четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Families exiled by Saddam return to Iraq

An Iraqi immigration official says 20 families who were sent into exile in Iran by Saddam Hussein following a failed uprising have returned to Iraq.

The head of immigration and displaced persons in Basra says the families crossed the border Thursday into southern Iraq.

Atheer Kamil says the families, about 250 people, are mostly from Basra. They are the first of two groups that will arrive this week, he added.

The families were exiled following their involvement in a failed uprising against Saddam in 1991. The families settled into refugee caps on the Iranian border.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further …

George Bekefi, Physics Researcher

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. George Bekefi, a physics researcher andprofessor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, died ofleukemia on Thursday. He was 70.

Mr. Bekefi, born in Prague, joined MIT's Plasma Physics Group in1961. He contributed to the production of extremely high-poweredmicrowave generators and free-electron lasers, which are …

Judge finds Indiana teen guilty in school shooting

MARTINSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — A central Indiana teenager who insisted for weeks that he hadn't intended to kill a former classmate admitted in court Monday that he had hoped the shots he fired would be fatal, bringing an unexpectedly fast end to his trial.

Sixteen-year-old Michael Phelps softly answered "Yes, sir," when defense attorney Steven Litz asked him if he had intended to kill 15-year-old Chance Jackson in the March 25 shooting at Martinsville West Middle School. A few moments later, prosecutors dropped all charges but attempted murder, the one count on which Morgan Superior Court Judge G. Thomas Gray found Phelps guilty. The trial lasted 15 minutes.

"This was essentially …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Celtics handle Kobe onslaught and lead LA 3-2

It's looking a lot like 2008 again, with Paul Pierce carrying the Boston Celtics to victory in the NBA finals and leading them to the brink of yet another title.

Pierce scored 27 points _ his best performance of this year's finals _ and the Celtics withstood 38 points from Kobe Bryant to beat the Los Angeles Lakers 92-86 on Sunday night and take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series.

Game 6 is Tuesday night in Los Angeles, and a victory then or in Game 7 in L.A. on Thursday would give the Celtics a record 18th NBA championship.

Pierce was the finals MVP in '08, when the new Big Three beat the Lakers to raise an NBA-record 17th banner to the rafters …

Muscular dystrophy fundraiser 'arresting'

Innocent Kanawha Valley citizens will be arrested this week for agood cause.

The Muscular Dystrophy Association is joining forces with HolidayInn Express Civic Center to raise money for "Jerry's Kids" andothers in the Kanawha Valley living with neuromuscular disease.

Holiday Inn will host the the jail 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. today andThursday. The goal is to raise $145,000 to fight …

Lawyers required in claims disputes

Many employers will either be muzzled or forced to hire a lawyer in disputes over unemployment compensation after a little-known court decision changed the procedure for such cases.

Commonwealth Court ruled that employers cannot hire nonlawyers to represent them at unemployment compensation hearings. The Unemployment Compensation Board of Review conducts such hearings to decide whether former employees' claims for jobless benefits are justified. The board says the Commonwealth Court decision requires many employers to send attorneys to the hearings, although some can send senior executives, instead (See "About the ruling," page 5). The decision, issued Feb. 3, is not …

RAB Capital surges on cost savings, balance sheet

Shares of RAB Capital PLC surged 29 percent Friday morning after the hedge fund announced it would save money by closing a number of troubled funds and revealed its balance sheet was stronger than analysts had expected.

RAB said the funds it planned to shut down included one prime broker with exposure to collapsed Wall Street investment bank Lehman Brothers.

The value of assets under management by RAB has fallen from $5.5 billion on July 1 to $2.8 billion on Nov. 1, the company said.

"We have taken the necessary action to focus the business and reduce its scale of operations in the context of …

Teenager denies racist abuse

A teenager who allegedly confronted two Polish nationals andshouted racist abuse at them following an incident outside a Streetkebab shop has been ordered to stand trial in the New Year.

Haydn Paul Allen pleaded not guilty to using towards AlexandraHudecova and Michal Homer threatening, abusive or insulting words orbehaviour with intent to cause them to believe that violence wouldbe used against them, and the offence was racially aggravated,during the incident on August 28.

The 19-year-old, of Upper Church Road, Weston-super-Mare pleadedguilty to possessing 0.2g of cannabis on the same date when heappeared before South Somerset Magistrates.

He also …

Some Assassination Attempts on Musharraf

A glance at apparent and confirmed assassination attempts on Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf:

- April 26, 2002: Explosives in small pickup truck parked near Karachi airport fail to detonate when Musharraf's motorcade passes. Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen al-Almi, Islamic militant group, blamed for attempt and later use of vehicle to kill 12 Pakistanis in explosion outside U.S. Consulate in Karachi.

- Dec. 14, 2003: Powerful bomb underneath bridge in Rawalpindi explodes moments after Musharraf's limousine drives over. Section of …

China shares fall for 3rd day on economy doubts

Chinese shares fell for a third straight session Friday on doubts over the economic outlook, giving the Shanghai benchmark its first weekly decline in a month.

The Shanghai Composite Index shed 13.02 points, or 0.5 percent, to 2,597.6, ending the week down 1.8 percent. The Shenzhen Composite Index for China's second exchange slipped 0.2 percent to 876.58.

Prices fell in the absence of any positive cues for the market, analysts said.

"Investors are hesitant as they haven't seen any clear improvement in economic fundamentals," said Wen Lijun, an analyst for Nanjing Securities.

Energy shares fell on lower crude prices …

EATER'S DIGEST

Indian

No, not Native American, as much as we adore that cuisine. Todayour taste buds pay a call on four mini-consulates of India. MOTI MAHAL (2525 W. Devon, 312-262-2080) does a flame-red tandooroven chicken that lights my fire, but then so do most of the currycreations. On a quieter note, I enjoy a biryani (rice dish) withmeat and some of the wonderful onion nan. And my doctor's glad Ilove the many vegetarian possibilities (and none of the desserts) atthis cozy, neat North Side stalwart.

PAT BRUNO KLAY OVEN (414 N. Orleans, 312-527-3999). Chances are you'll beeating your samosas to the piano music of Beethoven or Chopin.Moghul, or northern Indian cuisine, is taken …

Charles' 22 points, 23 boards lead Sun past Sparks

UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) — Tina Charles had 22 points and 23 rebounds to lead the Connecticut Sun to a 79-76 victory over the short-handed Los Angeles Sparks on Tuesday night.

Renee Montgomery scored 17 points, and Kara Lawson and Asjha Jones added 16 apiece for Connecticut (5-3).

Kristi Toliver had 19 points, DeLisha Milton-Jones scored 13 and laToya Pringle 11 for Los Angeles (4-4), which played its first game without Candace Parker. Parker, who tore the lateral meniscus in her right knee in Sunday's loss to the New York Liberty, will be out for about six weeks.

Montgomery scored the last four points for the Sun, including two free throws with 12.9 seconds remaining for …

Hans Hofmann

Hans Hofmann

AMERINGER YOHE RNE ART

Hans Hofmann's paintings on paper have a freshness, an energy, a presence that belies their age. They're sixty years old, but they have a timeless immediacy. "Time flows like water does back in the ocean back into Eternity," he wrote in the poem on paper that hung as an introduction to the paintings, which themselves flow like the water of eternal life-water with a strong, relentless current, a deep expressive undertow, a painterly Heraclitean water that is never the same but nonetheless flows with sure-footed fastness over the paper.

Clement Greenberg, critiquing the artist's exclusion from the Museum of Modern Art's 1958 "New American Painting" exhibition, remarked that Hofmann's art was being "recognized increasingly as a major fountainhead of style and ideas for the 'new' American painting" and that he was "a virtuoso of invention-as only the Klee of the 1930s was." Perhaps he wasn't included because he was more inventive than the new American painters (otherwise known as the Abstract Expressionists), as these works show, or perhaps because his paintings "breathe as no others do" (certainly there's more of a sense of open space in them, as Greenberg claimed). Or do their "open, pulsating surfaces" convey more "freedom" than any of the new American paintings, as Greenberg convincingly argued? Or was it simply that Hofmann was German and MOMA wanted an all-American show?

