четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Transportation seat puts Lipinski on a roll

Since he was elected to Congress in 2004, Rep. Dan Lipinski (D-Ill.) has been trying to wrangle a seat on the House TransportationCommittee.

After a two-year internal campaign, this week he was tapped forthe panel. Lipinski told me he is most interested in keeping federalfunding flowing for the mega-project called CREATE to improve theregion's railroad infrastructure. He also wants to watchdog MidwayAirport at a time the city is considering taking it private.

In 2004, Lipinski's father, former Rep. Bill Lipinski, fixed thepolitics so his son, then an assistant professor in politicalscience at the University of Tennessee, could move to the districtand inherit a …

Hasselhoff's Visitation Rights Suspended

LOS ANGELES - A judge on Monday suspended David Hasselhoff's visitation rights with his two teenage daughters after last week's surfacing of a videotape showing the recovering alcoholic apparently intoxicated in his Las Vegas home.

"This videotape changes the landscape, it just does," Superior Court Judge Mark Juhas said.

The judge set a May 21 hearing to determine if the tape is authentic and who was responsible for its release. His visitation order will remain in effect until then.

Hasselhoff, 54, did not attend the hearing, but his former wife Pamela Bach was there.

Portions of the video were aired last week on syndicated entertainment shows. The …

Japan shares rise on upbeat US data

Japanese shares rose sharply Thursday with sentiment turning upbeat as investors took heart from better-than-expected U.S. economic data.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average gained 156.34 points, or 1.84 percent, to 8,636.33. The broader Topix index added 1.02 percent to 826.81.

"Investors bought back shares as sentiment improved on the better-than-expected new home sales and durable goods orders," said Yutaka Miura, senior strategist at Shinko Securities Co. Ltd.

U.S. new home sales rose 4.7 percent in February, while orders at U.S. factories for cars, household appliances and other durable goods climbed 3.4 percent in the month. …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Umpires end two-day walkout

NEW YORK Major-league umpires agreed to a new contract Monday andended their two-day walkout, but the deal came too late for them toreach seven of the eight season openers.

Amateur umpires, who took over for the final two days of springtraining, worked all but one of Monday's games, the first timeregular umpires missed games during the regular season since 1979.

Regular umpires are scheduled for today's nine games.

The only Monday game with regulars was in Texas, where JimEvans, Durwood Merrill, Larry McCoy and Tim McClelland umpired as theRangers played the Milwaukee Brewers.

"Money was the biggest issue," commissioner Fay Vincent said."I …

Internet Porn-Linked Donors: Filthy Lucre?

Internet pornography became an issue in Virginia's 2001 gubernatorial race in an unexpected way early in June. Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Earley faced a political trap just days after winning his party nomination when disclosures surfaced that a major donor to Earley owned a company that marketed online ad servicing software to sexually explicit Web sites.

Earley's campaign announced it would return $47,000 it received from Bruce M. Waldack, owner of Thruport Technologies Inc. …

Accidental overdose of prescription pills killed Heath Ledger; 6 sedatives, painkillers

The actor Heath Ledger died from an accidental overdose of six different drugs _ painkillers and sedatives _ the medical examiner said Wednesday, leading doctors to warn of the dangers of mixing prescription drugs.

The 28-year-old film star died "of acute intoxication" from the combination of two strong painkillers, two anti-anxiety medicines and two sleeping aids, according to the medical examiner's office.

Among the drugs found in his body were oxycodone, a painkiller sold as OxyContin and used in other pain relievers such as Percodan and Percocet. Others included drugs sold as anti-anxiety pills Valium and Xanax, which are sedatives.

Top trio hot favourites

Middlefield, Newhills and St Josephs, the top three in the R A MTubulars Primary League Three, start favourites to gain maximumpoints when they face Kaimhill, Kirkhill and Tullos respectively toopen up a gap over nearest challengers Walker Road who are on cupbusiness.

SATURDAY'S FIXTURES

9am

Harlaw 1: Milltimber v Muirfield (L2); 2: Scotstown v Newtonhill(WC); 3: Greenbrae v Braehead (L4); 4: Crombie v Fernielea (WC); 5:Woodside v Abbotswell (L2)

Nelson St: Bucksburn v Kittybrewster (L4)

Groat's …

new solutions

Iron Key Offers Trusted Bookmarks for Online Banking

Sunnyvale, Calif. | www.ironkey.com

IronKey is offering customers a new capability within its secure browser solution for online banking and e-commerce. Trusted Bookmarks is a newfeature of Trusted Access for Banking allowing customers to safely access popular websites using a "white list" managed by the bank and keeping users safe f rom crimeware like Zeus and SpyEye. With this feature, customers know they are accessing an authentic site and their transactions are not being monitored or tampered with by criminals. While the customer has the secure USB device plugged in, that person will only be able to use the …

Yankees 2, Red Sox 1

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Sheen, Richards split is resolved, lawyers say

LOS ANGELES -- The acrimony is apparently over for the once-coupled Charlie Sheen and Denise Richards.

There has been an amicable resolution in the couple's divorcecase, lawyers for Sheen and Richards announced Monday after meetingwith a judge in chambers.

No judgment has been entered in the divorce.

Issues before the court were resolved during the meeting withSuperior Court Judge Marjorie Steinberg, said Lance Spiegel, a lawyerfor Sheen, and Neal R. Hersh, a lawyer for Richards.

The lawyers wouldn't elaborate on the issues resolved Monday. Theyalso refused to say whether a restraining order Richards obtainedagainst Sheen in April remained in …

Collaborate to Compete?

The cost of not collaborating on pre-competitive issues in the healthcare space could be staggering.

Daunting but common challenges currently face many biotech, pharmaceutical, and device firms. These companies are encountering a restless public, worried investors, and a skeptical, publicity-hungry Congress that are all concerned about product safety and the reliability of regulators' scrutiny. Individual firms are arming themselves to fight their own particular safety issues, financial challenges, or public relations blunders. R&D costs are up, yet biopharmaceutical productivity is down. Given this landscape, industry observers are beginning to conclude that collaborating in …

Troops Surround Taliban, Villagers Flee

Afghan civilians piled belongings onto trucks Wednesday and fled two villages infiltrated by hundreds of Taliban militants outside Afghanistan's second-largest city. U.S., Canadian and Afghan troops had about 250 of the insurgents surrounded.

The troops killed 50 militants in three days of fighting 15 miles north of Kandahar city, the provincial police chief said. Three policemen and one Afghan soldier also died.

"The people are fleeing because the Taliban are taking over civilian homes," Sayed Agha Saqib said. "There have been no airstrikes. We are trying our best to attack those areas where there are no civilians, only Taliban."

Need to become hipper? Trendier? More in the flow? The answer could be as simple as hiring black friends, though rates may vary

How to Rent a Negro

By Damali Ayo

Lawrence Hill Books. $14.95.

'So we are all black people, so-called Negroes, second-classcitizens, ex-slaves," Malcolm X famously reminded a Detroit audiencein 1963. "You are ex-slaves. You didn't come here on the Mayflower.You came here on a slave ship -- in chains, like a horse, or a cow,or a chicken." In equating the United States' treatment of slaveswith the handling of livestock (and mixing his metaphors: How oftenhas anyone seen a chicken in chains?), Malcolm's typically blunt"Message to the Grassroots" drove home the monstrous immorality atthe heart of American slavery: the refusal of the slaveholding classto regard their chattel as fellow human beings.

The nation's tremendous profit from its use of slaves -- a bountyfrom which slaves and their descendants were largely excluded -- haspoured salt in a wound that continues to fester. Nearly every ethnicgroup has been enslaved at some point in the course of human events,but America's descendants of slaves belong to the only group whosecenturies-long captivity, forced labor and post-emancipation lowest-caste status contributed directly and substantially to thedevelopment of the mightiest superpower of all time. The extent towhich that cruel practice and its resulting inequities still affectour society continues to be a source of thorough study and intensedebate. It also resonates throughout How to Rent a Negro, DamaliAyo's satiric take on modern American race relations.

Although "the purchase of African Americans was outlawed manyyears ago," Ayo writes, "black people are once again a valued andpopular commodity." In her view, they appeal especially to whites whorely on their relationships with blacks as evidence of their ownprogressive politics or simply to inject some sorely needed "cool"into their lives. She has in mind real-life versions of GeorgeCostanza, the "Seinfeld" sidekick who spent an entire episode insearch of a black person whom he could pass off as his friend.

