Thursday, March 15, 2012

And maybe a little extra help ...

Finally, for those who can afford that little bit extra, non-surgical treatments that once you use you won't want to lose.

Bristol's premier cosmetic surgery practice, Transform MedicalGroup, in Colston Street, offers a wide range of treatments, safelyprovided with free consultations.

Top of the list is botox. Now 4,000 women a month go for the jabswhich relax muscles using tiny amounts of a product derived frompoisonous botulism.

The paralysis banishes frown lines and forehead wrinkles,vanquishes crows' feet and even stops sweating armpits and hands formonths at a time. It is also thought to help migraine sufferers andhas been used successfully to improve …

Navigating through the 'decision decade'

GOD, MONEY AND ME

As people move closer to the magic age of 65 that society has deemed the age of retirement, they may find themselves wondering if they are ready for the transition.

They may question whether they have set aside enough money for retirement and what their expenses may be as they transition into retirement mode. They listen to, and read reports about, the financial requirements of retirement, listen to stories of those who retired ahead of them, and worry about what their days may be like or how their retirement will compare to the commercials portraying leisure retirement living on a southern beach or golf course.

Some refer to the five years prior …

Cancer forces Tasmanian devils to breed earlier

The little devils just can't wait. Faced with an epidemic of cancer that cuts their lives short, Tasmanian devils have begun breeding at younger ages, according to researchers at the University of Tasmania in Australia.

"We could be seeing evolution occurring before our eyes. Watch this space!" says zoologist Menna Jones of the university.

Tasmanian devils live on the island of Tasmania, south of Australia. They weigh 20 to 30 pounds and were named devils by early European settlers because the furry black marsupials produce a fierce screech and can be bad-tempered.

Since 1996 a contagious form of cancer called devil facial tumor disease has …

Calif. beekeeper attacked by 'killer bees'

LONG BEACH, Calif. - An 83-year-old beekeeper who did not realizehis hives were apparently taken over by Africanized "killer bees" wasattacked while mowing his lawn and was in critical condition.

Virgil Foster was stung 50 times Tuesday and was not breathingwhen paramedics arrived. He went into cardiac arrest as they workedon him.

Health department officials estimate Foster's three hives,originally set up for more timid European bees, held about 1 millionAfricanized honeybees. They also built a hive in a tree.

Africanized bees are not more venomous than other varieties, butthey are more aggressive and attack in large numbers. They appearvery similar to European …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

BWC protocol talks in Geneva collapse following U.S. rejection

NEWS AND NEGOTIATIONS

INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS 1N Geneva to conclude a protocol to the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) collapsed this summer after the United States rejected the protocol in late July, casting uncertainty over the talks' future.

BWC states-parties had been meeting since 1995 under a body known as the Ad Hoc Group to negotiate the protocol-a legally binding agreement to strengthen the BWC, which outlaws biological weapons but does not contain verification measures.

In a highly anticipated speech July 25, Ambassador Donald Mahley, the head of the U.S. Ad Hoc Group delegation, said the United States would not support the draft protocol or …

Cal's Campbell delivers big hits in 7-3 CWS win

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — California coach David Esquer called on all hands to save his baseball program, and he's doing the same to keep his team playing in the College World Series.

Freshman utilityman Derek Campbell drove in two runs out of the No. 9 spot, closer Matt Flemer pitched three scoreless innings in his longest outing of the year and the Golden Bears kept up their improbable postseason run with a 7-3 victory over Texas A&M.

"I'm happy our guys kind of grinded it out, because that's kind of how we do it. We don't do it easy," Esquer said.

The Bears (38-22) won their first CWS game in three appearances since 1980 and will play Virginia on Thursday in another …

Austrian cop pleads innocent to attack of American

An undercover policeman has pleaded not guilty to assaulting a black American teacher after mistaking him for a drug dealer at a Vienna subway station.

The 36-year-old policeman, who cannot be named under Austrian law, acknowledged in court Thursday that he used force to floor Mike Brennan on February 11, 2009. Brennan, a former football player, was injured, and the incident …

'Stingy' Americans again save the day: U.S. prosperity keeps the U.N. afloat

THE death toll in Asia from the killer tsunami exceeded 100,000.Almost immediately, the United States put together an aid package of$15 million, with assurances that more would be on the way. TheUnited States pledged an additional $20 million a few days later; now$350 million.

We also dispatched emergency relief teams and Navy patrols to helpwith the aftermath and to assess what more we can do.

"We also have to see this not just as a one-time thing," ColinPowell said. America is in the reconstruction effort "for the longhaul."

This commitment, however, was not generous enough for Jan Egeland,the Norwegian bureaucrat who heads up relief efforts for the …

Paraguay dentist says Aerosmith's Tyler doing fine

ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP) — The Paraguayan dentist who treated Steven Tyler says the Aerosmith singer is "doing splendidly."

Dr. Maria Bastos also says Tyler was "friendly and humble" as he received two dental implants. She told the Monumental radio station on Wednesday that Tyler "surprised me with his …

Braden, Don

Braden, Don

Braden, Don, contemporary American jazz saxophonist; b. Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 20, 1963. Don Braden started playing contemporary jazz professionally at age 15 after two years of learning to play tenor sax in Louisville, Ky. After time at Harvard (during which he studied with Jerry Bergonzi and Bill Pierce), he moved to N.Y. in 1984 and began gigging with a variety of mainstream artists, starting with the Harper Brothers …

Walmart, Pullman Park project rezoning vote delayed again

The vote to rezone an area on the Far South Side to make way for the city's second Walmart retail store was delayed for a second time.

Discussions between the retailer and union officials that delayed last month's scheduled vote were still ongoing, according to Aid. Daniel Solis (25th), chair of the zoning committee.

The talks had been underway between Walmart and union representatives from the Chicago Federation of Labor and the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union about the proposed Pullman Park development that Aid. Anthony Beale (9th) wants the store to anchor.

While Walmart was ready in May for the zoning committee to vote, union officials …

National League Leaders

BATTING_CJones, Atlanta, .415; Berkman, Houston, .392; Furcal, Los Angeles, .366; Pujols, St. Louis, .348; Nady, Pittsburgh, .338; Tejada, Houston, .337; Atkins, Colorado, .335.

RUNS_Berkman, Houston, 42; HRamirez, Florida, 34; Furcal, Los Angeles, 34; Young, Arizona, 33; McLouth, Pittsburgh, 32; Utley, Philadelphia, 32; Tejada, Houston, 32; DLee, Chicago, 32.

RBI_Berkman, Houston, 38; Nady, Pittsburgh, 34; DWright, New York, 32; McLouth, Pittsburgh, 31; CJackson, Arizona, 31; Burrell, Philadelphia, 31; CJones, Atlanta, 31.

HITS_CJones, Atlanta, 59; Berkman, Houston, 56; Atkins, Colorado, 54; Tejada, Houston, 54; Utley, Philadelphia, 50; CGuzman, …

EU drops travel ban on Uzbek officials

The European Union said Monday it had dropped a travel ban on Uzbek officials imposed after a bloody crackdown on an uprising in 2005, saying the central Asian country had made some progress in improving human rights.

The EU's 27 foreign ministers meeting here based their decision on the recent release of human rights activists. They included Mutabar Tojibaeva, a vocal critic of the government's bloody crackdown during the 2005 uprising, in which at least 700 people were killed, according to rights activists and witnesses.

But the EU ministers said they remained seriously concerned by the human rights situation and encouraged Uzbek authorities to "implement their international obligations" in meeting international democratic norms. They kept an arms embargo in place for another year.

In a statement, they urged Uzbekistan to implement a number of judicial reforms, including scrapping the death penalty and enforcing the basic rights of habeas corpus, the right to judicial process. They called on Uzbek officials to better combat child labor practices and to cease harassment of human rights defenders.