As Greenberg noted, Hofmann had lived in Paris on close terms with the Fauves and Cubists for a decade beginning in 1904, "during which both movements had their birth and efflorescence," and also had seen and absorbed the art and ideas of Kandinsky, Mondrian, Arp, Masson, and Miro. He in fact integrated them into his own art and theories, a tendency that suggests he was indeed the consummate modernist, perhaps the grand climax of European modern painting. MOMA might not have wanted to acknowledge his heroic originality-and transnationalism-when new American art heroes were on the national horizon. Or perhaps they didn't want to acknowledge their profound dependence on him, especially by way of his influential school, which many attended-it was founded in Munich in 1915 and refounded in New York soon after Hofmann emigrated to the United States in the early '3Os-and without which Abstract Expressionism is inconceivable. The new American painters were his epigoni, and they turned the open aesthetics of European modernism into a sort of dogmatically closed and exclusive system.

What is most striking about Hofmann's paintings on paper-which combine gouache, crayon, India and ballpoint inks, and marker-is the amount of black in them. It seems Hofmann is trying to reconcile Matisse's idea of black as a color with Kandinsky's view of black as a symbol of death. There is a Matissean lyricism and a Kandinskyesque density to Hofmann's black: It dances even as it oppresses. Many of the works are derivative of Kandinsky and Matisse, but more alive with instinct, even joie de vivre, despite their insistent blackness. Hofmann responds spontaneously to nature-sunrise and sunset especially, as he implies in various poems-suggesting that we might think of him as an "abstract naturalist," by which I mean that, like Kandinsky and Mondrian, he thinks art can extract the spiritual from the natural.

Indeed, many of the poems treat "spiritual" experience and the experience of space as essentially the same, which is no doubt why his works on paper, however small, convey what Roger Fry called the "cosmic emotion" that abstract art alone can convey. As Hofmann wrote, it is only when using "all our senses" that we can sense the spirituality of space. Hofmann's paintings, with their extraordinarily inclusive modern sensibility-the meaning and possibilities of which we seem to have forgotten in this time of trendy conceptualism-and tactility and musicality (they owe much to Kandinsky's synesthetic paintings), suggest that aesthetic experience can put us in touch with "eternity," to use his word. But then, who needs eternity in this age of short-lived art?

-Donald Kuspit

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Perfect into sixth, Buehrle unravels against Twins

As Mark Buehrle breezed through the first five innings against the Minnesota Twins, the Chicago White Sox ace felt even better than he did during his perfect game the last time he took the mound.

Then the Twins used some of that Metrodome magic to dink and dunk their way to a 5-3 victory over the White Sox, turning a historic start by Buehrle into a loss in a matter of minutes.

Coming off the 18th perfect game in major league history, Buehrle retired the first 17 batters to set a record with 45 outs in a row before the Twins finally got to him in the sixth inning.

"I'm not a big fan of broken-bat, bloop singles," Buehrle said. "It just seems like any time at this place you just know it's going to happen. You could be up 10-0 in the ninth inning and something's going to happen in that inning."

Buehrle (11-4) lost what would have been his second straight perfect game and his no-hitter with two outs in the sixth. He wound up allowing five runs on five hits in 6 1-3 innings.

"It's an honor, another one of those things I never thought I'd do," Buehrle said of the record. "It's just frustrating the way the game ended."

After walking Alexi Casilla to lose his bid to become the first pitcher in history to throw consecutive perfect games and then losing his no-hitter on a single up the middle by Denard Span, Buehrle gave up an RBI double to Joe Mauer to tie the game at 1 in the fifth inning.

Then Nick Punto had a blooper for a two-run single and Brendan Harris added another soft RBI single in Minnesota's four-run seventh to chase Buehrle.

"I have never seen anything like that. It takes a special guy to do something like that," Span said of Buehrle's streak. "I am not saying I was going to break it up, but I was determined that somehow he wasn't going to do that to us, especially in the Dome. Give him a lot of credit, he gained a lot of respect in my book tonight."

Buerhle surpassed the mark of 41 straight set by San Francisco's Jim Barr in 1972 and tied by teammate Bobby Jenks, a reliever, in 2007.

"Especially being able to break that here on the turf," Jenks said. "That team is known for being able to hit the ball on the ground and run. It's pretty impressive."

Jermaine Dye hit a solo homer off Scott Baker in the sixth and Gordon Beckham's two-run single in the ninth made things interesting before Joe Nathan recorded the final out for his 28th save.

The win pulled the Twins (51-50) into a tie with the White Sox for second place in the AL Central, just two games behind the Tigers.

Athletics 9, Red Sox 8, 11 innings

At Boston, Rajai Davis singled home Mark Ellis in the ninth to send the game into extra innings, then did it again in the 11th to give Oakland the win.

Boston led 7-4 when Jonathan Papelbon blew just his third save in 28 opportunities, thanks in part to two ninth-inning throwing errors by shortstop Nick Green. It was still 7-7 with two outs in the 11th when Ellis doubled off Manny Delcarmen (2-2) and scored on Davis' single to right.

Davis scored on Adam Kennedy's career-high fifth hit to make it 9-7. Craig Breslow (4-4) pitched a perfect 10th for the win, and Andrew Bailey earned his 12th save despite giving one run back in the 11th.

Rays 6, Yankees 2

At St. Petersburg, Fla., Tampa Bay's Scott Kazmir outpitched CC Sabathia to win for the first time in more than two months.

Evan Longoria hit a solo homer and Carl Crawford had an RBI triple off Sabathia (10-7), and AL East-leading New York lost for just the second time in 12 games since the All-Star break.

Kazmir (5-6) took a four-hitter into the eighth inning to win for the first time since May 9, against Boston.

Sabathia, 7-1 lifetime against Tampa Bay before Tuesday, allowed six runs and nine hits in 5 2-3 innings.

Rangers 7, Tigers 3

At Arlington, Texas, Ian Kinsler drove in three runs and rookie Elvis Andrus homered and had three hits for Texas.

Kinsler, who was in a huge funk at the plate that shrunk his batting average from .272 to .242., highlighted a four-run second with a two-run triple. Kinsler had just 16 hits in his last 103 at-bats.

Detroit is 4-8 since the All-Star break and has scored three runs or less eight times in that span.

Former Tigers reliever Jason Grilli (1-1) pitched two perfect innings. The Rangers' bullpen shut out the Tigers on one hit over the final five innings.

Luke French (1-2) allowed six runs and eight hits over five innings of his fifth big-league start.

Royals 4, Orioles 3, 11 innings

At Baltimore, Mark Teahen led off the 11th inning with a 45-foot single and scored on a single by John Buck for Kansas City.

The Royals' second straight win gave them their first winning streak since a three-game run on July 4-6. Billy Butler hit a two-run homer and Willie Bloomquist added a solo shot for Kansas City.

Teahen opened the 11th by topping a ball down the first-base line. Catcher Matt Wieters and pitcher Danys Baez (4-4) watched the ball stop on the chalk halfway down the line.

Jamey Wright (1-3) pitched two perfect innings and Joakim Soria got three outs for his 17th save.

Angels 7, Indians 6

At Anaheim, Calif., Gary Matthews Jr. hit a tiebreaking three-run double in the eighth inning, and Los Angeles survived another meltdown by All-Star closer Brian Fuentes for their major league-leading 33rd comeback victory.

Juan Rivera's RBI single tied it earlier in the eighth for the Angels, whose latest remarkable rally made up for another poor performance by their starting rotation and closer. Matthews capped the comeback with a two-out drive to left-center off reliever Tony Sipp, the Indians' third pitcher of the inning.

Matt Palmer (9-1) pitched two solid innings in relief of struggling starter Jered Weaver for the Angels, who have won 13 of 16 despite losing their previous two.

Peralta homered and drove in two runs, and Ben Francisco homered as the Indians lost for the second time in eight games. David Huff (5-5) pitched into the eighth inning for the Indians.

Mariners 4, Blue Jays 3

At Seattle, Ichiro Suzuki singled with two outs in the ninth to score Rob Johnson, and Seattle snapped a four-game losing streak.

Suzuki golfed the pitch nearly off the dirt and in front of center fielder Vernon Wells for the first game-ending hit of his career.

David Aardsma (3-3) got the win pitching the ninth. He allowed a leadoff single but retired the next three batters.

