Thursday, 15 March 2012

Sprint to join rivals in cutting termination fees

Following its rivals, Sprint Nextel Corp. will soon begin trimming the fees customers face for canceling their cell phone service early.

Chief Executive Dan Hesse said Tuesday in an interview with The Associated Press that Sprint could start lowering the early termination fees as soon as December, once the company updates its billing software. The fee of $200 or more is charged to wireless subscribers who end their service before their two-year contract ends.

The new policy would reduce the fee slightly for each month a subscriber stays with the plan. Competitors AT&T Inc., Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile USA already prorate their fees.

A …

Cut allowances plan

Allowances for councillors may be cut back in North Somerset.

The move, which could affect some councillors responsible forChurchill, Sandford and Winscombe, will be discussed at the nextexecutive meeting of North Somerset …

Angels Go Extra Innings to Sweep Pirates

ANAHEIM, Calif. - For the second time in three days, the Los Angeles Angels beat the Pittsburgh Pirates in extra innings with a "ground-run double" that wasn't.

Erick Aybar singled home the winning run in the 10th and Jose Molina drove in two runs, leading the Angels to a 4-3 victory on Sunday and a three-game sweep that kept them eight games ahead of the pack in the AL West.

"Every guy in here has the ability to step up and get the job done, and as we've seen lately, everybody's been contributing to all the wins," second baseman Howie Kendrick said. "That's one great thing about our organization. Even the guys who aren't everyday players, when they get spot starts they …

Obituaries in the news

Carol Cole

LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Carol Cole, an actress and Natalie Cole's sister, has died. She was 64.

Natalie Cole's publicist, Maureen O'Connor, says Carol Cole died Monday, the same day Natalie received a kidney transplant.

The singer was by her older sister's side when she learned that a donor organ had become available.

Carol Cole, who went by the nickname Cookie, appeared on her father's "The Nat King Cole Show" on television in the 1950s and went on to appear on TV and in movies in the 1960s and '70s. Her credits include "Sanford and Son" and the 1974 movie "The Taking of Pelham One Two Three."

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Mingo airport site shows the possibilities: ; Surface mines can help us diversify Southern W.Va.

VARNEY - The dedication of the Mingo County Air TransportationPark in southern West Virginia this past week is a prime example ofthe value of our surface mine lands in the effort to diversify theeconomy of the Appalachian coalfields.

The 900-acre site was donated to the Mingo County RedevelopmentAuthority earlier this year, with owners Alpha Natural Resourcesproviding not only the land but completing the basic sitedevelopment, moving millions of tons of earth and rock.

This work was completed by the company at no cost to thetaxpayers, saving them millions of dollars.

When construction is completed on the project, the people ofsouthern West Virginia will have a …

R&D UPDATE

Adding Peanuts to the Pump

Move over, soybeans and com: Peanuts may be elbowing their way into the biodiesel fuel market. Agricultural Research Service (ARS; www.ars.usda. gov) scientists are searching for economically feasible peanut varieties for that very purpose.

Agronomist Wilson Faircloth at the ARS National Peanut Research Laboratory in Dawson, GA, and Daniel Geller, a collaborative engineer at the Univ. of Georgia (Athens; www.uga. edu), are testing a peanut called Georganic. It's not up to commercial edible standards for peanuts, but is high in oil and has low production costs.

Georganic - or similar varieties - will likely be the future of peanut biodiesel …

Clooney, Zellweger Whistle-Stop

"Leatherheads" wasn't filmed here, and one of its characters _ played by Renee Zellweger _ spends part of the new movie disparaging the place, flung way atop the U.S. map as it is.

But Zellweger and her co-star, George Clooney, stopped by to thank the folks here anyway for the city's role in the football comedy, part of a promotional whistle-stop tour Monday that included Maysville, Ky., near Clooney's hometown.

At the Depot, an old train station in downtown Duluth, the stars arrived aboard a train _ how else do you arrive via whistle-stop tour? _ wearing period clothes reflecting the movie's 1920s setting.

Clooney, who also directed …

Confederates ride again--into furor

MEMPHIS--The rebels are coming, bringing color and controversy toMemphis this week.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans' annual convention returns toMemphis for the first time in 26 years.

The descendants of Confederate soldiers will ride horses into thePeabody hotel and try riding out an election some fear could colorthe organization as racist.

More than 1,200 members have registered, making it one of thelargest reunions since the Sons of Confederate Veterans was foundedin 1896.

"We're amazed. This is the largest gathering of Confederates in 50years," said Lee Millar, one of about 350 Memphis members andchairman of the reunion committee.

One …

Key to '99 Jeep launch: One shift only

How Chrysler is preparing its Detroit Jeep plant to launch the new Grand Cherokee with high quality - and minimal lost production.

Dave Standen looks you straight in the eye, and clicks off his plants new model launch strategy, step by logical step. He speaks assertively, obviously full of confidence.

"One shift. That's how we're gonna start this launch," says Standen, operations manager at Chrysler's Jefferson North Assembly Plant (JNAP) in Detroit. "On just one shift, we learn the process elements. One shift gives us 16 hours at night to fix what's needed - to work on the equipment, to upgrade, change it, move it. By the time we get through those three weeks, we'll have …

AP Executive Morning Briefing

The top business news from The Associated Press for the morning of Thursday, July 17, 2008:

Fannie, Freddie spent millions on lobbying

WASHINGTON (AP) _ For years, mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac tenaciously worked to nurture, and then protect, their financial empires by invoking the political sacred cow of homeownership and fielding an army of lobbyists, power brokers and political contributors. New attention is being focused on the bruised mortgage companies as the Bush administration presses its rescue plan to Congress. Some lawmakers have challenged the plan's open-ended nature and expressed fears of a potential big taxpayer bailout in an …

Counterfeit wars ; India's fight against the fake currency racket isn't getting any easier. Counterfeiters hitherto had limited printing facilities which made it easier to detect fakes.

India's fight against the fake currency racket isn't getting anyeasier. Counterfeiters hitherto had limited printing facilitieswhich made it easier to detect fakes. But lately, they have beenattaining a level of printing sophistication that can almost easilypass off as genuine. In 2007, over Rs 10 crore were seized by theauthorities, up from Rs 8.4 crore the previous year. But the malaiseruns deeper as many fakes go undetected. Says Dr Soumendra K Dash,chief economist, Care Ratings:The fake currency in circulationaffects the economy.

One of the ways in which the government …

WOOD HOG ON TRACKS

Featuring wood waste processing power with undercarriage, the Morbark Model 6600 Track Wood Hog offers a grinder with self-propelled mobility and remote control of all functions. Engine options range from 860-1,000 HP, effective …

Higher Netflix prices equals fewer subscribers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Netflix's decision to raise prices by as much as 60 percent is turning into a horror show.

The customer backlash against the higher rates, kicking in this month, has been much harsher than Netflix Inc. anticipated. That prompted management to predict Thursday that the company —the largest U.S. video subscription service— will end September with 600,000 fewer U.S. customers than it had in June.

It will mark just the second time in 12 years that Netflix has lost subscribers from one quarter to the next. The last downturn occurred during 2007 when Netflix lost a mere 55,000 from March through June.

The current hemorrhaging exacerbated fears that Netflix is losing the magic touch that increased its stock 10-fold in the three years leading up to the company's July 12 announcement about its higher prices.

Since then, Netflix has turned into Wall Street's equivalent of a box-office flop. Its shares plunged $39.46, or about 19 percent, to close at $169.25 on Thursday, leaving Netflix's stock price more than 40 percent below where it stood before the company unveiled the higher prices. The cost to shareholders so far: more than $6 billion in paper losses.

