четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Insurer Aegon reports profit in Q4

Aegon NV, the bailed-out Dutch insurer, reported a return to profit in the fourth quarter due to gains on investments, a better operating performance and fewer impairments on assets.

Net profit was euro393 million ($530 million), compared with a loss of euro1.18 billion in the same period a year ago, during the financial crisis.

In the Americas, where Aegon does more than half its business and owns the Transamerica company, operating profits were euro201 million, from a loss of euro1.17 billion in the fourth quarter of 2008.

"The improvement was due mainly to the recovery in financial markets," which helped both investment performance …

Robinson out as Kings coach

INGLEWOOD, Calif. Larry Robinson is out as coach of the LosAngeles Kings after his team failed to make the playoffs three of thelast four years, the Associated Press learned today.

A source close to Robinson said the coach was informed during ameeting with general manager Dave …

Aetna sues 6 NJ doctors for overbilling

WOODLAND PARK, N.J. (AP) — Aetna Inc. is suing six New Jersey physicians, claiming they filed "unlawful and excessive" bills, including nearly $57,000 for a 25-minute consultation.

The lawsuits stem from hospital care where patients were referred to in-network hospitals but received care from out-of-network physicians. The doctors don't have contracts and set their own fees.

Aetna spokeswoman Cynthia Michener told The Record newspaper the six …

Granada signs Orellana then loans him to Celta

GRANADA, Spain (AP) — Granada re-signed Fabian Orellana and then immediately loaned the Chile international to second division club Celta Vigo.

Granada says on its website that Orellana agreed to a three-year deal with the club after his contract with …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

3 eagles have Mahan soaring

MARKHAM, Ontario -- Hunter Mahan had to rely on the crowd to tellhim where his approach shot ended up on the ninth green in theCanadian Open.

The load roar made it easy to figure out that he holed the 81-yard shot for his third eagle of the round -- and second on a par-4hole.

"I was like, 'Wow! That's crazy,"' Mahan said. "That doesn'thappen."

Playing in perfect scoring conditions on Angus Glen's NorthCourse, Mahan also holed out from 189 yards on No. 18 -- the ninthhole of his morning round -- and made a more routine eagle with a 10-foot putt on the par-5 11th. He finished with a 9-under 62 to matchthe tournament record and take a two-stroke …

Jan. U.S. Auto Sales Seen Slightly Up

DETROIT - Gas prices may be lower than they were most of last year, but consumers still want to buy fuel efficient vehicles, giving Asian automakers' sales a boost over Ford and GM in January.

Industrywide, sales for the month could be up nearly 1 percent to nearly 1.2 million compared with January 2006, when strong fleet sales propped up results, according to estimates from Edmunds.com, a research Web site for car buyers. Companies report January sales Thursday.

Jesse Toprak, chief economist for Edmunds.com, said Toyota Motor Corp. likely will post double-digit gains and Honda Motor Co.'s sales could rise nearly 10 percent.

The Honda Civic, which was redesigned …

headline

OBAMA: So let's look towards the future with a renewed sense of common purpose, a renewed determination, and most importantly, renewed confidence that a better day will come.

All right. With that, let me take some questions. And I've got a list here.

Let's start off with Jennifer Loven, AP.

Q: Thank you, Mr. President. Your treasury secretary and the Fed chairman were on Capitol Hill today asking for this new authority that you want to regulate big, complex financial institutions.

But given the problems that the financial bailout program has had so far _ banks not wanting to talk about how they're spending the money, the AIG bonuses …

Jennifer, 12, has a variety of interests

Jennifer, 12, has brown hair and brown eyes, and she just gother first pair of eyeglasses.

She is a friendly, polite child, but is emotionally needy andcraves adult attention. She lives in a foster home with eight otherchildren, so it's impossible for her foster mother to give her asmuch attention as she needs.

Jennifer usually gets along with other children, but sometimesgets jealous when her foster mother gives the other childrenindividual attention.

Although Jennifer has been in foster care since 1984, she hastried to remain her own person and has developed many interests. Shetakes weekly piano and acrobatic lessons, and likes ice skating,swimming, …

Minister: OPEC to Cut Crude Production

ALGIERS, Algeria - Algerian Energy Minister Chehib Khelil said Sunday that OPEC will announce a 1 million barrel a day cut in crude production.

"All the countries are in agreement to contribute to reduce OPEC production by 1 million barrels and we will make our official announcement at our next meeting in Doha, (Qatar), from Oct 18-21," Khelil told reporters outside the Algerian parliament in the capital, Algiers.

The dates Khelil mentioned did not appear to be consistent with those announced by Levi Ajuonuma, the senior spokesman for Nigeria's state-owned oil company, who said the Doha meeting is a one-day event that will take place on Thursday, Oct. 19.

Another …

Case of Abramoff protege puts lobbying on trial

Years into the scandal, a protege of Jack Abramoff is the first member of the imprisoned lobbyist's team going before a jury to fight federal corruption charges that will put their very profession on trial.

Prosecutors argue the lavish meals and box seats that Kevin Ring provided government officials were an illegal pay-to-play scheme. Ring says he merely used traditional tools of his trade to build influence.

Ring is making a rare and bold move in putting his case before a jury, considering the public's distaste for the influence of lobbyists and the cache of Ring's often sarcastic and chummy e-mails that prosecutors plan to use against him.

Ring is …

Top-ranked teams win prep openers

There were no big surprises Friday on the opening night of thehigh school football season.