Whites like George needn't despair that slavery is no longerlegal, Ayo suggests. "Those who want to utilize the service of anarticulate and well-mannered African American are easily classifiedas renters. Those who find themselves serving as certified AfricanAmericans for colleagues and friends are conveniently referred to asrentals." Her book is a tongue-in-cheek guide to completing such"transactions" with a minimum of fuss.

According to Ayo, her suggestions will help her fellow Americanshonor their country's "vibrant spirit of capitalism." The mercantileroots of racial relations on these shores are frequently touched onin African-American art. The results are often evocative anddramatic, as in "Bid 'Em In," Oscar Brown Jr.'s classic 1962 songabout a slave auction:

"I'm looking for four. And $400, she's a bargain for sure

Four is the bid, 450; five; $500 now look alive

Bid 'em in; get 'em in. Don't mind them tears, that's one of hertricks

Five-fifty's the bid, and who'll say six?"

Building on the work of Brown and other visionaries, thegeneration of artists to which Ayo belongs has begun to address notonly the commodification of black people but also the marketing ofblackness. (Ayo specifically acknowledges comedians Godfrey Cambridgeand Dick Gregory, who told Rent-A-Negro jokes during their 1960sperformances.) It's a shakier concept, to be sure, given the nearimpossibility of defining it. Still, Madison Avenue relentlesslypushes blackness as an all-purpose brand. "Buy what we're selling,"many commercials suggest, "and you, too, can possess a bit of thatelusive 'thing' so easily embodied by those colorful, sexy, sassy,rhythmic African Americans." In TV ads such as the one featuring ayoung white woman pop-locking (a decades-old urban dance stylepopularized by blacks) in the front seat of a Mitsubishi, advertiserssend up our preoccupations with blackness even as they sell it,preempting the irony and savage wit once considered the province ofartists.

Ayo challenges whites to bypass simulated blackness in favor ofthe real deal, available for only a few dollars more. "Most blackpeople are qualified to fill your need for an authentic blackpresence," she writes. "Many have a lifetime of experience in thefield." What's in it for blacks? Well, unlike the helpless woman onthe auction block in Oscar Brown's harrowing lyric, the modernAfrican American can finally profit from her labor. "You've beenvolunteering your services for years," ayo argues. "Why not startcharging fees? Would a dentist, teacher, or hairdresser give awayevery session for free? Of course not." According to ayo'sbiographical note (she prefers a lower-case spelling), she has been"a professional black person for more than 30 years." Her book is anoutgrowth of rent-a-negro.com, a Web site she launched in 2003. Itincludes a price guide to help novices get started. Fees forcorporate clients, for example, should begin at $350 per hour.Clients who want to touch their rental's hair should be prepared tofork over $25 each time (upped to a suggested $100 in the book). Drop-in appearances: $100 each. In a 2003 interview with the WashingtonPost, ayo said the site grew out of her years "being in all-whitesettings, fielding questions from people wanting to touch her hair,and playing the role of cultural ambassador."

Although her book may appeal most to members of the post-civil-rights class of black professionals who have endured similar trials,it is not likely to prove so fascinating to other African Americans,who likely have more pressing concerns. What's more, ayo risksoverestimating whites' willingness to be made fun of for 190-pluspages. That said, her repetitive style will challenge the attentionspans of even her most sympathetic readers. "Don't let your pride getin the way of your paycheck," she facetiously warns potentialrentals, before providing similar advice -- "Don't let your anger getin the way of a solid paycheck" -- a dozen pages later. Ayo'sapproach may remind some of Keith Townsend Obadike, an African-American artist who in 2001 attempted to auction his blackness oneBay. He set the opening bid at $10 and accompanied his posting witha list of virtues, among them:

"This Blackness may be used for making jokes about black peopleand/or laughing at black humor comfortably"; and "This Blackness maybe used for dating a black person without fear of public scrutiny."But he also included such caveats as "The Seller does not recommendthat this Blackness be used while shopping or writing a personalcheck" and "The Seller does not recommend that this Blackness be usedwhile voting in the United States or Florida."

Obadike planned to conduct the sale for 11 days, but eBay shutdown the project four days later after deciding it was"inappropriate." He received 12 bids, with the highest offer at$152.50. The project was daring, funny, innovative -- and lasted justlong enough to be effective. Which points to the major shortcoming ofHow to Rent a Negro: It is essentially a one-joke propositionstretched to book length. It works better as an Internet attraction.As a book it's a much harder sell.

It is also hampered by readers' awareness of Aaron McGruder, DaveChappelle and other artists who mine the same territory with moreconsistent results. The best of these may be ego trip, a five-mancombo whose riffs on race in books like ego trip's Big Book of Racism(2002) and on TV programs such as VH1's "Race-O-Rama" effectivelyskewer a range of American neuroses. Gabriel Alvarez, one of thegroup's members, told the New York Times that race "was the newpornography, the only thing in our culture that people are stilluncomfortable talking about." We can laugh about it, however; in somecases, all the way to the bank.

Jabari Asim is deputy editor of the Washington Post Book World,where this review first appeared.

BLACKNESS AS ACCESSORY

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Hendrick Says No Room for Earnhardt

CONCORD, N.C. - Cross Hendrick Motorsports off the list of teams interested in signing Dale Earnhardt Jr. Although he's spoken to Earnhardt, car owner Rick Hendrick said Saturday "there's no room at the inn" for NASCAR's most popular driver.

Earnhardt is leaving Dale Earnhardt Inc., his late father's company, at the end of the season. He wants to stay with one of the top Chevrolet teams so he can contend for championships, and Hendrick is the best in NASCAR right now with eight wins in the past nine Nextel Cup races.

Richard Childress Racing and Joe Gibbs Racing are the next best Chevy teams, and both owners have indicated they are interested in speaking with Earnhardt. Only Hendrick had been silent on the issue, but as he walked toward pit road before Saturday night's Nextel All-Star Challenge, he said he was maxed out with four drivers right now and couldn't fit Earnhardt in his stable.

"We're good friends and I've talked to him, because I really want him to make the best decision and do the best thing for himself," Hendrick told The Associated Press. "But right now, I'm full."

Hendrick fields Cup cars for four-time series champion Jeff Gordon, defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch and Casey Mears. All are under contract through at least 2008, and Hendrick is currently trying to extend Busch's deal.

Hendrick said he's offered to help Earnhardt if he elects to field his own Cup team.

"I've talked to him about doing motors and cars if he wants to do this himself," Hendrick said. "But that's really all we've discussed."

Earnhardt owns JR Motorsports, which fields a Busch Series team and several late model cars. He hasn't ruled out running his own team, but Kelley Earnhardt Elledge, his sister and business manager, said Friday that expanding JRM to the Cup Series was their last option.

In his seventh season with DEI, Earnhardt is frustrated by his inability to win a championship and his difficult relationship with his stepmother, Teresa. He asked for 51 percent ownership during contentious contract negotiations, and walked away from the table last week because the two sides "were never in the same ballpark."

It made him the most coveted free agent in NASCAR history, but getting a deal done might not be so simple, after all.

JGR president J.D. Gibbs said his family would have a hard time signing Budwesier, Earnhardt's longtime sponsor, because of its family values focus. And now Hendrick appears to be out of the race, as well.

7.1 earthquake topples homes in Honduras, Belize

A strong earthquake killed at least one man early Thursday as it collapsed homes in Honduras and Belize and sent people running into the streets in their pajamas as far away as Guatemala City.

The magnitude-7.1 quake struck at 3:24 a.m. (0824 GMT) at the relatively shallow depth of 6 miles (10 kilometers), according to the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colorado. The epicenter was 80 miles (130 kilometers) northeast of La Ceiba, Honduras.

"People were running for the door," said Alfredo Cedeno, an employee at the Gran Hotel Paris in La Ceiba. "You could really feel it and you could see it _ the water came out of the pool."

A man died after his house collapsed in Pineda de la Lima, 120 miles (200 kilometers) north of the capital, Tegicugalpa, according to Carlos Gonzalez, deputy director of Honduras' Permanent Emergency Commission. A neighbor's house also collapsed, he said.

"Dozens of workers have been evacuated from factories in San Pedro Sula (in northern Honduras) because the buildings have cracks," he said. "There are cracks in the roads in several cities."