It could get uglier if the worst-case scenarios play out. Netflix suffered another setback earlier this month when Starz Entertainment ended talks to renew the licensing rights to a key part of Netflix's video library for streaming over the Internet. The fallout from that decision will hit in March when Netflix will no longer be able to stream the popular mix of recently released movies and TV shows that it got from Starz, raising the specter of another onslaught of customer defections.

"Netflix isn't looking like it's as good a deal because their prices are getting higher and their content isn't getting any better," said Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter, who thinks the company's shares could fall as low as $110. "It's like they have taken the beef away from the buffet."

The customer exodus still hasn't convinced Netflix to reverse its course and lower its prices as it did in 2007 when it was engaged in a cut-throat battle with Blockbuster Inc. In announcing its lowered subscriber forecasts Thursday, Netflix emphasized it consider its new prices to be "the right long-term strategic choice."

The new pricing structure was driven by Netflix's desire to build up its service that streams video over high-speed Internet connections, even at the risk of hurting the DVD-by-mail rentals that used to be its main business. Netflix management believes the convenience of Internet video is the main reason that it has added 17 million U.S. subscribers during the past three years, establishing the company as a major player in the entertainment industry.

As the streaming service took off, Hollywood studios and other video distributors such as Starz have been demanding higher fees for the licensing rights to their content — a trend that caused Netflix to dig deeper into its subscribers' wallets.

Even with fewer subscribers, Netflix expects to bring in $10 million to $25 million more from its customers than during the July-September period than it did April-June.

Netflix revenue won't keep rising, though, if more subscribers flee. Pachter thinks that could still happen because some customers won't be billed at the higher rates until the end of the month.

Besides being more expensive, Netflix's new pricing structure is also more complicated for subscribers who want to stream and rent DVDs from the service.

Until Sept. 1, Netflix offered plans that bundled DVD rentals and unlimited video streaming for as little as $10 per month. Those options are now sold separately, resulting in a cost of at least $16 per month for people who want streaming and DVDs. Having both choices is appealing because Netflix's streaming library primarily consists of old TV shows and movies, leaving DVDs as the main way to see recently released films.

To hold down costs in a tough economy, millions of Netflix customers are either limiting their subscriptions to a streaming-only or DVD-only plan. Other customers are canceling their accounts to protest the new pricing scheme. Those canceling are following through on threats that were made on Facebook and Netflix's own blog after the higher prices were announced.

Despite the vitriolic reaction, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings still thought the company would be able to add subscribers. In late July, he issued a forecast that indicated Netflix would end September with 25 million U.S. subscribers, up from 24.6 million in June. That prediction was lowered Thursday to 24 million. The revision mostly reflects Netflix's expectation that it will have 800,000 fewer DVD-only subscribers than it previously thought.

Many of the people no longer renting DVDs from Netflix will get their discs elsewhere. That could be a boon for Redbox, which rents DVDs for $1 per night through 33,330 kiosks in supermarkets and other retailers, and Blockbuster, which still has 1,500 U.S. stores after emerging from bankruptcy protection under the ownership of Dish Network Corp. Investors are betting Redbox will be the main beneficiary; the shares of Redbox owner Coinstar surged $3.33, or more than 7 percent, to close at $48.55 on Thursday. Dish Network's shares edged up 11 cents to $25.82.

This could be an opportune time for would-be rivals to attack Netflix's streaming service too, BTIG Research analyst Richard Greenfield wrote in a Thursday blog post. Internet retailer Amazon.com Inc. launched a free streaming service for subscribers to its two-day shipping service earlier this year. Greenfield and other analysts believe Google Inc., already the owner of YouTube, is eager to expand its Internet video offerings to include more movies. One way Google could achieve that would be to buy Hulu.com, which has been put up by for sale by the television network owners that supply its video content.

"Netflix made a bad move, raising prices as much as they did," Pachter said.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Death toll in China warehouse fire rises to 14

BEIJING (AP) — The death toll from a warehouse fire in central China has risen to 14, including three children.

The official Xinhua News Agency said Wednesday that firefighters found two bodies in the two-story building late Tuesday.

It says a short circuit in an electrical outlet downstairs is believed to have caused Tuesday's fire. Most people in the warehouse managed to escape, but at least a dozen were trapped on the second floor.

The warehouse is located in an industrial park in Wuhan in Hubei province. Xinhua says it is rented by a latex firm.

Xinhua says the building contained temporary dorms for workers and some of the victims were their family members.

Real Madrid president defends club from Ferguson's criticisms over Ronaldo

Real Madrid president Ramon Calderon has criticized suggestions by Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson that the Spanish club is trying to lure Cristiano Ronaldo.

Ferguson attacked Madrid on Friday for allegedly using the Spanish media to unsettle the 23-year-old Portugal captain.

"I'm really surprised by what he said about us. I don't understand Ferguson," Calderon was quoted as saying by sports daily Marca on Sunday.

"Real Madrid has behaved exquisitely in the matter of Cristiano Ronaldo. We have always said he is a player who has a contract and that Manchester United is a club who is not selling. That's all," he added.

Calderon last week compared United's efforts to keep Ronaldo to slavery.

Ronaldo, whose contract with United expires in 2012, has hinted recently he plans to leave the newly crowned European and English champions but has said he won't make an announcement on his future for several weeks.

Marca _ which has been accused by Ferguson of being a tool of Madrid's _ said Sunday that the Spanish champions will offer United a world-record fee of euro80 million (US$126 million) for the player who has scored 42 goals this season. The current highest fee is the US$65 million (now euro41.2 million) Madrid paid for Zinedine Zidane in 2001.

The paper said Madrid plans to make Ronaldo the best-paid player in the world, with a net annual salary of euro9.5 million (US$15 million).

It added that Madrid will offer the player a five-year contract and will allow him to keep all his image rights from marketing abroad and half those from Spain.

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It's an art, not a science

TRANSFER-PRICING ISSUES ARE MANY SHADES OF GRAY, WHICH PRESENTS CHALLENGES FOR THE TAX PRACTITIONER AND THE TAXPAYER

Transfer pricing focuses on the pricing of goods, property, services, loans and lease transactions between multinational enterprises, and it's widely recognized that it is an art rather than an exact science. Transfer pricing and the application of the arm's-length principle requires understanding a taxpayer's unique facts and circumstances, interpreting comparable information and applying judgment to determine appropriate terms and conditions for intercompany transactions. Typically there is no black or white, but many shades of gray. This, coupled with the fact that current Canadian legislative and administrative guidance on many transfer-pricing issues is unclear, presents challenges for both tax practitioners and taxpayers.

Canada's Income Tax Act was amended in 1998 with the introduction of section 247, which requires that, effective for taxation years commencing after 1997, taxpayers must determine and use arm's-length terms and conditions for transactions with related parties or potentially face adjustments by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). For taxation years commencing after 1998, penalties may also be applied. Paragraph 247(2)(b) allows the CRA to recharacterize certain related-party transactions that would not ordinarily occur between arm's-length parties.

The tax act does not provide details on how arm'slength terms and conditions should be established; consequently, the CRA has provided some administrative guidance on its interpretation of the act's requirements through its Information Circular on International Transfer Pricing (IC 87-2R) issued September 1999. IC 87-2R outlined the agency's general views as to how the transfer-pricing provisions of the act would be applied in practice. While IC 87-2R did provide some further information, many transfer-pricing matters are discussed in broad concepts, leaving room for differing interpretations.