Eight Uzbek officials were banned from traveling to the EU in 2006.

The sanctions were imposed after government troops opened fire on a crowd of mostly peaceful protesters in Andijan, a city in the east of the country, killing hundreds of people, according to witnesses. The government insisted 187 died and blamed Islamic militants for instigating the violence.

Also Monday, the EU foreign ministers lifted a travel ban on 35 officials of Belarus, including President Alexander Lukashenko. The bans had been imposed in 1999 following several crackdowns against the political opposition.

US police dodge bullet in booby trap attacks

Police officers in this retirement town in rural California have been on edge in recent weeks. Someone is trying to kill them.

First, a natural gas pipe was shoved through a hole drilled into the roof of the gang enforcement unit's headquarters. The building filled with flammable vapor but a police officer smelled the danger before anyone was hurt.

"It would have taken out half a city block," Capt. Tony Marghis said.

Then, a ballistic contraption was attached to a sliding security fence around the building. An officer opening the black steel gate triggered the mechanism, which sent a bullet within eight inches (20 centimeters) of his face.

In another attempted booby trap attack, some kind of explosive device was attached to a police officer's unmarked car while he went into a convenience store.

"There's a person or people out there, a bunch of idiots, trying to do damage to us," Hemet Police Chief Richard Dana said. "We can't expect our luck to hold up, we need help."

Since New Year's Eve, there have been several other booby trap attempts to kill police officers, Dana said.

"The only reason they haven't killed an officer yet is because we've been observant enough to see devices planted around the station and in cars and different places," he said.

Gang enforcement officers appear to be the target of the assassination attempts, though Dana noted the devices were indiscriminate by nature and could have killed any police or law enforcement officer.

The incidents have shaken a close-knit police department already demoralized by steep budget cuts that last year saw its officer numbers slashed by a quarter to 68. Officers are checking under cars for bombs and scouting for other potential hazards.

"I would call the mood tense," Capt. Marghis said. "Everyone is being very vigilant about their surroundings and the environment."

Dana said officers have seen gang members carrying out counter-surveillance, studying police behavior. He often looks in his rear view mirror when he drives home at night to make sure he is not being followed.

In the attack with a ballistic contraption, the officer only avoided being shot in the head because the wheels on the sliding gate were wonky so he had to angle his body to open it.

"He had to push it to the right, the bullet went by to the left," Dana said.

Hemet is a working-class city surrounded by the snow-topped San Jacinto Mountains about 90 miles (145 kilometers) southeast of Los Angeles. Its main street is dotted with real estate offices, tax offices and auto repair stores, and it has traditionally been known as a quiet retirement community.

The town's population grew in recent years to about 75,000 but the once-booming housing market has been hit hard by the foreclosure crisis.

Investigators are still trying to determine why officers are being targeted. A prevalent theory is that members of an outlaw motorcycle gang _ the Vagos _ were angered when members of Hemet's anti-gang task force monitored them at a funeral in a church opposite the task force's former headquarters.

A memorial service was held Dec. 29 in the Hemet Christian Assembly church and upward of 100 members of the gang attended, said Riverside County sheriff's Capt. Walter Meyer, who oversees the regional gang task force.

Officers monitored the memorial but did not attend the service. Some of the Vagos members were questioned or followed as they left town.

Two days later, the gang enforcement unit's black shingle roof was drilled through and the single-level house, converted for police use, filled up with gas.

"Which would obviously leave a reasonable person to ask: Are they involved?" Meyer said.

One of the church's pastors, James McKiney, said a group of motorcycling friends mourning the death of a prominent Hemet man asked if he would conduct a memorial service.

"When a family is crying and asking for a service, you don't say no to them," McKiney said. "I said that's no problem, I'll do that."

McKiney declined to discuss the service or if he recalled any gang officers monitoring its attendants.

Authorities said about 30 members of the Vagos, California's largest motorcycle gang, were arrested in Riverside County on Wednesday, as part of a crackdown across the state and in Arizona, Nevada and Utah. Prosecutors don't have a total number of arrests yet.

Meyer said there are about 200 Vagos members in Riverside County. The gang specializes in methamphetamine sales, identity theft and violence, he said.

Law enforcement officials from around the state on Thursday appealed for the public's help in solving the case. Several state, local and national agencies have banded together to put forward a $200,000 reward.

"It is incredible and I think unprecedented that police officers in the line of duty could be subjected to these kind of terrorist attempts on their lives," Attorney General Jerry Brown said.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Police here impatient to talk to rape suspect

Chicago police are frustrated that suspected serial rapist MarkAnthony Lewis is expected to remain in federal custody in Californiauntil next week.

Police traveled to San Francisco last week to bring Lewis back toface a state charge of aggravated criminal sexual assault in a June12 attack here, but were unable to take custody of Lewis or interviewhim.

Lewis, 33, is set to return Aug. 16 or 17 on a plane operated bythe U.S. Marshals Service.

"That is generally how long it takes to get prisoners after aremoval hearing," Deputy U.S. Marshal Sharon Metzger said. "He is notgetting any preferential treatment."

Lewis was arrested Wednesday in the Philippines and flown to SanFrancisco for a court hearing Friday. He waived extradition and wasordered held without bond on a federal warrant of fleeing the countryto avoid prosecution. He will stay in federal custody until thatwarrant is dismissed in Chicago. Then he will face the stateaggravated criminal sexual assault charge, officials said.

Lewis is suspected in eight attacks between April 7 and July 19 onAsian women and a ninth attack on a Hispanic woman, but deniesinvolvement. On July 21, he entered the Philippines, authoritiessaid.

Conrail suspects vandalism in derailment

Conrail Inc. officials suspect vandalism caused a coal trainderailment in Institute.

"Someone threw a switch they shouldn't have," said spokesman BobLibkind in Philadelphia. "How they were able to do that is stillunder investigation."

Three of the train's 85 cars and all three locomotives derailedSunday afternoon, Libkind said. The trains were restored to thetracks by Monday morning and the cleanup was complete.An engineer was treated at a hospital for lower-back injuries andreleased, Libkind said.The incident occurred near Rhone-Poulenc Ag Co., but did notaffect the chemical plant's operations, a spokesman said.The shipment originated in Toledo, Ohio, and was to be transferredto Canadian National Railway in Canada, Libkind said. He said he didnot know the shipment's final destination.The rail line, which carries one coal train a day and two otherfreight trains daily, was not seriously disrupted, he said.Conrail will repair a portion of the track, Libkind said.Teenage girl reports robbery, attackA 15-year-old female told police she was kicked and robbed by agroup of juvenile females after leaving a party on Woodbridge Drive.Tiffany Jones, a resident of the 1300 block of Red Oak Street,reported she was walking in the 200 block of Woodbridge Drive about11 p.m. Monday when a group of six to eight juvenile females beganharassing her, said Lt. Randy Young of the Charleston PoliceDepartment.Jones said she tried to run away, but the girls caught her, threwher to the ground and kicked her several times before taking herjacket and purse, Young said. The purse contained an undisclosedamount of money.Jones was not transported to the hospital, and she could notprovide a detailed description of the suspects, Young said.

`James Whale: A New World of Gods and Monsters,'

`James Whale: A New World of Gods and Monsters,' by James Curtis Faber and Faber. $16.95.

If you watch any of the classic Universal horror movies of the'30s, you're as likely to laugh as to shiver. The exceptions are thetwo monster movies made by James Whale, "Frankenstein" (1931) and"Bride of Frankenstein" (1935), which, after more than 60 years,still retain much of their spooky power.

James Curtis' James Whale: A New World of Gods and Monsters isthe most thorough account to date of the life and career of thiseccentric Englishman, who first made his reputation directing a wardrama called "Journey's End." Whale knew what he was dealing with:He had seen action on some of the bloodiest fronts of World War I.