Juan Sevilla, a spokesman for Honduras' firefighters, said wooden homes collapsed in Puerto Cortes, 120 miles (200 kilometers) north of Tegucigalpa, as did a stadium wall in Comayagua, 60 miles (100 kilometers) north of the capital.

Osman Hernandez, a spokesman for the mayor of El Progreso, told Radio Satelite there was "serious damage" to Democracy Bridge, a 1957 span across Honduras' biggest river, the Ulua. He did not provide details of the damage.

Tegucigalpa Mayor Ricardo Alvarez appealed for calm as officials reported electricity, telephones and Internet connections were cut across a large part of Honduras.

"It was an earthquake of great proportions that was felt in almost the entire country," said Ana Maria Rivera, spokeswoman for the emergency commission.

In Belize, people rushed from their homes as glasses and framed pictures crashed off of shelves. At least five wooden houses on stilts collapsed in three towns and a water tower toppled in the town of Independence, local officials said. Electricity was out all the way to the Mexican border.

"I urge you not to panic, but to remain calm," National Emergency Minister Melvin Hulse said on the radio. "Your government is monitoring the situation and will be keeping you informed."

A tsunami watch was discontinued for Honduras, Belize and Guatemala.

Raul Gonzalez, a receptionist at the Gran Hotel Sula in San Pedro Sula, said guests ran into the streets in their pajamas.

"I ran out of the building and kept going for about a block before I looked back and everything had calmed," he said. "It was really strong. I have never felt anything like that."

He said the hotel did not suffer damage.

A two-story warehouse caught fire in San Pedro Sula but no injuries were reported, according to firefighter Lt. Col. Daniel Flores.

People ran into the streets as far away as Guatemala City, but firefighter Byron Juarez said a survey of firefighting offices throughout Guatemala revealed no reports of major damage.

The quake occurred in a region where the North American and Caribean plates come together, according to Gonzalo Cruz, head of geophysics at Honduras' National Autonomous University.

The USGS said a magnitude-4.8 aftershock struck off Honduras about three hours after the quake.

___

Associated Press writers Juan Carlos Llorca in Guatemala City and Patrick Jones in Belize City contributed to this report.

Former 'James at 15' star Lance Kerwin sentenced

Former child TV star Lance Kerwin has been placed on five years probation after pleading guilty to a theft charge.

Kerwin, who played the title role in "James at 15" on NBC in the 1977-78 season, was given credit during last Thursday's sentencing for 90 days served and ordered to perform 300 hours of community service for the second-degree theft charge.

Kauai County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Lauren McDowell says the 49-year-old Kerwin was caught falsifying documents to obtain state medical assistance and food stamps.

Defense attorney Craig De Costa says when Kerwin applied for the benefits, he omitted in the application that he owned three properties on the mainland.

Kerwin, a pastor at Calvary Chapel in Kapaa and a U-Turn for Christ program leader, said he has already paid $21,822 in restitution.

"I'm sorry," Kerwin said before being sentenced. "The last thing I want to do is to make a statement to minimize what I have done."

Kerwin said his actions affected the community, his fellow church members and his children, and added he hoped his punishment can have a positive effect in his life.

His wife, Yvonne Kerwin, 28, requested a deferred acceptance of her guilty plea for second-degree theft and two counts of unsworn falsification to authorities. She left court with a record that will remain clean if she stays out of trouble with the law. She will also have to pay crime victim compensation fees and complete 300 hours of community service.

___

Information from: The Garden Island, http://thegardenisland.com/

Bandleader Kevin Eubanks ends 18 years with Leno

It's a wrap for "Tonight Show" bandleader Kevin Eubanks after 18 years backing up host Jay Leno.

"I don't think we've ever had an argument," Leno said, bidding Eubanks farewell on Friday's show. "We've had a lot of fun."

Eubanks, whose duties included comic sidekick to Leno as well as guitarist, had been aboard since Leno took over NBC's "Tonight" in 1992. Eubanks became musical director when Branford Marsalis left in 1995.

The 52-year-old Eubanks joined Leno last fall for the short-lived "The Jay Leno Show" in prime time, then came back to "Tonight" when Leno reclaimed the show from Conan O'Brien in March. O'Brien left NBC rather than move "Tonight" to a later slot to make room for Leno in late night.

In April, Eubanks announced his plans to depart, but he insisted the recent turmoil had played no part in his decision. He said he was seeking a career change of pace.

Exiting with Eubanks will be the other five members of the Tonight Show Band. They include vocalist and percussionist Vicki Randle, keyboardist Gerry Etkins, bass guitarist Derrick "Dock" Murdock, saxophonist Ralph Moore and drummer Marvin "Smitty" Smith.

"We have gone through all this together," said Eubanks, introducing and thanking them.

During the hourlong show, a clip reel highlighted comic moments Leno and Eubanks have shared through the years, then Eubanks was featured performing an original song.

He will be replaced by former "American Idol" music director Rickey Minor, who arrives with his own troupe June 7.

"The Tonight Show" will air reruns next week.

___

NBC is owned by the General Electric Co.

___

Online:

http://www.nbc.com

ABRUPT EDGE, NOV. 24, KNITTING FACTORY

And we thought they fell off of one. It's been a while since we heard from local melodic rockers Abrupt Edge. After playing the Big Nasty Hill Climb this summer, the group took a step back, rearranged their lineup - they are now a power trio again - and are ready to hit the scene once more.

Vocalist/guitarist Cliff Miller and his brother Tivon (on bass) are back together, and Cliff said he likes being a three-piece, but it definitely adds some challenges.

"I like it and hate it," he said, laughing. "It's really tough to play some of the stuff I've written live." Miller added that when they go back into the studio, he may invite some guest musicians in, and will definitely have to find inventive ways to get some of the layers recorded.

"I'll have to double-track some of the guitar for sure," he said.

- Amy Atkins

With Primalodic, The Forgotten, Actual Depiction and Fallen Idols. 7:30 p.m., $4-$6. Knitting Factory, 416 S. Ninth St., bo.knittingfactory.com.

Today'speople

Comedian Chris Rock says he has no interest in moving to thepolitical arena, despite urgings from the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Rock happy to stay

in show businessNEW YORK - Comedian Chris Rock says he has no interest inpolitics, despite urgings from the Rev. Jesse Jackson that he becomemore involved."I'm in show business," Rock told TV Guide in its July 10 issue."I wanna hang out with Janet Jackson, not Jesse Jackson."Rock also reflected on the deaths of comedians Chris Farley andPhil Hartman, who he worked with on "Saturday Night Live," callingthem victims of "the comedian curse.""We're performers - a bunch of geeks no one liked," he said."Now, people finally like us, and we're willing to put up with atremendous amount. . . and make ourselves miserable, to maintainit."Cindy Crawfordgives birth to sonLOS ANGELES - Supermodel Cindy Crawford and husband Rande Gerberare "over the moon" at the birth of their first child, theirpublicist said.Presley Walker Gerber was born on Friday at an undisclosedhospital in the Los Angeles area, said Annett Wolf, the couple'spublicist.The boy weighed 8 pounds, 4 ounces and was 20 inches long.Crawford, 33, and Gerber, 36, married in May 1998. He runs thechic clubs Skybar in Los Angeles and Whiskey Park in New York.Roberts to bringmom's story to lifeLOS ANGELES - Seven years ago, Erin Brockovich was an unemployed,struggling single mom. Now her life is about to be depicted by JuliaRoberts.In her next movie, the star will portray Brockovich, a researchassistant who in 1992 began helping attorney Ed Masry win a $333million settlement against Pacific Gas & Electric Co.Masry and Brockovich represented 650 people who blamed PG&E for acontaminated water supply that they say caused cancer and otherillnesses in their small desert community of Hinkley, Calif.The film is "a story of a twice-divorced woman, three kids, nochild support, who comes to my office as a secretary," Masry said."She rises up to the occasion and helps put together this massivetoxic case and at the end gets a few million dollars in bonus, andisvery successful."Young actor movesinto deep waterMADISON, Ind. - Jake Lloyd is jumping from deep space to the deep,choppy waters of the Ohio River.The 10-year-old actor, who played the young Anakin Skywalker in"Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace," has been cast as theyoung Mike McCormick, whose late father drove a hydroplane calledMiss Madison to its greatest victory in the 1971 Madison Regatta.