Following the issuance of IC 87-2R, the CRA has provided further guidance on transfer-pricing matters in its Transfer Pricing Memoranda (TPM), which are meant to supplement IC 87-2R and provide further guidance on specific aspects of the transfer-pricing legislation. To date, five TPMs have been issued covering very specific and technical aspects of the transfer-pricing legislation and administrative matters. However, TPMs have yet to deal with the more key transfer-pricing issues.

In September 2002, at the Canadian Tax Foundation Conference, the chief economist of the CRA's International Tax Directorate presented a somewhat controversial paper providing guidance on the CRA's approach to the use of ranges in testing a taxpayer's compliance with the arm'slength principle. Among other matters, the paper concluded:

* The CRA does not believe the use of statistical tools enhances the reliability of comparable data in the range.

* The CRA prefers the selection and use of specific comparables from the range that has a relatively high degree of comparability with the targeted transaction's key economic characteristics. (In practice, this criterion has often led the CRA to seek a small number of comparables and sometimes identify a single comparable when making transfer-pricing adjustments.)

* Where more than two comparables are relevant, the mean is a more relevant statistic than the median, as it incorporates all the range results.

* Multiple-year data is to be used only in selecting comparables and in making adjustments to potential comparables. However, as a taxpayer must determine his or her income on an annual basis, the transfer prices employed should be tested on the basis of the single-year results alone. (In practice, this can lead to year-by-year adjustments even when the taxpayer's results were within the range over the audit period taken as a whole.)

The courts may have to provide ultimate clarification on these matters. In the interim, tax practitioners and taxpayers must consider the CRA's stated position.

The CRA has become more aggressive in its enforcement and is willing to utilize its arsenal of tools to ensure taxpayers comply with the transfer-pricing rules. All taxpayers must be prepared to deal with transfer-pricing audits.

Every taxpayer dealing with related nonresidents can expect a more aggressive approach in CRA's transfer-pricing audits. Actions by the CRA to ensure compliance with section 247 include:

* A CRA internal directive instructing field auditors to formally request taxpayers' contemporaneous transfer-pricing documentation at the beginning of every audit.

* Increasing use of formal demands for information relating to transactions with nonresidents under sections 231.2 and/or 231.6 of the Income Tax Act.

Previously, some tax services offices of the CRA were using standardized letters when requesting documentation, while others were making informal requests or were not requesting the documentation at all. In October 2004, the CRA adopted a formal policy and instructed its auditors to formally request that each taxpayer provide contemporaneous transfer-pricing documentation at the initial stage of every audit. (The directive, dated October 13, 2004, can be found at www.craarc.gc.ca/tax/nonresidents/business/memorandums-e.html as Transfer Pricing Memorandum TPM-05.) Unlike general audit queries issued by the CRA, no extension of this statutory three-month period would be granted without penalties.

Previously, formal demands for information under sections 231.2 and/or 231.6 of the act had only been made as a last resort. Such demands often strain the relationship between the CRA and the taxpayer and any cooperative efforts in relation to the audit generally disappear once a demand has been made. Nonetheless, the CRA appears to be taking advantage of all enforcement tools available under the act.

The CRA has been taking an increasingly hardline approach to transfer-pricing documentation compliance and related penalties. Transfer-pricing audits are being conducted in smaller companies ($15 million in revenue) as well as multimillion-dollar companies. In fact, a CRA official confirmed, the first transfer-pricing penalty assessed by the CRA involved a transfer-pricing adjustment that exceeded the 10% of gross revenue threshold, indicating the taxpayer was a small company.

The CRA's Transfer Pricing Review Committee was formed in late 2003 to advise the local tax services offices on whether the 10% transfer-pricing penalty should be applied on adjustments in excess of $5 million or 10% of revenue because the reasonable efforts requirements of the act hadn't been met. All cases where transfer-pricing income or capital adjustments exceed these thresholds must be referred to the committee. It also advises tax services offices whether the form of transactions should be disregarded and recharacterized for transfer-pricing purposes pursuant to paragraph 247(2)(b) of the act.

Of the cases that have been referred to the committee for review, penalties have been applied in almost half the cases.

Given the current Canadian environment, taxpayers must be proactive when it comes to transfer pricing to ensure they are compliant. They should review their transfer-pricing documentation to ensure it is up-to-date and satisfies the information required under subsection 247(4) of the act. The transfer-pricing analysis must be robust enough to meet the more aggressive environment and to avoid penalties.

To gain greater certainty, taxpayers may consider participating in the CRA's advance-pricing arrangement (APA) program. This is a service that confirms the appropriate transfer-pricing methodology to establish an arm's-length price for specified crossborder transactions between related parties. An APA may be used to cover the selected transactions for up to five years. Therefore, the benefit of such an arrangement is that it provides certainty on the Canadian tax treatment of the covered intercompany transactions.

For smaller businesses, the CRA recently introduced special procedures to give them access to the APA program. The small business APA program (to be eligible, the taxpayer must have gross revenue of less than $50 million or a proposed covered transaction of less than $10 million) is designed to address small business taxpayers' concerns and to reduce time and costs.

Transfer pricing is not just a tax compliance matter. Taking a proactive approach also presents opportunities for taxpayers to incorporate transfer pricing into their tax planning. In today's environment, as multinational enterprises change their global operating models, fundamental changes to the business model (e.g., reorganization, M&As) may affect the pattern of intercompany transactions. This creates a need to regularly review transfer-pricing practices and policies. A failure to adjust transfer-pricing practices following major business changes may leave a multinational enterprise exposed to transfer-pricing adjustments and legitimate planning opportunities may be missed.

The CRA is becoming more aggressive in its transfer-pricing audit approach, taking an increasingly hard line on transferpricing compliance and related penalties. Now more than ever, strong transferpricing documentation is essential to avoid potential adjustments and penalties.

[Author Affiliation]

Sheila Smith, CA, is a partner working in the Toronto and Calgary offices of Ernst & Young LLP. Paula Kelley, CA, is a principal at Ernst & Young LLP in Toronto

Technical editor: Trent Henry, partner, Ernst & Young LLP

China berates Dalai Lama visit to area near Tibet

China lashed out at the Dalai Lama's visit to a disputed border region in India on Tuesday, saying his trip to the area revealed the exiled Tibetan leader's separatist agenda.

In a now familiar tit-for-tat response, the revered Buddhist figure and Nobel Peace Prize winner defended his trip, saying it had been overly politicized by others.

The Dalai Lama has been holding prayer meetings and teaching sessions with adherents in the Himalayan town of Tawang, near the frontier with Chinese-controlled Tibet.

China has repeatedly criticized his weeklong visit to the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which Beijing also claims as its territory.

The trip began Sunday after months of rising friction between India and China.

"We oppose the Dalai Lama's visit," China's ministry spokesman Qin Gang said at a regularly scheduled news conference.

The Dalai Lama's visit to the disputed area "fully reveals his essential nature of splitting the motherland, but his plot is doomed to failure," Qin said.

Qin also criticized India for having permitted the visit above China's objections.

In an interview with India's Times Now television news channel in Tawang, the Dalai Lama dismissed the criticism from Beijing.

"I'm simply a Buddhist monk and all my conduct where I go (is) basically nonpolitical," he said.

The Dalai Lama also recalled entering Tawang from Tibet following a harrowing escape from his palace in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa amid an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

"A lot of anxiety, anguish and also a sense of hopelessness, helplessness like that," he said.

Arunachal Pradesh is one of two disputed border regions claimed by both China and India, who fought a border war in 1962 and have had stretches of increased tensions ever since.