In traditional openers, top-ranked Mount Carmel won 22-7 at No.18 Joliet Catholic; No. 3 Providence won its 29th game in a row,23-13 over No. 15 St. Rita, and No. 4 Glenbrook South beat Barrington13-3.

West Suburban Silver favorite Hinsdale Central lost 24-16 …

Today In History

Today is Tuesday, Dec. 20, the 354th day of 2011. There are 11 days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1192 - Richard I the Lion-heart, king of England, is captured in Vienna.

1582 - The Gregorian calendar is adopted in France.

1694 - Frederick of Brandenburg restores Schweibus to the Holy Roman Empire.

1712 - The Swedes defeat the Danes at Gadebusch, Poland.

1790 - The first successful cotton mill in the United States begins operating in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

1803 - New Orleans flies the American flag for the first time, signaling a transfer of ownership as the Louisiana Territory is handed over to the United States, which …

`Short' Doesn't Say It

Wow, great new look. We've given the Wednesday Fashion pages a face-lift. Watch for anexpanded version of Style Watch, a weekly Deals column, Shop Talkprofiles of unique stores and other rotating features. You'll alsofind profiles of style makers, see what trends are happening on thestreets and get the scoop on what it's like to try out some of thelatest looks. n your way to the thrift shop with your short skirts? Not so fast.

At the recent haute couture shows in Paris, where designers showexorbitantly priced made-to-order clothes that help them maintaintheir oh-so-exclusive images, the word of the week was "micromini."

How short? Far too short to even contemplate for real women inreal life. Yves Saint Laurent's short skirts with a wide band of lace at thehem are among the skirts predicted to be most influential.

The about-face in lengths can be seen as a victory for women,because long skirts haven't been a big hit, especially among workingwomen and anyone past 40. Some women, however, think designers aretrying to jerk customers around, telling them what's hot one seasonis passe the next. Let's hope it's the former. After all, women aresmart enough to know they should wear what suits them.

New look at W: W has undergone a makeover. And it's for thebetter.

The glossy Fairchild publication, which has been the consumerversion of Women's Wear Daily for 21 years, has shrunk from abroadsheet size to a more manageable 10 1/8 by 14 1/8 inches. It'snow bound like a magazine instead of being divided into countlesssections. Formerly a biweekly glossy, the new W will come out 14times a year.

Highlights of the August issue include a survey of what womenlove and hate about fashion and a look at Hillary Rodham Clinton'sstyle of entertaining at the White House.

Murray advances to 3rd round of US Open

NEW YORK (AP) — Britain's Andy Murray has defeated Jamaica's Dustin Brown 7-5, 6-3, 6-0 to move into the third round of the U.S. Open.

The fourth-seeded Murray is seeking to make his second U.S. Open final in three years. He won this year's U.S. Open Series title, which means he could earn up to an extra $1 million in prize money if he wins the tournament.

Brown pushed him to 5-5 in the first set of the match Friday, but Murray won 14 of the next 17 games. The entire match lasted 1 hour, 25 minutes and the third set went 18 minutes.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

McLaren's misery: Blunders damage F1 hopes

LONDON (AP) — A weekend of blunders at the British Grand Prix has left McLaren bosses red-faced, with their hopes of catching Red Bull in the Formula One championship all but gone.

The mishaps began on Saturday when Lewis Hamilton qualified in 10th after being given the wrong tires in qualifying and pessimistic team principal Martin Whitmarsh publicly acknowledged that their car is just not fast enough.

While Hamilton defied that gloomy forecast to weave his way through the field up to a podium position at one stage, a fuel shortage forced him to slow down and finish in fourth.

Jenson Button fared even worse, with a botched pit-stop leading to his retirement 12 laps from the end.

In perhaps the understatement of the weekend, Whitmarsh said Button and Hamilton were "in some ways a little bit handicapped in the race and that's a shame."

It left McLaren 110 points adrift of Red Bull in the constructors' championship and Hamilton fourth in the drivers' standings, 95 points behind leader Sebastian Vettel.

"We all make mistakes, and you always hope they won't happen," Button said. "But this is even more disappointing as it's in front of my home crowd."

The Briton was released from his pit stop by a mechanic who didn't notice that a wheelnut had not been fully secured to the front right wheel.

While leaving the pit lane, the wheel began to wobble and Button pulled off the track in despair — maintaining an unenviable record of having never finished on the podium at his home race.

The team principal tried to avoid making anyone the fall-guy for the bungling.

"Our pit crew have done a fantastic job all year, but on this occasion it was a case of human error in the heat of the moment," Whitmarsh said. "We mustn't be too hard on individuals. I know he's being very hard on himself right now. You can imagine, you can pinpoint it.

"Often when something goes wrong you can't, but this is an unfortunate one that can be pinpointed on an individual who is doing his best."

In the end, it could be Whitmarsh who pays the price for the mistakes in front of a record 122,000 Silverstone crowd.

"I am confident I will stay in my job," he said. "I answer to the board — not just (group chairman) Ron (Dennis) — and they seem happy with the job I am doing — certainly for now.

"But for sure it was not one of the best grand prix I have ever had. We don't want to let the fans down and we did."

Whitmarsh had already raised eyebrows on the eve of the race by commandeering the microphone at the start of a media briefing to give an eight-minute account of where the team has been going wrong this season.

"This team and these great drivers cannot be happy," he said before admitting that their car is "not quick enough."

It prompted Hamilton to be asked what motivation there was to stay with McLaren amid ongoing speculation that a move to championship leader Red Bull could be on the cards.

The 2008 world champion has a break-clause to release him from the final year of his contract. And while reaffirming his commitment to McLaren, he has adopted a tough stance in negotiations for a new deal.