Cards place Smith on 15-day disabled list

Shortstop Ozzie Smith of the St. Louis Cardinals was placed onthe 15-day disabled list Tuesday because of a pulled muscle in hisrib cage suffered during a March 30 spring training game, teamofficials said.

TENNIS: Top-seeded Steffi Graf and No. 2 Martina Navratilovaboth struggled in the early going before winning in the second roundof the $300,000 Family Circle Magazine Cup at Hilton Head Island,S.C.

Graf, the top-ranked women's player in the world, defeatedRosalyn Fairbank of South Africa 6-4, 6-3. Navratilova was ex tended to three sets before defeating Laura Gildemeister of Peru6-4, 4-6, 6-0.

HIGH SCHOOLS: Swayed by the possible medical risks of usinganabolic steroids, the Senate Education Committee endorsedlegislation that would prohibit high school athletes from taking themuscle-building drugs.

COLLEGE: A defense attorney said the state will have a difficulttime proving that former University of New Mexico Athletic DirectorJohn Koenig and two of his assistants conspired to defraud the schoolout of thousands of dollars.

GENERAL: Athletes who engage in "reckless misconduct" duringgames can be sued for damages if injuries result, Massachusetts'highest court ruled.

The Supreme Judicial Court, ruling in a civil suit filed by aWorcester State College hockey player who was seriously injuredduring a game, said holding athletes to a minimum legal standard ofconduct would cut down on violent episodes caused by players' need toretaliate.

BASKETBALL: Despite Dominique Wilkins' new claim that Georgiacoach Hugh Durham did not know Wilkins received money from a sportsagent during his Bulldog days, school officials said an in-houseinvestigation will continue.

BOWLING: Jeanne Maiden won 14 of her 16 matches to move to a253-pin lead over Donna Adamek at the end of fourth round of the$35,000 Ladies Pro Bowlers Tour Ebonite Firebolt Classic in FortPierce, Fla.

At least 8 killed, 16 injured in a train collision in Bangladesh

Two trains collided Wednesday in eastern Bangladesh, killing at least eight people, a railway official said.

Bangladesh Railway spokesman Shafiqul Alam Khan said an additional 16 people were injured in the morning accident in Brahmmanbaria district, 80 kilometers (50 miles) east of the capital, Dhaka.

Khan said the Upaban Express train rammed into the rear of another train, the Noakhali Express, which was waiting at a railway station for its regular stop. The casualties were all passengers on the Noakhali Express.

A combined six coaches from both trains were badly damaged by the collision, he said.

Train services in the area resumed Wednesday after hours of suspension, Khan said.

Khan said both trains, one heading for the northeastern city of Sylhet and the other toward the eastern town of Noakhali, left Dhaka's Kamlapur Railway Station late Tuesday.

Bangladesh Railway director general Belayet Hossain said a four-member committee was investigating the accident.

Train accidents are common in Bangladesh mainly because of poorly maintained tracks and a lax signaling system.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Wellsway progress ; Brief Letters

I am writing to welcome the revised proposals for WellswaySchool's new sports hall which have now been submitted for planningpermission. The previous plans caused significant concern among manyresidents neighbouring the school as the sports hall would have beenextremely close to some homes and the height of it would have beenoverly intrusive to residents.

I, and fellow Keynsham East councillor Bryan Organ, supported theconcerns of residents over the previous plans and it was good thatthe Planning Committee sent these back to be revised.

The revised plans appear to take on board the concerns which wereraised, moving the sports hall further away from local houses and ata lower, less intrusive, height.

Hopefully these revised plans will then mean that we can soonhave in Keynsham excellent new facilities which local schoolchildren, and the wider community, can use and enjoy, whilst alsomeeting with the approval of neighbouring residents.

COUNCILLOR MARIE LONGSTAFF Cons, Keynsham East

Can Washington and Seoul Try Dealing With Pyongyang For a Change?

Like his predecessors, President Barack Obama is learning the hard way that the only thing worse than negotiating with North Korea is not negotiating with North Korea.

Instead of moving to resume talks, the administration sustained the suspension of promised energy aid by South Korea that President George W. Bush endorsed just before he stepped down. It has now matched the Bush record of holding just one high-level meeting with Pyongyang in its first 21 months in office, and it still speaks of "strategic patience" as if the pressure of sanctions and isolation will somehow make North Korea relent.

Nothing of the sort has transpired. Instead, the North stopped disabling its plutonium facilities at Yongbyon and conducted a missile and a nuclear test, then reprocessed the spent fuel removed from its reactor during the disabling to extract another bomb's worth of plutonium.

Disengagement has never gone down well with Pyongyang, which has long tried to exploit its nuclear program to convince Washington to end years of enmity and reconcile by signing a peace treaty to end the Korean War and fundamentally improving relations. Even worse, U.S. disengagement conceded the initiative to the Fee Myung-bak government in South Korea, which was determined to show the North who is boss. That led to the North Korean attack on a South Korean navy corvette, the Cheonan, in the West (or Yellow) Sea, killing 46 on board.

Much of Washington saw the attack on the Cheonan as an unprovoked bolt out of the blue by a regime attempting to divert attention from domestic disarray and an uncertain leadership transition. Washington also took Pyongyang's missile and nuclear tests as slapping away the hand that Obama had held out during the 2008 campaign.

That is far from the whole story.

North Korea's tests were retaliation for South Korea's halt to delivery of promised energy aid in late 2008. Seoul's action reneged on an October 2007 six-party agreement to disable the plutonium facilities at Yongbyon. In addition, North Korea most likely carried out the attack on the Cheonan to avenge a South Korean attack on one of its own naval vessels in November 2009.

What North Korea has yet to do is restart its Yongbyon reactor to generate more plutonium-laden spent fuel, complete a plant for enriching substantial quantities of uranium, or conduct additional missile and nuclear tests it needs if it is to develop a deliverable warhead and reliable missiles.

An effort to induce North Korea not to take these steps should be a matter of some urgency in Washington. It has not been, in part because political operatives in the White House harbor doubts about its prospects for success and do not want to give the Republicans a target for partisan attack by seeking another deal with North Korea and in part because Obama wanted to mend fences with allies, most notably South Korea, alienated by Bush's unilateralism. Disinformation from Seoul assiduously laid the grounds for disengagement. The North's economy was in decline, it alleged, despite the South's own data that showed gross domestic product and trade had grown for nine of the past 10 years. A succession struggle was said to be raging despite signs since early 2009 that an orderly leadership transition was under way.1 Understanding the recent pattern of U. S. -Korean interactions is essential if Washington is to head off more trouble on the Korean peninsula.

Engagement Plateaus in 2007

The 1994 Agreed Framework verlfiably froze North Korea's plutonium program up front, pending its ultimate dismantlement. The United States, in return, promised two replacement reactors by a target date of 2003, supplies of heavy fuel oil in the interim, and above all, an end to enmity - "to move toward full normalization of political and economic relations." In 2002, hard-liners in the Bush administration seized on intelligence that North Korea was seeking the means to enrich uranium to scuttle that accord. The North's response was to restart its plutonium program. Confronted with the grim prospect of unbounded nuclear arming in the North, Bush grudgingly accepted a September 2005 six-party joint statement that committed North Korea to "abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs" in return for pledges by the United States and Japan to normalize relations; pledges by the United States, South Korea, and China to negotiate "a permanent peace regime on the Korean peninsula"; and the provision of energy aid by the five parties.2 Washington immediately contravened that promising accord by implementing an Illicit Activities Initiative intended to get banks around the globe to freeze Pyongyang's hard-currency accounts.

When Bush became president, the North had suspended tests of longerrange missiles, had an estimated one or two bombs' worth of plutonium, and was verifiably not making more. By October 2006, it had six to eight bombs' worth of plutonium, had resumed testlaunching missiles, and had just conducted its first nuclear test.

Within three weeks of that test, U.S. negotiator Christopher Hill held a bilateral meeting with his North Korean counterpart that led to resumption of the six-party talks, resuscitation of the September 2005 accord, and the refreezing of North Korea's plutonium program. In October 2007, the talks yielded an accord on "second-phase actions" under which the North pledged to make "a complete and correct declaration of all its nuclear programs" and to disable its plutonium facilities at Yongbyon, pending their permanent dismantlement. In return, it was to get energy aid and an end to U.S. sanctions under the Trading with the Enemy Act and removal from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism. The agreement made no mention of verification, which was left to a later phase.