India has responded to China's demands to call off the trip by saying the Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile in India since fleeing Tibet, was an honored guest and free to visit any part of the country.

China regards the Dalai Lama as seeking formal independence for Tibet, which it claims has been Chinese territory for four centuries. The Dalai Lama says he seeks only a high level of autonomy under Chinese rule for the Himalayan region, although many of his supporters say Tibet was effectively an independent country for most of its history.

On Monday, Indian officials restricted access to the Dalai Lama by journalists covering the visit in an apparent effort to minimize tensions with China.

The relatively muted tone of Qin's comments also appeared to signal a desire by Beijing not to further aggravate the dispute.

U.S. officials say they expect President Barack Obama to discuss Tibet with Chinese President Hu Jintao on a visit to Beijing next week, along with issues of freedom of speech and religion and strengthened rule of law.

Ringo Starr celebrates 68th birthday in Chicago

Ringo Starr celebrated his 68th birthday in Chicago giving out messages of peace and love, along with dessert.

Fans surrounded the former Beatles drummer Monday as he waited for the clock to strike noon the Hard Rock Hotel. Then he flashed peace signs with both hands in the air and yelled, "Twelve o'clock _ peace and love!"

The crowd of about 300 sang "Happy Birthday" to Starr, who passed out white-iced cupcakes with his wife Barbara Bach. He says his dream for the day was to spread peace and love.

Starr and his band play a concert in Chicago on Sunday.

Boat capsizes off Irish coast at night, man drowns

Emergency officials say a Swiss man has drowned and nine others survived after their boat capsized at night while trying to reach a holiday island off Ireland's southwest coast.

Coast Guard spokesman Danny Lynch says a 17-foot (5-meter) boat carrying 10 Swiss nationals was hit by a wave about 1:30 a.m. (0130 GMT) Friday as it was traveling to uninhabited Coney Island off the West Cork shoreline. The privately owned island has a single holiday home rented out to tourists _ though rarely in the chill of December.

Police say the boat is owned by a Swiss man who lives in West Cork. Lynch says one Swiss man swam ashore to nearby Long Island and raised the alarm with one of the island's two residents.

The victim has not been publicly identified.

Listening to 'God's people now!'

Winnipeg

Jack Suderman, general secretary of Mennonite Church Canada, is planning a listening tour of churches across Canada.

The listening tour shares the theme name of the upcoming annual assembly in Edmonton, and will begin in late March. Like the assembly, the tour's purpose is to build up God's people in MC Canada.

'It is my dream and hope to visit every MC Canada congregation on their own turf to 'take the pulse' of how we are, what we are doing, and where the felt needs are," the new general secretary said, adding, "We want to seriously engage groups that want to be heard in our constituency, and nurture these important and good relationships."

Respondents to the constituency-wide survey conducted by MC Canada last year said that visits from MC Canada staff are one of the most valued ways of communicating.

The tour's planning team is consulting with leadership in each of the area conferences, seeking their blessing for the visits and inviting their participation in the tour.

The tour will take place in several phases, each one focusing on an area conference or region within an area conference. A preliminary schedule and invitation to participate will be sent to all MC Canada area conferences and congregations in late February. The tour is expected to conclude this fall.

-MC Canada release by Pam Peters-Pries

Monday, 12 March 2012

Chicago's most notorious nemeses

In the wake of Brett Favre's second unretirement, here's a look at those who have done Chicago wrong. Look for No. 2 on Thursday.

BRETT FAVRE

The first time the Bears played Favre, he didn't look that special. On Oct. 25, 1992, Favre was 20-for-37 for 214 yards with a touchdown and an interception as the Bears defeated the Green Bay Packers 30-10 at Lambeau Field.

But no player would be such a consistent Bears killer as the oft-retired Favre.

He led the Packers to 10 straight wins over the Bears from 1994 through 1998.

In '95, Favre threw five touchdown passes against the Bears at Lambeau and another three at Soldier Field, including a 99-yarder to Robert Brooks. Favre's Packers averaged 30.4 points per game against the Bears during that streak.

He also won seven straight games against the Bears from 2000 to 2003.

His 25 touchdown passes are the fourth most at Soldier Field, trailing only Erik Kramer (38), Jim McMahon (37) and Jim Harbaugh (28).

Now he'll have two more chances to stick it to the Bears this season.

Or maybe it's the other way around. Coach Lovie Smith is on his way to becoming Favre's nemesis. Favre was 20-4 against the Bears before Smith's hiring, but he's only 2-6 since.

Whom would you pick? Vote at www.suntimes.com/sports.

Photo: (See microfilm for photo description). ;

Biofuels Boom Raises Tough Questions

NEW YORK - America is drunk on ethanol. Farmers in the Midwest are sending billions of bushels of corn to refineries that turn it into billions of gallons of fuel. Automakers in Detroit have already built millions of cars, trucks and SUVs that can run on it, and are committed to making millions more. In Washington, politicians have approved generous subsidies for companies that make ethanol.

And just this week, President Bush arranged with Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva for their countries to share ethanol production technology.

Even alternative fuel aficionados are surprised at the nation's sudden enthusiasm for grain alcohol.

"It's coming on dramatically; more rapidly than anyone had expected," said Nathanael Greene, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

You'd think that would be good news, but it actually worries a lot of people.

The problem is, ethanol really isn't ready for prime time. The only economical way to make ethanol right now is with corn, which means the burgeoning industry is literally eating America's lunch, not to mention its breakfast and dinner. And though ethanol from corn may have some minor benefits with regard to energy independence, most analysts conclude its environmental benefits are questionable at best.

Proponents acknowledge the drawbacks of corn-based ethanol, but they believe it can help wean America off imported oil the way methadone helps a junkie kick heroin. It may not be ideal, but ethanol could help the country make the necessary and difficult transition to an environmentally and economically sustainable future.

There are many questions about ethanol's place in America's energy future. Some are easily answered; others, not so much.

WHAT IS ETHANOL?

Ethanol is moonshine. Hooch. Rotgut. White lightning. That explains why the last time Americans produced it in any appreciable amount was during Prohibition. Today, just like back then, virtually all the ethanol produced in the United States comes from corn that is fermented and then distilled to produce pure grain alcohol.

WILL MY CAR RUN ON IT?

Any car will burn gasoline mixed with a small amount of ethanol. But cars must be equipped with special equipment to burn fuel that is more than about 10 percent ethanol. All three of the major American automakers are already producing flex-fuel cars that can run on either gasoline or E85, a mix of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline. Thanks to incentives from the federal government, they have committed to having half the cars they produce run on either E85 or biodiesel by 2012.

HOW FAST IS ETHANOL PRODUCTION GROWING?

About as fast as farmers can grow the corn to make it. According to the Renewable Fuels Association, a trade group, ethanol production has doubled in the past three years, reaching nearly 5 billion gallons in 2006. With 113 ethanol plants currently operating and 78 more under construction, the country's ethanol output is expected to double again in less than two years.

IS ETHANOL BETTER THAN GASOLINE?

For all the environmental and economic troubles it causes, gasoline turns out to be a remarkably efficient automobile fuel. The energy required to pump crude out of the ground, refine it and transport it from oil well to gas tank is about 6 percent of the energy in the gasoline itself.

Ethanol is much less efficient, especially when it is made from corn. Just growing corn requires expending energy - plowing, planting, fertilizing and harvesting all require machinery that burns fossil fuel. Modern agriculture relies on large amounts of fertilizer and pesticides, both of which are produced by methods that consume fossil fuels. Then there's the cost of transporting the corn to an ethanol plant, where the fermentation and distillation processes consume yet more energy. Finally, there's the cost of transporting the fuel to filling stations. And because ethanol is more corrosive than gasoline, it can't be pumped through relatively efficient pipelines, but must be transported by rail or tanker truck.

