четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Guirgis' Broadway debut a blistering look at life

NEW YORK, New York (AP) — A fedora has never looked quite so menacing as it does resting on a side table when Stephen Adly Guirgis' gritty new play "The Motherf---- with the Hat" opens.

Ex-con Jackie has come home to the dingy apartment he shares with his girlfriend with good news: He just landed a job, the final piece of a resurrection that includes sobriety, meeting his parole obligations and landing Veronica, the woman he's loved since eighth grade.

Then he spies the hat, like an unwanted calling card. Or an unexploded grenade. It's not his hat. It's not Veronica's, either. The audience at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, where the play opened Monday, will leap to conclusions …

Colts open minicamp practice, stadium to Indy fans

The Indianapolis Colts added a new feature to minicamp practice Saturday _ fans.

Players and coaches boarded busses, made the short trip from the team complex on the city's west side to their downtown stadium where several thousand welcomed the defending AFC champions.

It was the perfect remedy for what might have gone down as just another mundane workout.

"When you're in the stadium, you up the ante a little bit with the energy level," Pro Bowl tight end Dallas Clark said before practice. "You give them (fans) a chance to see what our practices are like, from a coaching aspect and the drills that we do. It's a great opportunity …

Robb wants funds for S.C. library: Mayor says city should benefit if bond issue is approved

DAILY MAIL STAFF

Organizers of the effort to build a new library in downtownCharleston have not gone far enough, South Charleston Mayor RichieRobb said.

Robb has asked the board of the Kanawha County Public Library togive assurances that the South Charleston library would get somemoney if a bond issue is put before county voters and approved.

South Charleston's library is not a part of the county system, butRobb said it should benefit because residents there would be payinghigher taxes like everyone else.

"If they are expecting South Charleston people to vote on it andaffect their taxes, then some of it should come to South Charleston,"Robb …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Thousands in US mark 10th day without electricity after ice storm

More than 30,000 homes and businesses remained without power in the U.S. state of Oklahoma on Wednesday, more than a week after an ice storm hit the Midwest.

Customers in some rural areas were expected to be without power until Christmas, though Oklahoma's utility companies predicted that most service would be restored by Thursday.

The two-day storm caused 27 deaths in Oklahoma, most in traffic accidents, the state Medical Examiner's office said.

President George W. Bush issued a major disaster declaration Tuesday for seven Oklahoma …


Apple looks strong in advance of earnings report


Apple (AAPL) coasts into its first earnings report of 2012 with a strong wind in its sails, a clutch of envelope-pushing products in its hold, a record share price, and a steady hand at the tiller.
But its very success -- with the market-leading iPad and the voice-enabled iPhone 4S -- is luring cheaper rivals to the surface.
Google's (GOOG) Android, launched a few years ago and taking aim squarely at the high-end iOS, continues to attract cellphone makers. Amazon.com's Kindle Fire, half the cost of the iPad, is expected to have chipped away at the lower end of the tablet market.
Finally, though many on Wall Street, betting that an iTV and 4G iPhones and iPads will again pack its stores, continue to bank on a share-price climb to as high as $700, some begin to question the sustainability of Apple's torrid growth pace.
Apple tacked on $43 billion to its top line in fiscal 2011, lifting it to $108.25 billion -- a 65 percent increase from the previous year.
Barry Jaruzelski, a consumer hardware business expert and partner at consulting firm Booz & Co., said to sustain that is effectively to conjure a Fortune 500 company out of thin air -- year after year.
"You become a victim of your own success," he said. "Can you grow the existing products that much, or can you create a new category that creates $10 billion to $20 billion? That is the challenge."
When Apple reports earnings Tuesday, many investors for the first time might be watching for chinks in the armor, especially given Apple's first revenue miss since 2008 for the October quarter.
"The risk is the sustainability of what they have been doing," ISI Group analyst Brian Marshall said. "They have put up a huge number and the question is can they continue to penetrate with their current existing product portfolio at these price levels?"
The fear is that the number of people who can afford an iPad or an iPhone is dwindling, he added.
Apple has gone on a tear the past few years.
With $81.6 billion of cash, surging sales across product lines -- most notably its best-selling iPhone and iPad -- and fevered anticipation that it might make a big, game-changing bet on TV, many still say Apple has only one way to go this year: up.
As one of the companies that is a leader in major trends in technology -- mobile connectivity and the cloud -- Apple's revenue is expected easily to rise 30 percent this year and nearly 50 percent in its fiscal first quarter.
The average estimates for sales of Apple's products during the fiscal first quarter, which includes the holiday shopping season, are roughly 31 million iPhones, 13.5 million to 14 million iPads and 5 million Mac computers. But investors wouldn't be surprised if Apple handily beats these estimates.
Apple's stock trades at about 15 times earnings, versus 10 times for Microsoft and 21 times for Google. Some argue for excluding Apple's massive, $80 billion-plus in cash and investments from the valuation, meaning Apple trades at a much lower multiple.
"This is just a stepping point for it to go another 15 to 20 percent higher than it is now," said Michael Yoshikami, CEO of YCMNet Advisors, which owns Apple shares, adding that international expansion will drive much of the upside.
"The stock is cheap relative to companies like Google. It's a good value, especially considering what a growth trajectory this company is on."
Its stock gained 25 percent in 2011, adding about $77 billion to Apple's market cap, and touched an all-time high of $431.36 last week. That's a remarkable run for any company in a volatile stock market, yet the stock is way off from an average expectation for about $550.
Increasingly formidable competition and the pressure it could bring to bear on margins may be part of the story. The $200 Kindle, for example, is sold at a loss by Amazon as it tries to get a toehold in the tablet market.
For now, Apple's bulls hold sway, with 50 of 55 analysts covering the stock rating it a "strong buy" or "buy." Among its advantages are the global spread of the iPhone, which should sell more than 130 million units this year, and the mystique of an iPad that a plethora of rivals from Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) to Research In Motion have not been able to best.
Apple's MacBook Air has spawned a whole industry of thin and light laptops that everyone from Inte to HP to Asian computer makers is trying to match.
Some observers are now willing to bet that Apple can indeed pull a rabbit out of its hat with an "iTV," thereby producing a new multibillion-dollar growth business.
Poornima Gupta Reuters

