четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Story of Sinuhe

Story of Sinuhe

Importance.

The Story of Sinuhe survives in many manuscripts, suggesting that the Egyptians considered it among their most important literary works. The oldest manuscripts date to the Twelfth Dynasty (1938–1759 b.c.e.), also the time of the story's setting. There are also more than twenty New Kingdom (1539–1075 b.c.e.) copies and even a Late Period copy (664–332 b.c.e.). This large number of copies surviving in all major periods is due to the fact that scribe schools required scribes to copy this text as part of scribal training. Yet, the fact that so many scribes worked on copying Sinuhe suggests that it was also studied in all time periods. It is thus a work of literature that connected the Egyptian literate class for 2,000 years. The text also includes variations on many literary genres. Overall, it is structured to resemble an autobiography and is narrated in the first person. Unlike a tomb autobiography, however, Sinuhe's life goes astray rather than meeting the ideal as in the standard biography. It also includes songs, monologues, and even a …

Cop review board's silence is jeopardizing its credibiity

Editorial

Despite a mad scramble and weeks of publicity regarding replacing the Office of Professional Standards with the Internal Police Review Authority and bringing in an executive director from Los Angeles, one can't help but wonder if anything has changed when it comes to police shooting civilians in the city.

Earlier this week a 16-year-old Phillips High School student was stopped at the school and allegedly found to have a gun. After he ran from the school, the youngster was shot by an off-duty cop.

The story gets murkier from here - particularly because ifs the job of Bayna Rosenzweig, chief administrator of the D?RA, to apprise citizens and the media of the …

EUROPE NEWS AT 1100GMT

TOP STORIES:

FRANCE-COLOMBIA-HOSTAGES

PARIS _ France's foreign minister says Paris will not abandon efforts to free French-Colombian hostage Ingrid Betancourt despite a failed bid to reach her this week. Moved.

WITH: COLOMBIA-REBEL HOSTAGES

AUSTRIA-EU TREATY

VIENNA, Austria _ Austria's parliament is expected to ratify the EU's new treaty, despite calls for a referendum on the issue. Developing; timing uncertain.

EU-FIGHTING POVERTY

BRUSSELS, Belgium _ The European Union's development chief says EU nations must raise their aid to poor nations if they want to meet their promises to halve extreme poverty …

Bears lining up six-wide Shepherd or Gage? Final receiver spot up for grabs tonight

The Bears' game plan is to feed running backs Anthony Thomas andAdrian Peterson carries in the first half of their exhibition finaletonight. Then they have a decision to make.

Which wide receivers will have a job at the bottom of the roster?

The answer, to be supplied before Sunday's cutdown to the 53-manroster, will come by the end of tonight's game against the NewEngland Patriots in Foxboro, Mass. (7, Ch. 5, 780-AM). In the runningfor what appears to be a sixth receiver spot are NFL Europe veteranEdell Shepherd and fifth-round draft pick Justin Gage.

First, however, Thomas and Peterson will get a workout against thePatriots. Thomas has carried only nine times …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Tricky weather?

Behr's new climate tunnel helps the supplier increase its testing capacity.

There's a monsoon in Stuttgart Thousands of miles away in Troy, Mich., the temperature will change from artic cold to desert hot in only a few hours.

It's not a bizarre weather front. It's Behr GmBH's twin climatic wind tunnels installed last year in Stuttgart and next year in Troy.

The newest tunnel will increase Behr's capacity to handle testing of all vehicle classes - cars, light and heavy trucks. The North American wind tunnel also can handle dynamometer testing up to 800 hp and creates greater wind velocity with wind speeds up to 125 miles per hour.

Construction has already …

Cards pull within 1 game of Braves in NL wild card

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Cardinals headed to Houston wearing Hawaiian shirts and already dressed for a party.

Nearly out of contention a month ago, St. Louis pulled within one game of the Atlanta Braves in the NL wild-card race when Rafael Furcal hitting a tiebreaking home run in the eighth inning Sunday in a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs.

Before the game, Cardinals players decided they would all wear island garb on the flight in a show of team unity. Manager Tony La Russa decided to go along, as well.

"I've got a shirt with palms on it," he said. "I hope that qualifies."

St. Louis trailed Atlanta by 10 1-2 games before play on Aug. 26 but have since gone 20-8, …

Goodell says player salaries will keep growing

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell predicts players' salaries will still grow under a new labor agreement, even if their share of revenue is reduced as owners have proposed.

Appearing Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation" hours before the Super Bowl, Goodell said the owners need more money to cover rising costs for international ventures and infrastructure projects such as new stadiums.

"You have to invest in these stadiums that we're in today," Goodell said. "You need to find new ways of creating revenue, whether it's international or otherwise. And that takes investment. And we need to make sure that the owners have the capital to be able …

Zuke soup // Provencal touch will have you saying `potage'

I never have been a talented gardener; a small plot of herbs isall I can lay claim to in my backyard.

Fortunately, however, many of my friends have verdant thumbs,and in the summer months I am often a lucky recipient of theirharvests. Plump juicy tomatoes, long slender cucumbers and tendersalad greens are typical gifts that generous friends bring by ourhouse.

The quintessential summer vegetable - the one local gardenersseem to grow with abandon - is zucchini. I routinely receive a largebasket or two of this squash once the crop is in.

This year I have a new recipe for delicious Provencal zucchinisoup that will put my cache to good use. The simple …

Women, children killed in violence-torn Syria city

BEIRUT (AP) — Armed forces loyal to President Bashar Assad barraged residential buildings with mortars and machine-gun fire, killing at least 30 people, including a family of women and children during a day of sectarian killings and kidnappings in the besieged Syrian city of Homs, activists said Friday.

Video posted online by activists showed the bodies of five small children, five women of varying ages and a man, all bloodied and piled on beds in what appeared to be an apartment after a building was hit Thursday in the Karm el-Zaytoun neighborhood of the city. A narrator said an entire family had been "slaughtered."

The video could not be independently verified.

Heavy …

Top UN nuclear inspector Olli Heinonen resigns

The International Atomic Energy Agency says senior nuclear inspector Olli Heinonen will be leaving his post at the end of August.

Heinonen has headed the U.N. nuclear watchdog's all-important safeguards department, which is responsible for making sure that nuclear material is not used for weapons.

He is perhaps the most high-profile …

Fellowship Church member donates organs of deceased son

Just a couple of days after losing a son to gun violence, Bobbie Ann Dotson discovered her loss could save a life for others through donation of her child's organs.

Dotson, a member of Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church, 4543 S. Princeton Ave., announced her decision to donate her son's kidneys to her mother, Clara Dotson, and Fellowship Church member Kevin Yasser at a Thursday press conference.

Both Yasser and Dotson are on dialysis.

As of 3 p.m. Thursday, the body of Antowine Dotson, 26, was being harvested for various organs at Mount Sinai Hospital, Jack D. Lynch, director of community affairs for the Gift of Hope Organ & Tissue Donor Network told the …

Former Astana rider Matthias Kessler gets 2-year doping ban

Former Astana cyclist Matthias Kessler has received a two-year ban for doping.

The German rider was found guilty of having "a forbidden substance in his body," Swiss Olympic's disciplinary committee said Friday.

Astana, which was based in Switzerland at the time, suspended Kessler in April after his sample showed elevated testosterone levels at a surprise test.

Kessler will be …

There's no shame in poverty, Stewart

Stewart McKimmie is way out of order (Evening Express, November2).

I am a season ticket holder and I was there on Wednesday I wasthere because I could afford to be.

I agree the crowd was poor, but some people may not be in theposition as to go to all the games that cups bring up and have topick and choose what games they do go to.

For Stewart to say that they should be ashamed is disgusting.

Kenny Macbeth, Suttie Cottages, Kintore

I WAS really annoyed to read Stewart McKimmie's comments aboutfans staying away from the CIS Cup quarter final.

My family of five areseason ticket holders for the Merkland Standand paid pounds100 for tickets for the Lokomotiv Moscow andCopenhagen games.

Money is tight in the run-up to Christmas and as much as we wouldlike to attend all of Aberdeen's home games it is not alwayspossible.

Gwen Anderson, email

I AM a season ticket holder, go to every game, just came backfrom Inverness Caley costing another pounds71 for the family andbought two home tickets for the UEFA cup games costing anotherpounds54.

Sometimes the REAL fans have to say, not tonight, there areother things on - Halloween, let's stay with our children andloved ones.

Once you start paying like us, then you can slag us off. Untilthen, Stewart, shut up!

Mitch Cruickshank, email

Moderates in both parties need to fight extremists

Political moderates predominate in the U.S. electorate, but thetwo parties are increasingly captives of their extremes. Will themoderates ever rise up and assert themselves?

In the Republican Party, they ought to do so by defending SenateMajority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee against right-wing attacksfor bucking President Bush (and Christian conservatives) overembryonic stem-cell research.

