noting that the United States has a longhistory of talking to its enemies, including China and Russia duringthe Cold War.

Both candidates were forced to address character issues that havedistracted their campaigns. Webb gave his most direct apology yetfor a 1979 magazine article opposing women in combat that some womensaid was offensive.

Allen couldn't escape additional questions about his calling ayoung Webb aide of Indian descent "macaca," a slur in some cultures,including France. A panelist asked Allen, who says the word was madeup, if he might have learned "macaca" from his mother, who is partFrench Tunisian. The panelist also asked whether his mother wasJewish.

"I hope you are not bringing my mother into this," Allen said.

Senate Candidates Take On Domestic Issues; Debate Is Only One Planned in N.Va.

Virginia Sen. George Allen (R) and Democratic challenger JamesWebb turned to domestic issues yesterday as they sparred during adebate in Northern Virginia over health care, the economy,transportation and stem cell research.

At their second meeting in two days, Allen urged voters to returnhim to the Senate because he's a familiar face ("you know me") witha record of service. Webb, a former Marine and secretary of the Navywho has never run for office, countered that the country is"breaking apart" and needs fresh blood in Washington.

More than 600 people jammed a hotel ballroom in Tysons Corner forthe hour-long debate, the only time Allen and Webb are scheduled tosquare off in Northern Virginia before the Nov. 7 election. Theevent, sponsored by the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, wasmoderated by George Stephanopoulos of ABC News and televised byNewsChannel 8 and C-SPAN.

The debate -- as well as one Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" -- brought a new intensity to the Virginia campaign, but politicalobservers said neither event was likely to alter a close race.

"I don't think we saw any changed dynamics," Rep. Thomas M. DavisIII (R-Va.) said. "But seven weeks is an eternity in politics."

At times the candidates' responses got heated. One of thejournalists who asked questions forced Allen to defend his mother,while Webb again was dogged by charges that he is insensitive towomen in the military. The candidates also argued over how best tofight the war in Iraq and whether the United States should involveIran in Iraq's future.

Allen sought to convince the audience that the Iraq war is onlypart of the race. "My friends, this is not a one-issue campaign,"said Allen, a former governor and state legislator. "There are manyissues important for the security, safety and prosperity of thiscountry."

Anger about the war has turned the race into one of the mostclosely watched in the nation. But yesterday's matchup also gave thecandidates an opportunity to talk about local and domestic issuesthat are often deciding factors for voters.

"We are breaking apart in a way we have never had before," Webbsaid. "The people at the top of society have never had it so good. .. . The middle class, with the rising cost of health care andstagnation of income levels, is in great danger right now."

Allen discussed his plans for health savings accounts, supportfor small businesses and efforts to invest in technology. He oftenstressed the contrast in experience, portraying himself as "somebody[who] has the concrete, verifiable record for performance withactual plans on ideas that can actually, tangibly have an impact onpeople's lives."

Webb criticized Allen for voting against minimum-wage increasesand said the Republican-controlled Congress has failed to providehealth insurance to an estimated 46 million Americans.

Allen said he supports legislation that makes it easier for smallbusinesses to band together to buy health care for their employees.Webb countered that Allen's solution is insufficient, saying thefederal government should move toward a system in which health careis expanded to everyone.

Turning to stem cell research, Allen defended his vote this yearto oppose federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, sayinghe can't support a procedure that destroys a human embryo. Webb saidhe supports federal funding because he doesn't believe an embryo isa human life.

Although many in the audience of business leaders support higherstate taxes for transportation improvements, neither candidate waswilling to wade into that thorny issue. The Virginia GeneralAssembly will take up transportation spending next week.

Allen and Webb said the state should make it easier for privatecompanies to build and maintain for-profit roads. But severalaudience members said they wished Allen and Webb had talked moreabout solutions to the region's traffic woes.

"That, to me, is the issue in Northern Virginia," said state Del.Thomas Davis Rust (R-Fairfax), who has proposed tax increases to payfor road and transit fixes.

Both candidates said they support federal legislation to allowgun owners to carry weapons between states. Webb, who is trying toreach out to Republican-leaning rural voters, noted that he has apermit to carry a concealed weapon.

