Thursday, March 15, 2012

Egypt going underground to stem Gaza smuggling

Egypt is installing a series of metal sheets some 60 feet deep along its border with Gaza in an attempt to block tunnels that serve as a key conduit to bring weapons into the Palestinian territory, border guards and area residents said Thursday.

The work poses a risk to Egypt's relations with Hamas, a Palestinian militant group that has controlled the Gaza Strip since 2007, and could undermine its role as a regional mediator. Egypt is already under fire from Arab and Muslim groups for cooperating with Israel in its two-year blockade of the impoverished territory, with 1.4 million residents.

The border project appears to be one of a series of measures Egypt …

RESTAURANTS CATCH CONVENTION SPIRIT

Among Chicago restaurants offering special $19.96 meal promotionsduring the Democratic National Convention are: Brasserie Bellevue, 21 E. Bellevue, an "American Celebration" ofentree and dessert. Gordon Restaurant, 500 N. Clark, two-course lunch or late dinner. Gypsy, 215 E. Ohio, choice of eight specials and a complimentaryostrich appetizer. Shaw's Crab House, 21 E. Hubbard, 1-pound lobster, red potatoes andcoleslaw, soup or salad and ice cream. The Signature Room, 95 stories up the …

FIFA anti-corruption team expected in Zimbabwe

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — FIFA anti-corruption officials will travel to Zimbabwe next week to help wrap up another damaging match-fixing investigation, the African country's football body said on Wednesday.

Zimbabwe Football Association vice president Ndumiso Gumede told The Associated Press that FIFA's head of security, Chris Eaton, will lead the anti-corruption unit.

The FIFA team will arrive June 30, Gumede said, to help conclude a drawn-out ZIFA probe which will likely lead to strict sanctions — and possible lifetime bans — for a number of Zimbabwe national team players after they admitted last October to taking bribes to lose matches on tours to Asia.

"They are going …

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING_MiCabrera, Detroit, .346; Hamilton, Texas, .345; Morneau, Minnesota, .345; Cano, New York, .337; ABeltre, Boston, .332; ISuzuki, Seattle, .327; DeJesus, Kansas City, .327.

RUNS_Crawford, Tampa Bay, 67; Youkilis, Boston, 67; MiCabrera, Detroit, 64; Teixeira, New York, 61; Cano, New York, 60; Hamilton, Texas, 59; Jeter, New York, 59.

RBI_MiCabrera, Detroit, 76; Guerrero, Texas, 75; ARodriguez, New York, 70; Hamilton, Texas, 64; Konerko, Chicago, 63; TorHunter, Los Angeles, 62; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 61.

HITS_Hamilton, Texas, 117; ISuzuki, Seattle, 117; Cano, New York, 114; MYoung, Texas, 109; ABeltre, Boston, 107; …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Youth center opens to neighbors' protests

An unfinished South Side youth center named for the Rev. PaulHall opened Sunday amid protests by residents who say Hall shouldn'tbe working on such projects because he was convicted of sexuallyassaulting his foster son.

About 20 residents of the Washington Heights and Morgan Parkneighborhoods picketed outside the facility at 10140 S. Halsted,where members of Hall's Christ Universal Church gave out schoolsupplies after an afternoon parade.

"Nobody in his right mind would allow a convicted pedophile torun a center for children," said Saundra Bishop, a Morgan Parkresident who helped coordinate the protest.

Hall, 52, said his work "was something positive" …

Millenia acquires rights to Tetrandine

Montreal - Millenia Hope Inc. has acquired the global patent rights to develop, manufacture and distribute, for all indications, Tetrandrine from inventor Dr. Knox Van Dyke, an internationally renowned researcher from the University of West Virginia.

Millenia Hope is focused on the development of anti-malaria products and is actively engaged in the fight against this disease that claims nearly three million lives every year. Tetrandrine aids the treatment of drug-resistant strains of malaria when administered together with standard therapies.

"Tetrandrine adds to our pipeline of products targeting malaria, which include MMH18/ MMHMalarex and Malarex, currently in further …

Inauguration security tight for festivities

Authorities monitored a rush of intelligence leads Tuesday at the largest security operation in presidential inauguration history, including a possible threat from an East Africa radical Islamic terrorist group.

Law enforcement and intelligence officials received information that people associated with a Somalia-based group, al-Shabaab, might try to travel to the U.S. with plans to disrupt the inauguration, according to a joint FBI/Homeland Security bulletin issued Monday night. The information had limited specificity and uncertain credibility, said Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke.

U.S. counter-terror officials have grown concerned in recent months …

Vienna gets all fired up over 300 years of battling blazes

VIENNA, Austria Ages have passed since man learned to controland use fire. But fighting fires, in a professionally organized way,is just 300 years old.

Vienna's fire department, which regards itself as the oldest ofits kind in the world, will be marking its tricentennial inSeptember.

City historians say it all began in the year 1686 with four"fire serfs" who were hired by a lower chamber magistrate, GeorgAltschaffer. After their training, these four became the first paidfirefighting unit in history.

The fire serfs - the term "fire department" first came intobeing in the 19th century - were naturally just a single cadre. Whenthere was a fire, other …

Health Care Premiums Rise 6.1 Percent

Health insurance premiums paid by workers and their employers rose an average of 6.1 percent this year, outpacing inflation and pay increases and taking a bigger chunk out of families' budgets, according to a new survey.

Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance for the average family topped $12,000 - with employees picking up about one-fourth of that cost - although the increase in premiums slowed for a fourth straight year.

Insurance costs probably will rise again next year, according to the survey released Tuesday by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health care research organization that annually tracks the cost of health insurance. Many of the more than 3,000 …

Bettencourt gets his shot at Memorial

For most of a warm and wacky Saturday afternoon at the Memorial, the leaderboard was filled with a "Who's Who" of this golfing generation, five players with a combined 20 majors, 121 PGA Tour victories and 19 World Golf Championships.

Tiger Woods and Ernie Els. Davis Love III, Geoff Ogilvy and Jim Furyk.

It ended with a "Who's That?"

Matt Bettencourt, a 34-year-old rookie who had never played a PGA Tour event until this year, steadied himself during some nervous moments on the super slick greens of Muirfield Village for a 4-under 68 to share the lead with two-time tour winner Mark Wilson (69).

Bettencourt, who has yet …

Group Urges Pooling of Resources to Fight Crime

The South Side-based No Dope Express Foundation released its ownplan Monday to combat urban violence.

The plan, devised by the organization and Prince AsielBen-Israel of the Hebrew Nation religious group …

More confident China confronts US in latest talks

WASHINGTON (AP) — Five years and one financial crisis since the United States and China commenced regular high-level economic talks, fast-growing Beijing might have the upper hand this week in the latest round of discussions between the world's two biggest economies.

China faces threats of penalties against goods shipped to its largest foreign market unless it does more to end what U.S. manufacturers say are unfair trade practices, including currency manipulation, that have cost American jobs.

At the same time, America's biggest foreign creditor wants assurances that its $1.2 trillion in U.S. Treasury holdings are safe despite uncertainty in Washington over how much money the …

WVU FOOTBALL: ; Sands: 'We want it more' on 3rd down

MORGANTOWN - West Virginia's defense can be found in the top 20of several statistical categories after five weeks of the season.Much of the success can be attributed to how the Mountaineers havehandled themselves on third down.

WVU is No. 2 in third down conversion percentage, allowing only12 of 54 chances (22.2 percent) to go for a first down. Only PennState (12-for-57) is better. WVU also has allowed only 46 firstdowns, the lowest total in the country.

"I guess it's pretty simple," WVU safety Robert Sands said. "Wewant it more. It's all about wanting it more on third down. We wantto get off the field more than they want to continue their drive."

UNLV, which visits Mountaineer Field for the first time Saturday,is No. 103 on third down and has converted 23 of 69 chances. TheRebels are No. 92 in time of possession (28:32) while WVU's defensehas helped the team rank No. 19 (32:16).

The Mountaineers (3-1) have actually been short-handed on thirddown the past two games with defensive ends Julian Miller and WillClarke slowed by injury.

Clarke hasn't played the past two games while Miller didn't startagainst LSU. Both play on pass and pass-rush packages theMountaineers like to use on third down.

* n n

MANY WVU assistant coaches spent the days after the LSU lossrecruiting. Saturday's 3:30 p.m. kickoff - the second such starttime of the season - gives the team a recruiting opportunity itmight not enjoy with other start times.

"I like, because of recruiting, for me, personally, the 3:30ishstart because we can get youngsters a chance to drive here," WVUCoach Bill Stewart said. "Now I'm selfish, (but) they get a chanceto drive here from the 250-mile radius.

"Then we can keep them after the game a little bit and enjoythem. A noon game, they can't get here. A night game, they all wantto get back because you've got to get over the mountain."

* n n

UNLV IS in its first season with Coach Bobby Hauck. The Rebelsare beginning to figure things out on offense with 71 points thepast two games after managing just 38 the first three - losses toranked Wisconsin and Utah, but also Idaho.