Jack Hannahan singled off Downs (1-3) to lead off the ninth, his third hit of the game. Johnson walked and Chris Woodward bunted, reaching when Downs couldn't handle the roller. After two outs, Suzuki got his third hit of the game.

SoCal Heat Wave Strains Power Grid

LOS ANGELES - Parts of Southern California were in for another hot day Tuesday after a week of sweltering in triple-digit temperatures that contributed to power outages that left thousands without air conditioning.

Temperatures soared in the San Fernando Valley with Woodland Hills reporting 102 degrees on Monday and Van Nuys at 99, according to the National Weather Service. Tuesday wasn't much better, with a forecast high of 98 in Woodland Hills, but a cool-down was on the way.

In the meantime, 20,000 Southern California Edison customers in Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside and San Bernardino counties lost electricity, spokesman Steve Conroy said.

San Diego Gas and Electric Co., which serves San Diego County and southern Orange County, declared a power emergency and prepared for potential rolling blackouts as demand hit a record. About 30,000 of its customers experienced outages Monday, but electricity was restored to 22,000 of them by the afternoon, spokesman Peter Hidalgo said.

"We need immediate energy conservation, or else there will be rolling blackouts," Hidalgo said.

In addition, about 9,000 customers in scattered parts of Los Angeles were without power Monday, Los Angeles Department of Water and Power spokeswoman MaryAnne Piersen said. It wasn't known when their power would be restored.

"Probably more than 90 percent of them are due to stress on the system due to the heat," she said. "Different pieces of equipment get fatigued and blow out, so they have to be replaced."

Lightning strikes on grid equipment due to scattered desert thunderstorms also were adding to the strain.

The California Independent System Operator, which oversees the state's power grid, said no major shortages were expected. But it was urging customers to conserve electricity by setting air conditioning thermostats higher and waiting to use major appliances until after dark.

Relief was in sight with cooler temperatures forecast over the next several days.

"Everyone will see a drop of eight to 11 degrees on Tuesday," said Stuart Seto of the National Weather Service. "By Thursday, things will be getting back to normal."

Rolls-Royce says China might become 2nd-biggest market

Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG's super-luxury brand, said China may surpass the UK as its second-biggestmarket within a few years.

"China has strong potential to surpass the UK, given the growthof the ultra-rich class here," Chairman Ian Robertson said in aninterview at the Shanghai auto show. The carmaker unveiled itssecond model in China, the Phantom Drophead Coupe, priced at$600,000.

Rolls-Royce sold 75 cars in China last year, accounting for halfits Asia-Pacific sales and about 10 percent of its global sales,Robertson said. China's economy has grown by an average of about 9percent per year for the past decade, creating 300,000 U.S. dollarmillionaires and pushing up demand for Rolls-Royces, yachts andother luxury goods.

Rolls-Royce's sales in China rose 20 percent in the first quarterfrom a year earlier, Robertson said. To further boost sales, thecompany plans to raise its number of showrooms in China to sevenfrom four by the end of the year, he added.

The luxury-car maker plans to add a comparatively smaller modelglobally by 2010, Robertson said. The vehicle will cost $250,000 inmost markets. In China, it probably will cost $500,000 because thereis a 100 percent tariff on imported cars.

China surpassed Japan as Rolls-Royce's largest market in Asialast year. The U.S. is the carmaker's biggest market worldwide.

Kid Rock apologizes after cigar complaint

WARREN, Michigan (AP) — Kid Rock has apologized after a man complained that the musician smoked a cigar at a nonsmoking venue in the Detroit area.

Randy Snell says Kid Rock lit the cigar while attending country singer Travis Tritt's show Friday at Andiamo Celebrity Showroom in Warren.

Spokesman Nick Stern told The Detroit News that Kid Rock offered his "most sincere apologies" to patrons he may have offended. He said he had been drinking alcohol.

Fifty-eight-year-old Snell of Trenton has asthma and says he plans to file a health department complaint. Michigan law prohibits smoking at workplaces including bars and restaurants.

Kid Rock was born Robert Ritchie. He grew up in and lives in suburban Detroit.

GOP Rivals Argue Who's Most Conservative

ORLANDO, Fla. - Front-runners Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney were forced to defend their conservative credentials by their campaign rivals Sunday night in the sharpest debate so far of the Republican presidential campaign.

"You've just spent the last year trying to fool people about your record. I don't want you to start fooling them about mine," Sen. John McCain jabbed at Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts.

Former Sen. Fred Thompson turned Giuliani into his target, saying the former New York mayor supported federal funding for abortion, gun control and havens for illegal immigrants. "He sides with Hillary Clinton on each of those issues," he added, referring to the New York Democrat who leads in the polls for her party's presidential nomination.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Republican presidential candidates clashed Sunday over who is conservative enough to defeat Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, ahead of an evening debate in Florida.

"Look at my record and listen to my vision," Arizona Sen. John McCain told reporters while campaigning in Kissimmee, Fla. "I am far more conservative than any of the leading candidates, and I am, according to recent polls, the one conservative who could beat Sen. Clinton."

The GOP candidates were meeting for a 90-minute debate, the seventh of the 2008 campaign but only the second since actor-politician Fred Thompson joined the race. It was held during the deciding game in the American League baseball championship series between the Boston Red Sox and the Cleveland Indians.

McCain, in saying he has a better chance of defeating Clinton, borrowed a frequent claim by former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who leads the Republican field in national polls. Yet even as McCain stressed his conservative voting record, he said he would consider Giuliani, who favors abortion rights and gay rights, to be his running mate.

"I think Rudy Giuliani is a fine man who led this nation and New York City after a terrible, terrible tragedy," McCain said of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Former Massachusetts Mitt Romney, who narrowly won a straw poll of conservative voters on Saturday, was targeted by McCain and other rivals as a very recent convert to conservatism.

Romney narrowly won the straw poll by the Family Research Council, although former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who was close behind, won overwhelmingly among voters who were present and not voting online.

Huckabee mentioned a 1994 video of Romney, while debating Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, defending a woman's right to abortion, saying he would support letting gays in the Boy Scouts and distancing himself from former President Reagan.

Huckabee said he has stuck to one position on key issues.

"I'm a conservative who has authenticity. I've got consistency. I'm a hardworking conservative," said Huckabee, appearing on "Fox News Sunday."

"Nobody's going to find some YouTube moments of me saying something radically different than what I'm saying today," he said, referring to the popular video-sharing Web site.

Romney deflected charges that he has flip-flopped on abortion and other social issues important to religious conservatives.

A Mormon, Romney said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that evangelicals may not accept his religion, "but they will certainly see me as someone who ... can carry the standard of conservatives for social, major social issues."

The field onstage was narrowed to eight candidates on Friday, when lesser-known conservative Kansas Sen. Sam Brownback dropped out of the race.

---

Associated Press Writer H. Josef Hebert in Washington contributed to this report.

Australian rugby league results

Result of Wednesday's Australian rugby league match:

State of Origin

Queensland 30, New South Wales 0

(best-of-three series tied 1-1; third match July 2 in Sydney)

Wise touts progress of state: Governor kicking off Business Summit; talks of economic growth

DAILY MAIL BUSINESS EDITOR

Gov. Bob Wise was expected to kick off the 2004 Business Summit atThe Greenbrier resort today by promoting the state's progress overthe last four years.

"We have many assets; it is now time to promote them," Wise saidin prepared remarks. "In today's competitive environment, if we don'tpromote the positives, no one else will. To do this, we all must makea concerted effort to tell others what we've done - and where we aregoing."

"The positive image we will promote is one of a state that getsthings done, leads the way, makes positive changes and constantlyseeks ways to improve. In West Virginia, we live well, work hard andraise strong families. Together, we will tell the world how wonderfulit is."

He was expected to point out that tourist visits are up and WestVirginia is the sixth fastest-growing state in vacation homeownership.

"West Virginians have a quality of life that is second to none,and more people are discovering it," Wise was expected to say.

The governor was planning to mention that the state's per capitaincome and Gross State Product are increasing; state exports exceeded$2.3 billion in 2003; and Business Facilities Magazine ranked WestVirginia as the best location among five Mid-Atlantic states in termsof the overall cost of doing business.