Republican moderates also ought to start speaking up for"emergency contraception" before the right makes banning it a litmustest of party loyalty.

Someone in the GOP ought to tell Bush that "intelligent design"is not a true scientific theory on a par with evolution. Andmoderates need to fight at the state level to prevent requiring thatintelligent design be taught in biology classes.

Except for Log Cabin Republicans and the Republican UnityCoalition, does anyone in the GOP dare to come out for civil unionsfor homosexuals and to resist the party's reliance on gay-bashing towin elections?

It's almost impossible for a pro-choice candidate to get the GOPpresidential nomination, but anti-abortion mania could be theundoing of the party in the long run if Bush installs a U.S. SupremeCourt that actually overturns the Roe vs. Wade decision, as thereligious right expects him to do.

If John Roberts proves to be a vote against Roe, it will takeonly one more rightist appointee to ignite struggles in every stateto ban abortion. Polls show that two-thirds of the electorate wantsRoe to remain the law of the land.

There's no question that the Democratic Party is just as muchcaptive of the left as the GOP is of the right. Unions, pro-choicefeminists, trial lawyers and civil rights liberals call the shots.

America-basher Michael Moore was lionized at the last Democraticconvention. MoveOn.org is a major party mouthpiece. Leftistsdominate the Democratic blogosphere. And Howard "I hate Republicans"Dean is party chairman.

But the Democratic Party has an influential moderate wing, led bythe Democratic Leadership Council, with which a number of 2008presidential candidates are affiliated, including front-runner Sen.Hillary Rodham Clinton.

There is no real equivalent in the GOP that can serve as anorganizational and intellectual base for moderate candidates suchformer New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, New York Gov. George Pataki andSen. John McCain of Arizona.

Moderate groups such as the Republican Main Street Partnershipare useful, but they are not powerful, and moderate office holdersare regularly targeted for defeat by arch-conservatives from theClub for Growth, the Free Congress Foundation and the religiousright.

Occasionally, a Republican moderate will speak out in aprovocative op-ed, as when former Missouri Sen. John Danforthcharged that "Republicans have transformed our party into thepolitical arm of conservative Christians."

But Danforth, an Episcopal minister, has no organizationalbackup. And, while his articles gained some momentary attention,they sparked no moderate rally.

Moderates need to organize and fight -- in both parties. Whenthey don't, they ill-serve a centrist public and miss a politicalopportunity.

A July NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed that a plurality ofvoters, 39 percent, regards itself as moderate, compared with 33percent who say they're conservative and 22 percent who say they'reliberal.

A new Pew poll shows that the public supports embryonic stem-cell research by 57 percent to 30 percent, and that 53 percentfavors allowing gays to enter legal arrangements giving them thesame rights as married couples.

There is no new polling on contraception, but I would be shockedif its availability were not overwhelmingly supported by the public.

But the Bush administration is balking at approval of the"morning-after pill," which prevents a fertilized egg from attachingto the uterine wall.

Even though this is a process quite distinct from abortion, thereligious right is hostile toward the drug, and that opposition hasled two potential 2008 candidates, Pataki and Republican Gov. MittRomney of Massachusetts, to veto bills to make the pill availablewithout a prescription.

Frist, who is pro-life on every other matter, nevertheless cameout for federal funding of stem-cell research requiring thedestruction of embryos destined for destruction at fertilityclinics.

Despite all he's done for the right -- including making itvirtually certain that Bush's judicial nominees will get approved --Frist is being attacked for his stem-cell view.

The right insists that life begins at conception and thattherefore abortion and embryonic stem-cell research constitutemurder.

If this were truly the basis of its belief, fetuses should bebaptized as soon as it's clear a woman is pregnant and miscarriagesshould be the cause for a funeral and a religious burial.

No moderate would say that destruction of a human embryo is of nomoral consequence -- it constitutes a potential human life -- yetthere's ground for suspicion that some religious conservatives areas much about punishing illicit sexual activity as they are aboutsaving "life."

The religious right has every right to be politically assertive.So does the secular left. What's needed is for moderates to getmilitant and contest these extremes.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

EIT reform taking effect in state

STATE

Fewer tax collectors should streamline payroll for employers, improve collections

A 3-year-old reform law designed to eliminate ineffi ciencies in Pennsylvania's local earned income tax collection system fi nally will take eff ect next year.

Signed by former Gov. Ed Rendell, Act 32 requires all commonwealth employers to remit EIT withholdings for all resident and nonresident employees.

To comply with the mandate, businesses are required to maintain a certifi cate of residency for each employee, which determines the rate of withholding.

Th e residency step, which many companies have been working on this year in preparation for the change, has been off set by a reduction in the number of EIT collectors from 560 to 69 tax collection districts. Th ose districts have been set up by county to include all local taxing jurisdictions, with EIT handled by a single collection officer.

Philadelphia is exempt, and Allegheny County has four tax collection districts.

Employers also are obligated to withhold at the higher rate between resident and nonresident.

For example, a Harrisburg resident who works in Reading would be tagged with a nonresident EIT rate of 1.3 percent by their Berks County employer. Harrisburg's EIT is 1 percent, while Reading has a rate of 1.3 percent.

The business owner would remit money withheld at that higher rate to the tax collection officer. Since the home community is entitled to be paid first, 1 percent would be distributed to Harrisburg by the collection district officer. The remaining 0.3 percent of the EIT would stay in Reading.

In Swatara Township, the EIT rate is 1 percent for a nonresident. If a worker there lived in Dauphin Borough where the EIT is 2 percent, Dauphin would get the entire amount.

Whether a company has one office and 10 employees or operations and employees throughout Pennsylvania, the law streamlines the payroll process going forward because all withholdings can be sent to a single tax officer who then distributes to the appropriate taxing bodies.

"In the long run, think of the hours of manpower employers will save," said Lisa Myers, a partner at East Pennsboro Township-based Boyer & Ritter Certified Public Accountants and Consultants.

Under the current system, 560 taxing authorities are collecting nearly $1.9 billion in EIT for more than 2,900 taxing jurisdictions - more local governments than all other states combined, said Myers.

Act 32 should lower the cost of the collection system and bolster the amount of EIT collected statewide, she said, due to increased oversight and annual audits of tax collectors.

A 2007 study done by the Pennsylvania Economy League found that the system left as much as $237 million uncollected every year because of payroll deductions not being submitted by employers and misappropriation of funds.

"There are a lot more controls on our process," said Tom Butts, director of community services with Westmoreland County-based Keystone Collections Group, the tax collector for Dauphin and Lebanon counties, as well as nine other tax collection districts.

Over the last year, there has been a push by database software and payroll companies to make sure necessary system adjustments were in place to adapt to the Act 32 requirements, he said. The final step has been training employers on the new system and ensuring they have the right political subdivision codes, or PSDs, for all employee EIT withholding, he said.

The PSD is a six-digit code formulated to designate each of the 69 tax collection districts, along with the school districts and municipalities therein.

"This new form will ensure accurate, up-to-date information is captured," Amy Richards, a spokeswoman for the Dauphin County commissioners, said about the new residency certification process.

The county employs more than 1,700 full- and part-time employees.

"Going forward, the payroll tax process will be more streamlined as the number of payroll tax collectors to which we send is reduced," said John Sandy, a spokesman for Lancaster County-based The High Cos., which employs 2,100 people at 48 locations throughout the eastern and Midwestern U.S., including 1,700 in Pennsylvania.

Businesses with offices in multiple Pennsylvania counties can continue to file quarterly returns for each of their local offices, according to the law. If they choose to file all withholdings with the tax collection officer in their home county, they must file monthly and do so electronically.

Failure to comply can lead to fines of up to $25,000 and two years in jail.

[Sidebar]

EIT: Pennsylvania law streamlines payroll process going forward

About the pending changes

Under Act 32, municipalities are part of the tax collection district in which their school district is based, regardless of whether they are in another county.

The Dauphin County district includes Reed Township, which is in Dauphin County but is part of the Susquenita School District in Perry County; and Porter Township and Tower City, which are part of the Williams Valley School District in Dauphin and Schuylkill counties.

For more information about the pending changes, businesses can view a 14-minute tutorial video created by Tom Butts, director of community services with Keystone Collections Group.

YOUR TAKE

Have an opinion about this issue?

Email us at editorial@journalpub.com.