Hauck was a very successful coach in the Football ChampionshipSubdivision at Montana, where in seven seasons he led the Grizzliesto seven conference titles, seven national playoff appearances andthree championship games.

Hauck was 80-17 at Montana, where he never lost more than fourgames in a season and won 47 of 53 conference games.

In addition to Wisconsin and Utah, the Rebels have also playedranked Nevada. WVU is just outside the top 25 nationally.

"When someone has won 80 percent of their football games, thatsurely gets my attention," Stewart said. "They are in what someonemay call a rebuilding mode - and that's OK if that's what they say -but I can tell you this: Bobby Hauck is such a great football coach.He did a great job at Montana where he'd just win, win, win, win.

"I see Bobby as being a lot like a Chris Peterson at Boise State,a Dan Hawkins at Boise State before him or a Houston Nutt at BoiseState before them. He's in that same mold. He's going to be a greatcoach - he is a great coach. That being said, he's got a lot ofyoung players - a lot of freshmen and redshirt freshmen - in his two-deep. But he's got players. "

* n n

STEWART SOUNDED optimistic about the collective health of histeam after the open week and moving forward. Running back NoelDevine has practiced as he tries to recover from the bone bruise onthe big toe on his right foot.

WVU worked in full pads last week and was off Monday. The teambegins UNLV practice today.

"He bounced around a little bit in practice and he didn't do asmuch as he wanted to do or as much as we wanted him to do, buthopefully (today) and Wednesday he gets back on track," Stewartsaid.

Devine should play and WVU hasn't given much thought to theinjury keeping Devine out or to lightening Devine's workload.Stewart said fullback Ryan Clarke is next in line and freshman TreyJohnson and sophomore Shawne Alston practiced well last week.Stewart said fullback Matt Lindamood may fill Clarke's role ifClarke needs to fill Devine's.

"I think we have more than enough to get through," Stewart said.

Stewart said defensive end Julian Miller (back) and tight endTyler Urban (knee) are better and should play. Middle linebacker PatLazear (knee/tibia) played against LSU and should play against theRebels.

Stewart expects left guard Josh Jenkins (knee) to be cleared toplay, but isn't sure if Jenkins will. He missed the LSU game and wasreplaced by starting right guard Eric Jobe, whose spot has beenfilled by Cole Bowers.

"My problem is this: We have our first conference game five daysafter Saturday," Stewart said of the Oct. 14 ESPN game against SouthFlorida and how the quick turnaround affects the status of injuredplayers Saturday. "I just don't know what's right, right now."

West Virginia Mountaineers 2010 football schedule: Sept. 4 Coastal Carolina W, 31-0 Sept. 10 at Marshall W, 24-21 OTSept. 18 Maryland W, 31-17 Sept. 25 at LSU L, 20-14 Oct. 9UNLV (BETV) 3:30 p.m. Oct. 14 USF (ESPN) 7:30 p.m. Oct. 23 Syracuse* TBA Oct. 29 at Connecticut (ESPN2) 8 p.m. Nov. 13 Cincinnati TBA Nov. 20 at Louisville TBA Nov. 26 atPittsburgh TBA Dec. 4 Rutgers TBA *Homecoming

After ride on the weird side, couple wonder if car is safe

Q. My husband and I purchased a 1987 Chevrolet Celebrity with52,000 miles on it. It is a nice car, and we really like it.Recently, something strange happened while driving it. We went on ashort trip, and on the way there, we had the air-conditioner on andhad no problem. On the way back, we had the windows closed and thevent on. About 45 minutes into the drive, my husband, who wasdriving, started to feel weird.

He felt like he was on the edge of a cliff and about to fallover. His sense of balance was off. I felt fine so I drove home.And when we got home, I felt like I was going to fall over. Itlasted about five minutes, and then I felt OK. We didn't smellanything, and we had not eaten any food. What do you think? Gail

RAY: I think you're lucky to be writing to us today, Gail. Itsounds like it could be carbon monoxide poisoning. My brother's beensuffering from that for years now.

TOM: Huh?

RAY: You see what I mean? Seriously, you could have an exhaustleak somewhere under the hood.

TOM: When people hear the word "exhaust," they usually thinkabout the back end of the car, where the muffler and tailpipe arelocated. But the exhaust system actually starts in the front of thecar and carries the exhaust to the rear end.

RAY: There's a piece of weather-stripping that's supposed tokeep engine fumes out of the car's ventilation system. If you havean exhaust leak and that weather-stripping is not doing its job, thatwould explain how the carbon monoxide is getting in through thevents.

TOM: And that's very dangerous. Carbon monoxide is colorlessand odorless. And in fact, most people don't even notice thatthey're being poisoned. It slowly makes you stupid until you loseyour judgment.

RAY: You should get this looked at right away. Your mechaniccan use his emissions tester to search for an exhaust leak under thehood. And a visual inspection of the weather-stripping ought to tellhim whether it needs to be replaced.

TOM: Of course, there is one other possibility. We all knowthat light-headedness is a sign of euphoria. And if this was thefirst time either of you had driven an '87 Celebrity, well, thatwould explain it, too.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Yang Fudong talks about the Seven Intellectuals

In one of my earlier works, the photographic triptych The First Intellectual, I touched on a concept that still preoccupies me: One wants to accomplish big things, but in the end it doesn't happen. Every educated Chinese person is very ambitious, and obviously there are obstacles-obstacles coming either from "out there," meaning society or history, or from "inside," from within oneself. In this work you could see that "the first intellectual" has been wounded. He has blood running down his face and wants to respond, but he doesn't know at whom he should throw his brick; he doesn't know if the problem stems from himself or society. Ideals and the way they distinguish people, but also the way that they can unite people and encourage them to form bands, partnerships, brotherhoods-this was something I wanted to investigate in more depth, taking my time to do so. When I eventually completed An Estranged Paradise, I started defining this new, vast project, which will unfold as five different films. Because I feel that this topic is extremely important to an understanding of China, both past and present, I wanted to articulate several temporalities together: one that is really ancient, the stories of "The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove"; another set during the '50s and '60s, when there was a profound questioning of the status and role of intellectuals (and so the films will have a clear '50s, '60s kind of New Cinema flavor); and, ultimately, one dealing with the concerns and ideals of today.

The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove were a group of Chinese scholars and poets who fled the troubles accompanying the transition between China's Wei and Jin dynasties during the mid-third century. They assembled in a bamboo grove, where they forgot all of their worldly troubles, losing themselves in pure thought and discussion. This sort of retreat was typical of the Taoist-oriented ch'ing-t'an ("pure conversation") movement, which advocated freedom of individual expression and hedonistic escape from extremely corrupt politics. Their ideal consisted of following their impulses and acting spontaneously, and being sensitive to the beauties of nature.

So the first film in this project stands for me like the beginning of a book, the preface; it's an introduction of the story and the fate of these "new" seven intellectuals. "The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove" doesn't exist as a book; there are legends, popular stories, hearsay knowledge, and, of course, what's interesting is also the distortion, the fact that the stories have continually been adapted to changing contexts and times and to the intentions of different storytellers. That's also something that I want to investigate, in light of contemporary China and its relationship to history-this state we're in, which can be described as a moment when we have to negotiate our past while imagining our present.

The first film shows the intellectuals traveling to and dwelling on Huangshan, a very famous mountain situated in the southern part of Anhui Province. The landscape, the nature, is just beautiful there. The peaks rise one on top of another, and the pines and cypresses are luxuriantly green. There are almost a hundred big and small peaks and ridges, and plenty of lakes, brooks, deep pools: It's a kind of dreamscape. I really like showing this sort of atmosphere-very calm, very beautiful, but with a strange, disturbing aspect, exactly like in a dream. Or like when you wake and you cannot accurately recall the dream. Still, a feeling lingers that you had a strange or even frightening dream, and you know if you try to describe it to someone else, that person just won't be able to relate; you can only keep it inside you. In our real life, it seems that where we are heading is always the opposite of where we want to go. It is the same with the dream. We are dreaming we are somewhere, but when we wake up, we find that we are somewhere else. Perhaps this reflects the perfection of the dream.

My new film investigates how this dreamlike environment affects relationships and discussions among the intellectuals-as well as their solitary meditations on individuality and liberty. We need to pursue something, and then we have our spiritual sustenance and belief. In the subsequent films, the intellectuals will be shown living in a building, in a metropolis-say, Shanghai; in a village in the countryside in the company of peasants and villagers; and on a deserted island where they'll start to invent a new world from scratch by defining new modalities of social life and interaction and a new distribution of labor. (Of course, the separation of material and immaterial labor and capital will be questioned.) And in the fifth and last part, eventually the intellectuals will return to the city-and so return to reality, confronting their contemporaries with their new experiences.