"West Virginia also is leading the way for others," Wise said inprepared remarks, pointing out that Toyota's plant at Buffalo, PutnamCounty, ranked first in the nation in productivity among plants thatmake six-cylinder engines for the third year in a row.

He was expected to highlight expansion plans previously announcedby Toyota, Diamond Electric and American Woodmark and to say, "whilewe're focusing on new businesses, we certainly aren't forgetting ouroldest industries."

"As part of Pechiney's proposed merger with Alcan, the PechineyRolled Products plant in Ravenswood was to be sold. After myintervention, the U.S. Department of Justice ruled that thedivestiture, which would have affected 1,000 workers, may not berequired."

Also, "Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp. was ready to close itsdoors," Wise said. "Hundreds, if not thousands of men and women andtheir families, faced an end to life as they knew it. Thanks to anunprecedented loan from the state of West Virginia, the companyturned tragedy into success because we took a risk that no othergovernor would have considered doing. The company emerged frombankruptcy and broke ground this fiscal year on a new electric arcfurnace."

Wise also was expected to highlight the state assistance given toBombardier Aerospace in Harrison County and Homer Laughlin China Co.in Hancock County.

"The likelihood of these companies surviving in the fashion theyare now without intervention from the state was zero," he said.

The state has new tools to help business, including tax incrementfinancing approved by voters in 2002; revised tax incentives; and aventure capital fund, Wise said.

The governor said the state Economic Development Grant Committee,which is funding 48 projects with $225 million, is "the largesteconomic stimulus package the state has ever seen."

He said West Virginia "is becoming the Silicon Valley of thenation in the biometrics industry."

Meanwhile, the workers' compensation system, which was "lurchingfrom crisis to crisis" four years ago and "expected to be flat brokeby July 1, 2006," now expects to have $757 million in the bank in twoyears, he said.

"While we still must find a way to address a $3.3 billion long-term liability, this improved cash flow position gives us reason foroptimism," the governor said.

In addition, Wise was expected to note that four years ago thestate had no coal truck safety legislation, and now it does.

He said that four years ago, mining permits were slow to beissued.

"We have sped up the permitting process without detracting fromour environmental protection efforts or hurting the economy bykeeping coal at a stalemate," he said.

Wise also was expected to highlight his education initiatives,including the Promise Scholarship program.

"This is the best investment we can make for the future of ourstate - keeping students in the Mountain State where they willhopefully stay to start their careers. The best problem we can haveis that so many of our hardworking students want to stay in WestVirginia."

Wise was scheduled to speak today during the West Virginia Chamberof Commerce's 68th annual business meeting, which kicks off thebusiness summit. The summit is expected to draw about 600 business,government and education leaders. It continues through Friday.

Contact writer George Hohmann at business@dailymail.com or 348-4836.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Who needs holy wars each Christmas?

`Tis the season for holy wars.

Isn't it funny how we can go for an entire year, enjoyingreligious peace and harmony? But when Christmas rolls around, whenwe're supposed to think about the Child's message of Peace on Earth,some people can't resist reopening the Crusades.

I'm talking about the battle over the display of religioussymbols, such as nativity scenes, on public property. I'm convincedthat most people don't particularly care either way; knowing thesensitivities of everyone, they would rather devote their energies tocelebrating the holidays in their own way.

But for zealots, respect and understanding is like somethingleft on the sidewalk you step in. Last year, the big fight was overa creche in City Hall. (A U.S. appeals court eventually ruled againstit.) This year, with Chicagoans too busy hating on the basis of raceto hate on the basis of religion, most of the action is in thesuburbs.

On one hand, you have atheist Robert I. Sherman, rushing fromsuburb to suburb, vowing to stomp out even the vaguest hint of publiccelebration of Christmas, be it a nativity scene on park land or areplica of a couple of choir boys next to a maintenance building onthe Tri-State Tollway. In Zion and Libertyville, Northbrook andMundelein, Mr. Sherman is making sure no one has to suffer thedisgusting sight of Mother and Child.

On the other hand, you have two determined women in Northbrookwho absolutely insisted that a nativity scene be allowed on park landin the center of town, fully knowing that much of Northbrook'spopulation is Jewish, that many Jews would be offended, that somewould complain, that it would divide the town. Every day, it wouldbe a cheery Christmas greeting to Northbrook's Jews saying: To hellwith your sensitivities.

So, it came to pass that both sides battled it out before astartled Northbrook Park District board. Board members used to thinkthat outrage was tennis players angry at a water fountain not workingat the tennis courts; at last week's meeting, board members faced aconstitutional crisis and an overflow crowd of red-hot ideologues.

Based on the assumption that "you can't please everyone, youcan't please anyone," the board took a course that, according toboard president John Wood, "attempted to keep the divisiveness withinthe village down to an absolute minimum" and to keep the district outof a costly court battle: It unanimously decided to prohibit thecreche.

Even if the fight is over there, the damage is done, withneighbor angry at neighbor. Those who would continue that fightshould ask themselves: Is winning worth it? Would it enrich ourlives, help us better understand each other, strengthen the ties ofour pluralistic society, bring us together? Does the simple presenceof a creche build your faith and win converts to Christianity? Doesthe absence of a creche win converts to atheism?

Do the inevitable court fights strengthen the Constitution, ordo they lead us down a road we'll regret? For example: If you canban a creche - a passive demonstration of religiosity - in a publicplace, how about an active demonstration, like Christmas carolling?If you can ban singing about Christmas, then can't speaking ofChristmas or other religious subjects be banned? If we controlreligious speech in public places, how about other kinds of speaking?

Sometimes we're better served if everyone would just shut up andsit down. Or go home and quietly send out their Christmas, Hanukkahor God-is-dead cards.

Dennis Byrne, whose column appears on Wednesdays, is a member ofthe Chicago Sun-Times editorial board.

States weigh options in offshore fight

Governors in some coastal states promised to fight attempts to tap offshore petroleum reserves, citing concerns about the environment and tourism. Others agreed with President Bush's call to lift a 27-year-old federal ban on offshore drilling but said states should decide whether to allow it.

Bush on Wednesday joined Republican presidential candidate John McCain in calling for the lifting of a prohibition on drilling along the East and West coasts and in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. As the battle to lift the moratorium began to play out in Washington, states debated their stance.

Califorina Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Wednesday he opposes lifting the ban on new oil drilling in coastal waters.

"We are in this situation because of our dependence on traditional petroleum-based oil," Schwarzenegger said in a statement.

Another McCain ally, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, reversed his opposition to oil exploration off the state's beaches after the presidential candidate said he supported lifting the moratorium. Crist said the issue is about local control.

"I think that not having that moratorium, blanket moratorium, and letting states rights be recognized, if you will, certainly is appropriate," he said.

Crist said he didn't know if Florida legislators would approve drilling, but like McCain he said states should be allowed to make their own decisions. McCain favors lifting the moratorium at the federal level, but allowing states to decide whether to allow drilling.

The moratorium applies to all federal waters, which extend three miles from the states' coastlines. If Congress lifts the federal moratorium without special provisions giving states a say, states would have little control over oil companies' exploration of federal waters.

If that happens, anti-drilling states' best recourse would be to sue the federal government for allowing activities that are odds with the states' coastal management plans, said Lisa Speer, senior policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Politicians and the public are increasingly divided on the offshore issue as energy prices spiral.

Virginia and South Carolina have largely supported lifting the moratorium, as have the governors of Mississippi and Alaska. California is joined by North Carolina and New Jersey among the anti-drilling states.

"States should be able to control their own destiny with what happens," said Joel Sawyer, a spokesman for South Carolina Republican Gov. Mark Sanford.

The state has "to be incredibly cognizant of our tourism industry and our other natural resources along the coast. We don't want to kill the goose that laid the golden egg," he said.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin supports allowing exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which Bush also proposed opening. Palin believes "the answers lie right here in Alaska" for reducing foreign energy dependence, her spokeswoman Sharon Leighow said.

Those in favor of opening closed areas to drilling say they could eventually yield 18 billion barrels of oil and 77 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, but opponents say it could be years before production begins and that would do little to stem the current rise of energy prices.