Elton John wants to adopt Ukrainian toddler

Look out, Madonna and Angelina Jolie _ pop star Elton John has decided he wants to join the ranks of A-list celebrities with adopted children.

But it's not clear if John, 62, will be able to adopt, and the Rocket Man star has not yet started formal proceedings, which are often long and complicated.

John and longtime partner David Furnish are interested in trying to adopt a Ukrainian toddler named Lev they met during an orphanage tour there.

The singer told reporters in Ukraine on Saturday that Furnish has long wanted to adopt a child but that he was reluctant until he met Lev at an orphanage where many of the children's parents have died from …

Flying high

((PHOTO …

Google 3Q Profit Soars 46 Percent

SAN FRANCISCO - Less than two weeks after its stock price smashed through $600 for the first time, Google Inc. showed why it might not be long before the Internet search leader's shares are flirting with $700.

Even with more people enjoying the summer weather instead of surfing the Web, Google churned out another quarter of astounding earnings and revenue growth likely to propel its stock to new heights Friday.

The third-quarter results, released Thursday, surpassed analyst expectations and demonstrated why Google has emerged as Silicon Valley's most prized company with a market value of more than $200 billion after just nine years in business.

"We're strong and …

Pakistan vs. Sri Lanka Scores

Scores Friday in the Twenty20 World Cup match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka at Lord's:

___

APPEALS COURT BACKS TYSON RAPE CONVICTION

INDIANAPOLIS The Indiana Court of Appeals today upheld MikeTyson's conviction in the rape of a beauty contestant in a 2-1decision.

Judge V. Sue Shields and Jonathan Robertson voted to uphold theFeb. 10, 1992 conviction of theformer world heavyweight champion, andJudge Patrick Sullivan dissented.

In a key issue in the 72-page decision, the appeals panel ruledthat the trial court "did not abuse its discreation" in blocking thetestimony of three defense witnesses who would have contradictedDesiree Washington, the beauty contestant in the Miss Black Americapageant who filed the rape complaint.

The majority ruled that the court properly excluded evidencethat …

Russia wants to supply all of China's gas needs

BEIJING (AP) — China and Russia signed agreements Monday to boost energy cooperation, while Moscow said it wants to supply its energy hungry neighbor with all its natural gas needs.

No dollar value was given to the agreements signed during a state visit by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, but they included documents on cooperation in coal, natural gas, nuclear energy and renewable energy.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin told reporters in Beijing that Russia is in talks with Chinese partners on plans to launch natural gas supplies to China starting in 2015, according to the state ITAR-Tass news agency.