[Author Affiliation]

By Jason sCott

jasons@journalpub.com

PLUS SPORTS

49ERS TRADE WASHINGTON: The San Francisco 49ers have traded startingdefensive lineman Ted Washington to Denver for a fifth-round pick inthis year's draft. SOCCER STAR DENER DIES: Dener, a soccer star with the club Vasco daGama, died Tuesday in a car crash. He was 23. Dener was returningfrom Sao Paulo when his car crashed into a tree next to the Rodrigode Freitas Lagoon on Rio's fashionable south side, team doctorAlexandre Campelo said. The player was sleeping in the passengerseat and had his seat belt on when the crash took place, Campelosaid. The driver, Otto Gomes, broke both legs. He told officials ina hospital he had fallen asleep at the wheel. GONAZALEZ MOURNS BROTHER: The Texas Rangers' Juan Gonzalez has leftthe team to mourn the death of an identically named brother.Gonzalez flew from Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport to SanJuan, Puerto Rico, to be with his family after the death of Juan"Puma" Gonzalez, 32. He died Sunday in Manti, Puerto Rico, of anapparent overdose. Tom Grieve, Rangers general manager who has knownGonzalez for nearly eight years, did not know of this brother.Gonzalez told club officials that his brother had been addicted todrugs for years. SKIER HONORED: Diann Roffe-Steinrotter receivedthe key to her hometown of Potsdam, N.Y., as 2,500 people turned outto celebrate her gold medal performance in the super giant slalom inthe Winter Olympics. At the celebration in Clarkson University'sCheel Arena, the 27-year-old Roffe-Steinrotter also received a letterof acceptance to Clarkson, to which she had applied earlier.Roffe-Steinrotter was given a key to the city of Potsdam made byAlcoa, an aluminum company with a plant in nearby Massena, and athree-dimensional wood and paint mural depicting her on the slopes. EXPO STOPPER DISABLED: Montreal Expos stopper John Wetteland wasplaced on the 15-day disabled list with a strained right hamstring.Wetteland, who had a club record 43 saves last season, strained themuscle in the 10th inning of Sunday's loss at Colorado. He's 1-1with a 3.12 ERA in six appearances. ORLANDO'S TURNER HURT: Orlando forward Jeff Turner, who started thepast 13 games for the Magic, will miss the rest of the season with atorn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Turner, averaging10.5 points and 6.7 rebounds since regaining his starting job lastmonth, was injured late in Sunday's 118-101 victory over the Bulls.He averaged 6.6 points and 4.0 rebounds in 68 games this season. N.C. GUARD TO TRANSFER: Larry Davis, a reserve guard on the NorthCarolina basketball team, plans to transfer to South Carolina afterthis term. "I get along well with the people here," the 6-foot,3-inch sophomore from Denmark, S.C., said Monday. "I'm not leavingbecause I'm mad at anyone. Playing time is the main factor." OILER ACCUSED: Houston Oilers linebacker Lamar Lathon is accused ofchoking a dancer at a topless club in a misdemeanor assault charge.Regina Anne Williams, 27, filed a complaint March 3, the day aftershe said Lathon knocked her to the floor and choked her at Michael'sInternational, a recently opened Houston men's club. Hurst said theinvestigation took a little time because investigators had adifficult time locating Williams and witnesses. Lathon acknowledgedthat he and Williams exchanged words, but said, "I didn't choke her.I pushed her off of me when she attacked me." BASEBALL MEETING SET: The executive board of the Major LeagueBaseball Players Association will meet on July 11, the day before theAll-Star game, to consider the status of labor talks and a possiblestrike. "This is what we normally do in negotiating years," unionhead Donald Fehr said today.

Judge Orders Charity Co-Founder Held

EUGENE, Ore. - A federal judge has ordered that an Iranian-American co-founder of a defunct Islamic charity who is facing conspiracy and tax fraud charges be held until a hearing next week.

Pirouz Sedaghaty, also known as Pete Seda, was to have been freed Friday after a federal magistrate judge ruled he was not a public danger or a flight risk.

But federal prosecutors appealed to U.S. District Judge Michael Hogan, the Eugene Register-Guard reported Tuesday. Hogan cited concerns about concealed assets and passports that could allow Sedaghaty to flee.

Sedaghaty, 49, returned to the United States last month to face charges related to the operations of the U.S. chapter of the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, which he co-founded in Ashland in 1997.

The U.S. government and the United Nations have declared the foundation a terrorist organization. The government of Saudi Arabia, where the foundation is based, disbanded the group in 2004.

Sedaghaty left the country in 2003 during an investigation that resulted in a federal grand jury indictment in February 2005 accusing him of helping to smuggle $150,000 out of the country to aid Muslim fighters in Chechnya. He has pleaded not guilty.

Sedaghaty's lawyer, Larry Matasar of Portland, said his client has cooperated with federal officials and promised to provide additional information for Hogan's review.

Obama hits McCain on Social Security

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama criticized Republican John McCain's approach to Social Security on Saturday, saying it would undermine the government program aimed mainly at retirees.

Obama said McCain's campaign has suggested trimming Social Security benefits and raising the eligibility age, according to prepared remarks of his speech to a gathering of the AARP, an advocacy group for older Americans. Obama was addressing the group via satellite.

McCain has not specifically embraced such plans. But by saying "everything is on the table" in discussing changes to Social Security, he has opened himself to such criticisms from Democrats.

Obama also said McCain wants to privatize a portion of Social Security. McCain has praised the notion of letting younger workers place a portion of their Social Security taxes into a package that is invested and follows them to retirement, but he has not made it a campaign promise.

All workers pay Social Security payroll taxes on the first $102,000 of their annual income. The money pays for benefits for current retirees and for other government programs. Analysts say the program will begin running short of funds in a few decades if it is not changed.

Obama cited his proposals to place a new Social Security payroll tax on incomes above $250,000 and to eliminate federal income taxes for older people making less than $50,000 a year. He also said he would "allow the government to negotiate with drug companies to lower costs for seniors, and we'll allow reimportation of drugs from other countries and ensure their safety."

The Wall Street Journal reported in March that McCain's top aides were "considering cost-of-living adjustment cuts and raising the retirement age as part of their Social Security plan." McCain has not endorsed or rejected those ideas.

McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said the Republican nominee "has always promised to fiercely protect Social Security benefits."

Martin should fight job bias

The beauty of Labor Secretary Lynn Martin's Aug. 8 "glassceiling" initiative was in its timing. Nobody can accuse her offailing to recognize that discrimination is alive and well incorporate America, now that study after study is saying the samething.

Women and minorities are indeed held back by discrimination,according to yet another survey of Fortune 500 companies, releasedSunday.

The trouble with Martin's strategy for dealing with outrightviolations of Executive Order 11246, which bans employers withfederal contracts from discriminating, is in her breezy confidencethat those naughty boys will do the right thing, now that she's askedthem to.

That view has also been expressed by Peter J. Eide, manager oflabor law for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "When the secretary oflabor says something, people listen," he said two weeks ago.

But the new data show very little improvement in the past 25years, despite the threat of sanctions under the executive order.Several recent Supreme Court rulings have made it more difficult forwomen and minorities to bring discrimination lawsuits. And Eide, whohas yet to admit the existence of a glass ceiling, said again Sundaythat women are "being given" higher positions all the time.

Martin's own findings, based on a selective Labor Departmentanalysis of 94 firms, found only 6.6 percent of the executive slotsfilled by women and 2.6 percent by minorities in 1990. A moreexhaustive study of the top 500 firms, by researchers at theUniversity of Southern California, paints an even gloomier picture:Women held only 2.6 percent of the top jobs, when top was defined as"vice president or above," and 4.5 percent of the corporate boardseats in 1990, it found. And women at the top earned 42 percent lessthan their male peers.

And don't go thinking that boards are integrating faster thanexecutive suites, warns Eleanor Smeal, president of the FeministMajority Foundation, which released the findings Sunday. "When youlook at the actual names, you find the same token woman sitting on 10corporate boards," she said.

Without vigorous enforcement of the federal order, the reportestimates, basing its conclusions on women's rate of ascent duringthe past 25 years, it will take another 475 years for women toachieve anything like parity in top management.

The administration apparently is not even considering vigorousenforcement. Asked if she would deny federal contracts to companiesthat discriminate, as she is empowered to do, Martin said two weeksago that she is "not going to go after employers with a 500-poundhammer." She will encourage voluntary efforts with publicrecognition for those making changes, she said, to the dismay ofanybody who'd been hoping for more than lip service.

Martin's disavowal of the 500-pound hammer approach could makethings even worse for women and minorities by signaling employers,who need no longer fear the loss of their multimillion-dollargovernment contracts, to quit worrying. "What she's really saying tocorporate America," Smeal said, "is, we will do nothing if youdiscriminate."

This was, in effect, what the last administration said, when itcame out against affirmative action. But the last administrationnever admitted it had evidence of continuing discrimination or hadfailed to enforce its own rules.

This one has.

Carole Ashkinaze is a member of the Chicago Sun-Times editorialboard.

International law expert Antonio Cassese dies

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Renowned international law expert Antonio Cassese, who served as first president of the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal and later as president of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, has died after a long battle with cancer, the Lebanon tribunal announced Saturday.

The court set up to prosecute the assassins of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri said in a statement that Cassese died peacefully at his home in Florence, Italy, on Friday night.

"For members of the tribunal he was the Maestro, whose towering ability as a jurist and a statesman was equaled by the immense personal warmth and humanity which made him our dear friend," said David Baragwanath, who succeeded Cassese less than two weeks ago as president of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon after the Italian stepped down on health grounds.