Fearing burnout due to his sponsorship commitments, Hamilton will not sign up again unless they are cut down.

"You have to make changes," he said. "When I re-sign the contract with McLaren they are going to be shocked at how many days they are not going to be able to make me do. I will be doing a lot less work.

"I definitely won't be doing the whole period of time before the Silverstone grand prix, that's for sure. I will have at least five days to prepare (for the race) in the future."

The immediate future is the German Grand Prix in two weeks.

It's Check-Out Time for Checking In // Marriott to Phase Out Front-Desk Registration; Keys Will Meet You at the Door

You've heard of speedy hotel check-in. Now, how about reallyspeedy hotel check-ins.

Abandoning a time-worn hotel ritual, Marriott Hotels will beginphasing out front-desk check-ins this fall.

By the end of this year, most guests won't have to show acredit card or sign a registration form when they arrive at most ofMarriott's 233 hotels.

Instead, Marriott will collect the essential information - acredit card number for billing, room preference and estimated time ofarrival - when reservations are made.

When a guest arrives, a packet containing a room key and otherinformation will be awaiting him or her.

Initially, many hotels will keep key packets behind the frontdesk. By the end of 1993, 90 percent are expected to have employeesstationed near the door to greet arriving guests and hand them theirpackets from a rack in the lobby.

Guests who pay with cash still would check in at the frontdesk.

The new service - code-named "First Ten" - is designed to boostcustomer satisfaction by impressing guests during the first 10minutes after their arrival.

Hotel experts say Marriott's program is the industry's mostambitious effort yet to eliminate check-in lines. "It sounds like aquantum leap" forward, said Douglas Shifflet, a hotel marketingexpert.

Chicago-based Hyatt Corp. has offered a 1-800-CHECKIN service toall customers since February that lets customers order up their roompreferences in advance by telephone, cutting front-desk time down toshowing a credit card and picking up the key.

Hyatt debuted the idea in 1990 with its most frequent guests,and officials report its popularity has soared, especially amongthose who travel most often.

Frequent business travelers say they like the Marriott concept."If it works, it will be a wonderful idea," said Judge Gary Schmidtof California, Mo. "They're taking 99 percent of the hassle" out ofchecking into a hotel.

Other Marriott hotel brands - Courtyard, Residence Inns,Fairfield - are considering the program, but haven't set a timetablefor adopting it.

Women, minorities gain, but still behind

The tight labor market for carpenters, electricians, plumbers andother building trades workers has led to more opportunity for womenand minorities.

That is not to say, however, that women or people of color havecome into their own in the building business. Although the numbers ofwomen and minorities breaking into the ranks of the historically all-white, all-male building trades unions have grown slowly over thelast decade, they still account for only a small percentage of thetrade workers in the Chicago area.

Chicago Women in Trades, a non-profit organization that offers pre-apprenticeship training programs for women interested in buildingtrade careers, said women have made the biggest gains in carpentry.

"Things are changing to a small degree, but it's still a one-by-one-by-one occurrence. Nobody is calling us and saying they could usefive women now," said Marian Reich, employment manager for theorganization. "I don't think that contractors generally havediscovered women as the resource they could be."

Michael O'Neill, president of the Chicago and Cook County Buildingand Construction Trades Council, believes that access is part of theproblem_people simply don't know how to get into a unionapprenticeship program.

The council now sponsors an annual Apprentice Day. This year, theprogram will have representatives from 18 trades_the constructiontrades as well as flight attendants, auto mechanics and buildingengineers.

The event is scheduled from 2-6 p.m. May 24 at Westside TechnicalInstitute, 2800 S. Western Ave., Chicago.

Bolivia jailer ousted over favors for ex-dictator

Bolivian officials say they have fired a prison director who let a convicted former dictator turn cells into a luxury apartment.

Interior Minister Sacha Llorenti says Col. Gilmar Oblitas and other police officers will face penalties.

Inspectors discovered that former Gen. Luis Garcia Meza had installed a sauna, gymnasium, ping pong table, dining room and even a barbecue grill in his quarters at the Chonchocoro prison.

Meza led a 1980 coup and resigned the next year. Now 81, he is serving a 30-year sentence for the deaths of political opponents and other crimes.

RBI LEADERS (1970-1979)

Johnny Bench is the only player to drive in more than 1,000runs during the 1970s. The former Reds catcher collected 1,013 RBIfrom 1970 through 1979. There are no Cubs or White Sox listed. Player, Team RBI

Johnny Bench, Reds 1,013 Tony Perez, Reds, Expos 954 Lee May, Astros 936 Reggie Jackson, A's, Yankees 922 Willie Stargell, Pirates 906 Rusty Staub, Four teams 860 Bobby Bonds, Giants, 7 others 856 Carl Yastrzemski, Red Sox 852 Bobby Murcer, Yankees 840 Bob Watson, Astros 822 Source: Bob Garfinkle, SABR

10 rounds too many for Wolves

Juraj Mikus scored in the 10th round of a shootout, giving the Toronto Marlies a 5-4 victory over the Wolves on Friday at Ricoh Arena.

The shootout spoiled a strong finish by the Wolves. They rallied to tie the game at 4 on right wing Anthony Stewart's goal with 8:05 to play in regulation. Stewart collected the puck from left wing Brett Sterling and cranked a quick wrister past Marlies goaltender Andrew Engelage.

In overtime, the Wolves killed off two five-on-three disadvantages.