At the same time, South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun was signing a potentially far-reaching summit agreement with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il that included, among other provisions, a pledge "to discuss ways of designating a joint fishing area in the West Sea to avoid accidental clashes and turning it into a peace area and also to discuss measures to build military confidence. "3 Had that provision been pursued, it might have prevented the November 2009 naval clash and the sinking of the Cheonan.

That was not to be. Within two months, Lee was elected president of South Korea. Determined to display toughness toward North Korea, he abandoned engagement and backed away from the 2007 summit agreement, specifically the West Sea provision.4 He also allied with Japan to undermine the October 2007 six-party accord. In so doing, he pushed North-South engagement off its precarious plateau and over the precipice.

Pyongyang's Bargaining Behavior

The most propitious moments in Korea policy have come when Washington and Seoul moved in tandem to reconcile with Pyongyang. That was the case in October 2007, as well as in January 2000 with the first North-South summit and that October with the exchange of visits by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Vice Marshal Jo Myong Rok, the highest-level U.S. -North Korean contacts to date. The most dangerous crises came when Seoul blocked engagement between Washington and Pyongyang in March 1993, prompting North Korea to announce its intention to renounce the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty; in May 1994, when it abruptly removed all the spent nuclear fuel from its reactor at Yongbyon; and again now.

By escalating tensions, Pyongyang has been trying to compel Washington to re-engage while strengthening its own bargaining leverage.

Seoul Impedes Six-Party Talks

The current crisis began in June 2008 after North Korea declared it had separated 38 kilograms of plutonium, an amount at the lower end of the range of U.S. estimates. In a side agreement, Washington allowed Pyongyang to defer disclosing its uranium-enrichment activities and any proliferation assistance it had given to Syria. Doubts soon surfaced in Seoul, Tokyo, and Washington about the accuracy and completeness of the declaration.

The day North Korea handed China its declaration, the White House said it intended to fulfill its obligations under the October 2007 accord to delist the North as a state sponsor of terrorism and end sanctions under the Trading with the Enemy Act but only if Pyongyang agreed to cooperate in verifying the declaration. As Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice acknowledged on June 18, Washington was moving the goalposts: "What we've done, in a sense, is move up issues that were to be taken up in phase three, like verification, like access to the reactor, into phase two."5

Seoul, along with Tokyo, took advantage of the opening to demand a verification protocol, and Bush went along. Washington gave Pyongyang a draft protocol that demanded "full access upon request to any site facility or location," among other highly intrusive measures.'' On July 30, the White House delayed delisting the North as a state sponsor of terrorism until it accepted them.

North Korea promptly stopped the disabling and, accusing the United States i of an "outright violation" of the October 2007 accord, soon announced it would move to restore the reactor and other facilities.7 In a transparent effort to resume proliferation forsworn in that accord, it also sought permission to overfly India with weapons technology believed to be bound for Iran.

In a last-ditch attempt to complete the disabling, Hill flew to Pyongyang on October 1 with a revised protocol. His interlocutor, Kim Gye G wan, agreed to allow "sampling and other forensic measures" at the reactor, reprocessing plant, and fuel fabrication facility at Yongbyon, which could have sufficed to ascertain how much plutonium Pyongyang had extracted in the past. If not, he also agreed to allow "access, based on mutual consent, to undeclared sites."8

That oral commitment did not assuage South Korea or Japan, which insisted it be put in writing. Much to the dismay of the Aso government in Tokyo, Bush then delisted North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism. The disabling resumed, with 60 percent of the spent fuel rods out of the reactor and roughly one-half the promised energy aid yet to be delivered - none from Japan. With South Korea due to deliver the next tranche, Seoul now sided with Tokyo to insist that the delivery of energy aid be suspended unless Pyongyang accepted a written commitment to more intrusive verification. Again, Washington went along. At the seventh round of six-party talks in December, South Korea, Japan, and the United States, but not China or Russia, threatened to halt the aid. On his departure, Kim Gye Gwan left no doubt that there would be retaliation for any reneging on energy aid: "We'll adjust the speed of our disablement work if it doesn't come in."9

On entering the White House, Obama stayed this course. Consumed by the global financial meltdown and looming depression, he made no move to undo the reneging on energy aid or to enter into talks with North Korea. In Seoul, meanwhile, Lee's approval rate had plummeted to 34 percent, and his party's right wing was growing restive. Worried that Obama might move to resume nuclear negotiations with Pyongyang or initiate peace talks, hard-liners made common cause with Tokyo. If engagement sped up, a senior South Korean official told a reporter, Japan could help by "slamming on the brakes.""1

Skeptical of Washington's intentions and unmoved by Obama's warm words, Pyongyang opted to force the action. In late January, it began assembling a rocket at the Musudan-ri launch site, an effort that would take two months, giving Obama time to reconsider engagement. In public, it did its best to portray the test launch as a peaceful attempt to put a satellite into orbit; in private it made clear to visitors that, without the promised energy aid, it would have no recourse but to strengthen its deterrent.

Intent on avoiding an open breach with Seoul and Tokyo, Washington joined them in warning of additional UN sanctions under Security Council Resolution 1718 if Pyongyang went ahead with the launch. That resolution, adopted in response to Pyongyang's 2006 nuclear test, had called on the North to "suspend all activities under its ballistic missile program and in this context reestablish its pre-existing commitments to a moratorium on missile launching." Russia and China, however, took the position that the resolution did not bar satellite launches.

On April 5, 2009, North Korea launched a three-stage rocket in an unsuccessful attempt to put a satellite in orbit. Washington, Seoul, and Tokyo promptly sought UN sanctions. Beijing initially demurred, convinced that sanctions would delay the resumption of talks, but it was not about to take the blame in Washington for blocking UN action. It drafted a Security Council president's statement with the United States that condemned the launch for contravening Resolution 1718 and imposed sanctions.

Spurning the UN action, a North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman denounced six-party talks as "an arena which infringes on our sovereignty and which aims only at disarming us and overthrowing our system" and said Pyongyang "will no longer be bound by any agreement." That called into question its commitment to "abandon" its nuclear weapons and its existing nuclear programs. The spokesman listed three other steps Pyongyang would take in response. First, it would "actively examine the construction of a light-water [nuclear] plant." Such a plant would require enriched uranium. Second, the Yongbyon facilities "will be restored to the original state for normal operation," which stopped short of saying North Korea would restart its reactor to generate more spent nuclear fuel. Third, the 6,500 spent fuel rods removed during disabling "will be reprocessed."11 By extracting another bomb's worth of plutonium, it could conduct its second nuclear test that May without depleting its stock of plutonium. That test prompted a tightening of UN sanctions and stepped-up Chinese engagement.

Pouring Oil on Troubled Waters

Not content just to impede six-party talks, the Lee government in Seoul also flung down the gauntlet in its competition with the North, which led to firefights in contested waters off Korea's west coast.

Those waters have been troubled ever since the end of the Korean War in 1953, when the U.S. Navy unilaterally imposed a ceasefire line at sea north of the Military Demarcation Line (MDL) on land. North Korea has long objected to this Northern Limit Line (NLL), which is not recognized internationally. It wants the MDL line extended out to sea.

A possible way around the NLL dispute emerged in a wide-ranging summit declaration signed in October 2007 by Kim Jong Il and Roh, Lee's predecessor. They pledged to discuss establishment of a joint fishing area in the West Sea "to avoid accidental clashes" and also to discuss "measures to build military confidence" that might forestall such clashes.12 That could have been a useful opening step in a Korean peace process.

Two months later, President-elect Lee's transition team opposed implementation of the October declaration. He later backed away from a 2000 summit accord that, among other steps toward reconciliation, had committed the North to abide by the provisional line until permanent borders were drawn.

The moves drew a bristling response from Pyongyang. In late March 2008, after building up its shore artillery near the disputed waters, it accused South Korean vessels of violating "its" territory and launched short-range missiles into the contested waters, underscoring the risks of leaving the issue unresolved. It also called for a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice agreement, a step the Lee government was loath to take.

A heated war of words erupted in 2009. On January 17, assailing the South's defense minister "for making full preparations for the possible third West Sea skirmish," a North Korean military spokesman warned, "[WJe will preserve... the extension of [the] MDL in the West Sea already proclaimed to the world as long as there are ceaseless intrusions into the territorial waters of our side in the West Sea."" Not to be outmuscled, South Korea's defense minister told the National Assembly a month later that it "will clearly respond to any preemptive artillery or missile attack by North Korea" in the contested waters.14 The message to navies on both sides was to shoot first and ask questions later.