Cassese was still working as an appeals judge at the tribunal at the time of his death.

Cassese was one of the world's most respected experts in international law. He guided the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia during its first years of operation, from 1993-97, and led the United Nations' International Commission of Inquiry into Genocide in Darfur in 2004.

Cassese was born in 1937 in Italy. The Lebanon tribunal did not release his exact age.

"He created and was the pre-eminent figure in modern international criminal law," Baragwanath said. "His family extended across the globe to wherever there was injustice. His vision, intellect, dynamism and courage changed attitudes, institutions and lives."

Cassese was professor of international law at the University of Florence from 1975 until 2008 and was a visiting fellow at Oxford University's All Souls College from 1979-80.

He published extensively on international law, particularly international criminal law, and received several awards for his work.

Funeral arrangements were not immediately announced.

Devine issues consumer alert on reparations scam

Devine issues consumer alert on reparations scam

In response to Ald. Dorothy Tillman's (3rd) call for an investigation, Cook County State's Attorney Dick Devine Wednesday issued a consumer alert warning the public, especially Black seniors to ignore a bogus slave reparations letter.

Devine asked seniors not to respond to these mail solicitations that ask for their names, addresses, Social Security numbers, date of birth and other data requesting the information to be sent to a Washington, D.C. post office that is registered to T.R.E.A. Senior Systems League.

Devine said T.R.E.A. Senior Systems' League, a not-for-profit firm based in Alexandria, VA, says the letters were not authorized or distributed by their organization.

After the sender fills out the form, the perpetrators of this scam claim they will be mailed an application to receive their $5,000 reparations settlement check.

Except, Devine said it is not true. Rather, he called the letter a "cruel hoax" that targets the elderly. "The federal government has not enacted a `Slave Reparation Act' and no one is eligible for a $5,000 payment," said Devine.

"Giving out the kind of personal information requested in this letter can lead to identity theft," he said.

Tillman said: "Lassar said he would turn it over to the Secret Service. I think it is very serious, and we commend Lassar and Devine. I would hope that on Sunday all African American ministers will tell their congregation not to fill out this form and to be a part of this hoax...."

According to Devine, copies of this hoax letter has been received throughout America including Philadelphia, Milwaukee, and Baton Rouge.

Devine asked the public to call me with their questions or complaints at his Consumer Fraud Division: 312-603-8600.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Elliott Abrams, Council On Foreign Relations

(This is not a legal transcript. Bloomberg LP cannot guarantee its accuracy.)

ELLIOTT ABRAMS, SENIOR FELLOW FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, TALKS ABOUT LIBYA AT BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE

FEBRUARY 28, 2011

SPEAKERS:

TOM KEENE, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE HOST

KEN PREWITT, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE CO-HOST

ELLIOTT ABRAMS, SENIOR FELLOW FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS

8:37

TOM KEENE, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE HOST: From the Council on Foreign Relations, Elliott Abrams. Good morning.

ELLIOTT ABRAMS, SENIOR FELLOW FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS: Good morning.

KEENE: What has changed over the weekend? I mean it becomes a blur. I think we become numbed to so much of this. What has changed over the weekend?

ABRAMS: Two things. One, Gaddafi is not doing well. His efforts to strike back and crush this rebellion don't seem to be working and you do get virtually unanimous world condemnation and action against him in the UN.

Secondly, it looks as if there is a shipment of oil from the eastern part of Libya as you were mentioning a couple of minutes ago. That's new.

The third thing I guess is we see the rebellions continue to spread. There was something in Oman, which is really about the sleepiest place in the whole Arab world, in addition to continue demonstrations in Egypt and Tunisia. So the spirits continue to rise.

KEN PREWITT, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE CO-HOST: How does the region look a year from now?

ABRAMS: Oh, boy. I think first of all it looks variegated. That is it is not going to be the same in every one of these countries. And some of them are going to be quite calm and others are not. I think it looks difficult.

That is this is not going to be a Czech Republic style velvet revolution where a year from now in every one of these countries we are going to say, oh, that's wonderful. That just looks like Vermont or New Hampshire, you know, the way the democracy is working. In a lot of places, I think there will be continued demonstrations and dissatisfaction.

And one thing that does worry me, in a place like Egypt people may be expecting magic in the economy. You know, I'm poor, I don't have a job, this will fix it. A year from now, those people will still be poor and still not have jobs. And what worries me is the possibility of kind of Argentina-style economic populism.

PREWITT: Well, in the case of Libya anyway, let's say Gaddafi falls and leaves or whatever. It's a real power vacuum, isn't there? I mean there are no trade union - no organizations really except tribes. Is that what happens? It descends into tribalism?

ABRAMS: Well, you certainly don't have the kind of society you have in Tunisia. You don't have the army the way you do in Egypt. And it may - it may descend that way. There is a little bit of hope. People do seem to be spontaneously organizing in the east.

There are some remaining officers from the free officers movement of which Gaddafi was a part that overthrew the king in 1969. If you take the prestige of a few of them and some of the notables in the society - engineers, doctors, professors - it is possible you can get some kind of provisional government.

I hope that the Europeans and we are thinking about that - meaning the White House - right now and are reaching out to people and trying to help them put together a provisional government because it may just be a matter of days before Gaddafi goes. And I don't think he leaves the country. I think frankly the way this ends is with him dead.

KEENE: Elliott Abrams, you've got a weekly standard article. You've got a lovely sentence here, "Once again silence is the right response for countries with no options and no capabilities. For the United States, the right reaction to such threats and such fears is to call Musa Kusa - (well, excuse me,) the right reaction here is to do more than silence." Explain that, please. What would you like to see from the administration?

ABRAMS: Well, the administration has been, in my view, behind the eight ball for days. It was very quiet when the Arabs and Europeans were denouncing Gaddafi, the United States was not doing much.

And the reason the administration kept saying was there are Americans in Libya and we have to be silent until they are out. Well, the striking thing about that was the Europeans weren't silent and they had people in Libya. The Arabs weren't silent. They had people in Libya.

When we finally got our people out, we did it by a ferry that sat there for three days and then was able to move. You know, the Chinese sent a gun boat and so did several of the European countries. My feeling was that we looked weak. That we looked afraid of Gaddafi.

Musa Kusa is the intelligence chief and now foreign minister. And what I thought we should do is to call him up on the phone and tell him touch an American, take an American hostage and you are a dead man. I think that is the kind of language Gaddafi and his henchmen understand a lot better than diplomacy and careful restraint in language.

PREWITT: Well, as you put it in your Wall Street Journal op-ed recently, Musa Kusa, his suave and murderous intelligence chief, Michigan State University class of '78.

ABRAMS: Yes, Musa Kusa is really quite a debonair fellow, perfect English, well dressed, expensive suits. And, you know, a Spartan fan I suppose.

But a lot of American blood on his hands. This is the guy behind PanAm 103, the plane that they blew up in the sky over Lockerbie. It is quite a crew.

KEENE: When you look at the crew of nations of the Middle East, one thing I noticed this weekend, Elliott, from people from all persuasions is they are pretty much exhausted by it. What is the self-help prescription for the Middle East?

You know, to get out, you think of Albert Hourani and you go through a colonial stage and a little bit of true capitalism in Egypt maybe in the middle part of the last century. Do you see a self-help prescription across the Middle East.

ABRAMS: You know, one of the good things about the way these revolts have played out is that they are all coming from within. Arab regimes have fallen when we knocked them over, for example, Iraq.

This is not coming from outside. This is not long lines of the history of colonialism or of American intervention. This is entirely internal and spontaneous. And that shows the kind of life for -

KEENE: Right.

ABRAMS: - Arab society that we haven't seen in a very long time.

KEENE: Well, are we, Elliott, unfortunately we are short on time here, but are we just slaves to our oil policy here? Is that all we are really talking about?

ABRAMS: We have been too much, and I hope that one of the things that this teaches is yet again to move away from the dependence on Arab oil. The oil producers have generally been some of the most retrograde countries when it comes to reform.

They just spend all that money to buy off public support. The king of Saudi Arabia did it again today, to spend some of the reserve. That is not a substitute for reform, and I wish they - it would be better for them as well as for us if they would learn that lesson.

KEENE: Let's leave it there. Elliott Abrams, thank you so much, the Council on Foreign Relations. Ken, that's not talk you usually see in the op-eds. Tough talk there.

PREWITT: Yes.

***END OF TRANSCRIPT***

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Italian Soccer Summaries

Summaries Sunday from Italy's Serie A (home teams listed first):

Catania 2, Cagliari 1

Catania: Giuseppe Mascara (37), Rocco Sabato (87).

Cagliari: Jeda (6).

Halftime: 1-1.

Chievo Verona 0, Juventus 2

Juventus: Alessandro Del Piero (40), Vincenzo Iaquinta (53).

Halftime: 0-1.