The American success of "Journey's End" brought him toHollywood, where he put it on film.

Though picky about the quality of his projects, Whale waseclectic in his interests and might have continued directing thissort of picture if fanged and cloaked destiny had not been lurking inthe shadows. It was called "Dracula," and it had been Universal'ssurprise hit of 1930. Carl Laemmle Jr., son of the studio head,thought "Frankenstein" would make a great followup.

Today this seems like an obvious decision, but Junior, aseveryone knew him, met resistance at the time. "Dracula" had been astage success before it was filmed and was looked on as a fluke.Desperate to make his producing mark, Junior pressed on. Theoriginal director was to be the now-forgotten Robert Florey; BelaLugosi was cast as the monster. These ideas didn't work out, andsomehow Whale ended up with the project, "forced more or less againstmy will."

Well, Francis Ford Coppola didn't want to direct "The Godfather"either. These arranged movie marriages work out as often as anythingdoes in Hollywood, and Whale's romance with the horror film producedtwo deliciously weird offspring. It's difficult at this distance toappreciate how new Whale's films were. His moody, shadowed lightingand tilted angles were a shock. So were his graveyard settings andhis blithe playing about with corpses: This was taboo stuff in theearly '30s, especially with the undertone of sinister humor Whalebrought to the proceedings.

Whale's career didn't crash, it just sort of petered out. Aftermaking 20 features, he retired in the early '50s.

A New Domestic Policy

GM gears up to be a major player in what will someday be the world's largest auto market.

Phil Murtaugh, chairman and CEO, GM China Group, says that one word can be used to characterize China's automotive industry over the past few years. That word is "growth."

2003 saw vehicle sales growing by 36 percent or about 4.56 million units. That followed a year in which sales grew by 40 percent.

China has now passed Germany as the world's third largest vehicle market and could pass the U.S. by 2025, becoming the world's largest car market.

"What I think is most impressive," Murtaugh says, "is the fact that sales of domestically built passenger cars have risen 80 percent and 60 percent over the past two years, respectively."

Through its seven joint ventures with Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation Group (SAIC), GM currently builds a range of Buick products for the Chinese market including the Regal full-size sedan, Excelle mid-size sedan, Sail small car, GL8 van, Chevrolet Spark mini car and Wuling micro vans and mini-commercial vehicles. GM is also importing the Saab 9-3 Sport Sedan and convertible and the Opel Vectra 3.2 V-6.

The company's market share in China rose by one percentage point to 8.5 percent in 2003 and is tracking at 10.1 percent in the first eight months of 2004.

Cadillac has also joined the line-up. The imported CTS went on sale in August followed by the SRX in November. The XLR will be available sometime in the first half of 2005.

"We decided to market Cadillac because the premium and luxury segments of the market have been the fastest growing segments for the last three years running," Murtaugh says.

The initial CTS and SRX models will be built at GM's Lansing Grand River assembly plant in Michigan. The next phase will see U.S.-built vehicles imported as kits, assembled in China with the long-term goal being to build the cars locally if volumes reach the mid five-figure mark.

"We think that the volumes of the SRX and the CTS will be enough to justify localizing it," says Murtaugh.

The company expects to double its vehicle assembly capacity from 650,000 to 1.3 million units by 2007.

While Murtaugh says that GM will continue to leverage its global portfolio to bring new vehicles to the Chinese market, that will not be enough.

"It's not good enough to simply offer our Chinese customers what are essentially copies of GM products from North America and Europe or GM Daewoo products from Korea," Murtaugh says. "Chinese vehicle buyers have their own unique tastes and preferences."

Murtaugh cites GM's strong relationship with joint-partner SAIC as one of the company's biggest assets.

"Besides providing us with some great resources and helping us navigate China's challenging bureaucracy," Murtaugh says, "working with SAIC also gives us invaluable insight into what local customers are looking for in a vehicle."

To create these vehicles for China, GM announced in June that it is investing $250 million to upgrade its Shanghai-based Pan Asia Technical Automotive Center (PATAC).

PATAC is an independent company with a separate board of directors, chartered in 1997 as a 50/50 joint venture between GM and SAIC, focusing on the areas of interior, exterior, powertrain calibration and chassis tuning. The facility was expanded in 2000 to broaden its focus on the entire vehicle. PATAC currently has 775 employees but expects that to grow to 820 by the end of the year.

"By 2010, our goal is for PATAC to be a self-contained automotive development organization," Murtaugh says.

PATAC has already opened a new prototype lab and Euro III and VI emission test lab with two emissions test cells running two shifts per day. The climate-controlled cell has a temperature variance from -20 to +50 degrees C. Emissions testing is very important because of the low-quality fuel in China which has a high sulphur and olefin content.

"We have a powcrtrain lab in place," says PATAC President, Ray Bierzinski, "however we're going to take that to the next level with additional dynamometers, measurement and teardown facilities and a temperature controlled dynamometer."

A virtual reality design studio will come online at the end of the year. On the list of future improvements are an NVH testing lab with a semianechoic chamber and squeak and rattle component shaker and a kinematics and compliance lab that willevcntually allow engineers to do virtual suspension testing. There are also plans for complete body tn white welding and general assembly cells and a safety-impact testing lab.

The biggest addition will be a 4.3 sq. ml proving ground that will feature straightaways, a ride and handling track, a dynamics pad, low-coefficient straightaways, a high-speed bowl and a durability road system. Bierzinski says that the proving ground will be within a three-hour radius of PATAC. The site selection is still under negotiation.

The new proving ground will allow GM to greatly expand its vehicle development capabilities. PATACs current road test facility is a 400 by 30 meter three-lane stretch, which is a condensed version of China's roads.

A Different Look

PATAC's design studio is one of 10 global studios that make up the GM global design community. James Shyr, PATAC director of design, supervises 62 designers who are charged with design, ideation and modeling, exclusively focused on the China market. The design center is capable of doing everything from initial sketches to full-scale clay models. There is a rapid prototyping studio, a color and trim studio, paint booth and a modeling studio.

"It's a typical studio setup in a smaller package," Shyr says.

So far, designers have been charged with freshening up existing GM products for the Chinese market, adding new front and rear fascias, grilles, headlamps and taillamps to Buick Regals and Daewoo Lacettis. But that could change as China's market grows.

Shyr's crew designed the Kunpeng CAV (compact activity vehicle) concept that made its debut at the 2004 North American International Auto Show, one of two full-size vehicles selected to appear at the Michelin Challenge Design exhibit. The Kunpeng CAV is the second concept vehicle to be developed in China for the Chinese market.

Shyr's group is currently in the process of adapting the styling of the concept to the existing production platform of the Wulang Sunshine micro van. The current Sunshine van is built by SAIC-GM-Wuling at a plant in western China.

Shyr says that the Sunshine Van is used by a lot of people in second and third tier cities. The small engine is fuel efficient and the flexibility of the vehicle can transform from a family van to a work truck.

"We are proposing the next generation of this car," Shyr says, "and we are using (the Kenpung concept) as the inspiration."