Kevin Doell, Sterling and Jason Krog scored for the Wolves in the second period. Stewart and Doell scored in the shootout, but Engelage stopped the remaining shooters until Mikus scored the game-winner for Toronto.

Art of the tango on full display at Navy Pier fest

'TANGO, THE DANCE OF THE ETERNAL'

When: 8:15 p.m. Saturday

Where: Navy Pier's Grand Ballroom

Tickets: $35-$50

Phone: (312) 902-1500

The tango has been called "the vertical manifestation of ahorizontal desire." That alone should be enough to heat up any dancefloor.

Add to this the fact that for the past week hundreds of tangoafficionados have gathered here for the 2007 Chicago InternationalTango Festival -- with intensive tango technique workshops, an artexhibition, film screenings and a gala performance Saturday night inNavy Pier's Grand Ballroom -- and the temperature begins to riseeven further. It's just the latest proof that this highly chargedsocial dance -- which began life in the late 19th century in therough-and-tumble barrios of Buenos Aires, became a staple ofEuropean night life and the ballet world from the 1920s on, and forseveral decades now has been enjoying a great renaissance -- hasfound passionate devotees around the world.

Saturday's program, "Tango, the Dance of the Eternal," willinclude performances by seven established tango couples fromArgentina and beyond. The festival also has attracted four tangoorchestras, from Italy, Mexico, San Francisco and Chicago. A dinnerwill precede the performance, and a milonga (social dance) with livemusic will follow. Better start warming up!

hweiss@suntimes.com

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Obama has become target of sick minds

When Chicagoans who know Sen. Obama read the columns about him turned out by the national punditocracy, we tend to gasp and shake our heads in bemusement. He has become an ink blot for sick minds, very clever sick minds. Call up realclearpolitics.com and see what I mean. My favorite recent outbursts of hate come from Thomas Sowell, an African-American conservative economist, and from Naomi Schaefer Riley, the "assistant taste editor" of the Wall Street Journal (which title may be an oxymoron). Both write about Obama's connection with the Trinity United Church of Christ.

Professor Sowell says the senator was a left-wing radical when he left Harvard University and joined the church because he was at home with the radical congregation. Riley contends he joined the church because he could collect its 8,000 votes when he ran for public office. Neither expert, I daresay, ever drove by the church on 95th Street on Sunday morning. The people, including the young ones, are the best dressed and best groomed congregants I have ever seen, and they emerge from the most elegant collection of cars displayed in Sunday morning Chicago. No Catholic parish in Chicago I know of displays such relaxed prosperity on a Sunday. This is not Rev. Jess territory nor do the congregants look like radical white-haters.

Recently they put the entire sermon from which Rev. Wright's incendiary remarks were excerpted online to show that they were drawn out of context, as were most of the other clips. Someone assembled the YouTube show to do the maximum possible damage. It would appear, however, from the most recent Wall Street Journal poll, the senator has recovered from the scandal, but he still lags badly in Pennsylvania.

Professor Sowell asserts that Barack Obama had to abandon his radical stance when he became a national public figure; he had to "project an entirely different persona, that of a post-racial leader who can heal divisiveness and bring us all together. The ease with which he has accomplished his chameleonlike change is a tribute to the man's talent and a warning about his reliability."

Anyone who knows anything about Obama's activity as a community organizer in Chicago, even before he joined Trinity knows his style was always one of bringing people together in consensus. For someone with legitimate claims to scholarship, Sowell is curiously innocent of regard for facts.

Riley sees his joining the church as an exercise in hypocrisy, a religious move to win votes and points out as proof that he rarely addresses himself to religious themes in his speeches. Apparently the healing of conflict is not a religious theme.

Sowell is unaware of the facts of the senator's coming to political maturity, which is bad enough. Riley claims the gift of scrutatio cordium, reading human motivation and smelling out hypocrisy. She is both more clever and nastier than Sowell. If you are a taste editor at the Journal, you don't have to explain how you know that another human person is guilty of hypocrisy.

Note that both are political conservatives, but their criticism is aimed not any specific position but at Sen. Obama personally. They simply can't stand him.

Neither columnist is capable of delivering a precinct, no matter how skillful their fiction. However, their venom indicates that both are offended by this attractive, charismatic and intelligent young man. The last American politician who was the subject of such animus was JFK.

Comment at suntimes.com.

Photo: Joseph Kaczmarek, AP / Sen. Barack Obama speaks at a rally Monday at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pa. ;

FBI arrests 2 in NYC terror investigation

Two men have been arrested in connection with the investigation of a bomb plot against New York City.

FBI Special Agent Richard Kolko says Adis Medunjanin and Zarein Ahmedzay were arrested early Friday in New York.

The FBI says the arrests were part of "an ongoing investigation." The charges were not immediately detailed.

Medunjanin's attorney says the FBI seized his client's passport on Thursday. Robert C. Gottlieb says he was not officially notified that his client had been arrested after being treated for minor injuries from a traffic accident.

Gottlieb says the search warrant indicates the passport was sought as part of an investigation into a conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction.

Najibullah Zazi (nah-jee-BOO'-lah ZAH'-zee) has previously pleaded not guilty to that charge.

The Colorado airport driver is accused of getting al-Qaida training to build homemade bombs to attack New York City.

Kenyan teachers strike due to overcrowded classes

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — More than 200,000 Kenyan teachers went on strike Tuesday to protest the diversion of government funds meant to hire more teachers and ease classroom overcrowding, a union official said.

The money has instead gone to the ministry of defense, whose spending is not publicly scrutinized.