[Sidebar]

At the 50th Venice Biennale, Shanghai-based artist Yang Fudong presented The Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest, 2003, the first part of his new filmic pentalogy, The Seven Intellectuals, an adaptation of the traditional Chinese stories known as "The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove." The first installment (shot in 35 mm black and white) begins the series' exploration of the ambiguous position of intellectuals in contemporary China-their longing for individual freedom in the shifting context of an emerging capitalist economy. Yang, who was born in 1971 in Beijing and graduated from the China Academy of Fine Arts, Hangzhou, has shown an interest in the conundrums of idealism in his earlier works, such as the photographic triptych The First Intellectual, 2000, where he reflects on the difficulty of finding and adopting a rebellious and critical attitude in a society undergoing changes that are as rapid as they are profound. On other occasions, his approach has been poetic and nostalgic, showing stylistic references to Chinese films of the '30s and '40s, such as Yuan Muzhi's Street Angel (1937) and Fei Mu's Spring in a Small Town (1948). Yang's internationally praised first feature film, An Estranged Paradise (2002), tells the story of Zhuzi, a young intellectual befallen by a strange illness, a restlessness that arrives with the rainy season and disappears with its end. In Yang's own words, the film stands as "a meditation on life," in which nature seems intimately bound to psychology. It is a poignant convergence of mind and outside world that presages the first episode of The Seven Intellectuals. -HANS-ULRICH OBRIST

WORLD SPORTS at 0000 GMT

TOP STORY:

SOC--CHAMPIONS LEAGUE DRAW

MONACO — Real Madrid, AC Milan and Ajax, who have won 20 European Cups between them, will meet in the group stage of the Champions League. Moved. By Jerome Pugmire.

NEW/DEVELOPING:

SOC--EUROPA LEAGUE ROUNDUP

LONDON — English clubs Liverpool and Manchester City qualified for the Europa League group stage on Thursday along with Italian sides Juventus, Napoli and Palermo. The German trio of Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen and Stuttgart also secured spots in Friday's draw. Moved. By Rob Harris.

GLF--BARCLAYS

PARAMUS, New Jersey — In his first tournament since his divorce, Tiger Woods finally looked like the No. 1 player in the world at the Barclays when he opened with a 6-under 65, his lowest score of the year, to share the lead with Vaughn Taylor. Moved. By Doug Ferguson.

CRI--ENGLAND-PAKISTAN

LONDON — Andrew Strauss' batting problems continued, with the England captain losing his wicket early on a rain-affected first day of the decisive fourth test against Pakistan at Lord's. Moved. By Stuart Condie.

WITH:

— LONDON — BC-CRI--ENGLAND-BATTING WOES. Moved. By Richard Sydenham.

TEN--US OPEN DRAW

NEW YORK — If Roger Federer is going to reach a seventh consecutive U.S. Open final, he might need to get past the man who ended his Grand Slam semifinal streak. Moved. By Howard Fendrich.

FOOTBALL:

SOC--EUROPEAN SUPER CUP

MONACO — New Inter Milan coach Rafael Benitez knows his players need time to understand his methods as they aim to capture the European Super Cup against Atletico Madrid after tasting unprecedented success last season with Jose Mourinho. Moved. By Jerome Pugmire.

ALSO:

— ISTANBUL — BC-SOC--FENERBAHCE-PAOK-VIOLENCE. Moved.

— LONDON — BC-SOC--ENGLISH ROUNDUP. Moved.

RUGBY UNION:

RGU--AUSTRALIA-TEAM

PRETORIA, South Africa — Australia recalled flyhalf Quade Cooper for Saturday's Tri-Nations test against South Africa, despite rumors linking him to a possible big-money move to rugby league. Moved. By Gerald Imray.

ALSO:

— PRETORIA, South Africa — BC-RGU--SOUTH AFRICA-MATFIELD MASKS. Moved.

GOLF:

GLF--RYDER CUP-MOLINARI

GLENEAGLES, Scotland — Francesco Molinari of Italy was guaranteed a place in Europe's Ryder Cup team following Ross McGowan's withdrawal from the Johnnie Walker Championship with injury. Moved. By Bernie McGuire.

ALSO:

— GLENEAGLES, Scotland — BC-GLF--JOHNNIE WALKER. Moved. By Bernie McGuire.

— COLUMBIA, South Carolina — BC-GLF--PGA TOUR-HERITAGE. Moved. By Pete Iacobelli.

AUTO RACING:

CAR--F1-BELGIAN GP

SPA-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium — Formula One's championship has arrived at the Belgian Grand Prix with favorites Red Bull, McLaren and Ferrari knowing there is no room for error in the title race with only seven races left. Moved. By Paul Logothetis.

WITH:

— SPA-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium — BC-CAR--F1-BELGIAN GP-SCHUMACHER. Moved. By Paul Logothetis.

BASKETBALL:

BKO--WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

ISTANBUL — Kobe Bryant towers over a city street as he dribbles a basketball in the cover photo of a pamphlet distributed earlier this year to promote the world championships. After offseason knee surgery, Bryant isn't doing much dribbling at all this summer. Moved. By Brian Mahoney.

WITH:

— ISTANBUL — BC-BKO--WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS-SUSPENSIONS. Moved.

— KAYSERI, Turkey — BC-BKO--ARGENTINA-NOCIONI. Moved.

TENNIS:

TEN--PILOT PEN

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut — Three Russian women have played their way into the Pilot Pen semifinals, while top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki advanced without ever taking the court. Moved. By Pat Eaton-Robb.

ALSO:

— PARIS — BC-BAD--WORLDS. Moved. By Trung Latieule.

— TORONTO — BC-OLY--HKW-WICKENHEISER-2014 OLYMPICS. Moved.

— UNDATED — BC-BOX--PACQUIAO-MARGARITO. Moved. By Dave Skretta.

YOUR QUERIES: Questions and story requests are welcome. Contact your local AP bureau or the AP International Sports Desk in London by telephone at 44-207-427-4105, fax 44-207-427-4118.

Add-ons put Web conferences on same page

Virtual meetings and collaborations just got easier for MicrosoftOffice users.

Microsoft and its conferencing partners, including two companieswith Chicago ties, have integrated Internet- and audio-meetingcapabilities with popular Microsoft Office applications, including e-mail, instant messaging, scheduling, PowerPoint and word processing.

Microsoft has launched add-ons to its Office suite linked withservices from Chicago-based InterCall, MCI's Chicago-basedconferencing group, and BT, the United Kingdom phone carrier.

"The whole process has become more efficient and productive," saidRobert Wise, InterCall's vice president of marketing and strategicdevelopment. "Say you're working on a Word document and want todiscuss it in real time with co-workers. You simply go to a pull-down menu and click to launch a Web conference, and go over thedocument."

Natasha Haubold, MCI spokeswoman, said: "We are seeing a lot ofinterest in this in the marketplace. We think this kind ofcollaboration is the wave of the future."

A Microsoft spokesman said the software giant has been focusing inrecent years on extending its applications, such as PowerPoint, Exceland Outlook, to communications programs, such as its Live Meeting Netconferencing software. The conferencing companies provide audioservices while reselling Microsoft's Live Meeting net-conferencingand other services.

Wise said the simplified link to conferencing "is going to have ahuge impact. We look for our revenue from Net conferencing businessto grow significantly."

Net conferencing represents about 10 percent of InterCall's $300-million-a-year business. Wise would not say how much growth heexpects. InterCall has about 1,700 employees worldwide, includingabout 150 in Chicago.

MCI doesn't break out conferencing revenues or employees. It hasmore than 700 employees in Chicago.

Wainhouse Research, a conferencing industry consulting firm, hasestimated that Web conferencing will grow at a 21 percent rate peryear through 2007, while conferencing overall, including audio, videoand Net conferences, will grow at a 12 percent annual rate.InterCall, which is owned by publicly traded Omaha-based West Corp., said its growth rate already exceeds these estimates.

Solid waste composting trends in the U.S.

THE THEORY of composting municipal solid waste other than just yard trimmings on a centralized basis is just as valid today as it was 50 years ago. The difference is that in the 1950s, the primary motivation to initiate projects was to mine the gold in the garbage. In these more "modern times" of MSW composting - more specifically the past 15 to 20 years - the motivation has come from finding a viable alternative to disposal or incineration. Because the need for alternative management scenarios has dwindled over the past ten years, rationalizing the need for composting MSW is more challenging. Projects on somewhat shaky ground technologically, politically, economically and/or waste flow wise - have found it more difficult to continue operating. On the other hand, those with the waste flow, cash flow, good process and odor management, viable end users, a well-defined mission and purpose and political support are doing well.

Two cliches come to mind when looking at the results of BioCycle's 2000 solid waste composting survey. The first is, "If the shoe fits, wear it." A number of the operating MSW composting projects are in locations where maximum recycling and composting are the best, if not the only, option for handling MSW. These include places with high volumes of tourists - thus generating waste streams with large amounts of recyclables and organics, but difficulty in getting consistent separation, e.g. Sumter County, Florida and Sevierville, Tennessee; islands with very high disposal costs, e.g. Nantucket, Massachusetts and Mackinac Island, Michigan; and situations where the economics actually can work in favor of composting (Marlborough, Massachusetts).

