Thursday, 15 March 2012

Merkel: Russian recognition 'not acceptable'

German Chancellor Angela Merkel condemned Russia's recognition of Georgia's two breakaway territories Tuesday as "absolutely not acceptable," but insisted Europe must still keep channels of communication open with Moscow.

The European Union said the decision by President Dmitry Medvedev, backed by the Russian parliament, to recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent was "contrary to the principles of Georgia's sovereignty and territorial integrity."

A statement released by the office of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose country currently holds the EU presidency, says the 27-member union will examine the consequences of the …

A seasonal walk for the whole family ; Nigel Vile goes for a seasonal walk that is flat, easy to follow, has pubs and tea shops along the way and a firm surface suitable for buggies so the whole family can go along

It is that time of year again - friends and family have arrived,the allure of seasonal television specials will soon have evaporatedas will the interest engendered by that much-anticipated gift.

Days stretch ahead until the new year and, with excesses to walkoff, there will be the inevitable clamour for some fresh air andexercise.

Time for an old favourite - a walk that is flat and easy tofollow, with pubs and tea shops along the way and with a firmsurface that is suitable for buggies so that the whole family cancome along. Time to head off to Bradford on Avon and the Barton FarmCountry Park.

The picturesque Wiltshire town of Bradford grew up around a"broad …

Stocks Slip but Show Signs of Stability

NEW YORK - Stocks fell slightly but showed more signs of stability Wednesday as investors sifted through new economic data and found little reason to resume last week's heavy selling pace.

The stock indexes wavered in a narrow range, reacting little to comments from Chicago Fed President Michael Moskow that inflation remains stubborn and that interest rate increases might be needed to contain costs. The stock market was similarly unimpressed by data showing a weaker jobs picture and sluggishness in some areas of the country.

Investors in the past week have harbored concerns about a global economic slowdown and have been looking at data to try to determine whether the U.S. …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Australia beats South Africa by 175 runs in 2nd test

Australia beat South Africa by 175 runs in the second test at Kingsmead on Tuesday to lead 2-0 in the three-match test series:

Scores:

___

Australia: 352 (Phillip Hughes 115, Simon Katich 108, Michael …

Conde Nast shakes up top ranks in search of growth

Publisher Conde Nast is shuffling its top ranks as it looks to boost growth amid a deep advertising slump across the magazine industry.

Among other changes, the company said Friday that it will split up the roles of President and CEO. Robert Sauerberg, previously head of the company's consumer marketing …

Direct radiative effect of aerosols

Aerosols help cool the climate by reflecting solar radiation back to space. Because the concentrations of these tiny suspended particles vary greatly in the atmosphere, however, global distributions of their physical and radiative properties are highly uncertain. Satellite measurements of aerosols provide the most reliable means of reducing these uncertainties and offer vital information for verifying global climate model simulations involving aerosols.

Using measurements from the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) instrument on board the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) spacecraft, we recently studied the top-of-atmosphere direct radiative effect of …

Miami Dolphins beat Baltimore Ravens in overtime for 1st win, 22-16

The Miami Dolphins finally won. They ended a 16-game losing streak since last season by beating the Baltimore Ravens 22-16 in overtime on Sunday.

With their first victory since Dec. 10, 2006, the Dolphins avoided matching the worst start in NFL history. They'd started this season losing their first 13 games.

Baltimore's Matt Stover missed a 44-yard field goal in the extra period, and Miami's Greg Camarillo turned a short completion into a 64-yard touchdown for the winning score, with the 1972 perfect-season Dolphins cheering them on.

The Ravens lost their eighth game in a row, extending a franchise record.

Patriots 20, Jets 10

Ann Hamilton

SAINT LOUIS

Ann Hamilton

PULITZER FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS

This past summer Ann Hamilton installed stylus, 2010, a single, institution-spanning, multipart work at the Pulitizer Foundation for the Arts (where it remains on view through January 22). In so doing, she carried on the engagement with the topos of communication - textual, vocal, aural, recorded - that has grounded much of her work. But while stylus has the distinction of being Hamilton's most interactive project to date, offering viewers multiple points of ingress and opportunities for participation, the resulting exchanges remain profoundly elusive. Interaction is invited, but rewards are deferred; and …

Germany beats Portugal 3-2 to reach Euro 2008 semifinals

After it was all over, Michael Ballack was dancing on the field, being serenaded by thousands of German fans. Cristiano Ronaldo, however, had already beaten a quick retreat into the bowels of the stadium, head hanging low.

After running riot through the tournament with nifty moves and flashy combination, the Portugal winger had no answer Thursday when faced with the solid, unyielding Germans. In the end, three-time champion Germany reached the European Championship semifinals by beating Portugal 3-2.

Ballack scored. Ronaldo did not. Ballack was all over the field, guiding his team. Ronaldo too often was all over the place.

"I did my …

Suspect felt himself 'getting weirder': Oklahoma man accused of killing girl, planning cannibalism

PURCELL, Okla. -- Kevin Ray Underwood's blog talks about theweather, movies, books, life in rural Oklahoma and -- especially inmore recent posts -- feeling isolated, depressed and even homicidal.

He wrote in September 2004, "my fantasies are just getting weirderand weirder. Dangerously weird. If people knew the kinds of things Ithink about anymore, I'd probably be locked away. No probably aboutit, I know I would be."

In February the 26-year-old described sitting at his computer for14 hours on his day off, while weeks of garbage sat in the kitchen.

"Pretty much the only time I believe in God is when I blame himfor something," he said. "Or, when I'm really …

Commercial Real Estate & Construction

In conjunction with what some may consider a shaky economy over the past year, Fort Wayne area builders and commercial real estate professionals have seen a similar trend in industry activity. According to the Community Research Institute at Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort Wayne, data received monthly relating to the value of new commercial permits is considered "volatile," and is smoothed by calculating a 12-month average.

This method helps to identify underlying trends. The dollar value of commercial construction in Allen County was estimated at about $25 million at the end of 2001, failing throughout 2002 to around the $15 million mark.

Similarly, local data documenting commercial construction permits (based on dollar value) shows a decrease since 2001, from approximately $18 million to $13 million.

Fort Wayne data also seems to have followed a somewhat erratic pattern, with slow growth between 1995 and 1999, followed by a dramatic surge in mid-1999, which then gave way to a sudden decline in early- to mid-2001.

Most area professionals in commercial real estate, however, including the ones you'll read about in the following pages, remain optimistic that factors like historically low interest rates will help to boost spending in the commercial real estate and construction sector. A spike in spending in commercial real estate and construction, many believe, could be a crucial forerunner in a rebound in the overall economical picture in the U.S.

The companies featured here should certainly know about the future of the commercial real estate and construction field. From beginning to end, these businesses run the full spectrum of the commercial real estate experience, bringing a world of possibilities to life for any type of area business.

You'll read about VSI Mortgage Services Inc., who specializes in providing the crucial financing that brings dreams to fruition for those striving to succeed in the business world. VSI is adept at commercial financing for a wide variety of business facilities to a wealth of customers.

You'll also learn about solution-minded commercial builder Miller-Valentine Group, a leading company in its field. MVG has been called by countless area companies to provide the best in all types of commercial facilities.

Specialty contractors, such as Fort Wayne Roofing and Schmidt Electric, are also a crucial component in literally making a new commercial building physically outstanding outstanding from top to bottom, as well as inside and out.

Then you'll also get to read about Protechs, a company with the amazing ability to take commercial facilities damaged by water, fire or smoke, many times catastrophically, and make them look, feel and operate just like new again. With the character of companies in the commercial real estate and construction field that do business here in northeast Indiana, it's easy to understand how people can continue to be optimistic about the future. It's hard not to see how economy will get a boost soon, because services like these are always in demand.

Program offers free medication for those in need

Prescription drugs have revolutionized the way we age, helping tostave off complications of chronic conditions or recover from acutediseases. But many people are missing out because they can't affordthe medicines.

Medicare doesn't pay for out-of-hospital prescription drugs, andonly the most expensive medigap policies cover them. Most MedicareHMOs do include such coverage, but increasingly they are capping howmuch they will pay for prescription drugs each year.