A state's openness to allowing drilling off its coast will have a big influence on energy companies' decisions about where to explore, said Tom Moskitis, managing director of the American Gas Association, which represent utilities feeding 60 million customers.

"At this point, the energy companies are in favor of giving the states options," he said. "They are looking more to the East Coast where there is a big potential for oil and natural gas. The political climate in California is such that just about everybody is opposed so it's not logical that exploration would begin there."

The Democratic governors of New Jersey and North Carolina joined Schwarzenegger in speaking out against lifting the moratorium.

"Our $35 billion economy is driven by tourism and the use of the shore," said New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine.

North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley also argued to keep the moratorium in place.

"It's doesn't work for states to decide. If the state above or below you has a problem it affects your shores as well," he said. "It's too much squeeze for the juice when you look at real estate on the coast, recreational fishing and tourism that could be adversely affected by some problem."

_____

Associated Press writers Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C., Whitney Woodward in Raleigh, N.C., Bob Lewis in Richmond, Va. and Steve Quinn in Juneau, Alaska contributed to this report.

Composing himself // `Beauty's' Menken eyes future

Alan Menken is looking out the window of a downtown Chicago hotelrestaurant just up the street from the Chicago Theatre, where "Beautyand the Beast" has settled in for a six-month engagement.

The man who composed the haunting score for the AcademyAward-winning film and the stage extravaganza for the Disney empireis very accommodating at 9 a.m., considering his day's schedule isfull of interviews.

Menken, along with the late lyricist Howard Ashman, brought theanimated feature film genre back to life with the megahit trio ofDisney's "Aladdin," "The Little Mermaid" and "Beauty and the Beast."Ashman never lived to see "Beauty and the Beast," having diedin 1991 of complications from AIDS. Menken discusses his late friendand musical collaborator with unabashed respect."Our first show was `God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater,' " Menkenbegins. "We met in 1982 when I was working in New York as a writer,arranger and accompanist, and Howard was the artistic director of theWPA Theater."How do I describe Howard at that time? He was Off-Off-Broadwaywith a deadly offbeat sensibility. You wouldn't have guessed thatthis was a man who had a splendid sense of musical theater structureand a real writer's voice. I knew from our very first meetings thatthis was a man who knew exactly what he wanted."While "Rosewater" won critical acclaim, the show that wouldmake them the team in musical theater would be their next production,a kitschy, campy cult hit called "Little Shop of Horrors.""I guess with that show we became what `Rent' is now. We werethe young, surprising upstart (show) in New York that everybodyflocked to see."The call to work on an animated film for Disney soon followed.The joy of the opportunity would be tempered with great sadness."The AIDS epidemic hit the New York theater world and radicallychanged the landscape for everybody. Tom Eyen, who was writing`Dream Girls,' is gone. Steve Brown, with whom I wrote two shows, isgone."Howard never told anyone he was sick. So when the opportunitycame to work for Disney, he embraced it wholeheartedly. I think hewanted to move out of New York and get as far away as possible fromall of it."I wanted to move into film, and the opportunity to work on aDisney animated feature was irresistible. It's a great tradition,and for a songwriter there's no better medium."Working almost simultaneously on "Aladdin" and "The LittleMermaid," Menken and Ashman upped the ante on "Beauty and the Beast,"as Menken puts it, deciding not to write a film score, but a Broadwayscore for an animated picture."We weren't sure Disney would even want it. We sent them ourfirst two songs, `Be Our Guest' and `Belle,' and we really thought itwould not go over too well. What we got back was an absolutelyecstatic response."The response to the film by audiences, critics and the movieindustry itself was phenomenal, and two Academy Awards later, Disneyopted to make "Beauty and the Beast" its first foray into afull-scale Broadway production. Moving from film back to a theaterproduction was not something Menken had intended."Initially I had mixed feelings about the transfer of `Beautyand the Beast' to the stage. Howard was gone, and the only history Iknew of the Walt Disney Co., as far as things onstage, were thoseDisneyland shows. I had visions of giant foam heads dancing aroundup there."Menken's fears were put to rest by then-Disney executive JeffreyKatzenberg, who assembled the composer's "dream team" for theproject. "I got to the presentation meeting at Disney and there was(costumer) Ann Hould-Ward and (director) Rob Roth and (choreographer)Matt West. It was obvious (Disney) wanted to do it right, the wayany theatrical producer would want to do it."To complete the stage version, Menken had to revisit hisOscar-winning score with lyricist Tim Rice ("Evita," "The Lion King")in place of Ashman, adding five new songs to the 2 1/2-hour musical.With "Pocahontas," "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" and "Hercules"added to his credits, Menken's work continued to capture a newgeneration of animated feature film fans.Menken has seen enormous success, but he has also had to swallowa few bitter pills. "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," which Menken saysis the favorite of Disney chairman Michael Eisner, received alukewarm response from audiences, while "Hercules" was a box-officeflop. His most recent endeavor, a Broadway concert performance of"King David" that featured the lyrics of Rice, played nineperformances at New York's New Amsterdam Theatre.At 48, the composer admits he has reached a crossroads in hislife."It's a time for me to sort of harvest what I've done over thelast 15 years and then gather my forces for where I want to go fromthis point." `King David' was a good start, a very good experience.`Hunchback of Notre Dame,' which I thought was my best score, got arelatively chilly response even though the critical response waswonderful. `Hercules' - I've never received reviews like that in mylife - had a tough time at the box office. I'm really trying toassess what's meaningful for me and what I want to do irrespective ofbox-office success or awards or critical opinion."In addition to the stage version of "The Hunchback of NotreDame," which is occupying much of Menken's time these days, thecomposer also is taking time to record his first album, due out ayear from now."The most exciting thing for me right now is doing an album ofmy music for Sony that Phil Ramone is producing. I have thisenormous catalog of songs, some that people know, some that peopledon't. I want to reinterpret them in my way, to bring them outsideof the context of each project and the characters and bring them intoa performatory record. Before I hit the age of 50 I should make anattempt to become a recording artist. (He laughs.) Before it's toolate."

English Football Results

LONDON (AP) — Results Tuesday in English football (home teams listed first):

Premier League

Blackburn 1, Bolton 2

Wolverhampton Wanderers 2, Norwich 2

CPS teachers awarded energy grants

An investment in a single teacher is an investment in thousands of children.

Two dozen teachers from more than 20 Chicago Public Schools earned top honors from British Petroleum and were awarded $5,000 and $10,000 grants by the energy company during a reception last week at the Museum of Science and Industry.

As part of the grant process through BP's A+ for Energy program, teachers had to develop after-school, creative classroom, extra-curricular or summer activities involving energy conservation and energy education.

"This is an exciting opportunity for our teachers to take, the lead on energy education, and for students at all grade levels to have hands-on learning opportunities," said CPS CEO Arne Duncan.

Winning entries include greenhouse to a school's Energy Nights developing a adding a campus; for the recycling a school; and North Side Kelvyn Park High School's energy bus to sponsoring community; program for be fueled with used cooking oil.

"We are extremely pleased to recognize some of Chicagoland's top teachers, whose creativity in the classroom both inspires and encourages students to be good energy consumers," said Doris Salomon Chagin, BP's Midwest community affairs director.

The financial awards will enable students to study, observe, build, convert and report on their projects with each other, their schools and their communities.

"These projects impact not just the students, but their schools and communities as well," Duncan said.

A $1,5000 scholarship was also given to the winning teachers to attend a three-day energy training conference.

"The A + for Energy program reinforces BP's longstanding commitment to quality education. We are actively engaging with, communities where our employees live and work, helping to enhance education, encourage enterprise development and promote alternative energy solutions," Salomon Chagin said.

BP doled out more than $1 million in grants and scholarships this year to Chicagoland teachers.

As the nation's third largest school system, CPS has 623 schools and serves more than 400,000 students.

[Author Affiliation]

by Kathy Chaney

Defender Stalf Writer

EUROPE NEWS AT 1100 GMT

TOP STORIES:

EUROPE-FINANCIAL CRISIS

ATHENS, Greece — Greece will receive the next batch of bailout loans in time to avoid a disastrous default, the finance minister says, while the prime minister was in Berlin for critical talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

ITALY-KNOX

PERUGIA, Italy — A defense lawyer has told a court to see Amanda Knox, the American student convicted of killing her roommate, not as the "femme fatale" her accusers describe but rather as a loving young woman.