In the end, even the most generous analysts estimate that it takes the energy equivalent of three gallons of ethanol to make four gallons of the stuff. Some even argue that it takes more energy to produce ethanol from corn than you get out of it, but most agricultural economists think that's a stretch.

BUT AREN'T THERE ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS TO ETHANOL?

If you make ethanol from corn, the environmental benefits are limited. When you consider the greenhouse gases that are released in the growing and refining process, corn-based ethanol is only slightly better with regard to global warming than gasoline. Growing corn also requires the use of pesticides and fertilizers that cause soil and water pollution.

The environmental benefit of corn-based ethanol is felt mostly around the tailpipe. When blended into gasoline in small amounts, ethanol causes the fuel to generate less smog-producing carbon monoxide. That has made it popular in smoggy cities like Los Angeles.

WHAT ABOUT ETHANOL'S ECONOMIC BENEFITS?

Making ethanol is so profitable, thanks to government subsidies and continued high oil prices, that plants are proliferating throughout the Corn Belt. Iowa, the nation's top corn-producing state, is projected to have so many ethanol plants by 2008 it could easily find itself importing corn in order to feed them.

But that depends on the Invisible Hand. Making ethanol is profitable when oil is costly and corn is cheap. And the 51 cent-a-gallon federal subsidy doesn't hurt. But oil prices are off from last year's peaks and corn has doubled in price over the past year, from about $2 to $4 a bushel, thanks mostly to demand from ethanol producers.

High corn prices are causing social unrest in Mexico, where the government has tried to mollify angry consumers by slapping price controls on tortillas. Lester R. Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, predicts food riots in other major corn-importing countries if something isn't done.

U.S. consumers will soon feel the effects of high corn prices as well, if they haven't already, because virtually everything Americans put in their mouths starts as corn. There's corn flakes, corn chips, corn nuts, and hundreds of other processed foods that don't even have the word corn in them. There's corn in the occasional pint of beer and shot of whisky. And don't forget high fructose corn syrup, a sweetener that is added to soft drinks, baked goods, candy and a lot of things that aren't even sweet.

Some freaks even eat it off the cob.

It's true that animals eat more than half of the corn produced in America; guess who eats them? On Friday the Agriculture Department announced that beef, pork and chicken will soon cost consumers more thanks to the demand of ethanol for corn.

It's also true that there's a difference between edible sweet corn and the feed corn that's used for ethanol production. But because farmers try to grow the most profitable crop they can, higher prices for feed corn tend to discourage the production of sweet corn. That decreases its supply, driving the price of sweet corn up, too.

In fact, many agricultural economists believe rising demand for feed corn has squeezed the supply - and boosted the price - of not just sweet corn but also wheat, soybeans and several other crops.

America's appetite for corn is enormous. But Americans consume so much gasoline that all the corn in the world couldn't make enough ethanol to slake the nation's lust for transportation fuels. Last year ethanol production used 12 percent of the U.S. corn harvest, but it replaced only 2.8 percent of the nation's gasoline consumption.

"If we were to adopt automobile fuel efficiency standards to increase efficiency by 20 percent, that would contribute as much as converting the entire U.S. grain harvest into ethanol," Brown said.

ISN'T THERE A BETTER RENEWABLE FUEL SUBSTITUTE FOR GASOLINE?

Most experts think it will take an array of renewable energy technologies to replace fossil fuels. Ethanol's main drawbacks come not from the nature of the fuel itself, but from the fact that it is made using a critical component of the world's food supply. Ethanol would be more beneficial both environmentally and economically if scientists could figure out how to make it from a nonfood plant that could be grown without the need for fertilizers, pesticides and other inputs. Researchers are currently working on methods to do just that, making ethanol from the cellulose in a wide variety of plants, including poplar trees, switchgrass and cornstalks.

But plant cellulose is more difficult to break down than the starch in corn kernels. That's why people eat corn instead of grass. Plus it tastes better.

There are also technical hurdles related to separating, digesting and fermenting the cellulose fiber. Though it can be done, making ethanol from cellulose-rich material costs at least twice as much as making it from corn.

HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE BEFORE CELLULOSIC ETHANOL IS COMPETITIVE WITH CORN ETHANOL AND GASOLINE?

Some experts estimate that it will take 10 to 15 years before cellulosic ethanol becomes competitive. But Mitch Mandich, CEO of Range Fuels, thinks it will be a lot sooner than that. The Colorado-based company has started building a cellulosic ethanol plant in Georgia that converts wood chips and other waste left behind by the forest products industry. Another company, Iogen Corp., has been producing cellulosic ethanol from wheat, oat and barley straw for several years at a demonstration plant in Ottawa, Canada.

HOW MUCH MORE EFFICIENT WOULD CELLULOSIC ETHANOL BE COMPARED TO CORN ETHANOL?

Studies suggest that cellulosic ethanol could yield at least four to six times the energy expended to produce it. It would also produce less greenhouse gas emissions than corn-based ethanol because much of the energy needed to refine it could come not from fossil fuels, but from burning other chemical components of the very same plants that contained the cellulose.

HOW MUCH GASOLINE COULD CELLULOSIC ETHANOL REPLACE?

The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that the United States could produce more than a billion tons of cellulosic material annually for ethanol production, from switchgrass grown on marginal agricultural lands to wood chips and other waste produced by the timber industry. In theory, that material could produce enough ethanol to substitute for about 30 percent of the country's oil consumption.

A University of Tennessee study released in November reached similar conclusions. As much as 100 million acres of land would have to be dedicated to energy crops in order to reach the goal of substituting renewable biofuels for 25 percent of the nation's fuel consumption by 2025, the report estimated. That would be a significant fraction of the nation's 800 million acres of cultivable land, the study's authors said, but not enough to cause disruptions in agricultural markets.

"There really aren't any losers," said University of Tennessee agricultural economist Burton English.

REALLY? NO LOSERS AT ALL?

There might be losers. Simple economics dictates that if farmers find it more profitable to grow switchgrass rather than corn, soy or cotton, the price of those commodities is bound to rise in response to falling supply.

"You can produce a lot of ethanol from cellulose without competing with food," said Wallace Tyner, an agricultural economist at Purdue University. "But if you want to get half your fuel supply from it you will compete with food agriculture."

There may also be ecological impacts. The government currently pays farmers not to farm about 35 million acres of conservation land, mostly in the Midwest. Those fallow tracts provide valuable habitat for wildlife, especially birds. Though switchgrass is a good home for most birds, if it became profitable to grow it or another energy crop on conservation land some species could decline.

WILL ETHANOL SOLVE ALL OF OUR PROBLEMS?

Ethanol is certainly a valuable tool in our efforts to address the economic and environmental problems associated with fossil fuels. But even the most optimistic projections suggest it can only replace a fraction of the 140 billion gallons of gasoline that Americans consume every year. It will take a mix of technologies to achieve energy independence and reduce the country's production of greenhouse gases.

"I think we're in a very interesting era. We are recognizing a problem and we are finding lots of potential solutions," said David Tilman, an ecologist at the University of Minnesota.

But if we're serious about achieving energy independence and mitigating global warming, Tilman and other experts said, one of those solutions must be energy conservation.

That means doubling the fuel economy of our automobiles, expanding mass transit and decreasing the amount of energy it takes to light, heat and cool our buildings. Without such measures, ethanol and other innovations will make little more than a dent in the nation's fossil fuel consumption.