The candidates had several sharp exchanges, such as on their tiesto southwest Virginia, an area that sometimes has been key toDemocratic wins.

"I've been coming to southwest Virginia since George Allen was aCalifornian," said Webb, who has relatives in that area. Allen shotback that he started his law career in the region. "For me, it's aplace in my heart, not a place on a map."

Allen hammered Webb for saying Sunday that solving hostilities inthe Middle East would require the help of neighboring countries,including Iran and Syria. Allen said involving Iran, which sponsorsterrorism, in Iraq's future "wouldn't make Iraq more secure, norwould it make Americans more secure."

Webb responded by noting that the United States has a longhistory of talking to its enemies, including China and Russia duringthe Cold War.

Both candidates were forced to address character issues that havedistracted their campaigns. Webb gave his most direct apology yetfor a 1979 magazine article opposing women in combat that some womensaid was offensive.

Allen couldn't escape additional questions about his calling ayoung Webb aide of Indian descent "macaca," a slur in some cultures,including France. A panelist asked Allen, who says the word was madeup, if he might have learned "macaca" from his mother, who is partFrench Tunisian. The panelist also asked whether his mother wasJewish.

"I hope you are not bringing my mother into this," Allen said.

Girl in Clinton's '3 a.m.' ad is now 17 and supports Obama

Casey Knowles didn't much like a recent campaign commercial for Hillary Rodham Clinton _ even though she's in it as a sleeping 8-year-old.

After all, she's about to turn 18 now and is a big supporter of Barack Obama, Clinton's rival for the Democratic presidential nomination.

"What I don't like about the ad is its fear-mongering," Knowles told ABC's "Good Morning America Weekend Edition" on Sunday. "I think it's a cheap hit to take. I really prefer Obama's message of looking forward to a bright future."

The well-known Clinton ad aired in Texas before last week's vote and implied a lack of experience on Obama's part. It showed an exterior of a Colonial-style home and old stock footage of Knowles sleeping in bed. A narrator describes a phone ringing in the White House: "It's 3 a.m. and your children are safely asleep. Who do you want answering the phone?"

Clinton won the Texas primary by a 51-47 percent margin.

Knowles said she didn't see the ad until Jon Stewart lampooned it Thursday on the news satire program "The Daily Show." Her brother noticed it was her, and the family replayed the commercial on their digital recorder to be sure.

"They were parodying this ad, kind of poking fun at it," Knowles said. "My brother was like, 'Is that Casey?' And we just erupted. Sure enough, it's me."

The file footage was originally shot for a railroad company advertisement. The Clinton campaign bought it from Getty Images.

Knowles, a senior at Bonney Lake High School who turns 18 next month, has been campaigning for Obama. She attended his rally at Seattle's KeyArena on Feb. 8. Her mother, Pam, told The News Tribune of Tacoma that Casey cried and trembled after shaking the candidate's hand.

The next day, she was a Democratic precinct captain for the state's caucuses. If she plays her cards right, she could go to the national convention.

Not to mention that she could be in another ad. After her identity became known, Obama's campaign contacted her.

"I mentioned that we should make a counter ad, me and Obama, against Hillary," she said. "They thought that was really funny. They actually might take me up on it."

That said, Knowles said she plans to vote for whichever Democrat wins the nomination.

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

GOP Confident of Minimum Wage Increase

WASHINGTON - Republican leaders were confident late Friday that they can push through the House the first minimum wage increase in a decade, along with a cut in inheritance taxes on multimillion-dollar estates.

But combining the two volatile issues was sure to cause problems in the Senate, where the minimum wage initiative was likely to die. A post-midnight vote was expected.

Still, Republicans saw combining the wage and tax issues as their best chance for getting a permanent cuts to the estate tax, which produced powerful lobbying by farmers and small businessmen - and super-wealthy families such as the Walton family, heirs of the Wal-Mart fortune.

"This is the best shot we've got; we're going to take it," said House Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio. He predicted a comfortable victory.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., however, pledged to kill the hybrid bill and its $300 billion-plus cost if it got to the Senate.

"The Senate has rejected fiscally irresponsible estate tax giveaways before and will reject them again," Reid said. "Blackmailing working families will not change that outcome."