Athletics 9, Angels 2

96Athletics 9, Angels 2
LOS ANGELES @ OAKLAND @
ab r h bi @ab r h bi
Figgins 3b 2 1 1 1 KSuzuk c 5 0 2 0
Mth Jr. cf 1 0 1 0 Murton lf 5 0 1 2
Ktchm 1b 3 0 0 1 Cust dh 4 1 2 1
Grrero rf 2 0 0 0 EBrwn rf 5 1 3 1
Willits rf 1 0 0 0 CGnzlz cf 5 1 2 1
Hunter cf 3 0 0 0 Ellis 2b 3 2 1 0
Quinlan 3b 1 0 0 0 DBartn 1b 4 1 1 1
GAndsn dh 4 0 0 0 Hnnhan 3b 4 2 3 3
JRivra lf 3 0 0 0 DoMph ss 2 1 0 0
Kndrck 2b 3 0 0 0
Mathis c 3 0 0 0
Budde c 0 0 0 0
EAybar ss 2 1 1 0
Totals @ 28 2 3 2 Totals @37 9 15 9
Los Angeles 002 000 000_2
Oakland 016 200 00x_9
DP_Oakland 1. LOB_Los Angeles 4, Oakland 11. 2B_EBrown (12), CGonzalez (15), Ellis (17). 3B_Figgins (1). HR_Hannahan (4). S_Ellis, DBarton. SF_Kotchman.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles @
Garland L,8-6 2 2-3 10 7 7 2 1
JSpeier 1 1-3 2 2 2 0 2
O'Day 4 3 0 0 0 2
Oakland @
Gallagher W,1-0 7 2 2 2 3 7
ABrown 1 1 0 0 1 0
Braden 1 0 0 0 0 0
HBP_by JSpeier (Ellis), by JSpeier (DoMurphy), by Garland (DoMurphy). PB_Mathis.
Umpires_Home, Chris GuccioneFirst, Ed HickoxSecond, C.B. BucknorThird, Joe West.
T_2:37. A_31,372 (35,067).

Judge sequesters jury in Fort Dix plot trial

A judge ordered a jury sequestered Tuesday as they begin deliberations in the case of five men accused of plotting an attack on the Army's Fort Dix.

Jurors told Judge Robert Kugler that they wanted to wait until Wednesday to begin deliberations in the case, which mostly focused on hundreds of secret recordings and the credibility of the informants who made them.

Lawyers completed closing arguments in U.S. District Court on Tuesday evening.

The five defendants _ all foreign-born Muslims from Jordan, Turkey and the former Yugoslavia who lived for years in the Philadelphia suburb of Cherry Hill _ are charged with conspiring to kill military personnel and attempted murder. Four of them also face weapons charges. They face life in prison if convicted.

There was no attack before the men were arrested in May 2007.

In his final remarks to the jury Tuesday, Deputy U.S. Attorney William Fitzpatrick portrayed the case as an example of law enforcement officials averting a potentially deadly attack.

"The FBI investigates crime on the front end. They don't want to have to do it on the back end," Fitzpatrick told the jury of eight women and four men. "They needed to know that these guys, these defendants, did not have another source of supply for weapons. They needed to make sure that these guys aren't going to get weapons from somewhere else and do something right under our nose."

Defense lawyers argued that the men were not seriously planning anything and that two paid FBI informants prodded them toward action.

"We know that this is all political talk by young Muslims in the post-9/11 world," said Troy Archie, the lawyer for defendant Eljvir Duka, an illegal immigrant from the former Yugoslavia. "They were angry, yes. ... Did they have an intent to kill? No."

It was a video from the group's January 2006 trip to the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania that tipped off authorities and led to the charges.

A Circuit City electronics store employee told police the men asked him to transfer a video of the trip to DVD, and that it included scenes of the men firing weapons and shouting "Allah Akbar," Arabic for "God is great."

Some of the men returned to the Poconos in February 2007 for training, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Hammer said in his closing arguments Monday.

Evidence showed that the men went to gun stores to look for weapons, fired guns at a firing range, played paintball and watched jihadist videos while there.

But Michael Huff, who represents defendant Dritan Duka, said the government has it wrong.

He said the al-Qaida propaganda videos the men watched took up only one hour of the week they spent in the Poconos. He pointed to testimony about other movies they watched, such as an Eddie Murphy concert film.

Huff also reminded jurors of testimony from a Philadelphia police officer who said one of the suspects, Serdar Tatar, a legal U.S. resident born in Turkey, invited him to go with his friends to the shooting range. Neither the officer nor Tatar ended up making the trip.

But it was still relevant, Huff said.

"Are you going to invite a police officer to your jihad training party?" he asked.

Iraq issues arrest warrant for ex-trade minister

The Iraqi government issued an arrest warrant Saturday for the former trade minister who resigned this month amid allegations of widespread corruption in his department, a leading lawmaker said.

The warrant for Falah al-Sudani comes as Iraq's government has been cracking down on government corruption, having issued hundreds of arrest warrants since the beginning of the year against officials _ including 51 in high-level positions.

The warrant was issued by the Iraqi judiciary, said Sabah al-Saedi, the chairman of the parliamentary integrity committee. Al-Sudani's whereabouts are not immediately known but he was seen Saturday by reporters at Baghdad airport.

Al-Sudani, a member of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Dawa party, resigned shortly after appearing before parliament earlier this month to answer allegations of corruption.

Al-Saedi has alleged that the minister's two brothers have skimmed millions of dollars in kickbacks on imports. One of them is in custody after attempting to flee the country and the other is at large.

The case became a national spectacle after a video surfaced on YouTube purportedly showing al-Sudani's two brothers partying and drinking.

The news of the arrest warrant also comes after al-Maliki said earlier this week that he would not defend any official in his party accused of corruption.

He also said he would refer all allegations to the judiciary for investigation. The statements came during an online question-and-answer session on Iraq's official government media Web site.

Dozens of Iraqi political leaders have been accused in the past of high-level corruption and links to violent groups _ some fleeing the country to neighboring Jordan and Syria or staying home and managing to keep the suspicions from turning into formal charges

In February, Sunni lawmaker Mohammed al-Dayni after being accused of an insurgent ringleader tried to flee the country on a flight to Amman, only to have the plane turned back.

He slipped through Iraqi custody, though, after arriving in Baghdad and disappeared. He is believed to be in Syria where he recently appeared on a cooking show.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Bush Talks of Compromise on Health Bill

WASHINGTON - President Bush signaled a willingness Saturday to spend more than what he had recommended for a popular children's health program, but provided no specifics on how much higher he would go.

The president on Wednesday vetoed legislation that would increase spending for the State Children's Health Insurance Program by $35 billion over five years. Bush has called for a $5 billion increase. Several Republicans in both chambers have sided with Democratic lawmakers on the issue.

"If putting poor children first takes a little more than the 20 percent increase I have proposed in my budget for SCHIP, I am willing to work with leaders in Congress to find the additional money," Bush said in his weekly radio address.

Democratic lawmakers say votes to override the president's veto will be held in mid-October. That effort is not expected to succeed.

The program provides health insurance to children in families with incomes too great for Medicaid eligibility but not enough to afford private insurance.

Bush used his radio address to once again make the case that he believes the spending increase sought primarily by Democrats is a step "toward their goal of government-run health care for every American."

"Government-run health care would deprive Americans of the choice and competition that comes from the private market," he said. "It would cause huge increases in government spending."

While the government does heavily subsidize the health coverage offered through the program, most SCHIP beneficiaries get coverage through private insurers who contract with states. That was a point stressed by Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., majority leader in the House, when he provided the Democratic radio address Saturday.

"The truth is, America's largest private insurance lobbying group supports this bill - as do America's doctors, nurses, children's advocates and, most importantly, 72 percent of Americans," Hoyer said.

The president also said the bill moving through Congress needs to move adults off the program. However, his administration has approved waivers that allowed some states to cover adults.

"In fact, based on their own projections for this fiscal year, Minnesota, Illinois, New Jersey, Michigan, Rhode Island and New Mexico will spend more SCHIP money on adults than they do on children," Bush said. "And that is not the purpose of the program."

The bill passed by Congress does call for gradually giving states less federal matching money when covering certain adults. It also says the administration cannot grant any new waivers to states that want to cover adults through SCHIP.

The president noted that his administration has added more than 2 million children to the SCHIP rolls since 2001.

Hoyer often cited Republicans to make his point that the bill is bipartisan.