Nuestra breaks ground on Dartmouth Hotel renovation

The long-vacant upper floors of the Dartmouth Hotel building in Dudley Square will soon receive a makeover and, more importantly, residents.

The Nuestra Communidad Development Corporation aims to renovate the building at the corner of Warren and Dudley streets to provide 65 new units of housing.

The project, on which the organization broke ground last week, will include the erection of a four-story structure next door where the Nubian Notion annex currently stands.

The housing will be for individuals and couples, with 58 studio and single-bedroom units and seven artists' lofts.

Most of the units will be subsidized, 45 of them for individuals or couples earning below 60 percent of the area's median income, which for individuals is $31,000.

A further 13 units will be set aside for tenants earning between 80 and 100 percent of the median, while the remaining seven will be rented at the market rate, according to Nuestra Executive Director Evelyn Friedman.

The development's HUD contract guarantees that 45 of the units will remain subsidized for the next 15 years.

"I think that as long as Nuestra continues to own the property it will remain affordable," said Friedman. "But I think we all have to be vigilant about making sure Dudley gets the property developed, but not gentrified to the level where people can't afford to live here."

Community groups in the Dudley neighborhood have been pushing for more affordable housing in their area to ensure that the neighborhood's low-income population will not be priced out if the neighborhood becomes attractive to the well-to-do.

Nuestra has done its part. It rents out 300 apartments designated affordable for lower-income people and has sold 300 homeownership units that are also designated affordable.

A series of development projects has poised the long-struggling shopping district for a turnaround.

The creation of the Orchard Gardens housing development recently brought much-needed affordable housing to the area. A new public kindergarten through eighth grade school will open nearby in the fall. And the Paladio Hall building across Warren St. from the Dartmouth was recently revitalized to house office and retail space.

"Just look a half mile around and look at what is going on," said Mayor Thomas M. Menino during the ground-breaking, held under a tent across Warren St. from the Dartmouth. "You've waited a long time in Dudley and finally it's coming. The best days are ahead."

Nuestra has been planning the project since it bought the land in August of 2001. The group solicited input on the project from merchants, Dudley Main Streets, the Roxbury Neighborhood Council and nearby neighborhood groups.

Early on, the organization determined that converting the upper floors into offices or condominiums, as some community members wanted, would not be feasible.

"There was more money available for rental because you have tax credits and a variety of other things," explained Friedman.

Office space requires more parking than housing and condominiums would not produce a high enough return, she said.

Furthermore the Dartmouth enjoys few green spaces within walking distance and thus would not be well-suited for families, according to Friedman.

"We thought it would be better for adult housing than families," she said.

In addition to providing more affordable housing in the area, the project will benefit the Roxbury community by generating business for local contractors.

Two Roxbury-based contractors, Crosswinds Construction and Biltrite Construction, have been hired to spearhead the project. Crosswinds is 100 percent minority-owned and both companies have agreed that at least 60 percent of the businesses they hire will be minority-owned while at least 60 percent of the workers will be people of color.

Funding for the Dartmouth development is coming from 15 different public and private donors, including Fleet Bank, which is investing $8 million. The state is investing $9.3 million in the project, according to Friedman.

Construction is scheduled to begin in June and the developers aim to complete the project in August 2004.

Photograph

Coffee club duties give her the jitters

My popular demand, I was given the thankless job of being incharge of the office coffee club.

My first act was to arrange to have hot coffee on hand. AntiqueCoffee Service eventually was contracted to place a machine in ourplace. Based on our need, 30 to 40 cups on Friday alone, I figuredit would pay for itself in no time.

Sadly, we had nothing but problems with the machine. Peoplekept losing money in the blasted thing, and it was frequently out ofservice. In fact, it once conked out on our busiest day, Friday.

At that point, I asked Antique Coffee Service to take back itsmachine. Because it had hardly worked in a month, I figured we'd beeven with the final charges. But Antique is billing us for $34.37.And is my boss ticked off!

The bill is in the company name, and a collection agency isbugging him. Oh, yeah, I'm not even in charge of the club anymore. CYNTHIA, Park Ridge

A. Apparently you had grounds for complaint because AntiqueCoffee Service has assured us the matter has been cleared up: thefirm's balance is zero.

Q. I guess I had this coming: The post office keeps telling me acheck's in the mail.

My problem began, strangely, when I got a job at the post officeas a temporary/casual employee. I was to have worked for threemonths, but I quit soon after I started. Since August, I have beentrying to get paid for the days I did work.

MS. G.

A. Days? Postal authorities said you quit after the first dayof orientation. Still, you were told it would take the computer twopaydays (four weeks) to crank out a check.

Then, the post office had a problem with your home address andwas reluctant to mail it until the address could be verified. We'retold repeated attempts to contact you were futile. Thankfully, yournote to us got things rolling and you have your day's pay.

Q. My daughter was born with Down's syndrome. To stimulate herdevelopment, I need two Fisher-Price toys. She just loves the twoitems, which were at her infant-stimulation intervention program.

Unfortunately, I can't find the toys in any store. Maybe theyare discontinued. Anyway, one is called a Happy Apple; the other'sa ferris wheel that plays music. MOM, Willowbrook

A. You were right. Fisher-Price verified the toys werediscontinued several years ago and none remain in stock. However,we've got faith in our readers' stockpile of toys. Someone musthave these. Senior/action Shutting (garage) door on this problem

At the age of 74, I don't need the grief of a faulty garagedoor.

I paid Better Built Lumber Co. good money to have an overheaddoor installed. But it just doesn't work right. Something's goofedup. The springs seem too lightweight to handle the door.

I'm been on the horn with these people a number of times butcannot get anyone out to even inspect the work. I'm writing ActionTime because I hear you can get answers when consumers can't. SMITH

A. So you need a little pull, eh? No problem. We passed alongyour comments to Better Built Lumber.

The firm responded with a note you signed, stating thateverything is now OK and that you are completely satisfied with therepairs done.

Senior/action appears Tuesdays and Fridays.

FOOD NEWS

TAKE TWO FOR TACABI

As much as I do love a Prince reference, this may be the very last time I get to use the phrase "the restaurant formerly known as Kol." As of October 1, the restaurant officially became TaCaBi, a moniker that's an amaigamation of the first names of the restaurant's three owners; Tammy, Carlos and Billy. And with a new name comes a bit of a new image insofar as the food is concerned. New lunch and dinner menus will be rotted out any day, featuring all the old favorites, but with a heftier showing of hot items, more suited for a winter palate. Bento boxes, tariyaki bowls and pub sandwiches like seared ahi or a New York strip steak between two slices of bread have been added to the lunch menu. And at dinner, diners can forgo nigiri for something from the grill, like pork or lamb chops.

And with a new name and a new menu comes a big party. A grand reopening party of sorts. Sat, Oct. 27, TaCaBi celebrates all things new about the restaurant with live music from 7:30-9:30 p.m., and a free glass of wine, draft beer or hot green tea with your meal. TaCaBi is also hosting an all-you-can-eat sushi day. Thursday afternoons from 2:30-6:30 p.m., TaCaBi rolls out an AYCE sushi menu for $19.99 per person. Late lunch, anyone?

Tacabi, 800 W. Idaho St., #112, 208-343-3474.

PRANZO AT PIAZZA

Boise is strange little town when it comes to wining and dining. We lose our minds over what are generally the most obtrusive new joints, even while the food is mediocre, the service poor and the menu overpriced. And while we're busy jumping from big-box hot spot to trendy address bistro, the quiet little places just keep getting better and better until one day, we can hardly stop obsessing about what we've been missing all along. Piazza di Vino is exactly one of those cozy, yet somewhat neglected and elegant little holes in the wall that suddenly has it coming together all at once.