SWITZERLAND-POLANSKI

ZURICH — Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski, who was freed from house arrest in Switzerland little more than a year ago, attends the Zurich Film Festival to accept the lifetime achievement award intended for him two years ago. Switzerland refused to extradite him to the United States where he faces charges of having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977. By John Heilprin. Expected 1600 GMT.

BRITAIN-SHAKESPEARE IN TRANSLATION

LONDON — All the world's onstage — a single stage — as theater troupes from around the globe perform all of Shakespeare's plays in three dozen languages in the Bard's symbolic London home. By Jill Lawless.

SPAIN-TERROR ARRESTS

MADRID — Spanish police have arrested five Algerians suspected of helping finance an al-Qaida linked terror group in north Africa, the Interior Ministry says. By Ciaran Giles.

KOSOVO-ENVIRONMENT

PRISTINA, Kosovo — Kosovo is cracking down on companies it accuses of polluting the environment in one of Europe's poorest regions, filing charges against a cement factory it says is not monitoring emissions.

TURKEY-CYPRUS-DRILLING

ANKARA, Turkey — The prime minister of the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state says a Turkish research ship has begun oil and gas exploration off divided Cyprus.

FRANCE-FASHION

PARIS — The City of Light's marathon spring-summer 2012 ready-to-wear collections kick off with displays by emerging talent, including rising Belgian designer Anthony Vaccarello, the new darling of Paris' fashion elite.

NORWAY-TERROR PLOT

OSLO, Norway — A Norwegian prosecutor has filed terror charges against three men accused in an al-Qaida linked plot to attack a Danish newspaper that caricatured the Prophet Muhammad.

BUSINESS & FINANCIAL:

RUSSIA-FINANCE MINISTER

MOSCOW — Investors and Russian economists are dismayed with President Medvedev's decision to force out the influential finance minister. Kudrin is described as the Russian government's most efficient minister and the man who had enough authority to disagree with Prime Minister Putin on key financial issues. While Russia is looking for his replacement, there is hardly anyone out there who would be able to oppose populist spending as vehemently and effectively as Kudrin did, experts say. By Nataliya Vasilyeva. Developing.

ITALY-FINANCIAL CRISIS

MILAN — Italy raised €14.5 billion ($19.6 billion) in short-term government debt but there were signs the country is finding it more expensive to raise the money it needs.

WORLD MARKETS

LONDON — Hopes that policymakers are preparing a grand plan to finally contain Europe's debt crisis bolstered stocks Tuesday ahead of a meeting between the leaders of Greece and Germany. By Business Writer Pan Pylas.

BRITAIN-BAE

LONDON — Defense contractor BAE Systems PLC confirmed Tuesday it is cutting around 3,000 jobs in Britain, in a move unions described as a "hammer blow" to Britain's manufacturing. By Cassandra Vinograd.

SPAIN-FINANCIAL CRISIS

MADRID — Spain's treasury has sold €3.2 billion ($4.3 billion) in two short-term debt auctions but has had to pay higher interest rates as investors continue to worry over the level of the country's borrowings.

OIL PRICES

BANGKOK — Oil rose above $82 a barrel in Asia, following stock markets higher amid hopes that Europe was finally girding for a major program to prevent debt-strapped Greece from going bankrupt. By Business Writer Pamela Sampson.

SPORTS:

SOC--CHAMPIONS LEAGUE ROUNDUP

LONDON — Real Madrid and Ajax, winners of 13 European Cups between them, meet in the second round of the Champions League group stage, while big-spending Manchester City chases its first victory in the competition at four-time winner Bayern Munich and Manchester United hosts Basel. By 2100 GMT. By Rob Harris.

RAC--BRITAIN-WHIPPING

LONDON — The British Horseracing Authority says jockeys will face stiffer penalties for excessive use of the whip after a review found the current rules were not an effective deterrent. Moved.

SOC--BATE BORISOV-BARCELONA

MINSK, Belorussia — With two hat tricks in his last three games, Lionel Messi looks primed to lead defending champion Barcelona to its first win of this Champions League campaign at BATE Borisov in Group H on Wednesday, while injury-plagued AC Milan hosts Viktoria Plzen. Moved.

SOC--VALENCIA-CHELSEA

VALENCIA, Spain — Chelsea striker Fernando Torres will look to keep his scoring touch going when his team visits Valencia on Wednesday in the Champions League. Moved.

_____

YOUR QUERIES: The Europe Desk in London can be reached at +44 207 427 4300.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Renowned safe maker now calls Yakima home, tools up to expand market

By ED STOVER

YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC

Even a safecracker buys his safes, says Ulrich Graffunder. "Hecame and looked at the safe and he said, 'Oh, you guys are making ittoo hard for us,'" said Graffunder, describing the former crook fromSeattle who, impressed with the safes manufactured by Graffunder Safe& Vault Inc., bought one for himself.

Indeed, Graffunder, who recently moved his company to Yakima fromLaGrande, Ore., has never heard of anyone cracking a Graffunder safe.

"We've been in business since 1968, and we don't know of anyonewho has had a loss from a burglary," he said. "If there has been, wehaven't heard of it."

A visit to the Graffunder plant at 2920 River Road reveals why.

The safes designed and manufactured by Graffunder and his son,Ralph, are heavy-duty, high-quality, finely tooled machines. He saysonly two other companies nationally, American Security and Brown SafeManufacturing, make products that are comparable in this segment ofthe market.

"It would be like buying a Mercedes, then comparing it to a Fordor Chevy or Kia," says company vice president Dave Giussi, watching acrew of workmen carefully fit together two boxes, one inside theother, made of heavy-gauge steel plate. The narrow void between thetwo will be filled with concrete and vermiculite for fireproofing.

"It always comes down to what you want to protect," addsGraffunder. "What's it worth to you? If you own a picture that'shundreds of years old, you don't want to put it in a tin can."

That's what Graffunder calls the sheet-metal boxes, or "homesecurity containers," that most people buy: "They're tin cans withdoors -- not in the same category as far as our industry isconcerned," he says.

As evidence, he displays pictures of Graffunder safes that havecome through devastating fires, their exteriors scorched black, butopen the door and, voil, the contents -- in this case, guns -- areunscathed. The company's Web site at www.graffundersafes.com hasother pictures and testimonials as well.

"A lot of people get sticker shock when they see our safes," saidGiussi, "but it's not any different than when you're buying insurance-- it depends on what you're locking up, what you want to protect."

Adds Graffunder: "You don't buy a $15,000 safe to lock up $1,000.We'll ask the question: 'How much cash do you keep in your safe overthe weekend?' Sometimes they won't say. But we have guidelines. Wesell them the type of safe they need to get the insurance coveragethey need.

"There's more to it than one size fits all," he said.

Actually, Graffunder makes 19 different sizes and styles of safes,plus a variety of vaults and vault doors. These are designed for bothcommercial and residential use, and are rated according to standardsestablished by the ISO, or International Organization of Standards.

For example, the minimum rating is a B-rated safe, which isconsidered adequate for protecting contents valued up to $10,000. Forcontents worth $1 million and up, Graffunder recommends a J-ratedsafe, vault or vault door. In between B and J are ratings of C($10,000-$50,000), E ($50,000-$200,000), F ($200,000-$500,000), H($500,000-$750,000), and I ($750,000-$1 million).

The safe in Graffunder's office is a B-rated safe, but at 5 feettall by 4 feet wide by 18 inches deep, it is still a heavy-dutyaffair weighing upwards of 1,600 pounds. A cheaper sheet-metal homesecurity container that size would weigh maybe 500 pounds, saysGraffunder.

"We're not into making those cheap light-gauge things, not atall," he says, adding that the pricetags for Graffunder safes rangefrom a low of $863 up to $11,000, but the company's custom-made safesand vaults can sell for as much as $30,000 and weigh upwards of 4,700pounds.

'We design our safes to keep out the professionals -- you alwayshave to stay one step ahead of the crooks," says Graffunder,explaining that challenge, plus the offer of a job, is what got himinto safe-building in the first place.