"As Senator Pat Roberts, a strong Republican from Kansas, recently said: 'I am not for excessive spending and strongly oppose the federalization of health care. And if the administration's concerns with this bill were accurate, I would support a veto.' But Senator Roberts added: 'Bluntly put, they are not.'"

A rare glimpse at a different side of North Korea

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — North Korea may be struggling to feed its people, but there was no shortage of mouthwatering options on the menu at our guide's favorite restaurant: ostrich, duck and beef; scallops, crab and lobster; pancakes, stews, noodles and even spaghetti.

Even the kimchi — and normally I am not a fan of the spicy fermented cabbage that is Korea's most famous dish — was irresistible.

That meal was part of a remarkable whirlwind trip that AP photographer Vincent Yu and I took to Pyongyang, capital of one of the world's most hidden nations, for the 65th anniversary of the ruling Workers' Party.

Breaking away from the gaggle of foreign reporters allowed into the country for the festivities, we ate traditional North Korean fare for lunch. Afterward, we wandered along the scenic Taedong River, stopping to chat with families picnicking along its grassy, willow-lined banks.

Later, our guides had a surprise: a trip to an amusement park. Earlier, as we'd sped past in a car, I had squealed with delight and told them how much I'd love to see the fair.

It was well past midnight when we finally returned to our hotel, exhausted but elated. As we looked over his photos and recounted the day, Vincent shook his head and asked aloud: "Was it real?"

___

"Covering" North Korea isn't easy. The state keeps a tight clamp on information. As AP's Seoul bureau chief, I rely heavily on dispatches from the official Korean Central News Agency. Foreign journalists are rarely granted visas to enter the communist country, and often resort to sneaking in with tour groups, disguised as students or scholars.

After 2008, when leader Kim Jong Il reportedly suffered a stroke, even fewer reporters were allowed in. Two American journalists who slipped across the Chinese border were arrested in March 2009; they were eventually freed months later after former President Bill Clinton intervened.

I made a brief trip to Pyongyang a few weeks after their release and was one of the few foreign journalists to visit the country in 2009. The mood was tense, a sense of uncertainty in the streets. Every unexpected noise made me jump, especially in my hotel room at night.

This visit was completely different. Pyongyang was ready to celebrate. Weeks earlier, leader Kim Jong Il's youngest son had been named a four-star general, all but confirming what many had suspected: that young Kim Jong Un was being groomed to succeed him.

A few days after that, most North Koreans got a first glimpse of their future leader when state media published the first known images of Kim Jong Un as an adult.

That set the stage for last weekend.

Red flags and celebratory banners went up across the city. Construction workers put the finishing touches on renovations and buildings got a fresh coat of paint.

Pyongyang was ready for its close-up.

At the last minute, a select group of media outlets was invited to cover the anniversary, including AP. As word spread, dozens of other journalists rushed to the North Korean Embassy in Beijing, begging for entry.

It was the foreign media's first real chance to report from Pyongyang in more than two years.

___

Kim Jong Il is in the house. That was the rumor when we arrived, straight from the airport, at the parachute-shaped May Day Stadium to see the famed Arirang spectacle that is part opera and part circus.

And this was clearly no ordinary event. Soldiers guarded the parking lot with rifles at the ready. Military VIPs, their uniforms bedecked with medals, filed solemnly past.

It's said that for the 100,000 performers who spend most of the year training for the intricately choreographed extravaganza in which they sing, dance and fly through the air, their dream is to perform for Kim Jong Il.

They got their wish — as well as a bonus. Joining Kim in the viewing booth for the first time was the heir apparent, Kim Jong Un. My hands shook as I tried to snap a photo; all I got was a blur.

As the music faded, the performers stood dazed, gazing up into the stands and reluctant to leave. Many were in tears. Only after an announcer urged them to leave the field did they scurry off.

The next day, we had a front-row seat for what was apparently the largest military parade in North Korea's history, a marvel of synchronicity, with troops goose-stepping in perfect precision across the plaza to shouts of "mansei" — "hurrah" — from the crowd.

Tanks followed, loaded with a fearsome array of missiles and rocket launchers.

"Kim. Jong. Il." The chant rolled across the plaza. A frenzy of waves and cheers erupted as he appeared, son at his side, on the observation platform above a huge portrait of Kim Il Sung, both the family and the nation's patriarch.

Tears rolled down our guide's face.

"It's my first time seeing the Young General," he said, "and the third seeing the great Comrade Kim Jong Il."

___

Foreign reporters are typically kept on a short leash, restricted to the hotel and the major sights and kept away from North Koreans. So it was a rare treat to eat lunch Monday at a local restaurant.

The eatery was festooned with blinking lights, the walls lined with framed photos of culinary specialties. Waitresses wore bright, traditional dresses called "chosun ot," and the place was packed with families enjoying a meal together on a state holiday.

We were offered the choice to pay in North Korean won, euros, Chinese renminbi or U.S. dollars. I settled the bill in euros, and got a piece of Japanese candy as change.

Outside, Kim Il Sung Plaza was filled with children skating and riding bikes. Couples strolled along paths lined with weeping willows. Families gathered in clusters along the riverbank, eating food provided by the government as a celebratory gift marking the occasion.

The idyllic scenes challenged what we thought we knew about North Korea, an impoverished nation struggling to emerge from economic hardship and slapped with U.N. and U.S. sanctions for its nuclear defiance. The average wage is believed to be just a few U.S. dollars a month, and the U.N. estimates that 8.7 million people are going hungry.

But perhaps not in Pyongyang, the nation's capital and showcase.

Vincent, who was drinking soju, an alcoholic beverage, with one family, waved me over and pressed a pair of chopsticks into my hand. A mouthwatering spread lay before them: beef casserole simmering in a pot, tofu soup, dumplings, tempura.

With very little prodding, their 5-year-old sang for us. Dressed in a red plaid skirt and green sweat shirt, she was coy and charming, every inch a future Arirang performer.

Down by the water, where rowboats plied the river, Vincent faced off against a North Korean in a game of badminton. Steps away, a father showed his son how to fire a rifle loaded with pellets. The guides hurried us along — it was time to rejoin the reporting pool.

___

A year ago, I wrote that an amusement park in central Pyongyang appeared to be shut down, the lights out, a ghost town of abandoned carnival rides.

This time, the Triumph Children's Park was bustling, people lined up at the front gate jostling to get in. Inside, there were bumper cars, a Tilt-a-Whirl and a rollercoaster to rival Coney Island's Cyclone.

Children ran around with Mickey Mouse balloons, and screams filled the air. Sophisticated young women with heels and handbags posed for photos; young men in suits and khakis stood around smoking.

There was plenty of junk food, including Belgian waffles served with Country Kitchen maple syrup, hot dogs and soft-serve ice cream. We settled on burgers, mashed potatoes and fried chicken, which came with clear plastic gloves to keep your hands clean — a nice touch in a country fastidious about hygiene.

Otherwise, it was easy to forget we were in communist North Korea.

Just before we said our good-byes for the night, our guide gave Vincent a small, glossy red pin bearing the smiling face of Kim Il Sung, just like the ones affixed to the shirt of every North Korean.

"Always wear it on your left side," he said, "close to your heart."

___

So, as Vincent asked repeatedly, was it real? Were we among the lucky few foreigners given the chance to experience what life is like for "real" North Koreans? Or was it a carefully choreographed performance put on for the benefit of visiting journalists?

In the end, we decided there was no way the encounters could have been staged: the stew bubbling on the portable gas cooker, the couple canoodling in the bushes, the screams and laughs that filled the night air around the Tilt-a-Whirl.

It may not have been what we expected in one of the world's last communist strongholds, but it was definitely real.

___

Jean H. Lee is AP's bureau chief in Seoul, South Korea. Photographer Vincent Yu, based in Hong Kong, last visited North Korea in the early 1990s.