In the last few weeks, the art gallery and wine bar has dedicated its second floor gallery space entirely to one artist, inaugurated a wine club and started not just serving, but delivering iunch. Basic deli sandwiches-grilled chicken, roast beef, ham and tuna-dressed up with gourmet touches like basil goat cheese, roasted peppers and tahini dressing. Salads comes in four flavors, and everyone's favorite naughty lunch-pizza-is available in mostly vegetarian options, as well as with pepperoni or chicken. The wine club, which held its inaugural meeting this month, meets the first Monday of each month. Host Greg Barnes of J.R. Premier Wines chose Washington wines to highlight in November, and Barnes promises to highlight wines that aren't widely known or widely available in Boise. Membership is a $25 introduction fee, plus $25 per month, and among a list of bennies, membership includes a monthly members-only tasting featuring six to eight wines and a food buffet, and wine discounts on featured wines at only 15 percent above cost.

Piazza di Vino, 212 N. Ninth St., 208-336-9577.

Pirates score four in 10th to beat Cardinals 8-4

Ronny Paulino drove in the go-ahead run in a four-run 10th inning for his second crucial hit in the Pittsburgh Pirates' 8-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

Troy Glaus hit a three-run home run and Albert Pujols tied it with his eighth in the eighth for the Cardinals, extending his hitting streak to 12 games. Pujols, who had a day off on Monday, also walked twice and has reached base in all 40 games.

It's the majors' longest streak at the start of the season since Derek Jeter's 53-game run in 1999 for the Yankees.

Adam LaRoche added a three-run double off Ron Villone (1-1) in the 10th for the Pirates, who have won seven of eight and are one game below .500.

Nate McLouth hit a two-run homer and Paulino, who entered in the second after catcher Ryan Doumit hurt his left thumb muffing a pitch on a passed ball in the first, had a game-tying double in the seventh.

Marino Salas (1-0) worked around three walks, one intentional, and escaped a bases loaded jam in the ninth to win in his major league debut. Salas, whose contract was purchased from Triple-A Indianapolis earlier in the day, got Ryan Ludwick on a high fly to shallow right to end the ninth.

Villone, who entered with a 1.26 ERA, allowed four runs, four hits and two walks in the 10th. The Cardinals have lost six of seven.

Glaus' second homer of the season off Phil Dumatrait also provided his first RBIs this month to put the Cardinals ahead 4-3 in the sixth.

The Pirates also came up empty with the bases loaded in the ninth against Ryan Franklin, who retired pinch hitter Chris Gomez on an infield pop-up.

Glaus, who has four seasons with 37 or more homers, entered the game in a 3-for-30 slump. He singled in the fourth before his low liner barely cleared the wall in left-center in the sixth. Dumatrait limited the Cardinals to two hits in the first five innings, but got into trouble with walks to Brian Barton and Ludwick.

Lohse retired the first nine batters in order before Freddy Sanchez singled to open the fourth and McLouth followed with his 10th homer just inside the right-field foul pole. Lohse breezed through eight more hitters before the seventh.

Lohse, who looked like a mid-March free agent steal at $4.25 million for this season, has allowed 20 earned runs in 16 innings in three starts this month, and an overall 5.01 ERA.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

EU split on Palestinians push for recognition

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union remains undecided whether to recognize the Palestinian push for recognition at the United Nations.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said Thursday the question remained "hypothetical" because no resolution had been tabled yet.

The Palestinian statehood bid comes amid stalled peace negotiations with Israel. Israel and the United States oppose the bid, saying a state must be established through negotiations. Israel has been lobbying EU capitals not to endorse the move.

Diplomats expect a split among EU members akin to that over Kosovo's independence, which five members of the 28-nation bloc refused to recognize. They say Belgium, Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, Malta, Norway, Portugal, Spain and Sweden may back the resolution.

THE PELICAN BRIEF

J.W. Robinson Horne
Sacramento Observer
12-22-1993
THE PELICAN BRIEF.

Darby Shaw sits alone in a Washington, D.C. hotel room, still alive, still waiting. She has just seen another man murdered, only inches from her -- the second in less than a week.

The killers are closing in on her and Darby knows she can no longer run and hide. She'd survived for days in the anonymous shadows and tourist-filled crowds of New Orleans' French Quarter, but this last murder was too frightening, too close.

Terrified and exhausted, Darby has decided to put her faith in a stranger, Gray Grantham, an investigative reporter whom Callahan had admired -- Callahan, her lover and mentor, now a fatality in this deadly chase.

Darby will tell Grantham exactly what's in the speculative legal brief -- "the pelican brief" -- she wrote about the Supreme Court justice assassinations -- about the man behind it all, about the growing cover-up that extends to the highest levels of government.

Darby had given Grantham very specific instructions. She'd told him to assume they're always watching and following.

She hopes by now he'll understand how dangerous they are -- that this isn't a game for anyone involved.

And perhaps, if Grantham can confirm the information and break the story before the killers figure out where she is -- perhaps she and Grantham will both survive.

The story is played out in Warner Bros.' "The Pelican Brief," starring Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington.

For two-time Oscar nominee Julia Roberts, the dual attractions of a strong heroine and director Alan J. Pakula himself convinced her to play the lead role of Darby Shaw, whose insight into a troubling series of murders targets her as the killer's next victim. Grisham had visualized Roberts as Darby even as he wrote his novel, but it was Roberts' meetings with Pakula that cemented her commitment to the picture.

"When I first agreed to the project, I had read the book and liked it," she recalled.

Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington is cast opposite Roberts in the role of Gray Grantham, a top Washington investigative reporter who finds himself teamed with Darby as the two work to confirm the information in Darby's revelatory legal brief -- while staying ahead of the assassins.

Washington said he spent time with several reporters and editors at the Washington Post while researching his role. The actor added that he was somewhat surprised to discover that newsmen and actors have more in common than making -- or writing -- the headlines.

"It's interesting that both reporters and actors are, in a sense, investigative, trying to figure out human behavior," said Washington.

"To play a part, I get with real people and find out how they feel and think and live, which is much like what a reporter does. We look for motivations and understanding," he added.

The movie is now showing locally.

Ethnic NewsWatch SoftLine Information, Inc., Stamford, CT
THE PELICAN BRIEFJ.W. Robinson Horne
Sacramento Observer
12-22-1993
THE PELICAN BRIEF.

Darby Shaw sits alone in a Washington, D.C. hotel room, still alive, still waiting. She has just seen another man murdered, only inches from her -- the second in less than a week.

The killers are closing in on her and Darby knows she can no longer run and hide. She'd survived for days in the anonymous shadows and tourist-filled crowds of New Orleans' French Quarter, but this last murder was too frightening, too close.

Terrified and exhausted, Darby has decided to put her faith in a stranger, Gray Grantham, an investigative reporter whom Callahan had admired -- Callahan, her lover and mentor, now a fatality in this deadly chase.

Darby will tell Grantham exactly what's in the speculative legal brief -- "the pelican brief" -- she wrote about the Supreme Court justice assassinations -- about the man behind it all, about the growing cover-up that extends to the highest levels of government.

Darby had given Grantham very specific instructions. She'd told him to assume they're always watching and following.

She hopes by now he'll understand how dangerous they are -- that this isn't a game for anyone involved.

And perhaps, if Grantham can confirm the information and break the story before the killers figure out where she is -- perhaps she and Grantham will both survive.

The story is played out in Warner Bros.' "The Pelican Brief," starring Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington.