But for people with limited incomes, there's another option. TheMedicine Program, a nonprofit volunteer organization, putsindividuals in touch with drug manufacturers willing to supply freemedication.

Most drug manufacturers offer free medicine to those in need, saysMark Grayson, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Researchers andManufacturers Association, but each company has its own requirementsand application, and most consumers don't know about the programs.

Dan Hogg, founder of the program, says most successful applicantshave incomes that are too high for Medicaid but not high enough tobuy health coverage that provides drug benefits. Even if you don'tfit that description, you probably know someone who does.

Here's how it works:

You fill out an application, which you can obtain by calling (573)778-1118 or visiting the organization's Web site atwww.themedicineprogram.com, and send it in with $5 per prescription.

You'll receive back an application packet and a letter for you togive your doctor asking for his or her help in completing theapplication. If you are approved, the company will send a freethree- month supply of medication to your doctor.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Library clash could put George W. Bush under oath

A Texan is trying to put a former president under oath and find out what he knew and when he knew it. But the issue isn't national security, political skullduggery or a sex scandal.

It's a property dispute involving George W. Bush's presidential library at Southern Methodist University.

Gary Vodicka, who was forced out of his condominium by SMU to make way for the project, contends the university coveted the property as the future site of the library even before Bush ran for the White House, and lied about its intentions.

On April 17, a Texas district judge ordered the former president to appear at a deposition to answer Vodicka's questions about the library's planning stages.

"I was humbled by the ruling," said Vodicka, 49, a lawyer who is representing himself in the case against SMU. "No one person is supposed to be above the law. And Bush is trying to act like he is."

The order has been stayed pending an appeal, but if it stands, it could be historic: No sitting or former president ever has been forced to testify in a state court proceeding, according to John Martin, one of Bush's attorneys.

Martin and an SMU attorney expressed confidence that the order would be overturned, saying the former president has no information of value to offer in the dispute.

"I think his deposition is irrelevant and an effort to make this case more important than it is," said Mark Lanier, the attorney for SMU.

The lawsuit centers on SMU's acquisition of University Gardens, a run-down, 40-year-old condominium complex across the street from the university.

SMU decided at the end of 1998 to begin buying up the approximately 350 units. Through a realty company called Peruna _ the name of the college's mascot _ SMU bought enough units to gain a majority of seats on the board of the homeowners association. It filled those seats with SMU employees and others affiliated with the university who did not own units or live at the complex.

The school eventually bought out all but two condo owners: Vodicka, who has four units, and another man with a single unit. About $800,000 from SMU is sitting in an escrow account for the two men to split if they want it, the SMU attorney said.

Citing problems with asbestos, the roof, mold and sewer lines, the school bulldozed the condos in 2006. Later that year, it became apparent SMU would be the site of Bush's library. The land upon which the condos once sat will be part of the library grounds.

Both sides agree on that much. They disagree on whether the school lied about its intentions and breached its legal duty to the other condo owners by letting the place fall into disrepair so that it could be torn down.

Vodicka alleges SMU officials began angling for the presidential library as far back as 1998, when Bush was governor of Texas and had not announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. He says the school acquired the condo property with the library project in mind.

"Bush floated the idea amongst his family, his close friends, his supporters, for probably a year before he made the announcement," Vodicka said. "So, yes. They knew."

Lanier scoffed at the accusation and the accuser, saying that Vodicka, "bless his heart, is a man of many suits." Vodicka, an SMU law school graduate who would not disclose his political affiliation, has been a party to more than a dozen lawsuits in Dallas County alone.

"It's not some big conspiracy," Lanier said. "There was no crystal ball-gazing that Bush would be elected and ultimately after eight years would give his library to SMU and we would need that property. That was not a consideration."

In his order, Judge Martin J. Hoffman said the former president "clearly has relevant and material information about the central issues of this case. He was involved in critical discussion about the presidential library at a time when SMU was purchasing units at University Gardens." But the judge rejected Vodicka's effort to compel Bush's wife, Laura, to testify as well.

There have been several instances in which a sitting or former president testified in a court proceeding, civil or criminal. President Thomas Jefferson gave a deposition in the treason trial of Aaron Burr, and Bill Clinton did the same in the criminal case against Whitewater defendant Jim McDougal. But Bush's attorney said all of those cases were in federal court.

In their appeal, Bush's lawyers wrote that the federal courts have generally held that presidential testimony is necessary "only where there are allegations that the president or someone closely associated with him engaged in improper conduct." And the lawsuit does not accuse Bush of any wrongdoing.

Officials hope to break ground on the project next year and open it in 2013.

Vodicka turned down $1 million to drop the case, according to SMU's Lanier, who said the lawsuit is simply an attempt to get more money out of the university.

But Vodicka said his case is about principle, and he is convinced he will get his property back _ even if the condos are long gone.

"I think I'll own my land by the time this is all over," he said. "I'm going to pitch a tent, play golf and set up an Obama lemonade stand."

START Over

Five years ago at the signing ceremony for the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), President George W. Bush claimed the agreement "liquidates the Cold War legacy of nuclear hostility" between the United States and Russia. Think again. Although SORT calls for deeper reductions in deployed strategic nuclear warheads, to 1,700-2,200 each by 2012, it has not liquidated the weapons nor mutual nuclear suspicions.

The treaty's emphasis on flexibility detracts from its predictability, lessening its value in building a more stable and secure U.S.-Russian relationship. Unlike the earlier Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) approach, SORT does not require the destruction of strategic delivery systems. SORT also allows each side to store nondeployed warheads. The treaty fails to establish new verification mechanisms, relying instead on those contained in START.

Now, news reports indicate that neither government wants to extend START past its scheduled expiration on Dec. 5, 2009. Although the 1991 treaty may require adjustments to reflect present-day realities, it serves as an important foundation for deeper, faster, and irreversible reductions in U.S. and Russian arsenals that would head off renewed strategic competition.

U.S. plans to install missile interceptors in Poland have added to Russian concerns that the United States might redeploy its reserve nuclear forces and utilize leftover nuclear delivery systems for conventional strike missions. In response, President Vladimir Putin has authorized new strategic missile systems and plans to increase the number of warheads carried by certain missile systems. Putin also has threatened to withdraw from the 1987 U.S.-Russian treaty banning intermediate-range nuclear forces.

The loss of START would complicate an increasingly complicated relationship. START was a breakthrough agreement that helped end the Cold War. It slashed strategic nuclear forces from approximately 10,000 warheads each to no more than 6,000 apiece by December 5, 2001. The accord also limits each side to 1,600 strategic delivery vehicles (land- and submarine-based ballistic missiles, plus heavy bombers).

In addition, START established a far-reaching system of notifications and inspections that provides an accurate assessment of the size and location of each side's forces. In 2002, the intelligence community warned that its ability to monitor SORT would be significantly compromised in the absence of START. If no new verification mechanisms are established, a former U.S. verification official told Arms Control Today in 2005 that the two countries would be "flying blind" in their nuclear relationship.

U.S. and Russian experts began discussions in March on followon measures to START, but the two sides are at odds over several core issues. Russia favors negotiating a new treaty that would reduce strategic nuclear warheads to less than 1,500 each, with additional limits on delivery systems. The Bush administration rejects further weapons limits and prefers new, informal transparency and confidence-building measures.

Both sides want some verification measures after START. But Russia claims that more intrusive measures, such as on-site inspections, would need to be included in a legally binding agreement as required by Russia's domestic laws. U.S. negotiators argue for understandings that would allow for "visits" to each other's weapons storage sites.

What should be done? Informal transparency measures may be helpful but provide too little certainty and do nothing to achieve deeper and more lasting force reductions. On the other hand, given the Bush administration's antipathy toward arms control treaties, the prospects for a new legally binding agreement before the end of 2008 look dim. The next U.S. president will have limited time to work out a new arrangement before START lapses.

Rather than allow the pact to expire or mask long-simmering differences with halfway measures, Bush's and Putin's successors should agree to continue to observe START until they can enter into a new agreement that achieves what SORT did not: permanent and verifiable reductions of excess U.S. and Russian Cold War nuclear forces. A new treaty with streamlined START-style verification protocols is necessary to restore confidence that each country will actually dismantle, not simply warehouse, warheads and missiles originally deployed to destroy the other.