"Russia is ready to meet China's full demand in gas," …

Stock futures rise modestly ahead of opening

U.S. stock futures rose modestly Monday as investors try to extend a market rally into a fifth straight day.

Overseas markets were mixed.

Signs of a strengthening U.S. economy helped push stocks sharply higher last week. The Dow Jones industrial average rose for the second straight week, and posted its best weekly performance since early November after a string of strong earnings and economic reports.

Earnings and economic data will continue to provide traders with insight into the economy throughout the upcoming week.

Lowe's Cos. said Monday its fourth-quarter profit rose 27 percent as it cut costs and saw a slight increase in sales. …

Hole's Back Online

Courtney Love can't escape controversy, even in cyberspace.

Well-known as a fan of America Online, Love frequently pops upin heated cyberspace debates on its "music industry dirt" folder.She is also known to read the folder devoted to her band, Hole.

Last week, AOL temporarily deleted the Hole folder - the firsttime it has ever taken that action. It cited a high volume ofviolations of its terms of service, including a death threat postedagainst …

Stock futures fall after disappointing jobs report

The stock market headed for a sharply lower open Friday after the government's May employment fell far below investors' expectations.

Dow Jones industrial average futures are down 182 points.

Investors got an unpleasant surprise from the Labor Department's report that 431,000 jobs were created last month. Most of those jobs, 411,000, were from the government's hiring of temporary census workers. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had forecast employers would add 513,000 jobs.

Hiring by private employers was particularly weak, which is raising concerns that the economic recovery remains slow. Private employers added just 41,000 jobs in May, down from 218,000 in April and the fewest since January.

The unemployment rate fell to 9.7 percent from 9.9 percent in April. That was slightly better than the 9.8 percent unemployment rate economists had forecast. That number, however, could creep higher again as more people try to find work and census workers lose their temporary jobs.

Overall, 15 millions American remain unemployed. Including workers who have given up looking for work or part-time workers who want full-time jobs, the so-called underemployment rate dipped to 16.6 percent in May from 17.1 percent a month earlier.

The monthly jobs report is one of the most important reports on the economic calendar. High unemployment remains one of the biggest obstacles to strong, sustained growth. Without people returning to the work force, consumer spending is expected to remain sluggish and limit future growth. Consumer spending accounts for the bulk of economic activity.

Dow futures tumbled 182, or 1.8 percent, to 10,076. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures fell 22.10, or 2.1 percent, to 1,081.00, while Nasdaq 100 index futures dropped 41.75, or 2.2 percent, to 1,856.00.

Futures were already down after concerns resurfaced about the health of European banks. The euro fell quickly to a new four-year low, which helped push U.S. stock futures and major European indexes lower.

The euro, which is used by 16 countries in Europe, fell as low as $1.2019 before climbing back to $1.2032. The euro has become an indicator for investors' confidence in Europe's economy. European and U.S. stocks have often mirrored moves in the euro over the past month.

Investors are concerned that mounting debt problems in countries such as Greece, Spain and Portugal will upend an economic recovery on the continent and slow a rebound globally.

Investors poured into safe-havens like U.S. Treasurys because of the weak employment report and faltering euro. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.26 percent from 3.37 percent late Thursday.

Overseas, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 1.7 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.8 percent, and France's CAC-40 dropped 3.1 percent. All three indexes traded higher earlier in the day.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

The more things change...

The more things change ...

The more they remain the same. It is appalling, but not surprising that Chicago and many other Midwestern cities, such as Detroit, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Indianapolis remain steeped in stubborn segregation in 2001, as pertains where their population -- Blacks, whites and Hispanic -- lives, according to a recent Los Angeles Times analysis.

The key factor that is keeping many neighborhoods here and in other cities across the Midwest segregated seems to be like in the 1960s and '70s when several areas were redlined -- is fear. Fear of the unknown.

Even though redlining was officially outlawed a generation ago by the 1977 federal Community Reinvestment Act, fear -- whether real or imagined -- is still an overriding factor in keeping the races separate and apart.

Witness the recent brouhaha concerning St. Sabina's entry into the white Southside Catholic Conference. Even though the predominantly Black Sabina was admitted, there is still fear among some conference members and possibly parents about traveling to what they considering the "dangerous" Auburn-Gresham neighborhood that houses Sabina. A "safety" concern, they say.