The protest will affect more than 10 million children in primary and secondary schools and will continue until the government agrees to hire more teachers, said Wilson Sossion, who heads the Kenya National Union of Teachers. The children were due to return to class this week after holidays in August.

In the capital of Nairobi, classrooms were empty Tuesday morning at St. Mary's Karen Primary School in the wealthy suburb of Karen. At the Toi Primary School in Kibera, Kenya's largest slum, a teacher said gifted students were conducting classes without teachers. Students could seen studying in groups.

The union wants the government to give full-time jobs to 18,000 teachers hired on temporary contracts and hire an additional 9,040 teachers, Sossion said. Some 79,000 teachers are needed to reach the internationally recommended teacher to student ratio of one teacher to 35 students. Kenya's public schools see an average of 50 students for every teacher, though some classes have only one teacher for 100 pupils.

The union projects a shortfall of 115,000 teachers in the next couple of years as the population increases.

Sossion said the overcrowding deepens social divisions. Poor children in overcrowded public-school classes receive little time with teachers, while children in private schools are lavished with attention, he said.

"Children of this country are not enjoying equal opportunities," Sossion said. "This is the struggle. We are not doing it this time around for a salary increment. We are doing it for the poor child of this country and for the poor parent of this country."

Nearly 10 percent of 13-year-old Kenyan students cannot complete a math problem meant for 7-year-olds, according to research done earlier this year by Uwezo, a pressure group that aims to improve literacy among children in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

Kenya received international praise when it made public primary school free in 2003. The program enrolled more than 1 million children who had never entered a classroom. The country adopted a free secondary school policy for day students in 2008. But the influx of students led to severe overcrowding.

Parliament had allocated around $53 million for hiring more teachers last week, Sossion said, but the ministry of finance diverted the money to the ministry of defense, even though the ministry had not requested it.

Now taxes will have to be increased if the teachers are to be hired, said Joseph Kinyua, the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Finance. Spiraling food and fuel prices are already causing great hardship for many Kenyans.

Kinyua did not say in his televised address Monday why the government decided to reallocate the money to the defense ministry. Government spokesman Alfred Mutua said he was in a meeting and could not discuss the issue.

The ministry of defense budget cannot be scrutinized for national security reasons, said John Mbadi, a member of parliament who is on the budget committee.

"The security docket is getting increased allocation because there is no proper scrutiny and I repeat there is no proper scrutiny... I dare challenge them to explain to the public how this additional (money) is going to be spent," Mbadi said last week.

Britain suspended payments to the Kenyan government intended to help poor schoolchildren after $45 million in international donor money went missing. The U.K., a major donor to Kenya, said the cash would be given to aid agencies instead and the portion of stolen funds that it donated must be repaid.

Some poor families have even been asked to pay their children's public school teachers, Sossion said.

___

Associated Press Television News journalist Jospat Kasire contributed to this report.

Top Drawer Finds the Right Fit

Most women (85 percent according to studies) are wearing the wrong size bra. That fact alone is driving business at Top Drawer Lingerie, which has busted out by providing individual bra fittings. After only a year and a half in business, the Exeter store has not only cultivated a loyal clientele in NH, but has customers from as far away as Texas and Alaska.

The bra-fitting service accounts for about 70 percent of the shop's business, according to co-owner Deanna Tinios. "We have become a destination store," she says.

Deborah Robb, Timos' business partner, says the idea to open the business came out of a frustrating look through a bevy of bras. "Being two women in our 40s, we couldn't find what we were looking for, so our next question to all of our friends was, 'Are you having a hard time finding gear not aimed at girls going to Victoria's Secret?' " she says. Top Drawer carries sizes ranging from 30AA to 48G, as well as several exclusive brands such as Aubade, Le Mystere and Hanro of Switzerland. However, it is the fact that customers can find a salesperson willing to spend time with them to find the perfect fit that is driving the shop's success.

"[Elsewhere], you're just weeding through the merchandise trying to find [what you need]. It's not a fun experience. We'll get girls who are 32F and they don't want a grandma bra. And we have the 44Bs, too," Robb says.

Business is so good that the pair has difficulty staying stocked. They make frequent buying trips to New York City and are sussing out options for adding additional fitting rooms and more staff. "We're much further along than we thought we'd be," Tinios says. The business is listed on www.myintimacy.com, a national directory of bra-fitting specialists recommended by Susan Nethro, the bra fitting guru who appears on Oprah Winfrey's talk show. The women have even mentored other businesswomen. "I think women have to help each other out," Robb says. Adds Tinios, "It was amazing how many people didn't support us. They said, 'You're women. You have children.' But we did our homework." Now their cups runneth over.

Matthias Sammer's contract extended as sports director of German soccer federation

The German soccer federation extended the contract of sports director Matthias Sammer by two years on Saturday.

The new deal will keep Sammer with the federation until April 1, 2013. He oversees Germany's youth soccer and the training of coaches, and is the only person to have held the position since it was created in 2006.

"The contract extension is in my view a clear recognition of the work done for the federation and the position of sport director," Sammer said.

Sammer was a key player when Germany won the 1996 European Championship, and also helped lead Borussia Dortmund to the 1997 Champions League title. In 2002, he coached the club to the Bundesliga title.

Oil up after surprise drop in US crude stocks

Oil prices are rising after the government reported a surprise drop in U.S. crude stockpiles.

The Energy Information Administration said crude supplies fell by 1.5 million barrels to 290.2 million barrels for the week ending Sept. 19. Analysts surveyed by energy information provider Platts had expected oil stocks to rise by 1.6 million barrels.