Such an agreement should map out permanent, phased reductions of all strategic nuclear warheads, deployed and reserve, to a level of 1,000 or less and establish ceilings on the number of non-nuclear strategic missiles. As the two sides' strategic arsenals shrink, they must also account for and agree to scrap Russia's residual arsenal of at least 3,000 tactical nuclear warheads, as well as the smaller U.S. stockpile, which includes 480 warheads stationed in Europe.

The year 2009 will mark two decades since the fall of the Berlin Wall. The United States and Russia are no longer enemies, yet their still massive nuclear arsenals continue to engender distrust and worst-case assumptions. What is required is a new push for real nuclear reductions based on the proven principles of START.

[Sidebar]

The loss of START would complicate an increasingly complicated U.S.-Russian relationship.

[Author Affiliation]

By Daryl G. Kimball

Executive Director

WILD-CARD RACE

A look at the wild-card race for the fourth playoff spot in theNational League:

TEAM W L GB 1. Astros 57 49 - 2. L.A.; Colo. 56 51 1 1/2 3. Padres 53 52 3 1/2 3. Phillies 54 53 3 1/2 5. CUBS 53 53 4

First-rate 'Quiet Man' speaks volumes about Irish culture

THEATER REVIEW

'THE QUIET MAN TALES'

RECOMMENDED

- Through May 24

- Chicago Theatre Downstairs, 175 N. State

- Tickets, $42.50-$49.50

- (312) 902-1500

Three weddings, one funeral, a war for independence, a bit of spycraft and potential terrorism, several betrayals and one knock-down, drag-out fistfight designed to re-establish manhood. And that's just the start of it with "The Quiet Man Tales," the beguiling world-premiere stage adaptation of Irish writer Maurice Walsh's classic 1935 short story collection -- also the source of the 1952 Academy Award-winning film starring Maureen O'Hara and John Wayne.

The list of what goes on in this play -- now receiving a heartfelt rendering in the Chicago Theatre's Downstairs space -- would not be complete without noting the bouts of drinking, bursts of song, heartbreak, comedy, chicanery, horse racing, displays of friendship and tragicomic mischief that all help to make this tapestry of Irish life, circa 1921, so rich and vivid.

Adapted here by Frank Mahon and Milissa Pacelli, directed with a fine sense of shifting tones by Susan Felder and performed by a large, first-rate cast that captures the time, place, manners and accents of the characters with impressive authenticity, "The Quiet Man Tales" could easily be a miniseries. But the adapters have telescoped a slew of political and romantic machinations into a 2�-hour running time (a few trims might be in order), and there is great pleasure to be had in following the destinies of these complex, often conflicted characters.

The Irish War for Independence is the backdrop for the story, with tensions, as well as unexpected bonds revealed to exist among the English, the Scots and the rebellious Irish. But it's several on-again, off-again romances that are of the essence here.

Paddy Brown (a wonderfully internalized performance by Ron Rains) is the sweet-spirited prizefighter who has been to war, and to America. He is tired of fighting, except for the love of Ellen Roe (deftly shaded work by Cassandra Bissell), the vaguely spinsterish sister kept under the thumb of her wealthy and selfish, tight-fisted brother (Bret Tuomi). Rains and Bissell are no love match at the start, but the two actors beautifully limn the evolution of a marriage in countless touching ways.

Actors Scott Cummins and Karin Woditsch also move skillfully through the many twists and turns of a relationship in which her character proudly closes the door on his seeming flirtations with a cousin, Nuala (Regina Leslie), who played a crucial role as a spy during the war. He sinks into an alcoholic depression. And Nuala goes on to enchant a most decent Scotsman (played by Aaron Christensen) and to make use of an English theater impresario (Eric Leonard) who doesn't realize he has met his match in treachery.

Meanwhile, there is much to enjoy in the buoyant antics of Paddy's pals (Christopher Genovese, Robert Allan Smith and Travis Williams) and one spoiled Scottish girl (Eliza Stoughton).

Although Jeff Bauer's sets and Lindsey Pate's stylish costumes alleviate the distracting space problems of the Downstairs theater, what is really needed here is an architect who can re-envision this basement area with its low ceiling so that the stage and sightlines are more modern and workable.

The theater's dedicated entrance (in the alley just off State Street) and an improvised intermission bar (with Irish specialty drinks doing a brisk business) are pluses. And a pre-show live music segment -- featuring the superb Kathleen Keane (violinist, pipe player and step dancer) and Declan Fahy -- are a treat. Four shamrocks for "The Quiet Man Tales."

Photo: Cassandra Bissell and Ron Rains star in "The Quiet Man Tales" at the Chicago Theatre Downstairs. ;

Madrid's Pepe to undergo tests on injured knee

Real Madrid defender Pepe will undergo medical tests to determine the extent of his knee injury.

The Portugal center back will be examined Sunday amid fears he may have injured ligaments after being carried off the field on a stretcher in Madrid's 3-2 win over Valencia at Mestalla Stadium in the Spanish league on Saturday.

He landed awkwardly after an aerial challenge with Valencia striker David Villa in the 45th minute of the match.

Madrid is second in the standings with 34 points, five behind Barcelona, which has played a game more.

Pepe joined Madrid from FC Porto in 2007 for euro30 million ($41 million).

SOLAR-POWERED SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY TO SUPPLY 30 PERCENT OF ELECTRICAL NEEDS

Oahu, Hawaii

A new residential solar-powered community for the U.S. Army on Oahu will provide about 30 percent of its electrical needs through seven megawatts of photovoltaic paneling. This 1,702-acre community transformation - a project of Actus Lend Lease, a public/private community developer - will integrate renewable energy sources and sustainable design solutions. The U.S. Army Hawaii initiative marks the first time a grid-connected project will be profitable enough to install PV solar panels without subsidies. Actus Lend Lease's project will replace traditional fossil fuel generation - saving approximately 18,000 barrels of oil each year. Roughly 65 percent of the demolition waste will be reused in the form of asphalt or other building materials. No old appliance, door or window will be landfilled before first being offered to low-income residents in surrounding neighborhoods.

Spiderbaby: The Twin Cities' favorite (gay) wrestler

The results are in. The "Best Wrestler of 2009" - at least in the Twin Cities - is a gay man.

But the bigger news might be that "SpiderBaby "'s selection has caused no news frenzy at all.

More interesting may be the fact that SpiderBaby - the "nom de mat" of Terranee Griep - made the transition from villain to fan favorite in just six years. And he did it partly because of- not in spite of- his sexuality.

Griep's route to wrestling began when he was 5. Then, at that young age, he did not understand the sport's homoerotic subtext; he simply liked the characters, the simplicity of good-versus-evil and the action.

At 5, Griep also had his first crush though he recognizes it only in hindsight: "It was the drummer kid from the Partridge Family!" he laughs. "I wanted him to be my pal."

Griep's first career was writing. His outlets ranged from gay magazines like The Advocate to comic books. But when his income driedup in the economic downturn of 200 1 , he looked around Minnesota- where he had grown up - for new sources.

A wrestling show needed a color commentator. Griep thought that might lead to an interesting writing market. But as he bartered his writing for training - he also wanted to learn how to fall without getting hurt - Griep realized he had "a talent for teeing off drunken fans." He'd found his niche.

Griep was already out to many in his life. But when someone Googled the new grappler, the word got, well, out in the wrestling world. No one said anything to his face, though a colleague alluded to his Advocate.com piece, "How Spider-Man Saved My Life." (That story - about the important influence of a superhero who also dealt with the normal struggles of adolescence - foreshadowed Griep's creation of his own "SpiderBaby" character.)

Griep soon realized that - although he was a villain - he could use sexuality to his advantage. "I actually sent a positive message," he recalls. "You could boo me because I cheated on the mat, or was reprehensible. But you couldn't boo me just because I was gay." In other words: Boo me for what I do, not who I am.