For two-time Oscar nominee Julia Roberts, the dual attractions of a strong heroine and director Alan J. Pakula himself convinced her to play the lead role of Darby Shaw, whose insight into a troubling series of murders targets her as the killer's next victim. Grisham had visualized Roberts as Darby even as he wrote his novel, but it was Roberts' meetings with Pakula that cemented her commitment to the picture.

"When I first agreed to the project, I had read the book and liked it," she recalled.

Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington is cast opposite Roberts in the role of Gray Grantham, a top Washington investigative reporter who finds himself teamed with Darby as the two work to confirm the information in Darby's revelatory legal brief -- while staying ahead of the assassins.

Washington said he spent time with several reporters and editors at the Washington Post while researching his role. The actor added that he was somewhat surprised to discover that newsmen and actors have more in common than making -- or writing -- the headlines.

"It's interesting that both reporters and actors are, in a sense, investigative, trying to figure out human behavior," said Washington.

"To play a part, I get with real people and find out how they feel and think and live, which is much like what a reporter does. We look for motivations and understanding," he added.

The movie is now showing locally.

Ethnic NewsWatch SoftLine Information, Inc., Stamford, CT

Monday, 5 March 2012

Chicago-bound train hits 2 cars hours apart; 5 die

Five people, including two children, were killed when an Amtrakpassenger train bound for Chicago from southern Illinois struck twoautos within 3 1/2 hours, authorities said Tuesday.

Amtrak spokeswoman Debbie Marciniak said the first accidentoccurred in rural Edgewood, about 200 miles south of Chicago, where acouple and their two children were killed Monday evening.

New agricultural and food chemistry study findings have been published by scientists at University of Nice.

"Odor impact compounds of Tagetes minuta L. essential Oil Were studied by gas chromatography (GC)-olfactometry using aroma extract dilution analysis (AEDA) and vocabulary-intensity-duration of elementary odors by sniffing (VIDEO-Sniff)," scientists in Nice, France report.

"AEDA was conducted by direct injection and revealed the presence of odorant ones Highest flavor dilution (FD) values were obtained for ethyl 2-met hyl ro anoate ethyl methyl utanoate (E)-ocimenone, two tentatively identified thiols, and two yet unknown compounds VIDEO Sniff as realized by dynamic ea s ace sampling (D-HS) combined with 8W-GC-olfactometry where eight sniffers simultaneously detect volatile …

WHAT'S OPEN / WHAT'S CLOSED.(CAPITAL REGION)

Thanksgiving Day is Thursday.

Here is a partial list of holiday schedule changes. BANKS: All banks will be closed Thanksgiving Day. Most will have regular hours Friday.BLOOD DRIVE: Albany Blood Donation Center at 33 Everett Road, Albany, will be open 7 a.m. to noon Thursday. BUSES: Capital District Transportation Authority buses will operate on a Sunday/holiday schedule Thursday. Regular weekday schedule will resume Friday. For more information call CDTA at 482-8822.GARBAGE: The Colonie landfill and the Clifton Park Transfer Station will be closed Thursday. Private haulers' schedules vary; some will pick up Friday and Saturday.GOVERNMENT: Most federal, state, …

Maybe Volvo has a better idea.(Column)(Column)

Byline: KEITH CRAIN

Consumers buy more than 16 million cars and trucks in the United States every year. They buy them from more than 20,000 dealerships.

You would think that if someone designed a specific vehicle for a large segment of the market it might have a chance to succeed.

For example, Toyota launched the Scion brand, aimed at the youth of America. And it has attracted more buyers than just the young folks for whom it was created.

So I was surprised at the reaction two weeks ago when Volvo introduced the YCC concept car at the Geneva auto show.

Volvo's YCC, which stands for "Your Concept Car,'' was designed mainly by female …

Pat Expects Lady Vols to Reach 'Summitt'

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Nine years have passed since Tennessee last won a national championship. Coach Pat Summitt believes she has found what's been missing since 1998.

After winning three straight national championships, Summitt kept recruiting talented players and returned to the Final Four five times - coming home empty-handed after each one.

The Lady Vols, holders of six national titles, are back in the semifinals this year for the 17th time overall and face North Carolina on Sunday. Rutgers and LSU will play in the other game in Cleveland with the winners advancing to the championship game Tuesday night.

What's different about Tennessee this season starts with …

Preckwinkle: Berrios ‘inappropriate’

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has talked frequently about changing the culture in government, which has long been tainted by government officials putting friends and family on the payroll.

So when asked about her friend, fellow Democrat and Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios hiring his son and sister, Preckwinkle chose her words carefully.

"I think it's inappropriate," Preckwinkle told reporters Thursday.

"When you're an elected official it's really important that people have confidence in your commitment to competence and good governance, and I think hiring relatives makes people question that," Preckwinkle said later during a taping of WBBM-AM's …

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Iberdrola Renovables inks its largest renewable energy sales contract.

(ADPnews) - Jan 15, 2010 - Spanish renewable energy company Iberdrola Renovables (MCE:IBR) signed its largest renewable energy sales contract so far with US Tennesse Valley Autority (TVA), a federally owned corporation, Iberdrola Renovables said today.

The sum of the contract was not disclosed.

Iberdrola Renovables will sell the electricity produced at the Cayuga Ridge …

OFFER FOR IRVING UP $10 PER SHARE.(Business)

Byline: Associated Press

Irving Bank Corp. said Wednesday that Banca Commerciale Italiana raised its cash tender offer by $10 per share but reduced its proposed stake in the banking company, which is fending off a rare hostile takeover from rival Bank of New York Co.

In composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange, Irving closed 25 cents higher to $61, while Bank of New York was unchanged at $31.37 1/2.

Under its revised offer, the state-run Banca Commerciale - Italy's second- largest bank - would pay $75 a share for 8.5 million shares, or 45 percent of Irving's outstanding common stock. Banca Commerciale also would have the right to buy an …

TROUPE IS FULL OF SURPRISES.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: TRESCA WEINSTEIN Special to the Times Union

BECKET, Mass. -- Modern dance fans who wince at the mention of opera or ballet shouldn't be put off by this dance group's name. On Tuesday night, The Ballet de l'Opera National de Lyon showed work that was exciting, original, and even avant-garde, and there wasn't a tutu or a diva in sight. The French company performs all this week at Jacob's Pillow.

The Lyon National Opera Ballet was founded in 1969 by Louis Erlo, then director of the Opera, and the company still performs with the orchestra of the National Opera of Lyon. However, since 1984, the troupe, now under the artistic direction of Yorgos Loukos, has …

REVOLVING CREDIT'S MODEST GROWTH CONTINUES.(Brief Article)

Consumer revolving credit grew at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 2.5% in June, the Federal Reserve reported this afternoon. The Fed estimates June ended with $743.5 billion in revolving credit receivables, up 2.4% from $726.1 billion in June 2003. More than 80% of revolving credit is on credit cards …

Asian markets mixed as Nikkei inches up, Hang Seng sinks on worries about tightening in China

Asian markets were mixed Monday as Japanese stocks inched higher and Hong Kong shares sank amid concerns about further tightening measures in mainland China.

Australian shares also fell Monday, led by Australia and New Zealand Banking Group after the lender said it expects earnings this fiscal year to be crimped by fallout from the global credit crunch.

But Chinese stocks jumped after the securities regulator's approval of two new equities funds and wealth management operations of nine mutual funds.

In Tokyo, the benchmark Nikkei 225 index rose 12.84 points, or 0.09 percent, to 13,635.40 as traders bought steel issues after they agreed to a 65 …