Man charged with theft from Emirates princess

NEW YORK (AP) — Authorities say a serial thief has taken about $250,000 worth of jewelry, electronics and other valuables from a United Arab Emirates princess' luxury New York hotel room.

Suspect James Bennett is due back in court Nov. 21 after a procedural appearance Monday. He faces grand larceny and other charges in an Oct. 30 theft from Dubai Princess Arwa al-Qassimi's room at The Plaza hotel and the Oct. 24 disappearance of employee paychecks from an office in another hotel.

Bennett's lawyer hasn't returned a call seeking comment. No contact information for the princess is available from Emirates officials in Washington.

A court complaint says about $35,000 worth of the items stolen from The Plaza were found in Bennett's home. The missing paychecks were found elsewhere in the hotel where they'd vanished.

3 Earthquakes Strike Greece

Three moderate earthquakes struck Greece's eastern Aegean Sea area early Friday, rattling residents of nearby islands, monitoring agencies said. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

The first and strongest quake, with a magnitude of 4.9, occurred at 3:43 a.m. local time with an epicenter beneath the seabed about 125 miles east-northeast of the capital, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It occurred just north of the small island of Psara, the Athens Geodynamic Institute said.

A second quake, with a magnitude of 4.5, occurred at 9:07 a.m., according to the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre. It was followed a few minutes later by a 4.8 magnitude earthquake, the USGS said. The two follow-up quakes had almost the same epicenter.

"The aftershocks were quite strong, but fortunately we have no structural damage to homes," Psara Mayor Manolis Agapoussis told Greek television.

Seismologist Gerasimos Papadopoulos, director of research at the Athens Geodynamic Institute, said that the first earthquake "was a strong quake. There were many small aftershocks and two stronger events this morning _ but this is normal aftershock activity."

"This activity is a relief because it suggests the main danger is over. The site of the epicenter makes it difficult to damage buildings," he said.

Greece lies in one of the world's most active earthquake zones. In 1999, a 5.9-magnitude quake near the capital killed 143 people, injured about 2,000 and left thousands more homeless.

No sense in playing blame game

Move on, get over it and get to know Jack Skille, Bryan Bickell, Jake Dowell, Viktor Stalberg and, of course, veteran goalie Marty Turco.

That would be my advice to Blackhawks fans who are ready to tear their Indianhead sweaters to shreds because of the seemingly never-ending dismemberment of the team that won the franchise's first Stanley Cup in 49 years.

Everybody, it seems, wants to play the blame game for what general manager Stan Bowman had to do this summer. Truthfully, though, many things contributed to the salary-cap mess the Hawks are in and all the moves -- including the decision not to accept Antti Niemi's $2.75 million arbitration award and sign Turco to a one-year, $1.3 million deal -- Bowman had to make because of it.

''The cap is what it is,'' Bowman said Monday. ''You've got to structure your team as such that it works under the cap. ... The decision we made [regarding Niemi] was in the best interests of the franchise for the short term and the long term. You have to have the flexibility within your roster. The cap situation has been well-documented here. This was the best way for us to approach the team as we prepare to defend the Cup in October.''

But people don't want to hear that right now. They want to find a scapegoat in all of this. They want to have somebody to blame if the Hawks aren't as good as they were last season. They want somebody to blame if they don't repeat.

FAULT LINES

You can point fingers at former GM Dale Tallon for allowing the qualifying-offer snafu to take place last summer and for overpaying defenseman Brian Campbell and goalie Cristobal Huet.

You can blame San Jose Sharks general manager Doug Wilson for signing defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson to a four-year, $14 million offer sheet. Then again, you can say Bowman was naive to shrug off offer sheets in the first place.

You can ridicule the NHL's salary cap, the collective-bargaining agreement and the fact that contracts can't be renegotiated. You can criticize Niemi and agent Bill Zito for filing for arbitration.

You can heap some blame on Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane for outperforming their entry-level contracts and receiving bonuses that count against the Hawks' salary cap.

You can argue that if the Professional Hockey Writers' Association hadn't awarded Toews the Conn Smythe Trophy and, essentially, the $1.3 million bonus he got for it, then the Hawks would have had some extra cash to retain Niemi.

You can say that had it not been for the Detroit Red Wings' success with average goaltending under Scotty Bowman, the Hawks' senior adviser, there would have been more of a need to keep Niemi, potentially a franchise goalie.

LOOKING AHEAD

It really goes on and on. But what's the point?

As painful as this might be for some fans -- especially new ones just getting to know the NHL -- the change you see was inevitable. The Hawks simply had too many good young players and couldn't afford to keep them all on board.

But Bowman has retained his best players to defend the Cup. Toews, Kane, Campbell, Hjalmarsson, Marian Hossa, Patrick Sharp, Dave Bolland, Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook are all back. So are role players Troy Brouwer and Tomas Kopecky.

It's about identifying the best players for your system, retaining them, then filling in the pieces around them. The Hawks' system is predicated on a mobile, puck-moving defense, speed and skill up front and decent goaltending.

And guess what? The Hawks still have that.

''The players that aren't with us anymore, you'll always have that championship together,'' Bowman said. ''We'll always walk as Stanley Cup champions.''

Color Photo: Tony Gutierrez, AP / The Hawks signed goalie Marty Turco to a one-year, $1.3 million contract.

Death toll in Amazon ferryboat sinking rises to 41

Rescue workers say they have retrieved another nine bodies from a boat that capsized in northern Brazil, raising the death toll on Wednesday to 41 in one of the worst accidents in decades along the Amazon river system.

Rescuers expect to find still more bodies, said Deputy Fire Commander Col. Carlos Bacelar. Sixty passengers are known to have survived Sunday's accident on the Solimoes River, one of the Amazon's largest tributaries.

Bacelar said he feared some bodies may never be recovered because of piranhas and other flesh-eating fish in the river.

The two-story wooden ferry, the Comandante Sales had no passenger list, leaving the number of possible victims unclear, Bacelar said.

Passengers had been on their way home from a Roman Catholic festival. The cause of the accident is under investigation.

Boats, often carrying hundreds of people, serve as buses in remote, roadless riverside areas in Brazil.

Two of the boats capsized on the Amazon River in separate incidents in 1981, killing 530 people.

In February this year, a two-story wooden ferry carrying more than 100 people collided with a barge loaded with fuel tanks on the Amazon River, killing 16.

Chanler, Theodore Ward

Chanler, Theodore Ward

Chanler, Theodore Ward, American composer; b. Newport, R.I., April 29, 1902; d. Boston, July 27, 1961. He studied in Boston with Hans Ebell (piano) and with Arthur Shepherd (composition), then at the Cleveland Inst. of Music with Bloch. He later took courses at the Univ. of Oxford (1923–25), and also studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. He returned to America in 1933 and wrote music criticism. He taught at the Peabody Cons, of Music in Baltimore (1945–7) and then at the Longy School in Cambridge, Mass. In 1944 he held a Guggenheim fellowship. His music, mostly in smaller forms, is distinguished by a lyrical quality; his songs are particularly expressive; he employed the modern idiom of polytonal texture without overloading the harmonic possibilities; the melody is free, but usually within tonal bounds.

Works

The Pot of Fat, chamber opera (Cambridge, Mass., May 8, 1955); Pas de Trois, ballet (1942); Violin Sonata (1927); violin pieces; piano music, including 5 Short Colloquies (1936), Toccata (1939), The Second Joyful Mystery for 2 Pianos (1942), and A Child in the House (1949); organ pieces; Mass for 2 Women's Voices and Organ (1930) and other choral works; about 50 songs.