In August 2009, Pyongyang reached out to re-engage with Seoul and Washington. Intent on releasing two American journalists who had strayed across the border from China, Kim Jong Il invited former President Bill Clinton to meet him on August 4 and renewed an invitation for U.S. special envoy Stephen Bosworth to come to Pyongyang for talks. He also sent his two top officials dealing with North-South relations to Seoul for Kim Dae-jung's funeral with a personal invitation for Lee for a third North-South summit meeting, but Fee, mistaking the gesture for a sign of weakness, spurned the invitation.

On September 3, the North Korean permanent representative to the United Nations informed the Security Council president by letter that Pyongyang's "experimental uranium enrichment has successfully been conducted to enter into completion phase."15 Was the North moving to construct an enrichment plant? The message's meaning was technically obscure, but politically obvious: Pyongyang was saying it was ready for "dialogue" - or else. Washington delayed Bosworth's trip until December. Without a commitment from Seoul to resume shipments of energy aid, he had little to offer except long-standing U.S. positions on the need to resume six-party talks and denuclearization in return for an improvement in relations.

With little to show for his efforts to re-engage, Kim Jong Il turned up the heat. On October 15, the North Korean navy accused the South of sending 16 warships into the disputed waters, according to a report by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency, which said, "The reckless military provocations by warships of the South Korean navy have created such a serious situation that a naval clash may break out between the two sides in these waters.""'

Shortly thereafter, just such a clash took place. On November 9, a North Korean patrol boat crossed the NLL into the contested waters - precisely what the 2007 summit had sought to forestall - and a South Korean vessel fired warning shots at it. The North returned fire and the South opened up, severely damaging the North Korean vessel and causing an unknown number of casualties. On November 12, after Pyongyang's demand for an apology went unanswered, North Korea's party newspaper, Rodong Sinrnun, spoke of avenging the attack: "The South Korean forces will be forced to pay dearly for the grave armed provocation perpetrated by them in the waters of the north side in the West Sea of Korea."17 Five days later, according to North Korean accounts, Kim Jong Il went to a naval base with his high command and ordered the training of a "do-or-die unit of sea heroes."18 That order was carried out on March 26 with the attack on the Cheonan, an attack for which Pyongyang has since denied responsibility.

A UN Security Council statement condemned the attack but, at China's behest, did not name North Korea as the perpetrator. South Korea and the United States imposed new sanctions on the North. The South curtailed trade, but stopped short of shutting down the Kaesong industrial park in North Korea, which South Korean firms operate jointly with the North. U.S. sanctions, ostensibly targeted at suspect North Korean firms, indiscriminately aimed at shutting down North Korean bank accounts everywhere.19 China, where most of the accounts were located, was unwilling; Chinese officials were convinced that economic engagement was bringing about needed change in North Korea.

Joint naval exercises by U.S. and South Korean warships in the West Sea, ostensibly to reinforce deterrence, were also designed to demonstrate the risk to China of not going along with pressure on North Korea.20 That only antagonized Beijing, prompting it to conduct naval exercises of its own. Some in Washington and Seoul wanted to pick a fight with Beijing over North Korea, but cooler heads understood that continued cooperation with China is the key to security in Northeast Asia.21

Next Steps

Events of the past decade have erased any trace of trust between Washington and Pyongyang. Words alone will no longer suffice to restore it. Both sides will need to take sustained actions to reassure one another if denuclearization and reconciliation are to have any chance of proceeding.

What does Pyongyang see in engagement? Kim Jong Il has promised "a radical turn in his people's standard of living" and a "strong and prosperous country" by 2012, the centenary of his father's birth. He needs foreign capital for his economy to grow, and he does not want to be wholly dependent on China for it. If he wants to meet those goals, he knows he will need to move to denuclearize. Moreover, he may not yet have given up trying to improve his security by convincing Washington, Seoul, and Tokyo to end enmity and normalize relations. He will not yield his nuclear programs without a sustained process of reconciliation.

Even a comprehensive settlement will have to be implemented step by tortured step. Some might cavil that such a gradual approach will allow Pyongyang to engage in salami tactics, offering thinner and thinner slices of its nuclear wherewithal and leaving elimination of its weapons to come at the end of that process, if ever. Of course, a step-by-step approach, illustrated below, would have to overcome the lack of political will in Washington to offer much in return and find a way to convince Seoul and Tokyo to contribute their share.

A starting point might be for Pyongyang to turn over the replacement fuel rods it has, forestalling a restart of its reactor, and to revive its moratorium on missile and nuclear tests. Additional energy aid might be an acceptable quid pro quo for the fuel rods, because South Korea was negotiating such an arrangement with the North in 2007. A test moratorium will require political moves by Washington, at a minimum the start of a peace process in Korea to be conducted in parallel with six-party talks and some relaxation of UN sanctions.

Such a peace process is the key to preventing more Cheonans and advancing talks on denuclearization. Although South Korea committed itself to a peace regime in the September 2005 joint declaration, the Lee government is reluctant to enter into such talks. In addition, it has backed away from negotiating a joint fishing area and naval confidence-building measures that could be the first of several agreements on the way to a treaty. Turning Seoul around will be critical to further progress.

Permanent dismantlement best might begin at the fuel fabrication plant at Yongbyon, which would preclude Pyongyang from reloading its reactor to generate more plutonium-laden spent fuel. An economic inducement, such as Nunn-Lugar funding of alternative employment for those who worked at the facility might facilitate that step.22 So would political gestures, such as sending Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to Pyongyang and concluding a peace declaration with the two Koreas and China affirming that they have no hostile intent toward one another and committing them to sign a peace treaty when the North is nuclear free.

While in Pyongyang, Clinton might try to reconstitute the offer that Kim Jong Il put on the negotiating table to end exports, testing, production, and deployment of medium- and longer-range missiles when Albright visited Pyongyang in October 2000. Launches of North Korean satellites and Nunn-Lugar aid for converting its missile facilities might be a quid pro quo for that step.

A summit meeting between Obama and Kim Jong II, establishment of full diplomatic relations, and much deeper economic engagement are likely to be needed for Pyongyang to dismantle its reactor and reprocessing plant and allow its enrichment and reprocessing to be verifiably ended. It is unclear whether the North's programs can be completely eliminated without recommitment by the other parties to construct a nuclear power plant in the North, but conventional power plants should be provided as dismantlement proceeds at Yongbyon.

Some in Washington wrongly want to focus on preventing Pyongyang from further proliferation, but the transfer of nuclear know-how has proven difficult to prevent. Elimination of the North's production capacity is the key to stopping its exports of missile components and nuclear equipment. Even worse, unless Pyongyang's nuclear programs are halted and dismantled, it may eventually generate enough fissile material to export. If unbounded, those programs will sow further doubts in Seoul and Tokyo about relying on Washington for their security, only making alliance relations more difficult to manage.

However reluctantly, the Obama administration is now inching back to the negotiating table. Talks might work but only if Washington and Seoul are committed to sustained political and economic engagement and a peace process in Korea. That remains to be seen.

[Sidebar]

South Korean navy personnel stand guard next to the wreckage of the salvaged patrol ship Cheonan during a May 19 media briefing in Pyeongtaek, south of Seoul. The ship sank March 26 near the maritime border with North Korea. An international investigation found significant evidence of North Korean responsibility, which Pyongyang has denied.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun (left) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il exchange copies of a signed joint declaration on October 4, 2007, during their summit in Pyongyang. In their agreement, the two leaders pledged "to discuss ways of designating a joint fishing area in the West [Yellow] Sea to avoid accidental clashes."

[Sidebar]

North Korea's public demolition of the cooling tower at its Yongbyon nuclear complex is shown on a TV screen at a railway station in Seoul on June 27, 2008.

The message's meaning was technically obscure. but politically obvious: Pyongyang was saying it was ready for "dialogue" - or else.

ENDNOTES

1. Among the signs were Kim Jong ITs designation of his third son, Kim Jong-un, as h is successor and the elder Kim's directive on the son's nomination to the leadership of the Workers' Party of Korea. See "N. Korea Leader Names Third Son as Successor: Sources," Yonhap, January 15, 2009. Another sign was the promotion of Kim Jong ITs brotherin-law lo serve, in effect, as regent.