Fiorentina 2, Atalanta 1

Fiorentina: Felipe Melo (20), Alberto Gilardino (23).

Atalanta: Sergio Floccari (77 penalty).

Halftime: 2-0.

Genoa 4, Reggina 0

Genoa: Diego Milito (53 penalty, 74, 89), Giuseppe Sculli (81).

Halftime: 0-0.

Inter Milan 1, Udinese 0

Inter: Julio Ricardo Cruz (90).

Halftime: 0-0.

Lazio 3, Siena 0

Lazio: Mauro Zarate (58), Tommaso Rocchi (86, 90).

Halftime: 0-0.

Napoli 2, Sampdoria 0

Napoli: Daniele Mannini (23), Marcelo Zalayeta (74).

Halftime: 1-0.

Defending champion Harrington chasing a repeat at British Open

Defending British Open champion Padraig Harrington put himself in position for a repeat, claiming a share of the lead Saturday at blustery Royal Birkdale.

With winds gusting close to 40 mph (64 kph), Harrington was joined at the top by Jim Furyk, K.J. Choi and 53-year-old Greg Norman, looking to become golf's oldest major champion at the oldest of the big four tournaments.

Anything close to par was a brilliant score on this day. While the sun finally came out after two gloomy days, the wind off the Irish Sea really picked up, holding up shots and sending them flying off line. One player, Anthony Kim, saw his ball blow off the green after he had marked it ready for a putt.

"It was probably about as tough as you can play out there," said 2003 Open winner Ben Curtis, who was thrilled to get off the course with a even par 70 and a share of the clubhouse lead _ at 7-over 217.

David Duval felt Birkdale's wrath. The 2001 Open champion quickly fell out of contention with an ugly 10-over 44 on the front side, going from three shots off the lead to 10.

Choi began the day as the only player under par through 36 holes, but a double-bogey on the massive sixth hole put him in the same company as everyone else. When he three-putted from just off the green at No. 8, the South Korean found himself in a four-way tie for the lead.

Clearly comfortable in the windy conditions, Harrington knocked in two birdies on the front side, including a chip-in at No. 5, and made the turn with a 34 that kept him at 2 over for the tournament. On Wednesday, he wasn't even sure if he'd be able to play because of a sore wrist.

Norman, a two-time Open winner who married tennis great Chris Evert three weeks ago, got off to a shaky start with bogeys on three of his first six holes. But a 364-yard drive at No. 8 set him up for an 8-foot birdie putt that brought a smile back to his face.

Jim Furyk was grinding out a solid round of his own. The 2003 U.S. Open winner closed the front side with two straight birdies, getting back to even for his round and part of the pack at 2 over.

No one else was within three strokes of the leaders. Camilo Villegas and Robert Allenby were tied at 5 over, with five more players another shot back.

Duval was hoping to show he has regained the form that carried him to the world's No. 1 ranking and the claret jug at Lytham. But, coming off a second-round 68, he returned to the form that sent his career into a seven-year skid that he's still struggling to halt.

The wind carried Duval's second shot of the day into the tall, tangly grass right of the green, forcing him to take a penalty drop for an unplayable lie. He wound up with a triple-bogey, which was just the start of his woes.

Duval bogeyed the next three holes before finally making his first par at No. 5. But a double-bogey at the sixth was quickly followed by two more bogeys.

Norman yanked his opening tee shot into the tall grass, had to punch out and took bogey. The Shark made another at the third, where a 4 1/2-foot putt rolled all the way around the edge of the cup and stayed out, dropping him three strokes behind Choi.

By the turn, Norman had caught the 36-hole leader.

The wind was the main story. Phil Mickelson's cap blew off in the middle of the 15th fairway. A course worker retrieved it for Lefty, who shot a 76 that likely erased whatever faint hopes he had for contending on Sunday. Anthony Kim, who carded a 71 for 7-over 217, was caught in a long delay at the 10th after he marked his ball on the green only for the wind to then blow it backwards 15 yards and off the putting surface. He called a rules official who stopped play at the hole until the wind had died down.

"It felt like we went through a war especially on 10 we had that 45 minute delay," Kim said. "I didn't know what was going on. I waited and wondered if they were going to call play."

It was possible to go low, but Curtis had to hole out from 165 yards at No. 3 to do it. The American turned away in disgust after hitting the shot, but the wind blew it back on line _ and right into the cup for an eagle 2. He was tied at 217 with England's Ross Fisher (71) and Kim, who eagled 17 after 10 straight pars.

Davis Love III and Henrik Stenson also shot 70 to sneak onto the leaderboard.

Villegas found the going much tougher after closing Friday's round with five straight birdies for a 65, the best round of the tournament so far and certainly unreachable on Saturday. He bogeyed two of the first four holes and was trying to hang on.

Asian Champions League: Gamba Osaka ends Melbourne's quarterfinal hopes

Masato Yamazaki scored a pair of goals Wednesday to lead Gamba Osaka to a 2-0 win over Melbourne Victory, ending the Australian club's chances of progressing in the Asian Champions League.

The win extended Gamba's lead atop Group G, with only one team to progress to the quarterfinals.

Defeat left Melbourne with only three points from four games, and it now can not catch Gamba.

Yamazaki put his team on top in the 32nd minute when he took a perfect pass from Yasuhito Endo and beat the Melbourne goalkeeper from close range.

Striker Danny Allsopp had a glorious chance to equalize for the visitors late in the first half when he hit the crossbar in the 42nd minute with a blast from inside the area.

Yamazaki gave the hosts a 2-0 lead when he redirected an Endo free kick in the 56th minute.

The top 10 singles and albums on iTunes

iTunes' top 10 selling singles and albums of the week ending Sept. 12, 2011:

Singles:

1. "Moves Like Jagger (Studio Recording from 'The Voice' Performance) (feat. Christina Aguilera)," Maroon 5

2. "Someone Like You," ADELE

3. "Pumped Up Kicks," Foster the People

4. "Party Rock Anthem (feat. Lauren Bennett & GoonRock)," LMFAO

5. "Stereo Hearts (feat. Adam Levine)," Gym Class Heroes

6. "You and I," Lady GaGa

7. "Cheers (Drink to That)," Rihanna

8. "You Make Me Feel...(feat. Sabi)," Cobra Starship

9. "Mr. Know It All," Kelly Clarkson

10. "Super Bass," Nicki Minaj

Albums:

1. "Tha Carter IV," Lil Wayne

2. "1," The Beatles

3. "21," ADELE

4. "Hands All Over," Maroon 5

5. "I'm With You," Red Hot Chili Peppers

6. "Watch the Throne," Kanye West, Jay-Z

7. "Nothing But the Beat," David Guetta

8. "Here for a Good Time," George Strait

9. "Teenage Dream," Katy Perry

10. "Torches," Foster the People

___

iTunes is owned by Apple Inc.

Injury hit Killie draw

Kilmarnock handed 19-year-old Iain Flannigan his SPL debut amid aninjury crisis that also saw youngsters Jamie Hamill and Craig Brysonhanded starts in the 2-2 draw with Inverness.

Killie twice went ahead through Aime Koudou and Colin Nish, but aSimon Ford own-goal and Don Cowie's free-kick earned Caley Thistle apoint.

Ford, who was cleared of blame for the mix-up over his headed goalby goalkeeper Alan Combe, was impressed by the young players.

He said: "They didn't look out of place and they haven't made iteasy for the other guys to get back in the team when they recoverfrom injuries."

More SPL on Page 39

City's execs cheer Daley, look forward to stability

Chicago's business community is breathing a collective sigh ofrelief over the election of Richard M. Daley as mayor. The victorywill, they believe, mean several years of governmental stability.

"The one thing businessmen don't like is risk," said FrankCassell, professor emeritus of industrial relations at NorthwesternUniversity. "They see the possibility of years of continuitycomparable to what they had under Richard J. Daley and HaroldWashington. Whether they get it or not remains to be seen."

Business put its money where its hopes were in the election.Members of the city's business establishment were the majorcontributors to Daley's $6.5 million campaign war chest.

"The business community is beside itself with joy," said WimWiewel, director of the Center for Urban Economic Development at theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago. "Business people care more aboutpredictability and consistency than they do about who is in CityHall."

A random selection of the city's business leaders pointed tohopes that Daley will follow through on promises to push throughreform of the Chicago public schools, that he will refocusdevelopment efforts downtown and that he will foster a generallycooperative relationship between city government and business.

"I see school reform as the No. 1 item on the civic agenda,"said B. Kenneth West, chairman of Harris Bank & Trust Co. and aleading proponent of the school reform plan. "And I know this is atop priority with Mr. Daley."

Companies are worried that the poor quality of educationprovided by the Chicago public schools will make it increasinglydifficult for them to hire qualified workers in the future. Already,businesses have launched their own summer jobs program to linksuccess in high school to success in the working world. The issuewill become more critical as the labor force shrinks in the future.