The move also put Democrats in the uncomfortable position of voting against the minimum wage increase and the estate tax cut - and an accompanying bipartisan package of popular tax breaks, including a research and development credit for businesses and deductions for college tuition and state sales taxes.

But there was GOP discontent, too. Some conservatives in the House were unhappy about the minimum wage vote, while moderates in the party were restive about its being tied to cuts in the estate tax.

The GOP package would increase the wage from $5.15 to $7.25 per hour, phased in over the next three years.

It would also exempt $5 million of an individual's estate, and $10 million of a couple's, from estate taxes by 2015. Estates worth up to $25 million would be taxed at capital gains rates, currently 15 percent and scheduled to rise to 20 percent. Tax rates on the remainder of larger estates would fall to 30 percent by 2015.

The maneuver was aimed at defusing the wage hike as a campaign issue for Democrats while using the popularity of the increase to achieve the Republican Party's longtime goal of permanently cutting estate taxes.

That left Democrats fuming.

"Just think of what it is to have a bill that says to minimum wage workers, 'We'll raise your minimum wage, but only if we can give an estate tax cut to the 7,500 wealthiest families in America,'" said Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., as debate opened.

Besides the 10-year, $268 billion cut to the estate tax, the measure contains $38 billion in other tax cuts that enjoy widespread backing, such as the research-and-development tax credit.

As part of the plan, the House and Senate would also pass a bill shoring up the U.S. pension system. That bill seemed more likely to succeed than the minimum wage-estate tax plan.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., was a driving force behind the plan, overruling Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who wanted to couple the business tax breaks with a bill to overhaul U.S. pension laws.

"He is looking forward to bringing to the floor two bills that will strengthen pension funding rules, help to bring sanity to the tax code and offer a first step toward full repeal of the unfair death tax," said Frist spokeswoman Carolyn Weyforth.

Democrats expressed outrage at the GOP strategy, saying low-income workers deserved a straight vote on increasing the minimum wage uncoupled to other measures.

The No. 2 Democrat in the House, Steny Hoyer of Maryland, said the move by GOP leaders - who actually oppose the minimum wage increase - was a cynical exercise to give political cover to GOP moderates while ensuring the wage increase does not become law.

"They want on the one hand to appear to be doing something and on the other make sure that it doesn't happen," Hoyer said.

Republicans countered that it was only fair to business interests opposed to the wage to reward them with estate tax relief and other tax cuts. And they said adding the estate tax was the only way to get their Senate GOP counterparts - who rejected a minimum wage hike just last month.

"The Republicans in the Senate have twice defeated this," said Steve LaTourette, R-Ohio. "You know what? If the Senate wants the estate tax and the (tax cut) extenders, they've to give us the minimum wage. That's how it's going to become law."

LaTourette organized a drive by almost 50 rank-and-file Republican lawmakers to convince House leaders to schedule the measure for debate. Democrats have been hammering away on the minimum wage issue and have public opinion behind them

It was during the campaign year of 1996 that Congress last voted to increase the minimum wage. A person working 40 hours per week at minimum wage makes $10,700, which is below the poverty line for workers with families.

Democrats have made increasing the wage a pillar of their campaign platform and are pushing to raise it to $7.25 per hour over two years. In June, the Republican-controlled Senate refused to raise the minimum wage, rejecting a proposal from Democrats.

Inflation has eroded the minimum wage's buying power to the lowest level in about 50 years. Lawmakers have won cost-of-living wage increases totaling about $35,000 for themselves over the last 10 years.

Lawmakers fear being pounded with 30-second campaign ads over the August recess that would tie Congress' upcoming $3,300 pay increase with Republicans' refusal to raise the minimum wage.

GOP Confident of Minimum Wage Increase

WASHINGTON - Republican leaders were confident late Friday that they can push through the House the first minimum wage increase in a decade, along with a cut in inheritance taxes on multimillion-dollar estates.

But combining the two volatile issues was sure to cause problems in the Senate, where the minimum wage initiative was likely to die. A post-midnight vote was expected.