Investors viewed the drawdown as more evidence of shrinking U.S. crude output after Hurricanes Gustav and Ike forced widespread shutdowns of energy installation in the Gulf of Mexico.

Light, sweet crude for November delivery was up $1.28 at $107.89 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Federal agency probing seat belts on minivans

WASHINGTON The government is investigating complaints that seatbelts are breaking apart on passengers buckled up in older versionsof Chrysler's minivans.

The government's highway safety agency has received 171complaints about belts becoming unhooked from a floor anchor in themiddle row of the minivans. Chrysler dominates the minivan market,and the problem could exist in up to 1.1 million minivans made from1991 through March, 1993.

All complaints involve belts for the right-side seat in theminivans' second row, the only seat using a hook to anchor the belt,National Highway Traffic Safety Administration records showed.Most of the minivan owners reported that the belt came undonewhile in use, an agency memo said.In one accident, Lynn Beaty, of Clinton, S.C., hit the brakes onher 1992 Dodge Caravan to avoid hitting two deer, and the child seatholding her 18-month-old daughter was sent flying. It landed upsidedown with the child still in the seat, wedged between the minivan'stwo front bucket seats."I was terrified," Beaty said. Her toddler escaped injury, butBeaty was furious when she found the seat belt detached from itsfloor anchor.The April 10 agency memo reports "compelling" evidence of seatbelt failure. Agency investigators suspect the belt failure could bemore widespread, based on spot checks of other vehicles, the memosays.They are studying the belt's design and will ask Chrysler forany additional complaints it has received. Customers traditionallycall the company.Chrysler Corp. spokesman Jason Vines, speaking from AuburnHills, Mich., said the company was working with the federal agency to"see what has to be done."The government's auto safety hotline number is (800) 424-9393.Chrysler Corp.'s customer number is (800) 992-1997.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Rodgers master of his own fate this year

DOVER, Mass. Bill Rodgers is used to being the perennialhometown favorite in the Boston Marathon. On Monday, the 40-year-oldRodgers again could find himself the top American in the nation'soldest footrace.

"It would be pretty funny," said Rodgers, chuckling at thethought of being the lead American in the race he dominated a decadeago. "It would be funny because I'm going to be quite a ways back."

Rodgers has turned his sights on the masters' title at Boston, aspecial category for over-40 runners. He also is gunning for BarryBrown's 2:15:15 American masters' record set in 1985.

But because 1988 is an Olympic year, the best Americans areexpected to bypass the prestige of Boston for the allure of goldoffered by the U.S. Olympic Trials. The men's trials are April 24 atthe New Jersey Waterfront Marathon and the women's trials May 1 atPittsburgh.

Any American with a chance at making the men's Olympic team willbe in New Jersey - not Boston. And that leaves the door wide openfor Rodgers, assuming he can still kick himself into high gear.

"I'm coming out of a real hole in the ground," said Rodgers, whorecently resolved a bitter financial dispute with the Bank of Bostonthat cost him his home in suburban Dover.

Rodgers ran a 2:20 marathon at Los Angeles in early March,placing second in his first marathon as a master. A series ofinjuries, heaped on top of his financial woes, hampered his trainingover the past few months.

"It's harder as I get older to recover," said Rodgers, who hasnotched 21 victories among his 48 marathon starts - including fourBoston and four New York City titles. He was the first American atBoston two years ago and the third American last year.

Money has always helped drive Bill Rodgers, and it's money thatmakes him salivate over this year's Boston Marathon. There is a$7,500 first prize for the top master, and a $7,500 bonus for toppingthe 2:19:04 masters' course record set in 1986 by Mick Hurd of GreatBritain.

"I think I can make it," said Rodgers, who since turning 40 hasregained some of the enthusiasm he showed in his early marathon days."I just want to win it, but by golly, if I feel good, I'm going to gofor it.

"This is the big change because Boston has really upped the anteand there is a course record purse," he said. "This is brand newstuff. It's treating the masters like the open division men andwomen. It's just time to do it."

Boston has assembled a top-quality international masters' field,including Sweden's durable Kjell Erik-Stahl, who has run 57 sub-2:20marathons, more than any other runner, including Rodgers.

Also running in the masters division are Great Britain's Hurd;returning masters' titlist David Clark of England; Poland's RyszardMarczak, masters winner at the 1987 New York City Marathon in2:19:49; a pair of swift Hungarians, Jazsef Bahinyecz and Ferenc Szekeres, and Larry Olsen ofMillis, Mass.

Admittedly quite out of reach for Rodgers this year is the$10,000 bonus being offered for the master who can break JackFoster's long-standing 2:11:19 record, set 14 years ago.

"But that may come," Rodgers said.

Mediate wins 'ugly' battle Thorpe tips Jacobs on first playoff hole to claim Tradition

Rocco Mediate admitted he couldn't have won ugly 10 years ago. Hepulled it off Sunday without a hitch in the Greater GreensboroChrysler Classic.

Mediate, holding his nerves together while battling 30 mph windgusts and a shaky swing, shot a 1-under 71 for a three-stroke victoryover Mark Calcavecchia in Greensboro, N.C.

"Today I had nothing," said Mediate, who also had rounds of 68, 67and 66. "I just felt bad out there. I didn't feel like I could putthe ball where I wanted to because I didn't know what the wind wasgoing to do.

"It was just about survival. This was ugly and I just kept goingforward and going forward. That's what's most satisfying to …

Yemeni teenager killed in clashes

A Yemeni lawmaker says police shot dead a teenager during clashes between police and protesters in the south of Yemen.