"Retailing provides many entry-level jobs in this city, and weneed a better-educated work force," said Sara Bode, president of theGreater State Street Council. "It's in everybody's interest thatyoung people get a better-quality education."

Another key concern among the city's retailers is the proposedCentral Area Circulator, an above-ground railway system that wouldlink the Near North Side with the suburban commuter rail stations onthe west side of the Loop.

"We consider Rich Daley to be a leader who recognizes essentialvalues and requirements of the central city, which includes our NearNorth Side," said Nelson Forrest, president of the Greater NorthMichigan Avenue Association.

Developers, in particular, supported Daley's candidacy, and theyexpect to reap the rewards.

"Real estate values should increase, and financing will beeasier for city projects than in the days when we had Council Wars,"said Kenneth Sheetz, managing partner of Oxford Cos.

"Development produces jobs, and I think this administration isgoing to be very keyed to job creation," said Robert Wislow,president of U.S. Equities.

Some constituents are worried that Daley will focus on thecentral city and that neighborhood development, which flourishedunder Washington, will wither under Daley's tutelage.

"If he's smart he will realize that good economic development isneeded in neighborhoods throughout the city, black or white orother," said Jacoby Dickens, chairman of Seaway National Bank and amember of the city's Economic Development Commission.

Ronald Gidwitz, chief executive officer of Helene CurtisIndustries and chairman of the Economic Development Commission, saidhe believes Daley will keep the support of the business communitythrough example, not promises. "Economic climate basically is amatter of perception," he said.

Robert Malott, chairman of FMC Corp., said he has been"frustrated" with the lack of follow-through on the part of the cityin responding to a 1986 Civic Committee report that called for tightreins on pay and benefits for city employees and "privatization" ofservices to ward off budget deficits.

Malott said his message to Daley is: "The business communitysincerely wants to help, and we do so without any expectation of quidpro quo."

Karl D. Bays, chairman of Whitman Corp., agreed.

"Rich Daley had just the right message in the campaign when hesaid, `Let's lower our voices. Let's work together for education,housing, and jobs.' That's what all the voters wanted to hear.Business is ready to work with him. If he follows through, he'll bea great mayor."

David Greising, Jerry C. Davis, Lisa Holton, Greg Burns, SusanChandler, Frederick H. Lowe and Patricia Moore contributed to thisstory.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Hundley accepts cameo in opener

Say you're Todd Hundley, and after a decade of kicking around thebig leagues you finally come back to the team of your youth and theteam of your dreams. And here it is Opening Day, and you findyourself sitting on the bench. Do you feel bad about it and complain,or do you say you understand and, hey, there are still 161 games toplay?

You could do both, of course.

"I'm thinking, `Wow, here it is Opening Day, and I'm in a Cubsuniform,' " Hundley, who came to the Cubs from the Dodgers during theoffseason, said Monday after the Cubs' 5-4 loss at Wrigley Field. "Itcan't be any better than this-except if we win."

Unless, of course, his role had been just a little bit moresubstantial than striking out while pinch-hitting for Joe Girardi toend the game.

Hundley seemed to feel very strongly both ways about not starting,saying at one point, "It's not that big a deal. (Manager Don Baylor)and I talked about it. There's a long way to go. It's a marathon.He's a good manager. He knows how to work guys."

But still . . .

"I'm going to be honest," said Hundley, whose father, Randy,started many a Cubs opener in his time. "I'm not going to lie to youand say I don't want to play Opening Day. He said it was nothingpersonal, it was just the way he had to go. (Starting pitcher JonLieber) and Joe have been together a year longer than he and I have.I told him I thought Lieb and I worked together well in springtraining."

So the bottom line is?

"I trust him," Hundley said. "He's the boss."

Fool me once . . .

Hundley's chance to make an impact in his lone at-bat could havebeen a big one, coming against the Expos' Ugueth Urbina, one of thebest relief pitchers in the game before undergoing elbow surgery lastseason. Urbina fanned him on a 3-2 changeup, and the way he did itconvinced Hundley that Urbina is back.

"A guy throws me a changeup on 3-2, I tip my hat to him," Hundleysaid. "I was trying to get to the fastball before he could get tothat pitch. I was waiting for him to try to blow one by me, and hepulled that one out of his pocket. I'll file it away and remember itnext time."

Starting over

The Cubs had their Opening Day bunting (like they have any otherkind) hanging from the Wrigley Field facade. Call it festive, call itwishful thinking or call it the start of something new. What isundeniably new is the roster, and I'm not talking about just theabsence of Mark Grace, either. Only 11 of the players on the 2000roster are back. Bill Mueller, who became the Cubs' 16th startingthird baseman on Opening Day since Ron Santo called it a career,broke in sensationally in the field. Mueller raced in to field PeterBergeron's bunt to open the third inning and gunned him out. Aninning later, he dived to stop Orlando Cabrera's shot down the line,scrambled to his feet and threw him out, too.

"They're both tough plays," said Mueller, who came to the Cubsfrom the Giants over the winter. "Bergeron is very fast down the line-I enjoy coming in on a play like that-and Cabrera hit a rocket. Thosewere good plays for the team."

Mueller was less thrilled when Expos first baseman Lee Stevensgrabbed his line-drive bid for a hit down the right-field line thatwould have won the game in the ninth inning.

"You saw a guy jumping up and down; I was pretty upset," Muellersaid. "I tried hard to hit it over the infield. If Lee just wasn't sodarned tall. . . . I took a couple away from them, and they took oneaway from me."

And finally . . .

When you've spent as many years in the big leagues as Felipe Alouhas, Opening Days tend to run together a bit. But the Expos' managerhas fond memories of the home run he hit years ago when the Giantsopened the season in St. Louis.

"It was cold, the wind was blowing in and nobody wanted to play,"Alou said. "I hit one off Vinegar Bend Mizell, and it must have takenthe ball five minutes to get out of the park."

Asked whether he was sentimental enough to save Opening Day lineupcards, Alou said no.

"Even the money you make in this business is hard to keep," Alousaid.

E-mail Ron Rapoport at rjr@suntimes.com.

Green is the new ...: ; Manufacturers supplying growing demand for eco-friendly apparel

For Teresa Lamb, the commitment to green living began on a smallscale. She bought organic food at a store near the doctor's officewhere she works.

Then she went looking for organic cotton underwear and came upona small boutique in Kansas City, Mo., called It's Only Natural. Theonly apparel sold there is in Earth-sustaining materials includingorganic cotton, hemp, bamboo and Tencel, a fabric made from woodpulp.

Lamb, of Kansas City, was drawn to the cotton sweaters and thenthe sheets, towels, blouses and, most recently, organic cottonshorts, which "I live in," she says. She liked that they wereproduced without chemicals, presumably with less damage to theenvironment.

It was a turning point that launched her into a new lifestyle.

"Once you get into it, you can't go back," she says.

Lamb is on the curve of a movement rumbling through the garmentindustry. Never mind black. The newest color on the front lines isgreen. Demand and supply for eco-friendly clothing - whether it'sorganic cotton or silk like soy - are increasing.

"It's been around before, but this time it's a much biggermovement," says New York-based trend analyst David Wolfe, with theDoneger Group consultants.

Before, green fabrics were considered part of a "lunatic fringe,and it's now moving into the mainstream. I think everybody is wakingup to the fact the world is in a sorry state," Wolfe says. "Peopleare so cynical. They would like to think they are doing somethinggood."

Upscale designer Eileen Fisher offers an organic group. Dillard'splans to open eco shops in selected stores. Levi Strauss has anorganic denim line identified with a capital E logo. Wal-Mart,Pottery Barn and Target carry organic cotton items on their Websites.

When Jane Fonda appeared on David Letterman's show, she toutedher eco-friendly outfit, a milk-and-cashmere sweater and hemp dress.And many magazines, including Vogue, Town & Country, Vanity Fair andGlamour, have published green issues in recent months.

"We're encouraging people to buy responsibly," says Ashley Baker,Glamour associate style editor. "Fast fashion where you buy cheap,trendy clothes every few months is a catastrophe to the environment.We suggest you save up and buy things that have lasting value. It'snot just about having a bunch of clothes."

The raised consciousness is part of a bigger picture identifiedunder the umbrella LO HAS, an acronym for "Lifestyles of Health andSustainability." It's about conscience-driven consumerism thatincludes driving a hybrid car, buying organic food, consideringconditions in which clothing is made and having a sense ofspirituality. The LO HAS Web site (lohas.com) says the overallmarket is $228 million.

Scott Leonard, the CEO of Indigenous Designs, a 13-year-old SantaRosa, Calif., company that markets fair trade and organicsportswear, says his business was up 30 percent in 2006, and 70percent in 2007.

He gives credit to the "media phenomenon" that helped bringattention to the global issues, and to Hollywood. Cameron Diazspends thousands on Indigenous Designs organic clothing, Leonardsays.