Griep conveyed that nuanced message when a group of teenage boys chanted: 'You are gay" (clap-clap-clap). SpiderBaby went over to them and responded: "You say that like it's bad!" (clap-clap-clap). The crowd turned on the youths; they soon shut up.

In Wisconsin, Griep was surprised to hear his opponent call him a "fag." "That gave the crowd permission to be hostile," Griep says. "When I won, I waved my belt in front of their noses. They just stared straight ahead."

As SpiderBaby became known as a gay wrestler, more and more audiences admired his "outness." Today he is a�ero.

Pro wrestling straddles the line between sports and entertainment. It also is burdened with decades of stereotypes.

"The cigar- smoking, beer-drinking white guy getting his thrills watching the bad man get beat up - that hasn't been true for 25 years," Griep claims. "Our audiences are the full age range, all income levels, every demographic. People understand it's a catharsis. If the stereotypes were true, it wouldn't be as popular as it is."

However, he adds, pro wrestling is not as advanced as other areas of society. Most gay fans remain closeted, and the number of out wrestlers and promoters is tiny.

Griep recalls fearing the reactions of fans and fellow wrestlers when they realized he was "exchanging body fluids in the ring" with a gay man. "Maybe people don't feel welcome because there are not more of us," he says. "Wrestling definitely does not have a gay tradition."

Even his own gay friends don't fully understand the sport and how homosexuality fits into it. "They either find wrestling repugnant, or they think it's some kind of stylized S&M," Griep says.

But enough people do love the sport to make it popular - and to lead "City Pages," the Twin Cities' alternative newspaper, to make "Best Wrestler" one of its 2009 categories.

Crowds react to SpiderBaby because of how he wrestles, "not because he likes to kiss guys," "City Pages" wrote.

Griep appreciates the honor. But true to SpiderBaby's character, he deflects it abit. "I've been billing myself as the Most Formidable Wrestler in Sector 2814, which is Green Lantern's jurisdiction," he says. "So to be told I'm the best wrestler in two cities on one planet feels like something of a demotion, I guess.

Still, he notes, "a generation ago, working a gay gimmick was the surest way to get a wrestling crowd to boo. Now they've rounded the bend. God bless 'em."

You can take that to the mat.

Dan Woog is a journalist, educator, soccer coach, gay activist, and author of the "Jocks" series of books on gay male athletes. Visit his Web site at www.danwoog.com. He can be reached care of this publication or at OutField@qsyndicate.com.

MIXED MSW COMPOSTING IN TRANSITION

BIOCYCLE NATIONWIDE SURVEY

With two mixed MSW plants going source separated, and another redefining itself as "mixed waste," the 2007 facility survey finds 13 operating plants in the U.S.

Part I

WITHOUT a doubt, composting the mixed municipal solid waste stream is a "niche" business. It is an MSW management option that seems to be viable in very specific situations. In some instances, these plants were built to service tourist destinations, often in somewhat rural areas where recycling is difficult and landfills are distant. In several other cases, public agencies built plants to extend the life of an existing landfill. And in almost every case where the facilities appear to be doing well, there is a very apparent dedication to ensuring the success of the public investment in mixed waste composting.

BioCycle divides its annual survey of municipal solid waste (MSW) composting into two parts. Part I focuses on facilities that were built to process mixed (unsorted) MSW. Part II, to appear in the December 2007 issue, will report on composting of source separated MSW, where residents sort their household waste into compostables, recyclables and trash. In each case, to qualify for this survey, a composting facility has to be processing residential feedstocks other than yard trimmings only.

Table 1 lists the mixed MSW composting facilities in the United States. The first facility on the list, operated by the PinetopLakeside Sanitary District in Pinetop, Arizona, is included only because it was processing mixed MSW for about half of this year. Starting in September, however, the plant completely switched over to using paper and cardboard - instead of mixed MSW - as a bulking agent for biosolids composting. Another facility on the list, Dodge County, Minnesota, is in a similar situation, having switched from composting mixed waste to composting only source separated organics during 2007. There is a new facility on the list - Z-Best Composting in Gilroy, California. However, this is not a new facility, but instead, a transfer from our list of source separated MSW composting operations. Notes Michael Gross of Z-Best, "we really fit in the mixed waste category."

As a result, BioCycle reports a total of 13 mixed municipal solid waste composting operations in 2007. To the best of our knowledge, no new plants appear to be in planning or development.

FACILITY ROUND-UP

Pinetop-Lakeside, Arizona: This small composting plant that opened in 1991 recently completed a transition from a traditional mixed MSW processing facility to one only taking in source separated loads of feedstocks - in this case paper and cardboard, and biosolids. Therefore, this is the last time Pinetop-Lakeside Sanitary District's (PLSD) operation will appear in this mixed waste composting report.

It took almost a year to convert the 22 tons/day cocomposting facility to source separated paper and cardboard as the bulking agent for PLSD's biosolids, incrementally backing out mixed MSW. The facility expected to screen its first batch of virtually glass-free compost the first week of November. As reported in BioCycle's 2006 survey of MSW plants, the PLSD had started working with the region's largest waste hauler, Waste Management (WM), to offer free front-load dumpsters and collection of paper and cardboard to willing businesses and institutions. The remote location of the resort community of Pinetop makes it financially challenging to recycle paper and cardboard since the materials have to be transported to markets a couple hundred miles south in Phoenix. Except for a few large commercial generators such as Wal-Mart, which have the quantity of cardboard to justify their own baler, most commercial haulers and their commercial and institutional customers could not justify the cost of paper and cardboard recycling programs in these mountain communities of northeast Arizona. Therefore, PLSD teamed up with WM to offer the new program. As the number of new paper customers increased, WM brought less mixed MSW to the compost plant.

The primary driver for this change was glass contamination in the compost, which for more than 15 years had been tolerated by the soil companies purchasing the facility's product, primarily for its organic content. However, according to Phil Hayes, the compost facility manager who has been operating the plant since its start 16 years ago, the influx of new higher-end residential development and golf course communities has led to a demand for higher quality compost. "Working with Dave Smith, PLSD's manager, we decided to morph the plant over to a source separated composting facility," explains Hayes. "It was primarily a financial decision, due to a combination of high residue disposal costs and a decrease in the bid prices we were getting for our 2,000 cubic yards (cy) of compost each year. Our compost used to be purchased for $7/cy with several bidders, but in the last couple of years we only had one bid at $4/cy. An even bigger cost factor is residue disposal, where we used to ship one 50 cy compactor of primary trommel residue every four days to the landfill, plus one open top 40 cy container of tip floor sorted material every two weeks. Since replacing all loads of mixed MSW with paper/cardboard loads in September, we haven't even sent out one compactor load in the last month, and only one open top container. We still get the inevitable trash that some residents, but primarily tourists, slip into the unlocked paper dumpsters scattered at about 60 locations throughout the area."

The PLSD composting facility is processing (on a weekly basis) about 12.5 tons of paper and cardboard in a 1:1 blend of wood chips and around 34.5 wet tons of dewatered biosolids. It has taken some trial and error to get the optimal recipes. A belt press installed last year dewaters sludge to 17 percent solids (compared to nine percent solids with the old press). The higher solids, combined with the paper/cardboard that absorbs more moisture than the mixed MSW, enables more biosolids to be processed through the rotary drum. "My recipe is basically three to six times more paper/cardboard, by weight, than biosolids, plus an equal volume of wood chips per volume of biosolids," he explains. Regarding food waste, Hayes said they tried to work with some restaurants and the high school cafeteria but had problems with contaminants, plus the high moisture content cut into the amount of biosolids that could be processed.

PLSD does not get paid by WM to take the paper/cardboard, but has offset the loss of tip fees with much lower residue disposal costs, and higher quality compost. Hayes now has the Blue Ridge High School participating in the paper recycling program, something that was not happening previously, and has painted a sign on the recycling trailer to give visibility to the program. He also reports that the hospital, police station and other schools are participating. A new aspect of the program is confidential document destruction, with 25 law offices and the school system regularly bringing discarded files to the facility, and witnessing their papers going up the conveyor and dropping into the rotary vessels' steaming brew of biosolids. "We even took out an ad in the paper to promote confidential document destruction, and our users have found that they do not have to use a shredder in the office, and they can leave the material in three-ring binders and paper clips since our screening system removes those contaminants," says Hayes.