The second cliche is, "Survival of the fittest." What has become more than evident this year is that facilities with waste flow, a secure financial footing, a proven technology and well-trained operators are doing well in 2000, and prospects look good for the longer term. There have been plenty of lessons learned in this industry, and those projects doing well have applied them to their facility design, financing, contracts, composting technology and processes.

Perhaps one of the more surprising trends in 2000 is a renewed interest in residential separation and collection of organics other than yard trimmings. San Francisco's Fantastic 3 program is now servicing close to 15,000 households (see "San Francisco Takes Residential Organics Collection Full-Scale," February, 2000), and the city of San Jose, California is in negotiations with a hauler/composter team to initiate a similar program.

Fantastic 3 uses a cart-based collection system, where residents sort MSW into three fractions - commingled recyclables, trash and organics (primarily yard trimmings, food residuals and soiled and/or nonrecyclable paper). Trash and recyclables are cocollected in the same truck; a separate truck services the route to collect organics. In the San Francisco Bay area, two regional waste management companies (the one servicing San Francisco and another company) have invested in a composting infrastructure for commercial organics and now are pursuing separated residential organics (in addition to yard trimmings) to boost waste flows. In addition, local governments - under pressure to meet California's 50 percent recycling mandate by the end of 2000 - are more receptive to considering and investing in increased diversion from the residential sector. In Vermont, the Chittenden Solid Waste District has been running a residential organics collection and composting pilot.

THE 2000 NUMBERS

The 2000 BioCycle municipal solid waste composting survey identified 16 operating facilities and seven projects in various stages of planning or development. In 1999, there were 19 operating plants and six in planning or development. Table 1 provides a summary of this year's projects.

Of the 16 operating plants, five opened their doors ten years ago or more. Another five started in 1990 or 1991, and the remaining six started within the past five years. Six of the 16 are using the Bedminster rotating drum technology in the first stage of their operations; another is using a refurbished drum. Each of these operations go into an aerated windrow, aerated static pile or windrow process for remainder of the composting phase. The drum serves to open garbage bags, separate organics from inorganics, do some size reduction and begin initial composting. The nine other projects use the following composting methods: Windrow - 5; aerated static pile - 1; enclosed aerated static pile (Ag-Bag) - 1; aerated windrow - 1; in-vessel (OTVD) - 1.

Four projects closed their doors in the past year; however, in each case, the project managers note that the shut down may be temporary. Composting stopped at the beginning of the year in O'Neill, Nebraska because it was taking too long, says Kevin Seger, facility manager. A drop in income due to less material brought by the hauler was another reason. Seger hopes composting resumes in the future using windrows within an enclosed facility.

In Crisp County, Georgia, a mixed waste processing plant designed to handle 800 tons/day (tpd) had a sizable composting area to handle organics from the separation line. Composting of MSW stopped in January and there are no plans to resume in the near future. Inability to remove inerts from the waste stream led to the program's demise. "As we were running material through the plant, mechanical sorting would do what it could, but in trying to obtain a certain level of throughput, there was too much burden on the manual sorting belts to get inorganic material pulled out," explains Mike Guest, quality control manager for the Crisp County Solid Waste Management Authority. Crisp County is processing some paper products that come directly from the county's recycling programs, as well as wet and dry tobacco by-products and ground wood chips.

Marketing difficulties were among the problems that led to last year's closing of the MSW plant in Hot Springs, South Dakota. At least for now, the equipment remains in case the city wants to bring the operation on line again. Lexington, Nebraska stopped composting after a fire unrelated to composting ravaged its facility. Although it achieved a 47 percent diversion rate, the operation was never more than a break-even proposition, according to Dave Sterner, manager of the Lexington Area Solid Waste Agency in Nebraska. "In the future, we will use it to do a small amount of material," he says. "We have a meat processing plant in town, for example, that produces solids from its preparation of animal hides."

The composting plant in Mora, Minnesota never really got off the ground, and there are no immediate plans to open it. The East Central Solid Waste Commission had proposed a solid waste fee to generate money for the facility, but one of its five member counties opposed it. The site may be used for yard trimmings composting.

PLANNED START-UPS

A number of facilities are in development. The five members of the Mariposa County (California) Board of Supervisors are leaning toward approval of an MSW composting facility using Herhof technology, says Tom Starling of the county Department of Public Works. For a county of less than 16,000 residents, the $5 million price tag is steep. However, $1.8 million in federal funding has been approved due to the fact that Mariposa handles garbage from adjacent Yosemite National Park, bringing the total daily waste flow to 100 tpd. "That material is very high in organics," says Starling, "and we have minimal C&D debris. There's so much food waste coming to the landfill that would be ideal for composting, as well as lots of paper." Rural community grants may generate another $1.2 million, bringing the county's cost to $2 million and need for borrowing to $1 million.

Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts has to ship all of its garbage to the mainland. The island has accepted a bid from Waste Options, based in Newport, Rhode Island, to develop an MSW composting facility that would process an estimated 25,000 tons/year of material. In the last weeks of October, it was in negotiations with Waste Options, which would finance and own the plant under a long-term contract. The operation would be similar to the Bedminster system used in Nantucket, as would the company's responsibility for compost marketing. "Martha's Vineyard has some agriculture, but landscaping is the primary outlet on both islands, particularly because they have sandy soils and a lot of vacationers with large lawns," says Nelson Widdell, part owner of Waste Options. "Right now, all soil products are imported from the mainland."

In Rapid City, South Dakota, a facility is being designed to cocompost 200 tpd of MSW with 15,000 gallons/day of treated municipal biosolids at 90 to 92 percent moisture. Bids for construction will be sought next May. "We should be on-line in 2002," says Jerry Wright, solid waste superintendent. "We're going to partner with the wastewater plant because we don't want to land apply anymore. It's cheaper to cocompost than purchase land and go through the cost of land application. Another reason is that MSW is high in carbon and the sludge will add moisture. The sludge is a perfect partner." Windrows were considered initially, but an enclosed system is the most likely option. "We want to keep the operator out of the turning process due to concerns about the environment and worker safety," says Wright. "This will be more expensive to build, but cheaper to run."

Although Agranom, Inc. has been awarded a contract to build a facility to process 60 to 70 tpd of source separated organics for Harvey County, Kansas, the project has been put on hold. "The expense is the major reason," says Charlie Summers, the county's fiscal officer. "The longer it's been investigated, the more labor it appears to require for producing the product we want." If approved, the operation would process residential and commercial materials.

The planned $16 million-plus MSW composting facility slated for Delaware County, New York still needs authorization from the Board of Supervisors. "It's a money issue," says Sue MacIntyre, solid waste coordinator. The plant would use Conporec technology to cocompost up to 100 tpd of MSW with 25 tpd of biosolids.

Wright County, Minnesota closed its MSW composting plant in February, 1997 because of low feedstock volume and high operating costs. There is a good chance that it may reopen, according to Ginny Black of the Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance. "It was one of our best facilities," she says. A lawsuit filed by a landfill has kept the facility from reopening, but is expected to be resolved soon.

OPERATING FACILITIES

Here's a look at some of the operating MSW composting facilities in the U.S. Details on the composting methodology and throughput are in Table 1:

Pinetop-Lakeside, Arizona: A dehydrator was brought on line in January as a secondary biosolids handling system because the operation outgrew its existing capacity. The dehydrator has solved the plant's overtime problem and allowed it to go from six to five days/week of operation. "When the digester can't keep up with volume, we send some sludge to the dehydrator," says Phil Hayes, facility supervisor. "We're trying to blend the dry material with compost and come up with a new product, although we make very little dried sludge." Compost is sold for $14.02/ton to a soil blender who mixes it with topsoil and markets to golf courses.

Vacaville, California: The B&J Composting Facility, owned by Norcal Waste Systems, began as a yard trimmings composting site. The Ag-Bag enclosed aerated static pile technology was used from the beginning because of the windy nature of the site, and labor considerations. In 1998, B&J began taking commercial organics from a collection program in San Francisco. Then, when San Francisco launched its Fantastic Three residential program in early 2000 (see above), the organics fraction started being taken by the hauler (Sunset Scavenger, which also is owned by Norcal) to the B&J facility. A town closer to Vacaville also is taking source separated residential organics, including food residuals and yard trimmings, to B&J. The site's current capacity is 300 tpd (see "Flexible Processor Simplifies Commercial Organics Diversion," August, 2000).