Bibliography

E. Nordgren, An Analytical Study of the Songs of T C. (1902–1961) (diss., N.Y.U., 1980).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Observation of the Earth and its Environment: Survey of Missions and Sensors (Fourth Edition)

OBSERVATION OF THE EARTH AND ITS ENVIRONMENT: SURVEY OF MISSIONS AND SENSORS (FOURTH EDITION) Herber Kramer, 2002, 1540 pp., $199.00, hardbound, Springer-Yerlag, ISBN 3-540-42388-5

Of all of the books in my office, this is the one that I refer to most frequently. Anyone working in the field of remote sensing will eventually need the answers to questions such as, "What is the instrument complement of UARS?" or "What is the spatial resolution of EROS-Al?" Even in this age of online resources, the best and fastest way to answer those questions is to consult this book. Herbert Kramer has provided a comprehensive and up-to-date compendium of spaceborne missions that are designed to perform not only earth remote sensing, but also upper-atmosphere and ionosphere sensing, near-earth space environmental monitoring, and technology demonstrations. Thus, the word "environment" in the book title should be interpreted in the broadest possible sense. Nearly all relevant spaceborne missions, past and present, and those that appear to be reasonably firmly planned, can be found. The encyclopedic portion of the text on spaceborne missions totals over 1000 pages, and that alone would compose a unique reference text. But there is much more to this book. The first chapter includes an exhaustive 157-page "short" history of earth observation. The section titled "Reference Data and Definitions" could itself be a useful 110-page guidebook on remote sensing technologies. And in keeping with the theme of choosing modest titles, the 84page section of "Acronyms and Abbreviations" is far more than that. It includes excellent descriptions of the functions of many remote sensingrelated organizations, useful tables, and concise histories of the organizational name changes and mergers that many companies around the world have undergone over the decades. I do not know anyone in this field who is not confused by those changes, and this summary is very helpful.

The portion of the book in which the spaceborne missions and sensors are detailed is both broad and deep. In parts A through N, the missions are organized into areas such as "Atmosphere/Radiation/Aeronomy Missions," "Commercial Imaging Satellites," "Data Collection Systems," "Earth Observation/Monitoring Missions," "Meteorology-GEO Missions," "Space Science/ Solar-Terrestrial Missions," and so on. The mission descriptions include in-depth information about the sponsor, the spacecraft, the hardware providers, and each individual sensor (instrument). Much information that is difficult to find elsewhere is presented in an organized fashion. For instance, there is a full description of the extensive sensor complement on the Russian Priroda module that was part of the Mir space station. There is a complete description of the Indian IRS series of satellites and their sensors. There is a table of the complete history of NOAA's weather satellites and sensor complements. There is even an inclusion of the odd little fact that the Russian OkeanO satellite series is a follow-up to the Okean-O 1 series.

The entire contents of the book are also provided on a CD-ROM. The CD also contains a 327-page survey of airborne sensors. The author states that most of his effort in updating this book since the third edition was published in 1996 was spent on the spaceborne missions, since that is where more of the changes occurred. But the information on airborne missions is quite useful and detailed. Remarkably, there is also an 80-page summary of remote sensing field campaigns. To my knowledge, this information has not been gathered in any other single resource.

This is the fourth and unquestionably the best (and quite possibly the last) edition of this book. Some of the aspects of my professional life require that I maintain cognizance of past, present, and planned earth remote sensing missions worldwide. I can thus attest to the quality and thoroughness of this book. Given the freeze date of mid-2001 on the information, nearly every mission that merits discussion is included. I could only identify two omissions that probably should have been included-namely, ARIES and AVStar. I personally know Herbert Kramer to be a tireless and dedicated individual, and it takes someone with those attributes to see a task like this to completion. In the interest of full disclosure, it should be stated that I provided the author with certain historical and mission information, definitions, technical and organizational advice, and proofreading. My opinion of the past editions was such that I was happy to donate my personal time to help with this latest effort.

No book of this magnitude and scope can be perfect, however, and this one is no exception. It is sorely in need of an alphabetical index of missions. The index of sensors is a help, but if you were looking for the mission SUNSAT, you probably wouldn't know the names of the sensors on board. The list of acronyms and abbreviations has selected page references, but not all mission names are acronyms and locating the others can be difficult. Additionally, the book often presupposes a detailed level of knowledge in the reader. For example, you will find the German BIRD fire-and-hot-spot monitoring mission under "Satellite Emergency Services and Environmental Monitoring" rather than "Earth Observation/Monitoring Missions." You will find the South African SUNSAT under "University/Student-Developed Satellites & Payloads." And, somewhat inappropriately, you will find the sea surface-winds QuikSCAT mission under "Atmosphere/Radiation/Aeronomy Missions."

There are also various technical problems with the book. Pushbroom and whiskbroom scanning are discussed under "Observation Schemes" on pages 12101212 and in the glossary on page 1355. While the figures are clear, the discussion of whiskbroom scanning is inaccurate, confusing, and poorly organized. The discussion of spatial resolution on pages 1235-1236 refers only to the geometrical projection of a detector onto the ground (IFOV). It does not discuss the role of integration time and the resultant smear of that projected footprint. Nor does it discuss the role of Ground Sample Distance, which can be found separately in the glossary on page 1339, nor the Modulation Transfer Function, which can be found on page 1351. The other quibbles I have with the book are relatively minor. Some have to do with an occasional incorrect usage of terms, such as the use of "timeliness"when "refresh" is intended-in the definition of "In-situ soundings" on page 1342. Less obvious flaws relate to the book's omissions. A definition of "beamsplitter" is found on page 1324, as a device that splits a light beam, but no definition is found for "dichroic beamsplitter," which is a device that is frequently used for spectral separation in multispectral imagers.

But those criticisms pale beside the overall value of the book. This book is a tour de force. It is an indispensable reference book that belongs on the bookshelf of every serious practitioner of remote sensing science and technology, and I have already enthusiastically recommended it to colleagues around the world. In my estimation, it is a unique resource and has my very highest recommendation.

-DAVID L. GLACKIN

[Author Affiliation]

David L. Glackin is a remote sensing scientist with The Aerospace Corporation, Los Angeles, California, where he is on senior staff. He has authored over 70 publications in remote sensing, solar physics, stellar atmospheres, geophysics, and image processing; given many invited talks and chaired sessions at international conferences; and worked on remote sensing physics, phenomenology, sensor concepts, sensor design, and data interpretation for earth environment and solar applications across the spectrum from X-rays to microwaves. He is also the principal author of the book Civil, Commercial and International Remote Sensing Systems and Geoprocessing.

Program is key to jobs: ; State lets people lease vehicles to find work

She joked about keeping oars in the back seat.

But Mary Burghy is truly grateful for that "boat."

If it weren't for the 1981 four-door Ford LTD, Burghy might stillbe sitting at home without a driver's license and, perhaps, withouta job.

Burghy, 33, lives on the outskirts of New Martinsville. Two yearsago she was the first person to participate in the Wheels to Jobsprogram, coordinated by Community Resource in Wetzel County.

Program participants lease cars from the agency for $60 per monthso they can get to work, said Pam Billeter of the Wetzel agency.

Now officials at the Department of Health and Human Resourceswant to create a statewide program, …

Terry Allen Weinstein

Terry Allen Weinstein, 26, of Rolling Meadows, drowned Thursdayin Olympia Pool, an Arlington Heights Park District facility.

Mr. Weinstein, who lived in Meadows Mental Health Shelter inRolling Meadows, attended the Julia Molloy Educational Center, MortonGrove, and the Kirk Center, Palatine. He worked at the CountrysideWorkshop in Barrington.

Survivors include his mother, Rita; a sister, Cheryl Kenevan;a brother, Erwin, and his grandfather, Morris.

Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday at Piser Weinstein MenorahChapel, Skokie. Burial will be in Westlawn Cemetery.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

[ WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT? ]

"Gilmore Girls" (7 p.m., WGN-Channel 9): Rory goes to Florida forspring break and does what every kid does ... watches JosephCampbell's "The Power of Myth." That'll keep your T-shirt dry.

"On the Cover" (7 p.m., WCPX-Channel 38): Bet you never thoughtyou'd see the guy who hosted "Temptation Island" on Pax, did you?Well, surprise, surprise, surprise. Mark Walberg -- not to beconfused with Mark Wahlberg, who's actually talented -- is host ofthis game show dealing with magazine covers.

"The Blues Brothers" (7 p.m., AMC): "How much for the little girl?How much for the women? ... Your women. I want to buy your women. Thelittle girl. Your daughters. Sell them to me. Sell me your children."(Repeated at 11:40 p.m.)

"John Denver: The Wildlife Concert" (7:30 p.m., WTTW-Channel 11):WTTW believes you will value this 1995 concert more than the secondhalf-hour of "Chicago Tonight." If the station is right, then by allmeans send it money.

"Big Brother" (8 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): There's nothing wrong withthis show that releasing a pack of wild dogs on the premises wouldn'thelp.

"Summerland" (8 p.m., WGN-Channel 9): Bradin tries out for thehigh school surfing team? What kind of school has the kind ofinsurance that would enable it to sanction and sponsor a surfingteam? Of course, I still think it was selfish of Ava (Lori Loughlin)to drag the orphaned kids away from Kansas just so she could hang outwith her pals at the beach.

"Joe Schmo 2" (8 p.m., Spike TV): This reality parody/pranksputtered almost from the start because the cast was so lousy thatone of the two marks, Ingrid Wiese, figured the whole thing out. Itfinally comes to a conclusion tonight, and the remaining sucker, TimWalsh, presumably finds out he's been had. (The previous episodeswill be rerun between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.)

"Outback Jack" (8 p.m., TBS): How long did it take you to figureout this wasn't the movie with Jerry O'Connell, Anthony Anderson andthe kangaroo that stole all the money? Oh, well. Vadim Dale picks hisgal tonight in the series finale. (Repeated at 10 p.m.)

"The Amazing Race" (9 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): Trying to reach anisland in the Nile, those bowling moms are in denial if they thinkthey'll go far without any money.

"In the Jury Room" (9 p.m., WLS-Channel 7): ABC News must be aregistered voter because it's going on jury duty, beginning tonightwith this rare glimpse (for the media anyway) inside jurydeliberations on various homicide cases. First up is the State ofOhio vs. Mark Ducic, who's accused of overdosing his wife and afriend and could be sentenced to death. (Continued Wednesday.)

Monday, March 5, 2012

Right call can save money

How can we save money on the long-distance telephone calls that wemake? All those appeals on the telly that tell you to call 10-10whatever are pretty confusing, but the May issue of Consumer Reportsgives us a good helpful hint.

The surest way to cut your monthly telephone bill is to choose along-distance plan that offers you the best rates for the calls youare most likely to make. A carefully chosen dial-around service canbe a good money-saving complement to your normal long-distanceservice.

But ask for a printed rate card, which gives all the details onwhat you expect to pay. After all, it's not worth dialing all thoseextra digits for a call unless you're certain to …

Study data from University of Melbourne, Murdoch Children's Research Institute update knowledge of cardiac surgical procedures.

Data detailed in 'Fontan completion rate and outcomes after bidirectional cavo-pulmonary shunt' have been presented. "To determine outcomes of patients undergoing a bidirectional cavo-pulmonary shunt (BCPS) in the Fontan era. From 1990 to 2000, 212 patients underwent a BCPS in a single institution at a mean age of 2.6[+ or -]5 years," researchers in Melbourne, Australia report (see also Cardiac Surgical Procedures).

"Hospital mortality was 6% (13 patients). Five patients were lost to follow-up (3%). After a mean of 9[+ or -]4 years, 15 patients had not yet been referred for Fontan surgery and their status was deemed satisfactory (11 1(1/2) ventricle repair, three BCPS and one …

WITNESS IN JAIL ASSAULT CASE TESTIFIES HE SAW A BEATING.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: CAROL DeMARE Staff writer

Albany A former inmate testified Thursday that by ducking down and looking through the tray slot in his cell last year he could see several correction officers kicking and punching another prisoner some 20 yards away.

Defense lawyers quickly tried to discredit Brian Daley, who could identify only one of the officers in the alleged incident. They questioned whether Daley could actually see from his vantage point and challenged whether he was even in his cell at the time.

Roy T. Hoffman, 36, and William J. Gorman, 28, both Watervliet residents, are charged with repeatedly kicking and punching Syed Jaffrey, 54, on …

Brown & Cole to close Kennewick store.(THE BUZZ: Tips, rumors & miscellaneous pieces of business information)(Brief Article)

In May, Brown & Cole announced that it would be closing the Food Pavilion in Kennewick and laying off 29 employees.

The company had put the store up for sale when it announced in March that it was selling or …

Stern, union execs meet; more negotiations planned

NEW YORK (AP) — NBA Commissioner David Stern and deputy commissioner Adam Silver met with players' association executive director Billy Hunter and members of their staffs Tuesday, and there are more discussions planned for later this week.

An NBA spokesman would not disclose what was discussed Tuesday. A full round of negotiations is scheduled …

Starr's report will be graphic - Allegations, abuses, obstruction among the findings to be outlined

WASHINGTON - Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr is preparing tosubmit to the House a report laden with sweeping allegations againstPresident Clinton, including charges of abuse of power, perjury,obstruction of justice and witness tampering, sources close to theprosecutor said.

Starr is taking a "kitchen sink" approach to the long-awaitedreport to the House, outlining a variety of crimes by Clinton thatstem from his 18-month relationship with a former White House intern.

The report is still being drafted and could be shipped to theHouse within weeks. It also is expected to include graphic andpotentially embarrassing details of Clinton's sexual relationshipwith Monica …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Vice Prime Minister Abdullaeva on working trip to southern Kyrgyzstan.

Vice Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan Uktomkhan Abdullaeva is visiting Jalal-Abad oblast as part of her working tour of the southern parts of the country. She will continue efforts on development of actions aimed to further strengthen inter-ethnic relations and stabilize the situation in the south of the country, reported the president's press service.Uktomkhan Abdullaeva, who is also chair of the interdepartmental commission at the president on stabilization of the sitaution in Osh city, Osh and Jalal-Abad oblasts, intends to study the existing problems in the ground and then to develop the …

Vendor exchange.

For more information about any of Chain Leader's advertisers, please contact them directly at the numbers or addresses provided.

FOOD & BEVERAGE

Allen Canning Co. Inside Front Cover. A full line of canned vegetables and fruits. Call (800) 234-2553 or visit www.allencanning.com.

Bush Brothers & Co. Inside Back Cover. Signature baked beans and other products. Call (800) 251-0968 or visit www.bushbeans.oom.

Mission Foods p. 29. Maker of tortillas, chips, strips and shells. Call (800) 443-7994 or visit www.missionfoodsfsc.com.

Pilgrim's Pride Foodservice p. 18-19. A full line of fresh, frozen and convenience poultry products. Call …

BEER-SWILLING, SMOKING A NO-NO FOR 3-YEAR-OLD.(MAIN)

Byline: -- Associated Press

WINCHESTER, Ind. -- After a 3-year-old boy in his underwear was seen ``holding a can of beer and smoking a cigarette,'' the man taking care of him was charged with neglect.

The child was removed from the house after he told a county welfare worker: ``Yeah, man. Smokin' ... cigarettes is cool, man.'' The boy also said he'd consumed up to three beers at a time.

Wayne Hamilton, 41, was charged with felony neglect of a dependent, which carries a possible three-year maximum sentence. The child, his …