Gilroy, California: The Z-Best Composting site south of Gilroy was permitted in 1998 to accept up to 1,300 tons/day of curbside collected yard trimmings. In 2001, Z-Best was permitted to process municipal solid waste at the site as well. A sorting line was installed at the facility, which included hand sorting stations, as well as a BHS debagger, disc screen and a shredder. Materials passing through the 3-inch minus shredder were composted in Ag Bags. The company targeted "organics-rich" compactors, primarily from its commercial collection routes as well some residential. In addition to the compactor loads, the facility takes in screenings from a dirty MRF in Sunnyvale operated by a sister company, Zanker Material Processing Facility. "We receive about 280 tons/day of mixed waste, including the dirty MRF screenings, MSW from residential sources and commingled garbage and yard waste," says Michael Gross of Z-Best Composting.

Z-Best is in the process of changing its operations at several of its recycling facilities in the San Jose region. As a result, it is dismantling the front-end processing plant at the Gilroy site. "All materials will go through our new MSW MRF in San Jose," adds Gross. "Processed material that has been cleaned will be hauled to Gilroy for composting. This way, we won't have to haul residuals back to our landfill. It is a better use of that composting site."

Mariposa County, California: The Mariposa County mixed waste composting plant began operating in the summer of 2006. The facility is designed to process 60 tons/day of material from residents and businesses in Mariposa County, as well as Yosemite National Park. Finished compost is used for daily cover at the county's landfill. Equipment at the plant includes a Bulk Handling Systems sorting line (including a debagger) and SV Composter vessels from Engineered Compost Systems (ECS). In the fall of 2006, there were some odor complaints that needed to be ad dressed. Part of the problemwas traced to the biofilter, which wasn't functioning properly. ECS rewetted and reformed the media, added additional material and put an exhaust air humidifier that had been installed initially but wasn'tin operation at that time, back in service. Odor emissions were significantly reduced both in frequency and severity, reports ECS.

Cobb County, Georgia: The Cobb County mixed waste composting plant opened in 1996 to process 300 tons/day of mixed waste with 100 tons/day of biosolids. As reported in last year's BioCycle, the facility is operating at 200 tons/day. Operations have not changed much during 2007. The compost is a mixture of MSW and treated sewage sludge, which enters rotating drums for three days, and then is screened and placed in aerated windrows for 28 days. After a second and final screening, its Bio-Blend compost is offered free to residents for individual use, and is available for commercial sales by appointment.

Marlborough, Massachusetts: Starting its eighth year of operation this fall, this 120 tons/day rotary drum cocomposting facility processed 34,000 tons of mixed MSW, 12,000 tons of biosolids and 8,000 tons of source separated organics. According to Chris Ravenscroft, President of WeCare Environmental, owner and operator of the facility under contract to the City of Marlborough to process its MSW, it had to reduce the quantity of biosolids processed through the facility and have continued to identify new, clean sources of organic wastes, such as supermarkets.

The facility produces approximately 30,000 cy of compost per year, with 15 percent sold for $4 to $8/cy, and the balance distributed at the cost of transportation. Compost is used for topdressing existing lawns and athletic fields, as well as to manufacture topsoil. The compost is screened through a 3/8-inch McCloskey trommel screen. "We find that the markets have a very low tolerance for contamination," says Ravenscroft. The residue rate from material processed through the composting system is approximately 35 percent.

Nantucket, Massachusetts: On the Island of Nantucket off the coast of Cape Cod, Waste Options, Inc. continues to operate the 125 tons/day MSW and biosolids cocomposting facility under a 25-year contract with the Town of Nantucket. The last two years have focused on compost marketing, and Whitney Hall, President of Waste Options, reports that demand for the compost and organic topsoil continues to grow. "Landscapers who bring in yard waste are our largest customers, and we sell more topsoil than straight compost," he says. "We also have some distributors who take bulk deliveries and market the product."

The MSW compost is refined with a bivi-TEC screen and a destoner to remove glass, and then blended with ground yard trimmings for further curing. One modification to the blending recipe has been to cut back on the amount of chipped wood and brush and use more leaves and wood fines. Hall explains that this results in less wood and sticks to screen out of the final product. "Instead of using a 3/8-inch screen in the McCloskey trommel, we are using a one-half inch screen," he notes. Waste Options has a sliding scale price for the organic topsoil, with discounts for larger quantities -1-6 cy is $35/cy; 7-16 cy is $30/cy; and >16 cy is $25/cy. Fifty percent of compost sales revenues go to the Town.

As for possible changes at the facility, Hall says Waste Options is investigating the use of pyrolyis, a high temperature process that would extract combustible gas from the compost facility residuals, and construction and demolition debris. The gas would be used to generate electricity to power the plant. "I have looked at two operating pyrolysis facilities and have discussed it with the Town and the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)," he says. "It appears that the process could be permitted by the DEP. A quick look at the economics indicates that it could be viable, so the Town is forming a committee and hiring a consultant to assist with a feasibility study."

Dodge County, Minnesota: The Dodge County Transfer and MSW Compost Facility in Mantorville switched from processing mixed waste in its Nature Tech composting vessels in 2007 to only source separated organics from grocery stores and other commercial sources. The facility still has a permit from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to compost MSW. The site currently produces 1,500 tons of compost a year, which is being stockpiled until tests are complete. Tipping fees are $45/ton for source separated organics and $86/ton for garbage at the transfer station. Screening is contracted to an outside company, using a 3/4-inch screen.

Truman, Minnesota: The Prairieland Solid Waste District steadily processes 65 tons/day in its OTVD agitated bay composting system, with no plans to expand capacity. A portion of the residuals from the process are burned as refuse-derived fuel (RDF). According to the facility's director, Mark Bauman, if demand for RDF expands, the District might install an additional shredder to produce more fuel. It still produces 3,000 tons/year of compost, and will land spread it for no charge. A fee for trucking is charged to haul compost to farmers, and eventually, when demand increases, a small fee will be charged for the compost. In the last year, there has been growing demand for the end product to use in animal mortality composting, particularly with the swine industry. Pork producers use the compost as an amendment to process piglet mortalities, and the occasional sow.

The facility's tipping fee is currently $75/ton. A bivi-TEC is used to screen the compost to five millimeters. Due to fluctuating levels of lead, the District's compost is usually Class 2. "We landfill some residuals that could be used for fuel, but just don't have capacity in area to burn it at this time," says Bauman.

West Yellowstone, Montana: The West Yellowstone Compost Facility, operated by the Hebgen/West Yellowstone Refuse District, is designed processes 3,000 tons/year of mixed MSW. It uses an in-vessel composting system supplied by Engineered Compost Systems. "We accept mixed MSW from Yellowstone National Park only," explains Kathy O'Hern, facility manager. "The Park's waste stream includes a small amount of residential material. The remaining waste stream consists of waste generated in campgrounds, concessionaire restaurants and hotels, roadside bins and the Park's trade shops, e.g., electrical, plumbing and woodshops."

The plant opened in July 2003. Initially, it also accepted biosolids from the park. "The only change we made to our operations in 2007 was to stop accepting biosolids," adds O'Hern. "Although we are permitted to handle biosolids, we found that this material does not work well in our incline coreless auger conveyor." During 2008, the facility is planning to add a road kill composting program for the bison hit on local highways.

About 2,000 cy/year of compost are produced. It is sold in bulk for $15/cy. The facility has a bivi-TEC screen and a Forsberg destoner to remove contaminants from the compost. "About 95 percent of the contaminants are removed," she says. "The final compost continues to contain small flecks of colorful plastic picnic ware." Overall, residue from operations accounts for about 50 percent of the total incoming waste stream. "We receive a large amount of recyclable materials that cannot be recovered with our existing system," adds O'Hern. Tipping fee at the facility is $207/ton; cost to operate, including loan repayment, is $200/ton.