That was in 1958. Just 21 and newly arrived in San Francisco fromhis native Prussia, that part of pre-World War II Germany that is nowPoland, he went to work for the Mosler Safe Co. Now 70, Graffundersays experience has taught him no safe is entirely safe: "What can bemade by man can be destroyed by man. If I build something, a man canunbuild it."

For instance, he was once challenged by a European company to opena particular safe. "It took me two and a half days, but I got itopen. That why we never say a safe can't be opened. Given the timeand the know-how, there's always a way to do it."

A good safe buys that time. That's why there's different ratings."No crook can stick around five or six hours," says Graffunder, whosays the most effective combination is a good safe and a good alarmsystem.

Graffunder moved his company to Yakima because he is poised for amajor expansion. He also took in a new partner, Giussi, a Yakimaresident and former owner of the Paint & Equipment Supply Co., whichalso has outlets in Oregon and Idaho.

"We moved to Yakima because of the labor force. We couldn't findthe trained people (in LaGrande). This is more technicallychallenging than just welding something together. Also, we can buysteel from suppliers in Seattle, Portland, Spokane, Yakima and theTri-Cities."

Giussi said the local crew has grown to 10 -- seven full time andthree part time -- since work got under way last November in a 13,000square-foot leased facility on River Road. That crew is now producingat the rate of one safe per day (it takes an average of 26 man-hoursto complete a safe, depending on its size).

"Our goal is 10 a day," he said, adding that currently thecompany's safes are purchased before they're even built. The crewwill grow as new people are trained. Giussi figures he will berunning two shifts and leasing more workspace by this summer.Eventually, the company will purchase property and build its ownfacility, he said.

Until now, Graffunder has focused on direct sales to clients inthe West, mostly through the Web site and word-of-mouth. That willchange. "We're trying to set up a (nationwide) dealer distributionnetwork," says Graffunder. "We want to build up our inventory so thecustomers won't have to wait."

But pride of workmanship will remain the Graffunder hallmark.

Renowned safe maker now calls Yakima home, tools up to expand market

By ED STOVER

YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC

Even a safecracker buys his safes, says Ulrich Graffunder. "Hecame and looked at the safe and he said, 'Oh, you guys are making ittoo hard for us,'" said Graffunder, describing the former crook fromSeattle who, impressed with the safes manufactured by Graffunder Safe& Vault Inc., bought one for himself.

Indeed, Graffunder, who recently moved his company to Yakima fromLaGrande, Ore., has never heard of anyone cracking a Graffunder safe.

"We've been in business since 1968, and we don't know of anyonewho has had a loss from a burglary," he said. "If there has been, wehaven't heard of it."

A visit to the Graffunder plant at 2920 River Road reveals why.

The safes designed and manufactured by Graffunder and his son,Ralph, are heavy-duty, high-quality, finely tooled machines. He saysonly two other companies nationally, American Security and Brown SafeManufacturing, make products that are comparable in this segment ofthe market.

"It would be like buying a Mercedes, then comparing it to a Fordor Chevy or Kia," says company vice president Dave Giussi, watching acrew of workmen carefully fit together two boxes, one inside theother, made of heavy-gauge steel plate. The narrow void between thetwo will be filled with concrete and vermiculite for fireproofing.

"It always comes down to what you want to protect," addsGraffunder. "What's it worth to you? If you own a picture that'shundreds of years old, you don't want to put it in a tin can."

That's what Graffunder calls the sheet-metal boxes, or "homesecurity containers," that most people buy: "They're tin cans withdoors -- not in the same category as far as our industry isconcerned," he says.

As evidence, he displays pictures of Graffunder safes that havecome through devastating fires, their exteriors scorched black, butopen the door and, voil, the contents -- in this case, guns -- areunscathed. The company's Web site at www.graffundersafes.com hasother pictures and testimonials as well.

"A lot of people get sticker shock when they see our safes," saidGiussi, "but it's not any different than when you're buying insurance-- it depends on what you're locking up, what you want to protect."

Adds Graffunder: "You don't buy a $15,000 safe to lock up $1,000.We'll ask the question: 'How much cash do you keep in your safe overthe weekend?' Sometimes they won't say. But we have guidelines. Wesell them the type of safe they need to get the insurance coveragethey need.

"There's more to it than one size fits all," he said.

Actually, Graffunder makes 19 different sizes and styles of safes,plus a variety of vaults and vault doors. These are designed for bothcommercial and residential use, and are rated according to standardsestablished by the ISO, or International Organization of Standards.

For example, the minimum rating is a B-rated safe, which isconsidered adequate for protecting contents valued up to $10,000. Forcontents worth $1 million and up, Graffunder recommends a J-ratedsafe, vault or vault door. In between B and J are ratings of C($10,000-$50,000), E ($50,000-$200,000), F ($200,000-$500,000), H($500,000-$750,000), and I ($750,000-$1 million).

The safe in Graffunder's office is a B-rated safe, but at 5 feettall by 4 feet wide by 18 inches deep, it is still a heavy-dutyaffair weighing upwards of 1,600 pounds. A cheaper sheet-metal homesecurity container that size would weigh maybe 500 pounds, saysGraffunder.

"We're not into making those cheap light-gauge things, not atall," he says, adding that the pricetags for Graffunder safes rangefrom a low of $863 up to $11,000, but the company's custom-made safesand vaults can sell for as much as $30,000 and weigh upwards of 4,700pounds.

'We design our safes to keep out the professionals -- you alwayshave to stay one step ahead of the crooks," says Graffunder,explaining that challenge, plus the offer of a job, is what got himinto safe-building in the first place.

That was in 1958. Just 21 and newly arrived in San Francisco fromhis native Prussia, that part of pre-World War II Germany that is nowPoland, he went to work for the Mosler Safe Co. Now 70, Graffundersays experience has taught him no safe is entirely safe: "What can bemade by man can be destroyed by man. If I build something, a man canunbuild it."

For instance, he was once challenged by a European company to opena particular safe. "It took me two and a half days, but I got itopen. That why we never say a safe can't be opened. Given the timeand the know-how, there's always a way to do it."

A good safe buys that time. That's why there's different ratings."No crook can stick around five or six hours," says Graffunder, whosays the most effective combination is a good safe and a good alarmsystem.

Graffunder moved his company to Yakima because he is poised for amajor expansion. He also took in a new partner, Giussi, a Yakimaresident and former owner of the Paint & Equipment Supply Co., whichalso has outlets in Oregon and Idaho.

"We moved to Yakima because of the labor force. We couldn't findthe trained people (in LaGrande). This is more technicallychallenging than just welding something together. Also, we can buysteel from suppliers in Seattle, Portland, Spokane, Yakima and theTri-Cities."

Giussi said the local crew has grown to 10 -- seven full time andthree part time -- since work got under way last November in a 13,000square-foot leased facility on River Road. That crew is now producingat the rate of one safe per day (it takes an average of 26 man-hoursto complete a safe, depending on its size).

"Our goal is 10 a day," he said, adding that currently thecompany's safes are purchased before they're even built. The crewwill grow as new people are trained. Giussi figures he will berunning two shifts and leasing more workspace by this summer.Eventually, the company will purchase property and build its ownfacility, he said.

Until now, Graffunder has focused on direct sales to clients inthe West, mostly through the Web site and word-of-mouth. That willchange. "We're trying to set up a (nationwide) dealer distributionnetwork," says Graffunder. "We want to build up our inventory so thecustomers won't have to wait."

But pride of workmanship will remain the Graffunder hallmark.

GOP looking to limit Democratic gains in House

Democrats have the money and reach to add substantially to their House majority in November, but public sentiment is moving in Republicans' direction, according to a poll that suggests the GOP could limit those gains.

An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted Sept. 5-10 found Republicans trailing Democrats by just 5 percentage points when likely voters were asked which party they want to control Congress next year. That is a substantial improvement from the double-digit disadvantage Republicans were suffering in most public polls so far this year, although the boost could prove fleeting.

Holding a large cash advantage over the GOP, Democrats have solid chances to …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Girl's final message: 'I love you guys'

BAILEY, Colo. -- As the hours dragged by and the gunman insidePlatte Canyon High School released four hostages one by one, standingamong the desperate parents was John Keyes, wondering about the fateof his 16-year-old daughter, Emily.