2. "Joint Statement of the Tourth Round of SixTarty Talks," September 19, 2005.

3. "Declaration on the Advancement of SouthNorth Korean Relations, Peace and Prosperity," October 4, 2007.

4. Jung Sung-ki, "Peace Zone Project Faces Derailment," Koren Times, December 30, 2007.

5. Condoleezza Rice, "U.S. Policy Towards Asia," Address at the Heritage Foundation, Washington, DC, June 18, 2008.

6. "Verification Measures Discussion Paper," April 12, 2010, www.washingtonpost.com/wpsrv/politics/documents/kesslerdoc_092608. pdf?sid=S T200809260002.

7. "Toreign Ministry Spokesman on DPRK's Decision to Suspend Activities to Disable Nuclear Facilities," Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), August 26, 2008.

8. Office of the Spokesman, U.S. Department of Stale, "U. S. -North Korea Understandings on Verification," October 11, 2008, http://merln.ndu. edu/archivepdf/northkorea/state/1 10924.pdf.

9. "North Korea Warns Nuclear Disabling Might Slow," Associated Tress, December 13, 2008.

10. "Japan 'Could Become Seoul Ally in N. Korea Issues,'" Chosun libo, March 24, 2009.

11. "DTRK Toreign Ministry Spokesman Vehemently Refutes UNSCs 'Presidential Statement,'" KCNA, April 14,2009.

12. "Declaration on the Advancement of SouthNorth Korean Relations, Peace and Prosperity."

13. "Principled Stand of the KPA to Defend Socialist Country As Firm As Iron Wall Clarified," KCNA, January 17,2009.

14. "S. Korea to Strike Back If N. Korea Trovokes Armed Clash: Defense Minister," Yonhap, Tebruary 20. 2009.

15. "DPRK Permanent Representative Sends Letter to President of UNSC," KCNA, September 4, 2009.

16. "Halt to intrusion of S. Korean Warships Into DPRK Waters Demanded," KCNA1 October 15, 2010.

17. "S. Korea Will Be Torced to Pay Dearly for Armed Provocations," KCNA, November 12, 2009.

18. Young-jong and Ser Myo-ja, "Tleet Officer Says Kim Intensified Navy Training After Nov. 10 Defeat," loongAng libo, May 6, 2010 (quoting |North| Korean Central Television interview of naval officer Kim Kwang-il on April 25, 2009).

19. Daniel Glaser, Remarks at press conference at the U.S. embassy, Tokyo, August 4, 2010.

20. Elizabeth !Sumiller, "U.S. and South Korea Plan Naval Drill as a Message," The New York Times, July 21, 2010, p. A8 (quoting Admiral Robert T. Willard, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command).

21. Mark Landler, "Diplomatic Storm Brewing Over Korean Peninsula," The New York Times, May 20, 2010, p. AK; John Pomfret, "U.S. and South Korea to Announce Joint Military Exercises," The Washington Post, July 15, 2010, p. AlO.

22. The Cooperative Threat Reduction program is commonly known as the Nunn-Lugar program after its original cosponsors, Senators Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) and Richard Tugar (R-lnd.i.

[Author Affiliation]

Leon V. Sigal is director of the Northeast Asia Cooperative Security Project at the Social Science Research Council and author of Disarming Strangers: Nuclear Diplomacy with North Korea (1998). He has served as special assistant to the director of the Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs in the U.S. Department of State and a member of the editorial board of The New York Times.

Authorities arrest three on various charges

Kanawha County sheriff's deputies and U.S. marshals arrested threepeople on various charges including malicious wounding.

Michael Samann, 39, of St. Albans was arrested Wednesday on anoutstanding malicious wounding charge by marshals in Columbus, Ohio,after police in Kanawha County got a tip he was there, Kanawha CountyLt. Bryan Stover said.

Samann allegedly struck a person in the face with a kitchen chairin September at a residence on D Street in South Charleston, Stoversaid. The victim suffered back injuries and facial lacerations.

On Wednesday afternoon, sheriff's Lt. R.D. Clarkson and marshalsmade two arrests at one building. Two females who lived in separateapartments were arrested at 2301 Falcon Drive, Stover said.

Lizzie Ann Atkinson, 33, was picked up on an outstanding felonywarrant for child abuse resulting in injury, he said.

On Oct. 28, she allegedly assaulted her daughter with her handsand bit her, Stover said.

At a different apartment, Heather Raines, 26, was arrested on anoutstanding federal warrant for violation of supervised release, hesaid.

Airbus says Indonesia airline Garuda commits to order 25 A320 aircraft

LE BOURGET, France (AP) — Airbus says Indonesia airline Garuda commits to order 25 A320 aircraft.

'I'm giving grades. kids aren't earning them.'

Nearly a third of Chicago public high school teachers say they were pressured to change grades this past school year.

One in five report they actually raised a grade under such prodding.

And dozens of teachers -- elementary and high school alike -- say they believe someone changed their grades last year without their approval.

Those are the results of an unprecedented survey of more than 1,200 Chicago Teachers Union members conducted by the CTU and the Chicago Sun-Times in June and July.

The findings raise serious questions about whether some of the data used to judge Chicago Public Schools has been inflated, artificially manipulated -- or in some cases outright altered.

The responses pulled back the curtain on the stress many teachers feel every time they sit down to issue grades.

"I am giving grades. Kids aren't earning them," said math teacher Bonnie Kayser.

'IT'S IN THE CULTURE'

Teachers reported pressure from principals, "upset'' parents and even other CPS employees who were parents of their students. They said the squeeze was put on them to pass failing students, to give ill students a break or to help athletes. Some felt prodded to goose up grades to help kids graduate, avoid summer school or get into an elite high school.

Such heat was twice as common among teachers in high schools, where the push is on to reduce failure rates. Several such teachers said they felt pressured to offer last-minute deals to kids so they wouldn't fail. Another said her school lowered its grading scale and "still we are pressured to change grades.''

"That's all this district cares about -- how many kids are failing. Not how many kids are learning,'' said Kayser, who taught math at Fenger Achievement Academy last year.

Kayser said she was urged to assign make-up work, offer extra credit and stop giving zeros for missed assignments -- even for students who blew off most work or skipped tests.

Other survey respondents said grade-inflation is simply built into the high-school system.

"It's in the culture of the schools,'' wrote one experienced high school teacher who raised numerous grades under pressure -- and said at least one was changed without his approval. "You can't completely be honest in grading students, otherwise the failure rate would be off the chart.''

"While I am not crazy about it, I am sure it is necessary for a host of reasons,'' wrote another. "As the grade coordinator at the school, I am the one that has to actually make the changes.''

'TOO MANY FS = BAD SCHOOL'

More than 7 percent of high school teachers said they believed someone else changed their grades this past school year, and 4 percent of grammar school teachers reported such changes.

Chicago Schools CEO Ron Huberman said he takes the survey findings "very seriously'' and believes that new annual grade audits of every school will prevent tampering. The audits follow revelations this spring that grades were changed for Bulls star Derrick Rose and three other athletes in 2007, while they played basketball at Simeon High.

Make-up work can sometimes be appropriate but it shouldn't be "simply made-up work that doesn't justify going to the next grade,'' Huberman said.

"We are not going to accept as a school system people gaming grades," Huberman said. "No one should be pressured to change anyone's grade in a way they feel is inappropriate.''

In high schools, one F can stop a student from graduating and thereby affect a school's graduation rate -- one measure that can trigger district or federal sanctions.

And the pressure is nothing new in high schools, the survey found. More than half of high school teachers said at some point in their careers, they faced pressure to change grades for the better.

Last school year in particular, some teachers -- even in elementary grades -- felt their teacher ratings, jobs or the fate of their schools would be in peril if they gave out too many F's.

One fourth-grade teacher in the survey reduced the situation to an equation: "too many Fs = failure notices = bad school.''

'A LOT OF GAME-PLAYING'

The Chicago Sun-Times and the CTU agreed to work together to survey teachers after both received complaints from teachers about pressure to change grades. With input from the CTU, the Sun-Times wrote the survey and the CTU e-mailed it to teacher members.

Deborah Stipek, dean of Stanford University's School of Education, cautioned that teachers who felt pressure to change grades were probably more likely to fill out surveys than those who didn't. Even so, Stipek was not surprised by the results.

"It tells you what we all know -- that high-stakes pressures on schools don't necessarily result in increased quality of education'' but they can produce "a lot of game-playing and efforts to look good,'' Stipek said.