Courtney Fuchs, who owns It's Only Natural in Kansas City, saysthe market is at a "tipping point" as people begin to understand thechallenge.

"I find that less and less I am having to explain what [thematerial] is," says Fuchs, whose stock includes silk like printskirts and soft, feminine dresses.

Lynda Fassa, a former model who founded Green Babies more than adecade ago, sells her organic children's line in Whole Foods andother stores.

"In the beginning it was like pushing a great big elephant up ahill," she says. "Now it's like an explosion."

Credit for the heightened interest also goes to Al Gore's Oscar-winning film "An Inconvenient Truth." Publicity devoted to globalwarming and high gas prices plays a part, says Aysia Wright, whofounded Greenloop (thegreenloop.com), a retail Web site, in 2004.With an environmental background, she saw fashion as an "ideal pathof advocacy."

With one of the first green retail one-stop shops, Wright saysshe now has about 28 apparel lines and 10 to 15 accessory brands.Her line up includes Edun, the fashionable organic cotton linecreated by Bono and his wife, Ali Hewson, and New York designerRogan Gregory. Here you find a great trench coat, a chic shortjacket or skinny jeans. The brand is carried by Saks Fifth Avenue aswell as Web sites.

Organic cotton, of course, is at the center of the clothingmovement because cotton requires a considerable amount of chemicalsand pesticides to grow. The transition for cotton farmers requiresnurturing of the land and up to three years. But they are paid apremium for the product once they are certified. In 2005, organicfiber sales grew 44 percent, according to Lori Wyman of the OrganicTrade Association.

But the fashion-minded environmentalist now has many choices.Linda Loudermilk, a high-end Los Angeles designer, uses a range offibers including soy and bamboo for couture clothing often inspiredby images from nature.

Besides his work for Edun, Gregory is producing chic fashion forLoomstate (loomstate.org) in New York.

Panda Snack (pandasnack .com), a New York manufacturer and Website, transforms bamboo fibers into jersey like fabrics. The teesand tunic tops are sophisticated and sexy. Founder Dearrick Knuppsays he and his partner came upon bamboo at a trade show more thantwo years ago.

"It was so soft. It was so beautiful. Then we found out howwonderful bamboo is for the eco movement."

Knupp says the 2-year-old company is selling to specialty storessuch as Stanley Korshak and shipping to London and Japan. He sayshis company plans to add bamboo and cotton blends and eventuallybamboo denim, children's clothing and home furnishings.

The buyin' and wearin' o' the green

Panda Snack: Bamboo clothing at pandasnack.com.

Indigenous Designs: Fair trade and eco-friendly sportswear andactive wear at indigenousdesigns.com.

Sustainlane.com: Reviews on organic products and info on planningan Earth-friendly lifestyle.

Loomstate.org: Fashionable green clothing including denim for menand women.

Greenloop.com: Designer eco-friendly clothing.

Green Babies: Organic cotton clothing and gifts for newborns andyoung children at ecobabies.com. Also sold at retail stores andWhole Foods.

Danny Seo: Environmental consultant and co-host of HGTV special"Red, Hot and Green," a show about making your home eco-friendly.

Annatarian Couture: Los Angeles designer Anna Mkhitarian usesvintage fabrics and high-tech Earth-sustaining textiles to createone-of-a-kind couture designs. You can see the clothes on the Web atannatarian.com and order by phone or e-mail.

Green is the new ...: ; Manufacturers supplying growing demand for eco-friendly apparel

For Teresa Lamb, the commitment to green living began on a smallscale. She bought organic food at a store near the doctor's officewhere she works.

Then she went looking for organic cotton underwear and came upona small boutique in Kansas City, Mo., called It's Only Natural. Theonly apparel sold there is in Earth-sustaining materials includingorganic cotton, hemp, bamboo and Tencel, a fabric made from woodpulp.

Lamb, of Kansas City, was drawn to the cotton sweaters and thenthe sheets, towels, blouses and, most recently, organic cottonshorts, which "I live in," she says. She liked that they wereproduced without chemicals, presumably with less damage to theenvironment.

It was a turning point that launched her into a new lifestyle.

"Once you get into it, you can't go back," she says.

Lamb is on the curve of a movement rumbling through the garmentindustry. Never mind black. The newest color on the front lines isgreen. Demand and supply for eco-friendly clothing - whether it'sorganic cotton or silk like soy - are increasing.

"It's been around before, but this time it's a much biggermovement," says New York-based trend analyst David Wolfe, with theDoneger Group consultants.

Before, green fabrics were considered part of a "lunatic fringe,and it's now moving into the mainstream. I think everybody is wakingup to the fact the world is in a sorry state," Wolfe says. "Peopleare so cynical. They would like to think they are doing somethinggood."

Upscale designer Eileen Fisher offers an organic group. Dillard'splans to open eco shops in selected stores. Levi Strauss has anorganic denim line identified with a capital E logo. Wal-Mart,Pottery Barn and Target carry organic cotton items on their Websites.

When Jane Fonda appeared on David Letterman's show, she toutedher eco-friendly outfit, a milk-and-cashmere sweater and hemp dress.And many magazines, including Vogue, Town & Country, Vanity Fair andGlamour, have published green issues in recent months.

"We're encouraging people to buy responsibly," says Ashley Baker,Glamour associate style editor. "Fast fashion where you buy cheap,trendy clothes every few months is a catastrophe to the environment.We suggest you save up and buy things that have lasting value. It'snot just about having a bunch of clothes."

The raised consciousness is part of a bigger picture identifiedunder the umbrella LO HAS, an acronym for "Lifestyles of Health andSustainability." It's about conscience-driven consumerism thatincludes driving a hybrid car, buying organic food, consideringconditions in which clothing is made and having a sense ofspirituality. The LO HAS Web site (lohas.com) says the overallmarket is $228 million.

Scott Leonard, the CEO of Indigenous Designs, a 13-year-old SantaRosa, Calif., company that markets fair trade and organicsportswear, says his business was up 30 percent in 2006, and 70percent in 2007.

He gives credit to the "media phenomenon" that helped bringattention to the global issues, and to Hollywood. Cameron Diazspends thousands on Indigenous Designs organic clothing, Leonardsays.

Courtney Fuchs, who owns It's Only Natural in Kansas City, saysthe market is at a "tipping point" as people begin to understand thechallenge.

"I find that less and less I am having to explain what [thematerial] is," says Fuchs, whose stock includes silk like printskirts and soft, feminine dresses.

Lynda Fassa, a former model who founded Green Babies more than adecade ago, sells her organic children's line in Whole Foods andother stores.

"In the beginning it was like pushing a great big elephant up ahill," she says. "Now it's like an explosion."

Credit for the heightened interest also goes to Al Gore's Oscar-winning film "An Inconvenient Truth." Publicity devoted to globalwarming and high gas prices plays a part, says Aysia Wright, whofounded Greenloop (thegreenloop.com), a retail Web site, in 2004.With an environmental background, she saw fashion as an "ideal pathof advocacy."

With one of the first green retail one-stop shops, Wright saysshe now has about 28 apparel lines and 10 to 15 accessory brands.Her line up includes Edun, the fashionable organic cotton linecreated by Bono and his wife, Ali Hewson, and New York designerRogan Gregory. Here you find a great trench coat, a chic shortjacket or skinny jeans. The brand is carried by Saks Fifth Avenue aswell as Web sites.

Organic cotton, of course, is at the center of the clothingmovement because cotton requires a considerable amount of chemicalsand pesticides to grow. The transition for cotton farmers requiresnurturing of the land and up to three years. But they are paid apremium for the product once they are certified. In 2005, organicfiber sales grew 44 percent, according to Lori Wyman of the OrganicTrade Association.

But the fashion-minded environmentalist now has many choices.Linda Loudermilk, a high-end Los Angeles designer, uses a range offibers including soy and bamboo for couture clothing often inspiredby images from nature.

Besides his work for Edun, Gregory is producing chic fashion forLoomstate (loomstate.org) in New York.

Panda Snack (pandasnack .com), a New York manufacturer and Website, transforms bamboo fibers into jersey like fabrics. The teesand tunic tops are sophisticated and sexy. Founder Dearrick Knuppsays he and his partner came upon bamboo at a trade show more thantwo years ago.

"It was so soft. It was so beautiful. Then we found out howwonderful bamboo is for the eco movement."

Knupp says the 2-year-old company is selling to specialty storessuch as Stanley Korshak and shipping to London and Japan. He sayshis company plans to add bamboo and cotton blends and eventuallybamboo denim, children's clothing and home furnishings.

The buyin' and wearin' o' the green

Panda Snack: Bamboo clothing at pandasnack.com.

Indigenous Designs: Fair trade and eco-friendly sportswear andactive wear at indigenousdesigns.com.

Sustainlane.com: Reviews on organic products and info on planningan Earth-friendly lifestyle.

Loomstate.org: Fashionable green clothing including denim for menand women.

Greenloop.com: Designer eco-friendly clothing.