Still, Republicans saw combining the wage and tax issues as their best chance for getting a permanent cuts to the estate tax, which produced powerful lobbying by farmers and small businessmen - and super-wealthy families such as the Walton family, heirs of the Wal-Mart fortune.

"This is the best shot we've got; we're going to take it," said House Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio. He predicted a comfortable victory.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., however, pledged to kill the hybrid bill and its $300 billion-plus cost if it got to the Senate.

"The Senate has rejected fiscally irresponsible estate tax giveaways before and will reject them again," Reid said. "Blackmailing working families will not change that outcome."

The move also put Democrats in the uncomfortable position of voting against the minimum wage increase and the estate tax cut - and an accompanying bipartisan package of popular tax breaks, including a research and development credit for businesses and deductions for college tuition and state sales taxes.

But there was GOP discontent, too. Some conservatives in the House were unhappy about the minimum wage vote, while moderates in the party were restive about its being tied to cuts in the estate tax.

The GOP package would increase the wage from $5.15 to $7.25 per hour, phased in over the next three years.

It would also exempt $5 million of an individual's estate, and $10 million of a couple's, from estate taxes by 2015. Estates worth up to $25 million would be taxed at capital gains rates, currently 15 percent and scheduled to rise to 20 percent. Tax rates on the remainder of larger estates would fall to 30 percent by 2015.

The maneuver was aimed at defusing the wage hike as a campaign issue for Democrats while using the popularity of the increase to achieve the Republican Party's longtime goal of permanently cutting estate taxes.

That left Democrats fuming.

"Just think of what it is to have a bill that says to minimum wage workers, 'We'll raise your minimum wage, but only if we can give an estate tax cut to the 7,500 wealthiest families in America,'" said Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., as debate opened.

Besides the 10-year, $268 billion cut to the estate tax, the measure contains $38 billion in other tax cuts that enjoy widespread backing, such as the research-and-development tax credit.

As part of the plan, the House and Senate would also pass a bill shoring up the U.S. pension system. That bill seemed more likely to succeed than the minimum wage-estate tax plan.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., was a driving force behind the plan, overruling Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who wanted to couple the business tax breaks with a bill to overhaul U.S. pension laws.

"He is looking forward to bringing to the floor two bills that will strengthen pension funding rules, help to bring sanity to the tax code and offer a first step toward full repeal of the unfair death tax," said Frist spokeswoman Carolyn Weyforth.

Democrats expressed outrage at the GOP strategy, saying low-income workers deserved a straight vote on increasing the minimum wage uncoupled to other measures.

The No. 2 Democrat in the House, Steny Hoyer of Maryland, said the move by GOP leaders - who actually oppose the minimum wage increase - was a cynical exercise to give political cover to GOP moderates while ensuring the wage increase does not become law.

"They want on the one hand to appear to be doing something and on the other make sure that it doesn't happen," Hoyer said.

Republicans countered that it was only fair to business interests opposed to the wage to reward them with estate tax relief and other tax cuts. And they said adding the estate tax was the only way to get their Senate GOP counterparts - who rejected a minimum wage hike just last month.

"The Republicans in the Senate have twice defeated this," said Steve LaTourette, R-Ohio. "You know what? If the Senate wants the estate tax and the (tax cut) extenders, they've to give us the minimum wage. That's how it's going to become law."

LaTourette organized a drive by almost 50 rank-and-file Republican lawmakers to convince House leaders to schedule the measure for debate. Democrats have been hammering away on the minimum wage issue and have public opinion behind them

It was during the campaign year of 1996 that Congress last voted to increase the minimum wage. A person working 40 hours per week at minimum wage makes $10,700, which is below the poverty line for workers with families.

Democrats have made increasing the wage a pillar of their campaign platform and are pushing to raise it to $7.25 per hour over two years. In June, the Republican-controlled Senate refused to raise the minimum wage, rejecting a proposal from Democrats.

Inflation has eroded the minimum wage's buying power to the lowest level in about 50 years. Lawmakers have won cost-of-living wage increases totaling about $35,000 for themselves over the last 10 years.

Lawmakers fear being pounded with 30-second campaign ads over the August recess that would tie Congress' upcoming $3,300 pay increase with Republicans' refusal to raise the minimum wage.