Our advice to those who continue to live isolated lives in segregated neighborhoods: Live a little. Explore. One of the few things that can counter fear is understanding and communication.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Officers broaden search for Utah shooter

MOAB, Utah (AP) — The search for a gunman accused of critically wounding a Utah park ranger stretched into a second day Sunday as helicopter and boat crews combed a rugged Utah canyon and law officers broadened their pursuit to include a railroad line.

The Grand County Sheriff's Office said in a statement that more than 160 officers from around the state were searching an area near the Colorado River southwest of Moab, an area famous for red rock canyons and natural arch formations.

The search near Dead Horse State Park began after Utah State Parks Ranger Brody Young, 34, of Moab, was shot three times Friday night while patrolling the popular Poison Spider Mesa Trail, authorities said.

The search area on Sunday consisted of 15 square miles of rugged terrain that authorities say has likely given the gunman the "upper hand" in avoiding capture, Grand County Sheriff James Nyland said. Three helicopters were included in the search Sunday and authorities were also searching freight cars along an area railroad line.

"He pretty much knows where we are at all times because of the number of people we have," Nyland said at a press conference.

On Saturday, authorities tracked the man's footprints in a canyon along the Colorado River, recovering his rifle, backpack and a tattered, bloody T-shirt. However, Nyland said authorities still believe the man is armed, the Salt Lake Tribune reported.

The backpack contained canned goods and an empty gun holster believed to hold a .40-caliber handgun, according to the newspaper.

"We consider this individual armed and dangerous. As we're tracking him we have to keep that in mind — the security of the trackers — and we're having to move pretty slow," Nyland said.

Authorities found a new set of footprints they were tracking on Sunday before sunset.

Young stopped a vehicle at the trailhead, and gunfire was exchanged between him and the driver, said parks spokeswoman Deena Loyola. It was not clear what sparked the violence, and Nyland said authorities have not yet been able to interview Young.

Nyland had told The Associated Press that the ranger had been shot in the arm, leg and the stomach area, and he underwent surgery at St. Mary's Hospital in Grand Junction. The hospital declined to comment.

Loyola said in a statement Sunday Young remained in critical condition.

Authorities planned on searching the suspect's silver Pontiac Grand Am on Sunday. Police have not released the suspect's name, but Nyland told reporters at a news conference Sunday that the man's previous criminal history involved only misdemeanor traffic warrants, according to KSTU-TV.

Family members were stunned by the shooting, saying Young has faced tense work situations but never alone. His family says he is a friendly, outgoing ranger.

Young and his wife, Wendy, have three children. The couple are outdoor enthusiasts who once worked as river guides in the Moab area.

Loyola said Young, who has been a ranger for more than four years, was speaking to medics and at the hospital.

The Poison Spider Mesa trail to the south of Moab is among Utah's best-known biking runs with enthusiasts calling it an especially challenging but scenic loop that rises more than 1,000 feet into the surrounding countryside.

MYTURN: Granddog visits are grand; Having pet of your own more hassle than child's dog

Having a granddog is better than having a dog of your own.

My granddog, Hagrid, lives in Pittsburgh with my daughter. Thatmeans I don't have to feed him, pay his vet bills, brush him, or walkhim on a daily basis.

When he visits, I can spoil him and then send him home. From whatI am told, that is what you do with grandchildren, but I don't haveany of those.

So I call Hagrid my granddog. Some people find that strange.Others understand.

Hagrid, a Great Pyrenees, is more than 100 pounds of shaggy whitefur. He looks like a cross between an afghan rug and a polar bear.

Just the sight of him is enough to frighten any potentialintruder.

But the thing is, Hagrid is afraid of EVERYTHING.

On a recent walk with me, he cowered at a fake cat cut out ofwood. A few steps later, a tiny neighborhood dog barked and a wide-eyed Hagrid huddled against me.

When Jennifer and her friend, Deanna, first picked him up, it wasa game of tug and pull to get the timid dog in the car. He is doingbetter because he now loves car rides. But his size still makes ithard to squeeze him in our smaller car and he loves to sit on laps,another difficult feat.

Named after the gentle giant from the Harry Potter movie, Hagridis sweet but shy with strangers.

It just goes to show you can't judge a canine by his appearance.That includes temperament as well as cost.

On a walk through my neighborhood, I was once bitten by a harmless-looking beagle.

I do not know the going rate, but I am sure a Great Pyrenees isexpensive. Jennifer got him for a nominal amount through the GreatPyrenees Rescue Association.