'IT FELT LIKE [AN] AMBUSH'

Survey responses also indicated teachers interpreted "pressure'' in different ways. Some considered a superior's constant references to a school's failure rate or the questioning of F's they issued to be pressure; others didn't.

Untenured, rookie teachers -- especially in high schools -- were twice as likely to report pressure as the most seasoned teachers.

And not just F's were at issue.

Some teachers said they were prodded to change grades so kids could make the honor roll, maintain a class rank or get a scholarship.

"I was extremely disappointed that my principal called me in to a meeting with the student, coach and parents without talking to me first,'' one high school teacher wrote.

"It felt like [an] ambush -- very unprofessional. The student cut my final exam and still got a 'C' for previous efforts, but the principal wanted a higher grade to help him get a scholarship.''

"That is wholly unacceptable behavior," Huberman said Saturday at a new school opening. If he were presented with evidence of such a meeting, "I would take disciplinary action," he said. "That's not fair to the teacher. That's not fair to the student."

More than one in 10 elementary teachers said they changed grades under pressure. Said one who did so for seventh-grade students: "I was told that other schools do it to help get kids into selective enrollment high schools.''

Several teachers reported they were told they could not flunk special education students, even if they did little work. Wrote one: "Either change [grades] or be labeled a monster for failing special education kids that do nothing!''

At Portage Park Elementary, fourth-grade teacher Jeronna Hopkins said, teachers were told repeatedly not to give less than a C to special ed students. Hopkins believes it was an attempt to avoid giving kids more special ed help -- a charge Principal Mark Berman called "ridiculous.''

Last school year, Hopkins said, she resisted pressure to change the Fs she gave to one special ed student she was convinced needed more help. Ultimately, two Fs she issued were entered into a computer, which automatically increased the child's special ed minutes from 200 to 600 a week.

"Most people just don't want to deal with the headache, that if I give out an F the principal might be mad at me or lower my rating,'' Hopkins said.

"Some people can't deal with the pressure.''

HOW SUN-TIMES, TEACHERS UNION DID THE SURVEY

The Sun-Times joined forces with the Chicago Teachers Union to assess the grading situation after both received complaints from teachers of pressure to change grades.

Two days before classes concluded, surveys were e-mailed to all CTU teachers for whom the union had e-mail addresses.

Members were asked to fill out a survey if they were active classroom teachers. Only one survey could be completed per e-mail -- and per computer.

Of 7,938 teachers to receive the surveys, 1,437 (18 percent) completed them by the July 17 deadline. Of the respondents, 1,205 identified themselves as first- through 12th-grade teachers. Those were the basis of the Sun-Times statistical analysis.

Those included 850 first- to eighth-grade teachers and 377 ninth- to 12th-grade teachers; 328 untenured teachers with up to three years' teaching experience; 480 teachers with four to 10 years' experience; and 620 with more than 10 years' experience.

Rosalind Rossi and Art Golab

Color Photo: Ron Huberman ; Color Photo: Al Podgorski, Sun-Times / Portage Park teacher Jeronna Hopkins said teachers were told repeatedly not to give less than a C to special ed students. She believes it was an attempt to avoid giving kids more special ed help. ; Color Photo: Keith Hale, Sun-Times / CPS cares about "how many kids are failing. Not how many kids are learning," says Fenger teacher Bonnie Kayser. ; Chart/Graph: Survey Excerpts: (See microfilm for chart). ;

SNEED; MICHAEL SNEED (STANDARD)

Bulb blurb . . .

Check it out! Taxpayers' alert: Sneed is told the State ofIllinois Center, the monster of the midway, owes approximately$900,000 in electric bills! The extension cord: The overdue balance goes back nearly a year,although they are continuing to pay a monthly average of between$125,000 to $150,000. The hot wire: Word is a $6,000 late fee was recently attached to thebig-bucks bill. Ouch. Flick the switch! The donut mole . . .

Operation Kaffeeklatsch: FBI mole Robert Cooley, who has lentnew meaning to breakfast banter, was a busy, busy boy. Watch forRepublican names to surface in the federal probe of court corruptionand organized crime. Cooley was also close to big-time GOP wardcommitteemen. Baer bit . . .

Watch for conservative Republican Steve Baer to announce his candidacy for the Republicangubernatorial nomination this Thursday . . . IF he can raise $1million before then. At Friday's close, the Baer camp claimed it hadraised $640,000. They claim liberal GOP front-runner Jim Edgar's warchest was $2.7 million last August. Begorrah! . . .

A tradition broken? Mayor Daley was a no-show at the annualIrish Fellowship Christmas luncheon Friday and drew the enmity ofirate attendees, who claimed the event was a favorite of his latefather, Mayor Richard J. Daley. Sneed's comment: Times have changed.Sounds like a smart mayoral move to me. Methinks Daley doesn't wantthe Erin Isle to become the Errin' Aisle. The Prince . . .

The love slave? Scoopsville: Sneed's source mired in deep, deepcelluloid reports that sultry actress Kim Basinger is so far underthe spell of rocker Prince that she has just fired her agent and herlawyer. "She is in Prince's hands now," said the source. "He has a strong hand in making her decisions. Word is Basinger just optedout of a movie where she kills a man and Prince reportedly told her:" `You don't kill men. You love them.' " Let me out of this purplerain and gimme a break. The wince . . .

The butt of it: Chicago police Detective Bob Rice, Ald. EdBurke's former bodyguard, will make his movie debut this week in"We're No Angels," starring Robert De Niro and Sean Penn. The killer: Not only does Bob get bumped off in the first fewminutes of the film, but he accidentally struck director Neil Jordanin the head with a shotgun during the scene! The kicker: Producer Fred Caruso just offered Rice a role as apolice detective in the upcoming "Bonfire of the Vanities," which will star Tom Hanks and Michelle Pfeiffer. Sneedlings . . .

The pol maul: The comeback of the year award goes to Ironworkerslabor leader Buddy Ruel, who was "banished" to a South Carolina deskjob for backing Ed Vrdolyak's mayoral bid. Ruel was just electedpresident of the Midwest Ironworkers District Council. . . . Sundaybirthdays: Ed Howlett, 36; Dorothy Lamour, 75, and Susan Dey, 37.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Ohio compost facility classifications

THE OHIO Environmental Protection Agency's regulations classify composting facilities into four categories, based primarily on the types of feedstocks being processed. Norton Environmental's mixed waste processing and composting plant is a Type I facility. A Type f plant can accept mixed MSW, including food residuals, yard trimmings, glass, plastic, solvents, pesticides, etc. A solid waste permit is required for a Type I facility; the project has to be in an enclosed building with a floor and leachate control. (Norton received an exemption from the building requirement because it is composting a processed mixed waste.) The other facility classifications are as follows:

-Type II: …

Homes damaged, 4 injured, in Arkansas tornadoes

Tornadoes have struck parts of Arkansas, injuring four people and destroying a handful of homes.

Emergency Management spokeswoman Renee Preslar says three people suffered major injuries Wednesday in a tornado that destroyed a house near Pearson in northern Arkansas.

The National Weather Service says another person suffered a leg injury in a tornado in Center …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Insight battles Kentucky tax. (MSO Roundup).

Insight Communications is fighting a Kentucky tax, saying it is no longer a monopoly and that it's unfair that the direct broadcast satellite companies it competes with don't have to pay the tax. The company filed suit last week to …

Promise keeper.(Outtakes: An Inside Look Into Arkansas Media)

We got word that NBC's "Today Show" was scheduled to air a segment it taped with Murphy Oil Corp. President and CEO Claiborne Deming on Monday morning.

Chances are this paper didn't make it to your box in time, but the segment should be available on the …

RUSH LIMBAUGH IS RIGHT ALL RIGHT; IT'S JUST THAT HE'S ALWAYS HALF RIGHT TO THE EDITOR:.(MAIN)

Byline: MARK COHEN DUANESBURG

A lot of the time Rush Limbaugh is right. He's right when he says that America has the best health care in the world, but he neglects to mention that's only if you can afford it or be lucky enough to have an employer who provides it for you.

He's right when he says that religious people aren't dangerous to this country; of course they aren't, unless they are people who in the name of religion would tear down the wall of separation between church and state, which would eventually lead to the burning of witches and books at the stake (metaphorically speaking of course.?)

He's right when it says that in issues …