Sumter County, Florida: Incoming volume has increased from 42 to 75 tpd due to a population increase spurred in part by the fastest growing retirement villages in the United States, says Terry Hurst, county solid waste superintendent. Volume is expected to increase another 12 to 15 tpd when the influx of visitors and seasonal residents hits this winter. Because the rotating drum's capacity is only 50 tpd with 25 tpd of biosolids, some material is being landfilled. A $3.5 million grant approved by the state legislature will fund another drum (to be supplied by A.C. Equipment Services) and create the Florida Organics Recycling Center for Excellence (FORCE), which will conduct research, technology evaluation and development, and operator training. FORCE, which will involve the University of Florida, the state Department of Environmental Protection and others, will be located at the composting plant.

Cobb County, Georgia: Recovering from setbacks caused by odors and two fires several years ago, the MSW plant ramped up to its full capacity of 300 tpd of MSW and 20 wet tpd of biosolids early this year. For the most part, the biofilter - comprised of wood chips and compost - has taken care of odors. An emergency generator has been added in the past year to run the fans, blowers, digesters and major equipment in the event of a power failure. A 7,000-square-foot addition to the facility holds spare parts. "We're proactive in terms of maintenance," says Joe Accortt, who heads up the solid waste program. "We change parts before they break, which has led to our success."

Compost customers include residents, developers and golf courses. Sales are modest at several thousand tons annually; there also is an active giveaway program. "Market penetration has been difficult," admits Accortt, "although anybody who uses it comes back for more. One thing we have not done is to aggressively address this as a marketing issue. A private corporation probably would hire a marketing director, while we wait for people to come to us. We need to get out there and beat the bushes."

With more money available in the new budget, plans for the upcoming year include putting a cover on the biofilter. "If you live in this region of the country, you get hellacious rainstorms and tropical storms," says Accortt. "If the biofilter is exposed, it overloads the drainage system and has a deleterious effect on the media, which leads to changing it often. That gets to be expensive." Marlborough, Massachusetts

After a waste broker was hired to obtain feedstocks, the plant is composting 120 tpd of MSW, with 60 tpd biosolids. Approximately 50 tpd of MSW is from residential curbside collection, with the other 70 tpd from commercial sources (about 90 percent organic content by weight). "The lowest tip fee of $60/ton goes to MSW with no more than ten percent noncompostable residue by weight," says Bob Spencer, who manages the project for Bedminster Marlborough LLC. "We have been able to attract such waste from haulers serving grocery stores, restaurants, office parks, college cafeterias, etc. We try one or two loads from new sources to determine which category applies, or work with the hauler, who works with the generators to clean up the loads if they want to continue using our facility at the lower rates. The highest rate is about $85/ton, which assumes over 40 percent inorganic residue."

Biosolids come from both the Marlborough wastewater treatment plants, as well as the town of Hudson, Massachusetts. The plant added a biosolids hopper to provide greater storage capacity. It now has additional capacity that it is being marketed at a rate of about $70/wet ton.

Odors are under control at the plant, which has received only a handful of complaints. The biofilter was recently tested and determined to be operating at 95 percent odor removal efficiency after one year of operation. In September, the compost received Type I classification from the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection. "Our next challenge is to market the compost, since much of it has been stockpiled at our off-site curing area 30 miles away, awaiting the Type I classification." Nantucket, Massachusetts

The island's composting plant takes in 50 tpd during most of the year and twice that much at the height of the tourist season in July and August. The composting operation is located adjacent to a materials recovery facility to process recyclables. Together, the processing capacity is 60,000 tons/year. Waste Options claims a recycling rate of over 80 percent between the two facilities. Widdell expects that level to increase if plans to implement widespread use of biodegradable bags for residential collection are fulfilled next year. Vinyl fabricated structures for the composting area and biofilter were supplied by Universal Fabric Structures. The plant's 10,000 to 12,000 tons/year of compost are all used on-site for landscaping and beautification. A survey of commercial users on the island indicated great interest in the product when it becomes available on the market.

A double-lined landfill cell will be opened around this time next year to store inorganic residue screened out of composting and mixed construction debris loads. Meanwhile, the MSW plant's excess capacity during offpeak months will be used to start mining an old landfill. "Our first step was to reshape the landfill from 45 to 22 acres," says Widdell. "We're in the process of closing it completely."

Sumner Martinson of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection believes that as with other types of composting, future success for MSW composting may depend on establishing supplies of clean feedstocks. "Without a good upfront screening program, residue costs are immense," he explains. "Plus you have wear and tear of the equipment. These operators would like to go source separated if they could; it's a question of how you do it economically. There's a possibility of giving the Marlborough facility a grant to do source separated collection to see how much organics are in the residential waste stream, and whether the product quality would be higher enough to make it worthwhile. We have to show people there's an economic interest in separating."

Mackinac Island, Michigan: Getting the bulk of its MSW during the summer tourist season, the Mackinac Island plant processes an average of 5 tpd of material. A little over 1,000 cubic yards (cy) of compost were sold last year, says Bruce Zimmerman, an increase of about 200 cy. The main customers are landscaping businesses and residential users. Some compost is reserved for landfill cover. A small amount of organics are diverted to a vermicomposting project. To head off future odor complaints, public works director Bruce Zimmerman will try out different masking agents for those hot days when the wind blows in the wrong direction.

Fillmore County, Minnesota: Nothing has changed with the operation over the past year, says John Martin, who runs the plant, but on the recycling side, the county may switch from commingled collection to a twosort system. Six tons/day are composted at the MSW composting facility, about half the amount of 1996. There are contracts to receive source separated material from four cities. "In terms of others coming on, I don't see it happening," says Martin. "They don't want to separate." Compost is sold for $1/cy to residents and landscapers. According to Ginny Black of the Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance, Fillmore officials have been considering discontinuing MSW composting for the past year, partly because of an uncooperative hauler.

Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota: The MSW volume processed at the facility is gradually growing, hitting over 4 tpd. Two hundred feet of curing pad space will be added by the end of the year, notes Gary Lockner, county solid waste officer, bringing the total to 500 feet. "When we pour the floor, we're putting in collection pipes to heat the facility and keep the garbage from freezing," says Lockner. A Bivi-tech shaker screen will be another addition in the coming year. "The rotating screen has had trouble with moist material," Lockner explains. "With the shaker, you can fill it and walk away. You don't need to load it slowly and carefully; it's much more forgiving."

Pennington County, Minnesota: Composting volume has been downsized from 11 tpd to the 2,000 tons/year required for the county to keep the state grants received for the project. "We're losing money and nobody wants to buy the finished product," says Howard Person, who supervises the plant for the county. "People just don't want to buy compost made from municipal solid waste. We dispose of it on agricultural land and use it to reclaim gravel pits, but we don't get anything for it." The plant likely will shut down when the grant period ends in August, 2005.

The facility already has stopped producing MSW fuel pellets because of the poor market for them after an ethanol plant closed. Burdensome regulations and low costs for virgin fuel were factors in the decision to stop production, says Person. Market research was lacking when the compost and fuel pellet operations were planned, he adds.

Truman, Minnesota: About 55 tpd are processed at the plant, which produced 1,800 tons of compost in 1999. About half of the product is sold at roughly $3/ton to landscapers or as animal bedding for beef cattle, with the rest given away to farmers. "We have pretty good soils here," says Mark Bauman, director of the Prairieland Solid Waste Board. "The farmers don't want to spend much."

Medina, Ohio: The plant uses the equivalent of 1.5 staff persons to oversee composting of 80 to 120 tpd of material. Forty to 60 tpd of fines from mixed waste processing are added to yard trimmings and wood. A Komptech Mashmaster used for grinding and mixing includes a screw conveyor for dewatering. Compost is used for landfill cover.

Sevierville, Tennessee: Throughput has grown from 180 to 200 tpd over the past year, after the completion of system rehabilitation, says Tom Leonard, Sevier County solid waste manager. Compost is delivered for free in the immediate area, and for the cost of trucking when the distance reaches about 15 miles or further away. "In the past, we had to haul much of it up to 60 or 70 miles away," says Leonard. "We're delivering more of it locally now." About 13,000 tons were produced in 1999. The recent challenge for the facility operator, Professional Services Group, has been dealing with odor complaints. Much of them are coming from people who have recently moved into the area. "Even though we've been here for ten years, they don't like the smell," says Leonard. "We're working to improve it."

Columbia County, Wisconsin: After ten years of operation, the facility shut down for three months this spring to do repairs and preventative maintenance. Although the stoppage was scheduled, it took twice as long as anticipated. Burdensome regulations and the expense of a screen capable of removing small inerts has led the county to put aside thoughts of selling MSW compost to landscapers and nurseries. Instead, for the past year, it has been producing yard trimmings compost for those markets. The MSW compost is spread on farm fields. As time allows, a staff member is working on a machine to remove small glass particles.

Google wins EU ruling in fake luxury goods case

Google Inc. won a key EU court ruling Tuesday that says it did not violate luxury goods trademarks by allowing counterfeiters to buy brand names as advertising links _ but could face legal action if it doesn't pull problem ads swiftly.