West Wendover, Nevada: The city of West Wendover's composting facility accepts up to 25 tons/day of garbage, which is mechanically sorted and combined with up to 5 tons/day of biosolids (generated by the nearby wastewater reclamation facility). The compostable mix is then loaded into cement kilns, which operate as rotary drums. The end result is 14 tons/day of compost, and 6 tons/day of noncompostable garbage such as glass and C&D debris, which is hauled to the landfill for disposal. By combining the MSW and biosolids, West Wendover is achieving a 70 percent recycling rate, notes a statement on its website.

Delaware County, New York: "This year has been a good one for our compost facility, and I have to say we are successfully producing a quality product with minimum down time," reports Susan McIntyre, Solid Waste Director for the Delaware County Department of Public Works. The facility, which is owned by the county, came on line in May 2006. Its processing line includes a Conporec rotary drum and Siemens/IPS agitated bays (14 in total). The plant is processing 24,000 tons/year of MSW, 6,500 tons of biosolids and 2,800 tons of select commercial/industrial organics from local dairy plants.

McIntyre describes a number of minor changes made in the plant over the last year as part of fine-tuning the operation. "We made some adjustments to the bioreactor's interior for better waste tumbling and mechanical separation," she says. "We also added chains and paddles to the trommel screen interior to improve organics separation and screen cleaning. A leveling bar was added to the infeed conveyor to the pulverizer that crushes glass in the final compost product." The county instituted a two-week preventive maintenance shut down, a practice it plans to continue.

Operationally, the most significant change has been a more aggressive effort to divert problematic waste items such as hose, tubing, strapping, carpet and other bulky objects that contribute to generation of large "hair balls" inside the drum. "We are working with the private haulers who collect the MSW, and are making progress," adds Mclntyre. "Our crane operators have gotten more skilled at removing these materials from the tip floor prior to loading into the bioreactor. Once the operators extract a few hair balls out of the discharge end they tend to get more discriminate as to what they load in the front end!" To help with removing the hair balls that still are created, the county installed a permanent winch with custom designed logging grapples to hook onto the balls and pull them out.

Total residuals from the composting facility are 38 percent by weight, and 20 percent by volume, a more important number to Delaware County since all residuals go to its adjacent lined landfill. Landfill staff has found that disposal of wet residuals (about 55 percent moisture) has advantages over the drier MSW they used to bury since it is easier to handle and has less wind-blown litter. Recyclable materials are diverted through a separate MRF prior to MSW being delivered to the composting facility. The MRF is located on the same site. The facility does not charge a tipping fee, but Mclntyre reports that operating costs and debt service are in the low to mid $50/ton. The County sold approximately 7,500 cy of compost in the first three quarters of 2007. Most is sold to a broker on a profit share basis, with limited direct sales from the facility. Testing has repeatedly shown that the compost contains less than one percent foreign particles by dry weight. "We have a dedicated staff that is committed to what we are doing, and believe in it, and that is an important contribution to our success thus far," says McIntyre.

On the regulatory front, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation recently determined that the facility must register as a minor air emission source due to its biofilter. Using data from comparable composting facilities and their biofilters, the county was able to demonstrate that the facility is in the state's lowest regulatory threshold for emissions of NOx and SOx. As for odor complaints, Mclntyre says that when the occasional complaint comes in it is usually the adjacent landfill. "It's a different odor from the composter, and we can recognize it too," she says.

Medina, Ohio: Medina County has operated a mixed municipal solid waste processing facility ("dirty MRF") since 1993. Between 140,000 and 150,000 tons/year of MSW is tipped at its Central Processing Facility. Recyclables are removed via manual and automated sorting. Screened two-inch minus fines (the mixed organic waste fraction) are composted with yard trimmings and wood. Compost is used for various landfill applications. Recently, the facility began producing refuse derived fuel pellets from shredded paper and film plastic.

Rapid City, South Dakota: The mixed waste composting plant in Rapid City will celebrate its fifth year of operation next May. The plant has two rotary drums, followed by a nine-bay Siemens/IPS composting system. "We currently process 180 tons of MSW/day, down from 200 tons/day last year," says Mike Oyler, plant manager. "Our goal is to get a better breakdown of the organic fraction by putting less material through the drums. We are finding that by not overloading the drums, we are getting better separation of the MSW as it has more room to tumble." The facility cocomposts the MSW with about 12,000 gallons/day of biosolids. Retention time in the bays is 28 days, followed by secondary composting in aerated piles in an adjacent building. "We decreased the height of these piles, as well as piles of finished compost outside, to 6-feet," adds Oyler. "That eliminated a lot of odors. We think the piles were going anaerobic." On occasion, material is put back through the bays for a total retention time of 56 days. "That compost is much darker in color and when we screen it, it looks like wet coffee grounds."

The media in the biofilter was changed earlier this year; staff decided to use compost screen overs instead of wood chips only. In addition, the biofilter sprinklers were changed from a rotating head with a 30-foot pattern to umbrella head sprinklers that cover a 10-foot area, providing better overall coverage. In addition, operators are building a screen to further refine the finished compost. "We've designed a small vibration unit with a 1/8-inch screen," says Oyler. "We'd like to market this compost for use on golf courses and to topdress lawns." Roughly 40 to 50 tons/day of compost is produced using a 1/8-inch screen. Finished compost is given away. "We are getting great testimonials from area residents who are using the compost on their lawns and gardens," he adds.

Sevierville, Tennessee: Sevier Solid Waste Inc.'s 15 year-old MSW cocomposting facility, the largest operating plant in the U.S. in 2006, burned to the ground on May 31, 2007, completely destroying the 102,000 square foot building that housed the tip floor and compost hall. As fully described in the accompanying article, the five rotary drum compost vessels and their hydraulic rams were saved by the Pigeon Forge Fire Department. Pending final terms of the insurance settlement, Sevier Solid Waste Inc. plans to rebuild the facility, expanding it to 180,000 square feet and making significant changes to the materials flow process.

Prior to the fire, the facility was processing 250 tons/day of MSW and 50 tons/day of biosolids. A new Backhus windrow turner had been purchased and was being used to turn and aerate the compost piles; the forced aeration system had been turned off. According to Tom Leonard, Solid Waste Director, the aeration trenches had been a continual maintenance challenge due to clogging of the specially manufactured plastic grates developed by Bedminster Bioconversion when it built the facility. The grates were also prone to being dislodged by the loader bucket as it was turning the piles, and had to be continually replaced.

All of the residential and commercial MSW generated in Sevier County was being processed at the facility, with 60 percent of the total tons converted to compost. The remaining 40 percent residue, mostly plastic, glass and metal, goes to an unlined demolition debris landfill operated on an adjoining parcel of land, thereby diverting the residue from a lined landfill. There is no upfront sort line for recyclables, and after discharge from the digesters the recyclables are too dirty for marketing. In the early years, the facility utilized a belt magnet to pull metals off the residuals, as well as an eddy current separator to extract aluminum. Both streams were shredded and screened to remove dirt. However, neither metal product was sufficiently clean for recycling markets. In 2006, notes Leonard, the facility produced almost 30,000 tons of 1/4-inch screened compost. All of it was sold to a company that markets the materials for soil blending, topdressing and erosion control. The tip fee at the facility is $40/ton, with total costs to process MSW and biosolids, as well as dispose of residue, estimated at $25.34/ton.

Columbia County, Wisconsin: The Columbia County Recycling and Waste Processing Facility has been operating since 1992, and continues to process between 70 and 80 tons/day, although the flow is a bit higher in the summer. There are two rotary drums, each loaded with five yards of material at a time, with a daily capacity of 40 tons (maximum capacity of 250 tons per drum). After five days in the drum, the compost goes through a 15-foot long screen with 3/4-inch holes. The compost is then put into windrows for eight weeks, and is finally screened to 3/8-inch. About 3,000 tons/year of compost is produced. It is given away at no cost to local farmers.

According to Bill casey, the facility manager, national waste companies have been purchasing the independent haulers in the county, including those servicing municipalities. These companies also own the landfills, and with an inside market, they are able to undercut the $34/ton tip fee at the MSW composting facility, making it increasingly difficult to maintain the throughput. "We had to go out and do our own collection; we offer curbside collection in certain areas," says Casey.