I once looked at a small Pekingese with a price tag of $600. Anappalled friend who was with me remarked, "Six hundred dollars! Thisdog has no nose." While joking about the breed's short wrinkledmuzzle, she got them to knock off fifty bucks.

However, I remain dogless.

My granddog is fun, free and funny.

Charlotte Ferrell Smith is a reporter for the Daily Mail.

Fire erupts at historic Majestic Theater in Ohio

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) — Officials say a fire during a gospel performance forced the evacuation of the historic Majestic Theater in Chillicothe (chi-li-KAH'-thee), Ohio.

The Chillicothe Gazette reports that a curtain caught fire Thursday night in the theater that dates to the 1850s.

Aaron Crisler, spokesman for Nashville, Tenn.-based gospel singers The Nelons, says the group had just begun its first song when a fire alarm sounded.

Crisler says Kelly Nelon Clark, her husband Jason Clark and daughter Amber Nelon Thompson credited members of the group Beyond the Ashes for helping them to escape. He says the three members of The Nelons, three singers from Beyond the Ashes and a member of their management team were treated at a hospital for smoke inhalation and released.

The Majestic Theater has hosted many legendary entertainers, including Laurel and Hardy, Milton Berle and Sophie Tucker.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Dodgers beat Santana, Angels 6-3

Blake DeWitt hit a two-run homer in the second inning to put the Los Angeles Dodgers ahead to stay, and they went on to hand Ervin Santana his first loss of the season with a 6-3 victory over the Angels on Saturday.

Chan Ho Park made his first start for the Dodgers in almost seven years, limiting the Angels to two runs _ one earned _ over four innings. The 34-year-old right-hander gave up three hits, walked two, hit Vladimir Guerrero with a pitch and struck out three. He left with the Dodgers up 4-2.

Because Park pitched just four innings, Hong-Chih Kuo (3-1) earned the win by shutting out the Angels for four innings. He held the Angels to two hits, struck out four and walked none.

Santana (6-1), coming off his worst outing of the season, gave up four runs on five hits in six innings. He walked three, hit a batter and struck out five.

The Angels' right-hander was tagged for nine hits and five runs in 5 2-3 innings at Tampa Bay last Sunday, but didn't get a decision in the 8-5 loss.

Park's most recent start in the majors was April 30 of last year with the New York Mets. His last with the Dodgers was on Oct. 5, 2001, when he gave up Barry Bonds' 71st and 72nd homers of the season.

Park, who began his major league career with the Dodgers in 1994, averaged 15 victories for them between 1997 and 2001 before signing with the Texas Rangers as a free agent for the 2002 season. He rejoined the Dodgers after stints with the Padres and Mets.

He has been effective out of the bullpen this season, going 1-0 with a 2.16 ERA in 12 appearances.

The Dodgers padded their lead to 6-2 with one run each in the seventh and eighth innings. Juan Pierre was able to score from third in the seventh when Russell Martin tried to steal second and was tagged out in a rundown.

The Angels scored their final run in the ninth when pinch-hitter Juan Rivera led off with a double against Takashi Saito and came home on Erick Aybar's infield single.

After falling behind 4-0, the Angels scratched out two runs in the fourth, thanks in part to a throwing error by first baseman James Loney.

With one out in the bottom of the third, Park plunked Guerrero after Santana hit Pierre in the top of the inning. Garret Anderson followed Guerrero with a single to right, putting runners at the corners. Maicer Izturis then grounded to first, but Loney's throw to second for an attempted force play sailed into the outfield.

So on what could have been an inning-ending double play, the Angels instead got a run when Guerrero came home. Robb Quinlan followed with an infield single to score Anderson from third.

The Dodgers took advantage of Santana's control problems to score twice in the second inning and add two more runs in the third.

The Angels' right-hander walked Andruw Jones with two outs in the second and DeWitt then hit a two-run home run, his fourth homer of the season. In the third, Santana walked No. 9 hitter Chin-lung Hu leading off, then hit Pierre with a pitch. Andre Ethier and Martin each then singled in a run.

Notes:@ Dodgers RHP Brad Penny was scratched from Sunday's start in Anaheim because of arm stiffness. RHP Derek Lowe will move up a spot in the rotation to replace him. ... Dodgers manager Joe Torre thinks Ethier is the most emotional player in the dugout during games. "He's my Paul O'Neill," Torre said, alluding to the former Yankees outfielder. "When I first took over the Yankees, I heard how selfish Paul O'Neill was. Then I realized that people's idea of selfish was that he wants to get a hit every time up. That's how I see Andre Ethier. He takes his (frustration) out on equipment, as did O'Neill. One time I told O'Neill, `Do what you want _ but if you get hurt to the point where you can't play, I'm gonna kill you."'