The world's most used search engine won some legal protection against future cases after the EU's highest legal authority said it could not be held liable for advertisers' requests to place ads _ as long as it removes them when it is told the ad misuses a trademark.

The company is not completely in the clear, however. The European Court of Justice said the French companies who took the case _ headed by LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton _ could still claim for compensation in a French court if it rules that trademark misuse damages their brands.

The EU court left future decisions on Google's liability to national courts, saying they should examine whether the search engine's role in accepting ads directly on its web site is "neutral ... pointing to a lack of knowlege of, or control over, the data which it stores."

"If it proves to be the case that it has not played an active role, that service provider cannot be held liable for the data which it has stored at the request of an advertiser unless ... it failed to act expeditiously to remove or to disable access to the data," a court statement said.

LVMH, the company behind Marc Jacobs bags, Dior perfumes and TAG Heuer watches _ said the ruling showed that Google could not fully escape its responsibility.

It said Google could face legal action if it knowingly sells keywords that infringe a trademark.

"This decision represents a critical step towards the clarification of the rules governing online advertising, of which LVMH is one of the foremost clients," said the company's vice president Pierre Gode. "We are committed to working with all parties, including Google, to eradicate illicit online practices."

Google's senior legal counsel Harjinder S. Obhi said some companies were trying to extend trademark law to cover keywords bought by online advertisers.

"This case is not about us arguing for a right to advertise counterfeit goods," he said. "Trademark rights are not absolute," he said. "Ultimately they want to be able to exercise greater control over the information available to users."

He said Google's policies forbid advertising of counterfeit goods, describing them as "a bad user experience," and that the company works with brand owners to identify and deal with counterfeiters.

Google makes most of its revenue by selling advertising triggered by keywords. When someone searches for "vintage cars" or visits a partner site that mentions those words, advertising for a vintage car dealer may appear to the side. In some cases, a keyword that is a company's brand name can trigger an ad for a competitor or even counterfeiters.

The French companies complain that Google broke the law by accepting ads using a brand name without permission. They fear that would allow counterfeiters to buy a keyword such as "Louis Vuitton" and use it to sell fake bags.

Google has been repeatedly sued for trademark violations in courts around the world, and it generally prevails or settles cases without changing its practices. In the United States and most other countries, Google typically accepts trademarks used as those keyword triggers, but it places limits on what can appear in ads themselves.

But in many European countries, including France, Italy and the Netherlands, Google does restrict the use of trademarks as keywords. It will typically strike ads, however, only after receiving a complaint from the trademark owner and conducting a review.

Revived Yanks on the Mark Sox' Buehrle smoked for seven runs in first in rain-delayed loss

YANKEES 11, WHITE SOX 8

A struggling New York Yankees team was not a welcome sight forWhite Sox manager Ozzie Guillen on Tuesday.

"Everybody says, What's wrong with them?'" Guillen said beforeTuesday's first of three games at U.S. Cellular Field. "But that teamwill be all right, believe me. They have experience and talent.

"How many games have they played -- 13? Believe me, that team cango 70-6 the rest of the way because of the talent they have. They'vedone it before, and with the manager they have, I know they're notpanicking."

The Yankees proved Guillen's fear, jumping all over starter MarkBuehrle (1-1) with a seven-run first inning en route to an 11-8victory during a rain-delayed affair for 32,034 fans.

"That's part of the game," Guillen said. "[Buehrle] didn't havewhat he wanted to have. Things happen. Against that team, you have tobe consistent.

"But I just finished a meeting with them and I told them I'm proudof them. They battled back and made [the Yankees] come with theirbest pitcher [Mariano Rivera in the end]. I'm proud and I felt likewe won. If we keep this up all year long, it's going to be fun forthem to play this game.

"I told them in the second inning, We have nothing to lose now.Just have fun.'"

Buehrle lasted only two innings before a one-hour, 12-minutedelay, but the worst of the damage was done. He gave up eight runs,and though the Sox got that many back in a 10-hit attack thatincluded home runs from Paul Konerko (his third) and Aaron Rowand(his second), it wasn't enough.

The victory went to Paul Quantrill (2-0), one of four relieverswho worked after rookie left-handed starter Alex Graman lasted only22/3 innings. Graman let the Sox back in the game quickly by allowingfive runs.

Veteran Rivera finished the ninth for his fourth save.

The Sox split their four-game series with the Yankees in New Yorktwo weeks ago. But in this visit, the Yankees unloaded in the firstinning with their biggest first-inning explosion on the road since1988.

No sooner had the wet patrons settled into their seats than DerekJeter, Bernie Williams and Alex Rodriguez singled off Buehrle -- withRodriguez' hit a bunt that drew a wild throw from third baseman JoeCrede and led to the first run. Rodriguez had another at-bat in theinning as the Yankees sent 12 men to the plate and scored seven runs.

The barrage included five singles, a bases-loaded double by secondbaseman Miguel Cairo, a throwing error by shortstop Juan Uribe andtwo walks and a hit batter by Buehrle.

It was one of the worst outings ever for the 25-year-oldlefthander, who gave up another run in the second on a leadoff doubleby Jason Giambi and one-out double by Jorge Posada.

For the Yankees, it was as good a tonic as manager Joe Torre couldhope for after a difficult weekend in Boston where the Red Sox gotthe better of the first round of the rivalry, taking three of thefour games.

Buehrle's performance was the first bad outing by a Sox starter inthe early season. The pitching staff entered the game having worked23 consecutive innings without an earned run and ranked third in theleague with a 3.67 ERA. They allowed only four runs in the three-game weekend series in Tampa Bay, the fewest in a three-game seriessince giving up three to Baltimore in a three-game series last May.

"In spring training we had the best starting pitching inbaseball," Guillen said. "We had the best ERA, but no one believedthat. I think we're throwing the ball well.

"I don't know anything about [Graman]," Guillen said before thegame. "We'll go by the scouting reports from the minor leagues."

But he does know all about the Yankees.

3 dead in wave of attacks in northern Kenya

MANDERA, Kenya (AP) — A wave of attacks in northern Kenya left three people dead and 26 wounded, provoking a backlash by security forces who beat scores of civilians at the site of one attack in a town on the country's border with Somalia, officials said.

One soldier was killed in an explosion that struck a Kenyan army truck in the border town of Mandera and 11 others were wounded, including a few who were seriously wounded and had to be airlifted to the nearby city of Garissa, defense spokesman Maj. Emmanuel Chirchir said.

The attack in Mandera is the sixth in a series of roadside bombs and grenade attacks following the entry of Kenyan troops into Somalia last month. Kenya sent the troops into Somalia following a string of kidnappings and attacks on Kenyan soil that it blamed on al-Qaida-linked Somali insurgent group al-Shabab.

The explosion Thursday morning was believed to be caused by a land mine, provincial police chief Leo Nyongesa said. Security officers searched for clues.

In Garissa, two people were killed and 15 wounded in separate grenade attacks on Thursday evening, Nyongesa said. He said the grenade attacks happened simultaneously, one at a popular restaurant and another involving a group of people standing in the street. He didn't provide any further details.

Following the incident in Mandera, more than 300 people living nearby were arrested by Kenya military forces and Somali soldiers who crossed the border, town council chairman Mohamed Adan Khalif said. He said he had been inside the police station and had seen many people who had been severely beaten. A prominent local businessman and the imam of the Mandera Jamia mosque seemed to have broken arms, he said.

"Whenever attacks occurred in our town, our military officers turn against our innocent population living in the town," he said. "We fear if this kind of harassment continues, the (Kenyan army) will lose the hearts and minds of the locals ... Nobody shall expect a co-operation from intimidated people."

Khalif also questioned why Somali soldiers — who are helping the Kenyan military in their fight against al-Shabab — were operating in Kenyan territory.

"Whenever there is an explosion in Mandera — which is a town in Kenya — they joined the (Kenyan army) in harassing the people. We can understand when our people are beaten by our military officers, but how can our people been assaulted by a foreign force?" Khalif said.

Kenya said the incursion into Somalia was a reaction to the kidnaps, but it has spent years advocating for the establishment of a buffer zone in Somalia along the border and recruiting and training Somali militias.

Kenyan planes bombed two suspected al-Shabab camps on Wednesday, Chirchir said Thursday.

___

Katharine Houreld in Nairobi, and Boniface Bosire in Garrisa, contributed to this report.

Monday, March 12, 2012

NASA probes give moon a double smack

NASA smacked two spacecraft into the lunar south pole Friday morning in a search for hidden ice. But the big live public splash people anticipated didn't quite happen.

Instruments confirm that a large empty rocket hull barreled into the moon at 7:31 a.m. (1131 GMT), followed four minutes later by a probe with cameras taking pictures of the first crash.

Screens got fuzz and no immediate pictures of the crash or the six-mile (10-kilometer) plume of lunar dust that the mission was all about. The public, which followed the crashes on the Internet and at observatories, seemed puzzled.