Green Babies: Organic cotton clothing and gifts for newborns andyoung children at ecobabies.com. Also sold at retail stores andWhole Foods.

Danny Seo: Environmental consultant and co-host of HGTV special"Red, Hot and Green," a show about making your home eco-friendly.

Annatarian Couture: Los Angeles designer Anna Mkhitarian usesvintage fabrics and high-tech Earth-sustaining textiles to createone-of-a-kind couture designs. You can see the clothes on the Web atannatarian.com and order by phone or e-mail.

Police and courts

Woman turns in

grandson for theft

A woman turned in her grandson, who was wanted by police,according to a criminal complaint filed in Kanawha Magistrate Court.

Jeffrey D. Tompa, 32, of Glasgow was arrested Monday after beingfound inside his mother's residence.

Police had been searching for him since last week, when he wasaccused of going to his grandmother's home and breaking into hertool shed. When she confronted him, he threw her to the ground,according to a criminal complaint filed by the West Virginia StatePolice.

The grandmother then dialed 911, but Tompa took her phone andfled the residence, according to the criminal complaint.

Tompa also stole his grandmother's lawnmower, according to thecomplaint. The mower is valued at about $200, the report said.

Tompa is wanted for domestic battery and petit larceny.

The grandmother turned him in Monday, according to the criminalcomplaint filed by State Police Trooper S.D. Schoolcraft.

Tompa's mother, Patricia Tompa, told police she told her sonSunday not to come to her residence any longer.

He was charged with daytime burglary, giving false information topolice and trespassing.

Tompa was being held in South Central Regional Jail.

Ga. man arrested

at doughnut shop

Kanawha County Sheriff's deputies arrested a Georgia man wantedfor cruelty and battery of children.

He was captured outside a St. Albans doughnut and coffee shop.

Jeffrey Allen Lee II, 27, had eluded Kanawha County Sheriff'sdeputies Oct. 31 after fighting with them, police said. He wasspotted by one of those deputies, who was off-duty, about 8:30 p.m.Monday in a car at Tim Horton's in St. Albans, according to St.Albans Police Lt. James P. Agee.

St. Albans officers rushed to the scene and arrested Lee withoutincident.

Lee had been residing on Bigley Avenue in Charleston whensheriff's deputies went to arrest him last week on a fugitive fromjustice warrant from Paulding County, Ga. Details of his allegedcrimes there were not available.

Lee was being held without bond in South Central Regional Jail.

School locks down

after man escapes

KENNA - Kenna Elementary School in Jackson County was locked downfor several hours after a man escaped from a police cruiser not farfrom the school.

Michael James, 29, of Goldtown, was involved in a domesticdispute early Monday.

Still in handcuffs, James fled a cruiser about 5:30 a.m. while adeputy was taking statements, said Jackson County Sheriff'sDepartment Chief Deputy B.W. Dewees.

The spot where he escaped was about four or five miles away fromthe school.

James then got a gun at his father-in-law's house, authoritiessaid.

The grade school was locked down for about four hours whilepolice searched for James.

It was reopened about 1 p.m. after they found him near theInterstate 77 Goldtown exit.

Dewees said James had somehow removed the cuffs.

"The kids were safe," said Kenna Principal Mike King. "We triedto have as normal a school day as possible."

Man jailed for

illegal drugs

A North Carolina man is in jail for allegedly illegallypossessing both marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms.

Christopher Joe Hembree, 32, of Walkertown was seen stopped in avehicle on MacCorkle Avenue in Chesapeake for about an hour onFriday, according to a press release from the Kanawha CountySheriff's Department.

According to the release, Deputy J.M. Vernon became suspiciousand approached the car, which was filled with three people. He wasaided by K-9 units and Chesapeake Police, the release stated.

The K-9 unit indicated there was a presence of drugs in the car,and police found a large bag containing hallucinogenic mushrooms anda separate bag containing marijuana, all packaged separately forsale, according to the news release.

Hembree admitted the drugs were his and he was arrested, thereport said.

The release did not indicate if the other two passengers werecharged.

He was taken to South Central Regional Jail and is charged withfelony possession with intent to deliver marijuana and mushrooms.

Police looking for

suspected burglar

Police today were searching for a Chesapeake man suspected ofbreaking into a South Hills home and dropping some items after beingdiscovered by a woman who lived there.

A warrant was issued for Brian Franklin Petry, 29, after he wasidentified through a photo lineup.

The incident occurred on Monday morning when Elizabeth Knighton,who lives on Brookstone Road, heard the doorbell ring. She did notanswer, figuring it was only a delivery, according to a pressrelease from the Charleston Police Department.

Knighton then heard a door open, and when she went toinvestigate, she saw a man in her dining room with his hands full ofitems from the home, the release said.

The report says Knighton yelled at the man, who said he must bein the wrong house before he dropped the items and left.

She was able to note the license plate number and get adescription of the car as he left, according to the report.

An investigation revealed the man had pried open a back door andpossibly pilfered through the downstairs, according to Sgt. AaronJames.

The car was registered to Petry's girlfriend, but she is notsuspected in the crime.

Petry reportedly knows he is wanted but has yet to turn himselfin to authorities.

Charleston police

arrest father, son

Police arrested two Charleston men, a father and son, forallegedly committing separate crimes in the same week.

Les E. Bumpus, 47, and his son, Les Van Bumpus, 19, both of ParkAvenue, were arrested and taken into custody on Thursday and Sunday,respectively, according to police reports from the Charleston PoliceDepartment.

A report by Patrolman O.B. Morris says he received a call about amale with a gun on a KRT bus.

Morris stopped the bus on the East End, and the driver steppedoff to speak with police. That's when a man got off the bus andbegan running across the nearby Gino's Pizza parking lot and thenbehind Tudor's Biscuit World, the report said.

Morris gave chase, and when they rounded the corner, he heard thesound of metal hitting and sliding across pavement, so he pointedout the area to Cpl. E.W. Smith, the report said.

The man was apprehended in the next parking lot, and Smithlocated a gun where Morris indicated it had been thrown, the reportsaid.

The man, identified as Bumpus, is charged with carrying aconcealed weapon and fleeing on foot.

His son, Les Van, was sitting with a group of people on somesteps at Winston Court in Littlepage Terrace on Charleston's WestSide on Sunday, when plain-clothes officer A.C. Napier smelledmarijuana and observed an open container of beer, according to hisreport.

Napier wrote in the report that Detective J. Hunt displayed hisbadge and told people in the group to put up their hands, but theyounger Bumpus turned around and attempted to go up the steps.

He was told to come back down, and when he did, on the stepswhere he was sitting, there was a plastic bag with .8 grams of field-tested crack cocaine in it, the report said.

He was charged with simple possession of crack cocaine.

Man pleads guilty

to escaping facility

A Beckley man pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to escapingfrom a community correctional facility in Charleston.

Emmanuel Stoumile, 22, admitted that he left Bannam Place, wherehe was serving a sentence for dealing crack cocaine, on Aug. 21,according to a news release from federal prosecutors.

U.S. marshals traced Stoumile to a relative's residence inBeckley where he was arrested.

Chief U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin scheduled Stoumile'ssentencing for Jan. 28. Stoumile faces up to five years in prisonand fines up to $250,000.

Man accused of

wrecking golf green

A Charleston man is accused of vandalizing a local golf course.

Police have issued a warrant for Tristan Michael Jones, 25, ofEdgewood Drive.

He is accused of driving his beige colored Jeep through the gateand onto Cato Golf Course on Oct. 15 about 3 a.m., according to acriminal complaint filed in Kanawha Magistrate Court.

According to the report filed by the Charleston PoliceDepartment, Jones then drove onto the golf course and did doughnutsthroughout the green.

John Charnock, the city's director of Parks and Recreation, saidthere were tracks left all over the fifth hole.

"They knocked down the six-foot gate with their vehicle," hesaid.

Charnock said although there was extensive damage to the greenand around the hole, an estimated $1,100, the destruction did notnoticeably affect business.

"We're not very crowded right now due to the time of year. It wasjust a hassle that we had to work on it," he said.

Jones' Edgewood Drive home is in the immediate vicinity of thecourse.

The gate was rammed just behind the fifth hole, Charnock said.

No other vandalism was reported at the park.

Jones is wanted for destruction of property, a misdemeanor.

Police treating

death as homicide

Police are following leads to determine what happened to a GlenJean man who was found dead.

Arthur L. Thomas, 52, was found dead inside his home by a familymember on Sunday, according to a press release from West VirginiaState Police.

According to the release, "the manner in which the body was foundwould suggest it was not accidental or self-inflicted."

The method of death or time of death has yet to be determined,but the body was sent to the medical examiner's office, the releasesaid.

Interviews are being conducted to establish a time line ofpersons associated and involved with Thomas in the last severaldays, according to the release.

Sr. Trooper C.L. Adkins is leading the investigation.

compiled from staff reports