Nasser al-Khabagi, an opposition member of parliament, says the 16-year-old boy died Saturday when police fired at locals demonstrating at a voter registration center. He says the crowds were protesting the government's rejection of opposition attempts to amend the country's electoral law.

Police declined to comment on the death and said they opened fire in self defense.

Yemen's political parties have been preparing the amendment to the electoral law for the past year in an effort to bring more women into parliament, curb vote-rigging and limit the influence of government officials.

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Wal-Mart's same-store sales rise in September

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. says hurricanes hurt its September results, causing same-store sales to miss analyst expectations.

The world's largest retailer said Wednesday that same-store sales rose 2.4 percent during the five-week period ended Oct. 3. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected a 2.5 percent rise. Including fuel, same-store sales rose 2.8 percent.

Wal-Mart said hurricanes caused 341 stores to temporarily close and hurt same-store sales _ or sales at stores open at least one year _ by 0.4 percentage point.

Total September sales rose 6 percent to $36.23 billion.

The company expects October same-store sales to rise 1 percent to 2 percent. Wal-Mart reaffirmed guidance for third-quarter earnings from continuing operations of between 73 cents and 76 cents per share; analysts expect 76 cents per share.

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Arbor Accuses Sandner of Fracturing Globex

Patrick H. Arbor, chairman of the Chicago Board of Trade, hasaccused Merc Chairman Jack Sandner of making "highly misleading"statements that "seriously undermine" efforts to expand theexchanges' 24-hour Globex trading system.

The comments follow the decision Tuesday by the LondonInternational Financial Futures Exchange's to pull out of Globexafter two years of negotiations. The key stumbling block, theexchanges say, was the competition between the LIFFE and the CBOTover the right to trade the LIFFE's No. 1 contract in German Bonds onGlobex.

In a letter meant to reach directors of Globex Monday, Arborsaid "gross distortion of the facts" by Sandner had …

Bridlington MP backs home business set-up.

That's the view of Bridlington MP Greg Knight who is backing calls to relax restrictions.

"In the past running a small business from home would often mean noise, mess or both with activities such as car maintenance and small distribution operations bringing significant disruption to neighbours.

Therefore council landlords traditionally write business bans into rental agreements".

"However, we now live in the digital age. A small home office with an internet connection would enable council tenants to engage in everything from …

FLAG DAY PARADE IS A FIRST.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: KENNETH C. CROWE II Staff writer

When the first ever Flag Day parade in Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake steps off Thursday evening, it will be the start of a march to build community spirit.

``We needed something in Burnt Hills to pull our community together,'' said Torben Aabo of Power Cable Consultants, one of the parade organizers. `'It's a way to give our community some identity and pull it together.''

The parade at 7 p.m., Thursday, June 13, was the idea of Gary Bynon, a teacher and coach at Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake School District. Bynon brought the concept to the Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Business and Professional Association.

Retinal progenitor cells isolated from post-mortem tissue.

2004 OCT 14 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Retinal progenitor cells have been isolated from post-mortem tissue.

"The goal of the present study was threefold: to determine whether viable human retinal progenitor cells (hRPCs) could be obtained from cadaveric retinal tissue, to evaluate marker expression by these cells, and to compare hRPCs to human brain progenitor cells (hBPCs)," scientists in the United States report.

"Retinas were dissected from post-mortem premature infants, enzymatically dissociated, and grown in the presence of epidermal growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor. The cells grew as suspended spheres or adherent monolayers, …

Beijing-To-Tibet Train Makes Maiden Voyage

LHASA, China - The first train from Beijing to Tibet finished an arduous journey along the world's highest railway Monday, opening direct service to the Himalayan region that China has been trying for decades to tame.

Pens spit ink and packaged foods burst in the low pressure as the "Sky Train" climbed the 16,640-foot Tanggula Pass. Laptop computers and digital music players failed, the tiny air bags that cushion their moving parts broken at high altitude.

Some passengers threw up. Others took Tibetan herbs or breathed oxygen from tubes. Outside, Tibetan antelope and wild donkeys grazed beneath snowcapped mountains and deep-blue skies.

Despite Beijing's public …

Cuba joins in UN mockery

As if to remind us that the world was not rid entirely of crueldespots with the toppling of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, Fidel Castrodisplayed the absolute control he wields over his unfortunate islandnation by unleashing the most severe crackdown on his critics inyears. Castro had 75 Cuban dissidents arrested and given prison termsas long as 28 years, and three hijackers were executed for trying toflee to freedom.

This happened at the same time the United Nations Human RightsCommission was holding its annual meeting. But if anyone stillexpects some kind of action from that discredited organization, theywere disappointed. The commission ignored a U.S.-backed resolution …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

NOTABLE QUOTES.(Opinion)

"Paladino's attack dog candidacy ... seemed at first like Everyman's revenge on a state government that abuses its citizens. At the very least, it promised to be entertaining. Until, that is, the messenger got in the way of the message." -- Donn Esmonde of The Buffalo News, writing off the candidacy of Carl Paladino "Boston, if anyone knows how to throw a Tea Party, it is you." -- Sarah Palin, from Boston Common "Republicans can at least be unapologetic about stuffing …

Fast-food tradition not sliding away: Start of spring means it's time for customers to line up at venerable Jack's Drive In.

Apr. 17--WYNANTSKILL -- Hamburgers at Jack's Drive In are called "sliders." Piled with cooked onions and ketchup, the burgers go down, well, easy.