NASA officials said their instruments were working, but live photos of the actual crash were missing. Some select photos should be ready by a 10 a.m. (1400 GMT) press conference, they said.

But so far all NASA had was "images on the way in," said NASA spokesman Grey Hautaluoma.

Expectations by the public for live plume video were probably too high and based on pre-crash animations, some of which were not by NASA, project manager Dan Andrews told The Associated Press Friday morning 80 minutes after impact.

Another issue, one NASA thought was a good possibility going into Friday, was that the lighting was bad and work needs to be done on images to make them easier to see, Andrews said. Experts said the images could be essentially "gray against black," he said.

"What matters for us is: What is the nature of the stuff that was kicked up going in?" Andrews said. "All nine instruments were working fine and we received good data."

Andrews said the science team is pouring through the information _ including what are supposed to be good images from ground-based telescopes on Earth _ to answer the big question: Is there some form of water under the moon's surface that was dislodged? It will probably be two weeks before scientists will be certain about the answer, he said.

Before the crash, mission scientists said there was a chance that if it was really moist under the crater, they'd know about water within an hour. That's not the case now, Andrews said.

People who got up before dawn to look for the crash at Los Angeles' Griffith Observatory exchanged confused looks instead.

Telescope demonstrator Jim Mahon called the celestial show "anticlimactic."

"I was hoping we'd see a flash or a flare," Mahon said.

About 100 miles (160 kilometers) northeast of Los Angeles, 70 elementary school students at the Lewis Center for Educational Research charter school in Apple Valley capped off their weeklong "moon camp" experience by rising early to watch NASA television along with 300 members of the public.

"It was cool seeing actual pictures of the moon live," said 10-year-old Jackson Bridges, but he added: "I wanted to see the debris flying out. It was still interesting to watch, but it was less interesting without the flying debris."

The first and much bigger crash was supposed to hit with the force of 1.5 tons of TNT into crater Cabeus and create a mini-crater about half the size of an Olympic pool. The second crash was to be about one-third as strong.

The idea is to confirm the theory that water _ a key resource if people are going to go back to the moon _ is hidden below the barren moonscape.

The images were to come from the probe itself. The probe is LCROSS, short for Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite and pronounced L-Cross. It had five cameras and four other pieces of equipment to look for ice or any form of water as it dove through the dust storm created by the empty hull.

Minutes before the first crash, NASA was riding high, reporting no trouble at the Ames Research Center in California, where the mission was being controlled.

"Everything is working so very well," NASA's Victoria Friedensen, a manager in NASA's exploration office, said minutes before the one-two smack.

___

Science Writer Alicia Chang contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

___

On the Net:

NASA's LCROSS site: http://www.nasa.gov/lcross

Barry Knapp, Head Of U.S. Equity Strategy, Barclay`s Capital

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

BARRY KNAPP, HEAD OF U.S. EQUITY STRATEGY AT BARCLAY'S CAPITAL,TALKS ABOUT THE MARKETS ON BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE

AUGUST 31, 2010

SPEAKERS: BARRY KNAPP, HEAD OF U.S. EQUITY STRATEGY, BARCLAY'S CAPITAL

TOM KEENE, HOST, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE

KEN PREWITT, HOST, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE

IRA JERSEY, DIRECTOR OF U.S. INTEREST RATE STRATEGY, CREDIT SUISSE

7:37

TOM KEENE, HOST, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE: He bought seven suits last week at Saks Fifth Avenue, we welcome Barry Knapp of Barclay's Capital. Barry, good morning.

BARRY KNAPP, HEAD OF U.S. EQUITY STRATEGY, BARCLAY'S CAPITAL: Good morning.

KEENE: Equity markets, it's run-and-cover here. You've got a portfolio strategy that's I'm going to suggest cautious. When does cautious become, let's go to cash? Are we anywhere near where we really lower the allocation?

KNAPP: Well, you know it's interesting because I wrote a note on Friday and met with a research force yesterday. And I tried to set up a framework for a late-in-the-year rally and went through a number of things that I think if they developed, you know could set the stage for a rally later in the year. Things like the Fed restarting QE, a favorable settlement on Basil III, expectations getting marked down, some positive outcome on the Bush tax cuts and the like. So the sales people immediately asked me, well, what if those things don't happen. You know -

KEENE: I'm shocked.

KNAPP: What if we don't get the Bush tax cuts rolled - and, which there's a good chance we could obviously have a stalemate at least through the elections.

KEENE: Barry, let me translate this - we're jargon-free, it's a jargon-free earth. Let me translate this for those in the world that aren't on Wall Street. What Mr. Knapp was suggesting is the revenue producers at Barclay's Capital were saying, hey strategists, you stupid idiot, what if you get this wrong, we'll lose our paychecks. Okay, continue, Barry.

KNAPP: Well, it's okay. That's a good way to put it, I guess.

KEENE: So tell us about a year-end rally.

KNAPP: I mean, quite frankly, we've been in a negative camp and we've been saying that we thought we would at least test the early July low of 1010 (ph) and that we could potentially go below it. You know if we didn't get some of these developments to come together, then surely we could trade lower still, you know down into the 900 range or so on the S&P. But we do still think there's scope for a year-end rally. I definitely wouldn't put us in the optimistic camp and in fact, we lowered our price target on the S&P from 1210 to 1120. I realize it's a little bit arbitrary reaching those targets, but nonetheless, we thought that 1210 had become a best-case scenario rather than a base-case scenario.

KEENE: Let's bring in Ira Jersey here from Credit Suisse. Ira, say good morning to Barry Knapp.

JERSEY: Good morning, Barry. You know, one of the things that you have in your report is a significantly slower earnings growth next year. Is there any way that that's going to derail the range that we've basically been in for the last year or so?

KNAPP: Well, it's interesting. I have this debate with the traders quite often who tell me that, you know, the bonds of (ph) consensus forecast is 96. And I say, well no one believes that anyway and we're not trading on that kind of a multiple. So you know, the number's already marked down. And my report to them is that when you're actually - you go through the process of marking those numbers down, it can't be a favorable development for the equity market. So, one way of thinking about that is Intel preannounced on Friday in the market rally as if that was the end of the process as opposed to the beginning of the process. We think there'll be a lot more marking down of those forward earnings estimates. You know, 15 percent for next year doesn't make a heck of a lot of sense. Over time, S&P revenue growth tends to converge with nominal GDP growth, right. So GDP plus deflation and you know the first couple quarters coming out of a recession - or for a couple quarters coming out of a recession it can run as much as 5 percent above. But by next year we think it will converge towards that nominal GDP growth level. And margins have already gotten back to within 1 percent of peak during the last cycle, so we don't think there's much scope for further margin expansion.

JERSEY: So does that mean we just go sideways for quite a while?

KNAPP: It could very well. I mean when you look across all the various valuation metrics on the S&P, the metrics that the S&P looks positive against, or it looks cheap against, if you will, are fixed income instruments. You know, it looks cheap against investment grade credit. It looks cheap against treasuries. But against its own history, it doesn't necessarily look cheap. I'm in the camp that when you have significant upticks in economic volatility and I think your strategist at CS has the same point of view on this, that we can trade at significantly lower multiples. So yes, there's a stream of cash flows you could argue the equity market's cheap, but at least until you mitigate or offset that risk of a double-dip, it's hard to see how the equity market would get any real multiple expansion.

KEENE: Ken, dive in.

KEN PREWITT, HOST, BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE: Barry, we put some numbers together here at Bloomberg and found out that the percentage of buy recommendations from securities analyst is the lowest it's been since 1997 and yet estimates are for S&P earnings to be up 36 percent and that's the highest since 1988. In other words, earnings are going to be great, but don't buy stocks. So what's that telling you?

KNAPP: You know, I've heard that - I heard your story on that. I was a little confused by it because I've met with almost all of our analyst groups over the last month or so and I did not - just doing an eyeballing all of their recommendations think, and we have, as you know, the number one II (ph) research rated team. And I though there were significantly more buy recommendations by our team than 27 percent, but I think the net message of all this is that the numbers are just - the numbers are just too high. They need to come down.

KEENE: Yes.

KNAPP: So, to some extent that may very well be in the market. But I don't think when those numbers are actually getting cut, that will be a positive catalyst for the stock market.

KEENE: Right. Ira Jersey, jump in here with a question.

IRA JERSEY, DIRECTOR OF U.S. INTEREST RATE STRATEGY, CREDIT SUISSE: Yes, so you have a chart of one of your recent reports about correlations falling of the S&P 500 even though we've had a pullback. Is - what significance does the correlation within the equity market actually have in your analysis of it?

KNAPP: Well, you know I would say the way I think about it can't really anyways. When correlation goes quite high, and clearly, we had unprecedented correlation of cross asset classes during the crisis and for big parts of 2009 including during the heaviest parts of QE when the Fed was buying mortgages like they were going out of style, creating that portfolio rebalancing effect, you know pushing capital out the risk curve. The fact that correlations started to break down now, to me means that this is not really about just risk aversion.