[Sidebar]

The Pinetop-Lakeside Sanitary District now receives only paper and cardboard from the municipal waste stream - versus mixed waste. The paper is used as a bulking agent for composting biosolids.

[Sidebar]

The Mariposa County composting facility processes mixed MSW from residents and businesses, as well as Yosemite National Park.

[Sidebar]

"We are finding that by not overloading the drums, we are getting better separation of the MSW as it has more room to tumble," says Mike Oyler of Rapid City.

[Sidebar]

Adjustments were made to the interior of Delaware County's bioreactor to improve waste tumbling and mechanical separation. Operators also have increased efforts to keep problematic items from getting inside the drum and causing "hair balls" that can be difficult and unpleasant to remove.

Under consideration at the Nantucket plant is pyrolysis of compost facility residuals and construction and demolition debris to extract a combustible gas that can be used to generate electricity.

[Sidebar]

About 2,000 cubic yards/year of compost - sold for $15/cy - are produced at the West Yellowstone composting plant.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Last officer in Katrina shootings heading to trial

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Twenty New Orleans police officers have been charged in a series of probes by the Justice Department's civil rights division since 2010. A retired sergeant who was assigned to investigate deadly police shootings on a bridge after Hurricane Katrina will be the last of those officers to get his day in court.

A trial is scheduled to start Monday for Gerard Dugue. He is charged with participating in a cover-up to make it appear police were justified in shooting six unarmed people, killing two, on the Danziger Bridge less than a week after the 2005 storm.

A judge ordered separate trials for Dugue and five other current or former officers who were convicted in August of civil rights violations stemming from the bridge shootings.

O'Hare military use on way up

O'Hare Airport, which saw a decline in military operations aftershuttering its Air National Guard base two years ago, is seeing aresurgence in military flights.

The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks--which sparked tighter security inthe skies and at airports around the nation--are behind the increase,said Chicago Aviation Department spokeswoman Monique Bond.

In September, O'Hare handled 259 military flights, according tothe Federal Aviation Administration. In October, the most recentmonth figures available, O'Hare handled 77 military flights.

"With this heightened alert, these numbers could potentiallyremain at the same level," Bond said.

In 2000, and for the first eight months of 2001, the airport neverhandled more than 37 military flights a month. Often, there werefewer than a dozen out of roughly 70,000 to 80,000 total monthlyoperations, most of which were commercial airline flights.

The FAA's figures typically refer to takeoffs and landings, butsome of the military operations may involve flights that were inO'Hare's airspace and communicated with O'Hare's air trafficcontrollers but didn't touch down, so-called "overflights," officialssaid.

Fighter jets, for instance, have escorted commercial jetliners toO'Hare but didn't land there, officials said.

No. 9 Hoyas Advance to Big East Semis

NEW YORK - After breezing through the first half, the Georgetown Hoyas weren't expecting to sweat it out against Villanova in the last few minutes.

"I'm glad our guys held on," Georgetown coach John Thompson III said. "It was coming too easily. We just had to refocus."

Roy Hibbert scored eight of his 14 points in No. 9 Georgetown's opening 26-2 run, and the Hoyas held on for a 62-57 victory Thursday over ninth-seeded Villanova in the quarterfinals of the Big East tournament.

A rested Georgetown (24-6), the tournament's top seed, came out shooting, and a weary-looking Villanova couldn't find the basket early. The Wildcats (22-10) made a game of it in the closing minutes, but the huge first-half deficit was too much to overcome.

"I don't think we did anything wrong at the start of the game or throughout the game, really," Villanova forward Curtis Sumpter said. "We just had a couple of bad possessions and Georgetown just took advantage of them."

DaJuan Summers got things started with a 3-pointer 2:22 in and the Hoyas kept going from there. Georgetown was up 14-0 before Sumpter finally got Villanova on the scoreboard with a jumper 7:20 into the game.

The Hoyas followed with a 12-0 run to go up 26-2 at 9:28 on Jeff Green's layup, and opened leads to as big as 25 points three times.

"I think we were just a little better at it, and they were a little off to start," Thompson said.

Green, the Big East player of the year, added 12 points and nine rebounds for the Hoyas, who shot 42.6 percent (23-of-54) and have won 13 of 14. They advanced to play 20th-ranked Notre Dame (24-6), which beat Syracuse 89-83.

Sumpter scored 18 points for Villanova, which had its four-game winning streak end. The Wildcats just couldn't get their offense going in the first half - shooting 27 percent (6-of-22) compared to the Hoyas' 57 percent (16-of-28).

"You just try to tell them it's a long game, there's a lot of time left," Villanova coach Jay Wright said. "They went on a big run and we've just got to keep playing our game. You know, you don't try to make it any big deal."

The teams played close games in their two earlier meetings, which Villanova won at Georgetown in early January and the Hoyas won on the road last month.

"Before the game, one of the coaches said we owed them one," Hibbert said. "They beat us on our court. That got us going."

Trailing 37-18 at halftime, the Wildcats came out for the second half more energized. Villanova cut a 22-point deficit late in the first half to 10 with a 14-2 run, capped by Scottie Reynolds' 3-pointer 5:19 in.

After falling behind again by 17, Villanova hung tough down the stretch and made the Hoyas and their fans a bit uneasy.

"We've been at it long enough to know that anything can happen," Wright said.

Jessie Sapp made one of two free throws to give Georgetown a 56-45 lead with 1:43 left, but Villanova stormed back.

Trailing by six with 41 seconds left, Reynolds got open for a 3-point attempt, but missed.

"That would've blown the roof off the place and energized our guys," Wright said. "That was the play. Not that we quit, but that was our chance right there."

But the Wildcats weren't done just yet. Sumpter made two of three free throws with 27.9 seconds remaining to make it 59-54, the Wildcats' lowest deficit since Hibbert's layup that gave the Hoyas a 5-0 lead less than 4 minutes in.

But Georgetown wasn't about to set another tournament record for the biggest blown halftime lead - the Hoyas lost to Syracuse in last year's semifinals after leading by 15.

Sapp made one of two free throws and Hibbert dunked before Sumpter hit a 3 as time expired.

"We got too tentative and started looking at the clock and trying to get the game over instead of playing," Thompson said. "And all of a sudden, they are too good."

The teams reversed offensive woes in the second half, with the Hoyas going just 7-of-25 (28 percent) from the field, while the Wildcats were 13-of-29 (44.8 percent). Villanova recovered from the dismal first half to finish 37.3 percent from the field, going 19-of-51 overall.

"We came out and played as hard as we possibly could in the second half," center Will Sheridan said. "Our pride was at stake."

Villanova senior guard Mike Nardi, sidelined for most of the DePaul game after injuring his left ankle last Saturday against Syracuse, played a little more in this one, but wasn't much of a factor on offense. He went scoreless and had two assists in 8 minutes.

LSU, Bama want no part of postseason points-fest

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Bowl season has produced scores that look a little like high school basketball.

41-38. 45-38. 67-56. Even 70-33, West Virginia over Clemson, in the Orange Bowl.

But there will be plenty of defense on Monday in the BCS title game.

Alabama and LSU have the two top-ranked defenses in the country and many say that is part of the reason the SEC has been so successful. The conference is now assured of claiming a sixth straight BCS championship.

LSU defensive coordinator John Chavis says flashy offense is exciting for fans, but "I got enough gray hair. I don't ever want to see any of that."

China concerned by International Criminal Court's move to seek arrest of Sudan's president

China urged the International Criminal Court to rethink its arrest warrant for Sudan's president Tuesday in a sign of Beijing's skittishness over its already difficult relationship with the African country.

China, which buys two-thirds of Sudan's petroleum exports, has been repeatedly criticized for not using its economic leverage to apply more pressure on the government of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir to end a civil war in his country's Darfur region.

The issue has been particularly thorny ahead of next month's Olympic Games _ which some activists have used to turn the spotlight on Beijing's Africa policy _ forcing the Chinese government to balance its desire to be seen as a responsible global power with its need for resources to fuel its booming economy.