Each spring, as with other Capital Region mainstays, Rensselaer County residents keep an eye on the tiny hut at 24 Main Ave. waiting for the "open" sign. The late Jack Horne started the restaurant, which featured carhops, in 1938, near the end of the Great Depression, according to Joe Deeb Jr. whose father and uncle, Joe Deeb Sr. and S.K. Deeb, now own the business. The eatery employs about 20 people.

Besides the burgers, cheese fries, hot dogs and shakes like strawberry banana can be quick ordered from …

SHAKER/COLONIE OPENS WITH WIN.(SPORTS)

COLONIE -- Adam Ornstein scored a pair of goals and goalie Ryan Kemp stopped 12 shots as Shaker/Colonie blanked Rotterdam, 4-0, Monday at the Albany County Training Facility to advance to the opening round of the Section II Division I high school hockey tournament.

Shaker/Colonie (5-14) will face No. 1-seeded Saratoga tonight at 7 at Saratoga in the Division I quarterfinal. No. 7 CBA will meet No. 2 Shenendehowa at …

Mediaedge:cia.(Advertising/Marketing/PR)(Sande Bovis appointed)(Brief Article)

SANDE BOVIS, senior VP/ associate director, national broadcast, Universal McCann, New …

China leaders grapple with political aftershocks

Chinese leaders moved to contain the political aftershocks of last week's deadly earthquake, promising a big rebuilding fund, reining in the recently aggressive media and trying to keep despair from turning to anger in the disaster zone.

Still living under makeshift shelters of scrap wood and nylon tarps on Wednesday _ 10 days after the quake _ 70 farmers in the mountain town of Xinhua pressed against the locked gate of the local government compound, demanding tents. Ten soldiers in camouflage guarded the fortress-like compound.

"The government said they would deliver more tents last night. But we never got them. It rained last night and it looks like it …

Curtain Dropped On `Sunset' Feud

Actress Glenn Close and British composer Sir Andrew Lloyd Webbermade peace Tuesday in a dispute over ticket sales in the New Yorkproduction of his latest musical, "Sunset Boulevard."

Close, who plays the lead role, was outraged after one of LloydWebber's aides apparently inflated box office figures when Close tooka vacation break from the show. The distorted sales receiptsappeared to suggest that Close's understudy had as much pulling poweras the Hollywood star.

In a letter leaked to a show business trade paper, Close saidshe …

Cepsa adjusted profit soars 49% Y/Y in H1 2010.

(ADPnews) - Jul 30, 2010 - The adjusted net profit of Spanish oil firm Cepsa (MCE:CEP) for the first six months of 2010 surged by 49% on the year to EUR 184 million (USD 239.4m), the company said today.

Net profit, however, went down by 1% year-on-year to EUR 280 million.

Earnings before …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

Cheaper energy is a shared goal.(Business)

Byline: KEVIN HARLIN Business writer

Temperatures have fallen. Oil and electricity prices have risen. But Ted Taylor isn't worried.

Taylor, managing partner of Ballston manufacturer Specialty Silicone Products Inc., has signed up for another year of electrical power from the Energy Alliance, a 5-year-old buying consortium offered through several chambers of commerce in the region.

Specialty Silicone - which makes caps, seals, wiper blades and other products out of silicone - is locked in at a rate of about 8 cents per kilowatt hour, which Taylor said could save his company about $6,000 this year.

"I'm looking for the lowest price on power, …

GETTING IT STRAIGHT.

The Democrat-Gazette wants its news reports to be fair and accurate. We correct all errors of fact. If you know of an error, write: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette SUSAN SCANTLIN Editor, Northwest Arkansas 515 Enterprise Drive, Suite 106 Lowell, Ark. 72745 …

New EU health commissioner grilled on cross-border health rights

New EU Health Commissioner Androulla Vassiliou came under pressure from lawmakers during her confirmation hearing on Tuesday to present rules setting out clear rights for Europeans seeking health care in EU countries other than their own.

The former Cypriot first lady who was nominated to her job only a month ago, said she would to present draft rules setting out such rights in June.

A previous plan was shelved by the European Commission in December due to widespread concerns it could derail attempts to ratify the EU's new governing treaty and reopen a touchy debate over opening up national health services to cross-border competition.

Drafting …

Regional school chiefs sue to get paid

SPRINGFIELD — Illinois' 44 regional school superintendents have gone to court to get paid by Gov. Pat Quinn.

The Illinois Association of Regional Superintendents of Schools filed a lawsuit Friday seeking paychecks the Democratic governor cut off in July. The elected school chiefs inspect local public …

The University of Iowa Museum of Art Ceramics Gallery.

[ILLUSTRATIONS OMITTED]

World ceramics has become a central part of the permanent collection of the University of Iowa Museum of Art (UIMA). Here, ceramics from 8th--10th century Iran exist alongside antiquities from Peru and Mexico, Southwest-American Indian masters and 10th-century and contemporary African vessels and storage jars. This collection is also a repository for study, for expansion of thought; it is a history that holds pots by University of Iowa faculty artists and graduates of the program, as well as strong examples that respond to Iowa's woodfire tradition. The collection is a reflection of the personal journey of its mentor, Gerald Eskin, and his dedicated commitment to education and the enrichment of the cultural community. Its true strength, however, is the modern and contemporary American ceramics collection which, beginning in 1979, has been served by gifts from Joan E. Mannheimer. The Mannheimer Collection has been reinforced by works of art reflecting the global history of the field.

The study collection, which reveals the diversity of ceramics, ranges from a Chinese vessel of the Neolithic period to a vigorous abstract vessel by Peter Voulkos. The evolution of clay is documented with utilitarian …