KEENE: Yes.

KNAPP: People just cutting risk. This is really more about starting to discount the forward earnings stream for the S&P 500. What are the economic prospects?

KEENE: Interesting.

KNAPP: And so what I think that means is the defensive sectors will perform well, even when the market rebounds as opposed to just being you know the Fed's in need of outperformers.

KEENE: Barry, thank you so much. Barry Knapp, Barclay's Capital. Say hi to all your revenue producers as well. Tell them you're a good guy. Barry Knapp, Equities Strategist, Head of Equity Strategy, Barclay's Capital.

7:44

***END OF TRANSCRIPT***

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TICKET LINE

PHONE LINE Ticketmaster, (312) 559-1212.

New World Music Theatre, 19100 S. Ridgeland, Tinley Park. CallTicketmaster. Skyline Stage, Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand. Call Ticketmaster. Star Plaza Theatre, I-65 & U.S. 30, Merrillville (773) 734-7266,(219) 769-6600. Or, call Ticketmaster. Blues artist Keb' Mo' performs 9 p.m. Sept. 26 at the House ofBlues, 329 N. Dearborn.

Tiny Town opens.

Tickets are $20 and go on sale at 10 a.m. Saturday. For moreinformation, call Ticketmaster. ON SALE SATURDAY

dada, 7:30 p.m. Sept. 12, Park West, 322 W. Armitage(Ticketmaster); $15.50. On sale at 10 a.m.

4HIM with Jaci Velasquez and special guest Australian singerMichelle Tumes, 7 p.m. Nov. 16, Star Plaza Theatre, I-65 & U.S. 30,Merrillville (773-734-7266, 219-769-6600 or Ticketmaster); $17, $25.On sale at 10 a.m. ALREADY ON SALE

Anastasia On Ice, Disney's animated movie comes to life on icein Feld Entertainment's skating spectacular. Sept. 23-27, RosemontHorizon, 6920 N. Mannheim, Rosemont. The production moves to theUnited Center, 1901 W. Madison (Ticketmaster); $12.50-$19.50.

Arturo Sandoval with Pancho Sanchez, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, SkylineStage, Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand (Ticketmaster); $28.50.

Cathedrals, 8 p.m. Sept. 11, Wheaton College, Wheaton(Ticketmaster); $12.95-$15.95.

"Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde," an intimatelook at the trial of one of America's most celebrated playwrights.Sept. 11-Oct. 11, Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis (773-753-4472);$26-$36.

The Rippingtons with Russ Freeman, 7 p.m. Sunday, Skyline Stage,Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand (Ticketmaster); $29.

Rockstock '98, featuring Creed, the Black Crowes, Local H,Rammstein, Joe Satriani, Sevendust, Brian May, Monster Magnet,Anthrax, Candlebox, Stabbing Westward, Corey Glover, Powerman 5000,Cowboy Mouth, the Beer Nuts and more, 1 p.m. Sept. 12, New WorldMusic Theatre, 19100 S. Ridgeland, Tinley Park (Ticketmaster);$29.75.

Reo Speedwagon, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Star Plaza Theatre, I-65 &U.S. 30, Merrillville (773-734-7266, 219-769-6600 or Ticketmaster);$26.

Rod Stewart, 8 p.m. Sunday, New World Music Theatre, 19100 S.Ridgeland, Tinley Park (Ticketmaster); $27.75-$102.75.

Vigilantes of Love with Peter Mulvey, 9 p.m. Sept. 9, Schubas, 3159 N. Southport (312-525-2508 or Ticketmaster); $7.

Ex-Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler Dies

ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Bo Schembechler, who became one of college football's great coaches in two decades at Michigan, died Friday after taping a TV show on the eve of the Wolverines' No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown with perennial rival Ohio State. He was 77.

Schembechler collapsed during the taping of a television show in Southfield and was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital. His death at 11:42 a.m. was confirmed by Mike Dowd, chief investigator for the medical examiner's office in Oakland County.

Schembechler became ill at the studios at WXYZ-TV in Southfield, the station said. He also became ill there and was hospitalized Oct. 20.

Police were sent to the station around 9:25 a.m. along with the city's fire department and escorted an ambulance to Providence Hospital, Southfield police spokesman John Harris said.

Schembechler met with the media earlier this week to discuss Saturday's big game.

During the news conference, he discussed the device that was implanted to regulate his heartbeat after he was hospitalized last month.

He said the device covered about half his chest and that doctors still were adjusting it.

Schembechler said he did not plan to attend the game in Columbus, Ohio, and that he didn't attend road games anymore.

Schembechler had a heart attack on the eve of his first Rose Bowl in 1970 and another one in 1987. He has had two quadruple heart-bypass operations.

The seven-time Big Ten coach of the year compiled a 194-48-5 record at Michigan from 1969-89. Schembechler's record in 26 years of coaching was 234-64-8.

Schembechler's Wolverines were 11-9-1 against the Buckeyes. But fans in both states generally agree that the rivalry's prime years were 1969-78, when Schembechler opposed his friend and coaching guru, Woody Hayes. Ohio State prevailed in those meetings, going 5-4-1.

"It was a very personal rivalry," Earle Bruce, who succeeded Hayes as coach, once said. "And for the first and only time, it was as much about the coaches as it was about the game.

"Bo and Woody were very close because Bo played for Woody at Miami of Ohio, then coached with him at Ohio State. But their friendship was put on hold when Bo took the Michigan job because it was the protege against mentor."

Thirteen of Schembechler's Michigan teams either won or shared the Big Ten championship. Fifteen of them finished in The Associated Press Top 10, with the 1985 team finishing No. 2.

Seventeen of Schembechler's 21 Michigan teams earned bowl berths. Despite a .796 regular-season winning percentage, his record in bowls was a disappointing 5-12, including 2-8 in Rose Bowls.

The mythical national championship eluded Schembechler, but he said that never bothered him.

"If you think my career has been a failure because I have never won a national title, you have another thing coming," Schembechler said a few weeks before coaching his final game. "I have never played a game for the national title. Our goals always have been to win the Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl. If we do that, then we consider it a successful season."

His last game as Wolverines coach was a 17-10 loss to Southern California in the 1990 Rose Bowl. One week later, Schembechler - who also had been serving as Michigan athletic director since July 1988 - was named president of the Detroit Tigers.

NBA Leaders

G FG FT PTS AVG
James, Clev. 10 106 77 298 29.8
Wade, Mia. 10 95 83 279 27.9
Johnson, Atl. 9 84 43 234 26.0
Bosh, Tor. 9 78 70 226 25.1
Bryant, LAL 8 70 52 198 24.8
Duncan, S.A. 9 91 37 219 24.3
Nowitzki, Dall. 10 87 56 240 24.0
Carter, N.J. 9 76 45 214 23.8
Granger, Ind. 8 60 47 185 23.1
Stoudemire, Phoe. 11 82 85 249 22.6
Jefferson, Minn. 9 85 31 201 22.3
Jackson, G.S. 10 74 53 221 22.1
Crawford, N.Y. 10 72 35 213 21.3
Gordon, Chi. 10 74 45 213 21.3
Howard, Orl. 10 76 61 213 21.3
Roy, Port. 10 73 58 213 21.3
Durant, OKC. 9 74 39 190 21.1
Mayo, Mem. 10 79 31 210 21.0
Pierce, Bos. 11 67 74 231 21.0
Randolph, N.Y. 10 77 47 208 20.8
FG Percentage
FG FGA PCT
Nene, Den. 59 92 .641
O'Neal, Phoe. 60 95 .632
Haslem, Mia. 55 88 .625
Howard, Orl. 76 126 .603
Stoudemire, Phoe. 82 141 .582
Boozer, Utah 83 145 .572
Gasol, Mem. 44 78 .564
Parker, S.A. 55 99 .556
Duncan, S.A. 91 164 .555
Diaw, Phoe. 43 78 .551
Rebounds
G OFF DEF TOT AVG
Biedrins, G.S. 10 54 95 149 14.9
Howard, Orl. 10 54 86 140 14.0
Randolph, N.Y. 10 39 90 129 12.9
Boozer, Utah 10 34 80 114 11.4
Gasol, LAL 8 21 64 85 10.6
Jefferson, Minn. 9 22 73 95 10.6
Bogut, Mil. 11 40 74 114 10.4
Brand, Phil. 10 27 76 103 10.3
Bosh, Tor. 9 22 70 92 10.2
Kaman, LAC 9 32 60 92 10.2
Assists
G AST AVG
Paul, N.O. 9 104 11.6
Calderon, Tor. 8 72 9.0
Kidd, Dall. 10 82 8.2
B. Davis, LAC 8 64 8.0
Duhon, N.Y. 10 74 7.4
Nash, Phoe. 10 74 7.4
James, Clev. 10 73 7.3
Wade, Mia. 10 73 7.3
Rondo, Bos. 11 73 6.6
Iverson, Det. 9 59 6.6