"China expresses great concern and worry about the ICC's prosecutor's accusation against Sudanese leaders," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said at a regular media briefing. "The ICC's move should be conducive to safeguarding the stability of Sudan's situation and the proper resolution for the Darfur region rather than the contrary."

On Monday, ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo filed 10 charges against al-Bashir, accusing his government of waging a campaign of genocide and rape in Darfur.

Although the Sudanese president is unlikely to face trial any time soon, his U.N. ambassador, Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamed, indicated that he would draw on backing from Beijing _ one of the U.N. Security Council's five permanent members with veto power _ to help push back against the international court.

When asked by reporters whether China would use its position on the council block the charges, Liu said the matter would be discussed with other members but "as to what results would be reached after that consultation, I cannot speculate."

Though Sudan has denounced the indictment and says it will ignore any arrest order, one lawmaker said his government could no longer guarantee the safety of U.N. staff in Darfur, where an international peacekeeping force is deployed to protect civilians in a conflict that the U.N. says has claimed 300,000 lives and driven 2.5 million people from their homes.

Beijing also has peacekeepers in Sudan _ a fresh contingent of engineers leaves China Wednesday _ as well as a bevy of oil, construction and other companies doing business. Liu said he was not concerned for their safety.

The episode is another reminder of China's outsized presence in Africa _ one that has brought it criticism from Western governments, interest groups and some African elite for supporting corrupt regimes. Last week, China helped scupper a U.N. resolution to sanction another African partner, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, over election violence.

Chinese trade with Africa ballooned to $55.5 billion in 2006, up more than fivefold from 2000. Beijing projects that it will reach $100 billion by 2020. Chinese investment has been poured into roads, copper mines and oil fields, helping to boost African economies and gain resources and new markets for the Chinese economy.

Sudan has been a flashpoint, with activist groups saying China needs to use its close diplomatic and economic ties to press for an end to the bloodshed. One group, backed by Hollywood actress Mia Farrow, has warned Beijing its Olympics could become known as the genocide games if it does not do more.

As the pressure mounted last year, China took credit for persuading al-Bashir to agree to a U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force for Darfur. China also announced it would send an additional $10 million in humanitarian aid and provide military engineers to dig wells and make other preparations for the force. With Wednesday's deployment, Liu said China would have 315 peacekeepers in Sudan.

"On one hand, China wants to play a constructive role in solving the Darfur issue. On the other hand, it would like to maintain the friendly relations with Sudan," said Jin Linbo, a senior fellow at the China Institute for International Studies.

But in the long-run, Jin said China will have to take into consideration the political and legal opinions of the international community while planning its policies on Africa.

"China will have to find a compromise," he said.

Besides buying Sudan's oil, energy-hungry China also has refineries, a pipeline and joint exploration projects there. Beijing has also sold weapons to the Khartoum regime, which is accused of backing militias against Darfur rebels.

A BBC documentary that aired Monday alleged that China provides military trucks and trains pilots to fly Chinese jets in Darfur, in violation of a U.N. arms embargo.

Liu dismissed the report as "unfair and incorrect."

"China always has adopted a responsible attitude toward arms exports and strictly manages that in line with international obligations and domestic laws and regulations and never sells in areas in which arms embargoes are imposed by the U.N. Security Council," Liu said.

UN tribunals: Pressure Serbia, Rwanda

Two U.N. war crimes tribunals appealed to the Security Council on Wednesday for support in pressuring Serbia and Rwanda to do more to hunt down their most-wanted fugitives.

Judge Dennis Byron, the Rwanda tribunal's president, and prosecutor Hassan Jallow said they are seeking to secure the arrests of 13 remaining fugitives. That tribunal is trying the alleged masterminds of the 100-day Rwandan genocide in 1994 in which more than 500,000 minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed by Hutu extremists.

Jallow said the tribunal has delivered more than 30 judgments, including five acquittals, and there are more than two dozen trials under way.

Judge Fausto Pocar, president of the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, vowed that it would "not close its doors before all of those fugitives are tried."

That tribunal indicted in absentia former Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic and Gen. Rako Mladic for genocide and crimes against humanity. They are accused of allegedly masterminding Europe's worst massacre of civilians since World War II: the 1995 slaughter of thousands of Muslims in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica.

Prosecutor Serge Brammertz said Karadzic, Mladic and two other fugitives are "within reach of the authorities in Serbia" who could "do more to locate and arrest them."

U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who is president of the 15-member Security Council this month, told reporters that both tribunals have made progress and many of the council members have called on nations to cooperate with them.

"It is very important that there is no impunity for crimes committed against humanity," he said. "We all remember, of course, the terrible things that happened in the former Yugoslavia ... or the terrible things that happened in Rwanda. There is a determination on the part of council members to assist the tribunals to efficiently finish their work as soon as possible."

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Blackhawks get a break // Time off welcome after successful 6-game trip

There is some rest for the weary.

The Blackhawks returned home immediately after their 3-2victory Saturday night at Ottawa and now have a few days to rest upafter completing a solid 3-1-2 road trip.

"I don't know if there is such a thing as a perfect trip," coachCraig Hartsburg said. "But we put ourselves in a lot better positionwith the trip we had, and now we have five games in two weeks at homein which we can do the same."The Hawks' five opponents at the United Center will be Colorado(Thursday), Edmonton (Sunday), Phoenix (Dec. 10), Philadelphia (Dec.12) and San Jose (Dec. 14).Chris Chelios pointed to the Hawks' four consecutive victorieson the team's …

Australian troops in East Timor hunt for suspects in attacks on top leaders

Australian troops backed by helicopters hunted Thursday for suspects in the attacks on East Timor's top leaders as new details emerged on the strike that left the president critically wounded.

The operation, which also involved U.N. police officers and armored personnel carriers, took place on the outskirts of Dili and involved troops combing through the jungle, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene.

Referring to the operation, U.N. spokeswoman Alison Cooper initially said that "anti-insurgency" operations had begun. However, she said later she had intended to say they would begin once arrest warrants were issued in the case.

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

U.S. plans to spread special operations.(A)

Byline: Rowan Scarborough

The Bush administration has begun plans for military actions in the global war on terrorism that include placing special operations forces in multiple countries simultaneously.

One senior administration official said the Pentagon hopes to finish destroying Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda terrorist network in Afghanistan in weeks, not months.

"We need [these forces] in other parts of the world," this official said. "Everybody here has their own list [of countries]: Iraq, Somalia, the Philippines, South America. Take your pick."

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld is described as eager to go after al Qaeda cells outside Afghanistan sooner rather than later to prevent foot soldiers from burrowing deeper into the woodwork. "Rumsfeld wanted to start yesterday," said the administration official.

The defense secretary, a "hawk" in what the administration says will be a lengthy global war, has spoken …

U.S. plans to spread special operations.(A)

Byline: Rowan Scarborough

The Bush administration has begun plans for military actions in the global war on terrorism that include placing special operations forces in multiple countries simultaneously.

One senior administration official said the Pentagon hopes to finish destroying Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda terrorist network in Afghanistan in weeks, not months.

"We need [these forces] in other parts of the world," this official said. "Everybody here has their own list [of countries]: Iraq, Somalia, the Philippines, South America. Take your pick."

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld is described as eager to go after al Qaeda cells outside Afghanistan sooner rather than later to prevent foot soldiers from burrowing deeper into the woodwork. "Rumsfeld wanted to start yesterday," said the administration official.

The defense secretary, a "hawk" in what the administration says will be a lengthy global war, has spoken …

Monday, 5 March 2012

Prisoners set up fund for victims of crime [Candace Derksen Fund]

A group of prisoners serving life sentences has established a fund to help victims of crime set up healing programs. The Candace Derksen Fund is named after a 13-year-old Winnipeg girl who was murdered in 1984.

"It is a miracle that it [the fund] even exists," said Wilma Derksen, mother of Candace and head of Victims' Voice for Mennonite Central Committee Canada. It captures all of the intricacies of the journey from violence to healing and forgiveness, she said.

The inspiration for the fund came from Rene Durocher who spent 23 years in jail for bank robbery and is currently the national director of Life Line--a program of the John Howard Society which works with …