Louis Gonzalez, a spokesman for the family, said the father hadjust bought Emily and her twin brother cell phones for their 16thbirthdays. As he stood near the school, he searched for a volunteerto send a text message to Emily.

"How are U?" it asked.

At 1:52 p.m., Emily messaged back: "I love you guys."

Less than two hours later, Emily was dying from a gunshot wound tothe back of her head delivered by the suicidal gunman as …

Girl's final message: 'I love you guys'

BAILEY, Colo. -- As the hours dragged by and the gunman insidePlatte Canyon High School released four hostages one by one, standingamong the desperate parents was John Keyes, wondering about the fateof his 16-year-old daughter, Emily.

Louis Gonzalez, a spokesman for the family, said the father hadjust bought Emily and her twin brother cell phones for their 16thbirthdays. As he stood near the school, he searched for a volunteerto send a text message to Emily.

"How are U?" it asked.

At 1:52 p.m., Emily messaged back: "I love you guys."

Less than two hours later, Emily was dying from a gunshot wound tothe back of her head delivered by the suicidal gunman as …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Canadians observe U.S. church/school relationship

Pittsburgh, Pa.

When the leaders of Mennonite schools met in Pittsburgh, Pa., February 18-20, there was fresh excitement about the possibility of a new relationship between the schools and Mennonite Church USA (MC USA). Although the administrators and board members of Mennonite secondary and elementary schools have a long history of meeting together, this was the first time that the colleges, universities and seminaries joined them.

The integration of the Mennonite Church and General Conference Mennonite Church raised the question of how Mennonite schools relate to the church. In 2001, MC USA created the Mennonite Education Agency (MEA) to provide a formal link. The agency …

TULSA AUTO COLLECTION CEO CALLS IT QUITS.

Don Thornton, a dealer who led the troubled Tulsa Auto Collection, has resigned.

Thornton stepped down as CEO of the Auto Collection Aug. 31. COO Bill Knight temporarily is leading the consolidation of Ford Motor Co. dealerships until a CEO is chosen, said Ford spokesman John Ochs.

Thornton, 65, had been a car dealer for 27 years when he gave up his independence and threw his experience behind the Auto Collection, a new retailing idea created by Ford.

In April 1998, Thornton, five other Oklahoma dealers and Ford pooled their resources to create a single sales and service entity covering the entire Tulsa market.

Ford's radical retailing …

A step closer to transporting natural gas hydrates.(Chementator)(Mitsui Engineering and Shipbuilding Company Ltd.'s partnership with Chugoku Electric Power Co. )(Brief article)

Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co. (MES; Tokyo, Japan; edlinks.che. com/6894-540), in cooperation with Chugoku Electric Power Co. (Hiroshima, Japan), is building a pilot plant that will produce 5-m.t./ d of natural gas hydrate (NGH). The plant, located at Chugoku Electric's Yanai Power Station (Yamagnchi, Japan), is a scaled-up version of MES's 600 kg/d pilot plant, which has been operating since 2003. As part of a $13-million project supported by New Energy & Industrial Technology Development Organization (Kawasaki, Japan), the companies plan to demonstrate the feasibility of using NGH as an alternative to liquifacation for transporting natural gas. NGH produced in the new …

IF YOU GO...(Travel)

HOW TO GET THERE: Calgary has a modern international airport with frequent service by Air Canada, American Airlines, America West and Delta Air Lines. Via Rail Canada has transcontinental train service, which can be booked in the United States through Amtrak.

Kananaskis Country is one hour southeast of Calgary on Highway 40. Lake Louise and Banff are farther northeast of Calgary on the Trans-Canada Highway No. 1.

VISA OR PASSPORT REQUIREMENTS: American citizens need only proof of citizenship, such as a birth certificate or voter's registration card. People under 18 should have a letter of authorization from a parent or guardian to travel into Canada.

Venture capitalists betting LinkedIn worth $1 billion; latest support for social networking

Four venture capital firms are betting Internet startup LinkedIn Corp. is worth $1 billion, highlighting the lofty hopes riding on online services that connect people with their friends, family and business associates.

The 10-figure valuation is implied by a $53 million investment being announced Wednesday from Bain Capital Ventures, Sequoia Capital, Greylock Partners and Bessemer Venture Partners.

The investors received a combined 5 percent stake in Mountain View-based LinkedIn, whose 5-year-old Web site helps people use the Web to advance their professional careers.

It's one of the richest appraisals for a Silicon Valley startup since Microsoft …

BUCANEER FACTS

KEY OFFSEASON ACQUISITIONS: WR Alvin Harper (Cowboys); DE MarcSpindler (Lions); KR Clarence Verdin (Falcons); S Kenneth Gant(Cowboys); S John Booty (Giants); P Reggie Roby (Redskins). KEY OFFSEASON DEPARTURES: QB Craig Erickson (Colts); S Marty Carter(Bears); KR Vernon Turner (Panthers); S Tony Covington (Seahawks); PDan Stryzinski (Falcons). QUICK FIX: The Bucs needed a big-play threat on offense, so theypurchased the one they thought was the best available in free agency:former Cowboy Alvin Harper. They expect Harper to play a much biggerrole than he did in Dallas, where he basically was a complementaryplayer behind the likes of Emmitt Smith, Michael Irvin and JayNovacek. 1994 …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Turkey launches efforts to drill water well.

Turkey's State Water Works Agency launched on Wednesday efforts to drill a water well in Somalia.

MOGADISHU Seven-member DSI team, headed by geologist Musa Yilmaz, started to drill a water well near a Turkish Red Crescent tent-site in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.

PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN RECEIVES DELEGATION LED BY LITHUANIAN PREMIER.

Baku, 21 April (AzerTAc) - President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan today at the President Palace received the delegation led by the Prime Minister of the Republic of Lithuania Gediminas Kirkilas. Head of the Azerbaijan State noted successful development of the friendly and cooperation relations between Azerbaijan and Lithuania. Speaking of the importance of reciprocal visits, President Aliyev stressed the special role of these visits in expansion of ties. The President also reminded useful cooperation of both countries on the international organizations, underlining existence of potential to develop economic links and increase mutual trade turnover. …

CBA SETS LACROSSE STANDARD.(SPORTS)

Byline: BILL ARSENAULT Staff writer

COLONIE -- The Capital District High School Lacrosse League is getting better and CBA is still the team to beat.

CBA coach Bill Dollard knows that even though the league is improving, there's still a considerable gap to close between the league and the Suburban Council.

``The Suburban has the depth and the tradition,'' Dollard said. ``But with Foothills teams like Ballston Spa, Gloversville and Scotia getting the good athletes out for the sport and, with the other schools putting in the time and effort, there's no place to go but up.''

CBA has won back-to-back Big 10 titles and three straight Capital …

KEEPING THE SILKS CLEAN IT'S A DIRTY JOB, BUT NO ONE DOES IT BETTER THAN 'BIG LOUIE'.(Living Today)

Byline: Paul Grondahl Staff writer

If you want to know the down-and-dirty details about the Saratoga Race Course, there's only one man to see.

For 23 years, Louie Olah has observed firsthand the blood, sweat and tears of Saratoga's winning and losing jockeys. Olah's the guy who makes the New York Racing Association (NYRA) run clean and colorful meet after meet.

In the sport of kings, Olah's is not the most inviting dukedom. His wash-and-wear space is cramped, steamy and noisy. Splish-splash, splish-splash...ca-chunk, ca- chunk, ca-chunk are the sounds of his workaday world.

Despite the sweatshop atmosphere and 10-hour days, Olah has managed to rule his domain with the kind of princely finesse that has made him a minor legend in Saratoga racing annals. He is NYRA's longest-running manager of jockey racing silks.

"He's the best color man in the United States," says Chuck McClendon, Olah's assistant, who has been learning at the side of the master for the past five years. "He's got an incredible memory. That's what makes him so good."

"He's been around so long, he knows where George Washington hung his silks," says Tony Pellegrino, NYRA's assistant clerk of scales, who's spent 22 years himself weighing jockeys.

"Yeah, and George didn't leave no can there," Olah shoots back in the dulcet tones of his Staten Island breeding.

As "color man," Olah presides over a dizzying array of brightly-colored jockey silks, row after row, three high, hung on …