Mayfield expert under fire defends credentials

An expert witness for suspended driver Jeremy Mayfield is defending his qualifications after NASCAR accused him of lying about his credentials.

Dr. Harvey MacFenerstein says he noticed mistakes in the affidavit that was prepared on Mayfield's behalf. He says in a statement on Thursday that he corrected the mistakes in his educational background, but the revisions were not on the affidavit that was submitted May 29.

MacFenerstein did not say who prepared the incorrect affidavit.

NASCAR on Monday filed a motion to have MacFenerstein's testimony dismissed. Mayfield is challenging his indefinite drug suspension, prompted by a positive drug test.

Valencia beats Xerez 3-1, Deportivo beats Osasuna

Valencia beat last-place Xerez 3-1 to stay third in Spain on Sunday, while Deportivo La Coruna was a 1-0 winner over Osasuna.

Juanma Mata put Valencia ahead after 11 minutes at the Chapin Stadium, the Spain winger timing his run perfectly to receive Ever Banega's lofted pass inside the area before sliding it between goalkeeper Renan Soares' legs.

Xerez equalized in the 25th minute after Joaquin Sanchez slipped, allowing Carlos Calvo to start a counterattack, with the Xerez forward receiving the ball back from Jeronimo Figueroa before firing past Cesar Sanchez.

Valencia regained the lead in the 33rd as David Villa drew the defense before crossing to David Silva, who looped a left-footed shot over Soares.

Carlos Marchena sealed the win in the 69th as the burly defender burst into the box and fired a dipping shot over Soares.

Xerez remain rooted to the bottom of the table after its sixth straight defeat.

Deportivo maintained its bid to qualify for European competition next season as Juan Rodriguez scored the only goal of the game against Osasuna in the 50th, swiveling to meet Andres Guardado's center.

Osasuna was reduced to 10 men from the 67th when midfielder Javad Nekounam was red carded.

Elsewhere, it was: Malaga 1, Athletic Bilbao 1; Sporting Gijon 1, Getafe 0; and Espanyol 2, Zaragoza 1.

Real Madrid welcomes Kaka back from injury for its match against surging Mallorca later Sunday, before Spanish leader Barcelona looks to snap a two-game winless streak against Tenerife.

Fernando Llorente scored a 79th-minute penalty after Ivan Gonzalez dragged Llorente down inside the area to give Athletic a share of the spoils at Malaga after Welington had given the home side the lead with a header in the 48th.

Diego Castro's 39th-minute goal saw Sporting snap a four-game winless run and end Getafe's three-game winning streak.

Fernando Marques jumped on a loose rebound in the 71st to score the winner for Espanyol, which took the lead in the 13th when Joan Verdu took advantage of a goalkeeping error.

Javier Arizmendi scored for Zaragoza, which stayed second bottom, in the 40th.

On Saturday, Atletico Madrid won 4-0 at Valladolid, Almeria rallied for a 1-1 draw against Villarreal and teenager Sergio Canales scored both goals as Racing Santander beat Sevilla 2-1.

Insealation Sticks To Task at Hand

A relatively new type of building insulation claims to be highlyenergy-efficient and especially good for environmentally sensitivepeople.

Insealation, manufactured by the Toronto-based Icynene Co., ismade of soft, white polyicynene foam, chemically related to theupholstery foam in pillows and mattresses.

Insealation initially is a liquid that expands 100 times once itis blown into a building's walls, ceilings and floors - becomingsimilar in texture to angel food cake, with millions of tiny aircells making it lightweight. A sixteenth-inch layer of spray willexpand to a soft foam 5 inches thick.

Insealation, when blown into a given area, permanently adheres toeverything it touches - including plumbing and wiring - and fillscorners and cracks, which prevents air leakage and saves energy.

Icynene President Graeme Kirkland showed the product a while backat the custom builders' exhibition in Chicago.

Kirkland says the product is especially good for insulatingporches and floors over crawl spaces and garages. He credits theinsulation with expanding the construction of attached garages inToronto subdivisions since its introduction there in the late 1980s.

He also says his product is good for people with allergies andrelated conditions because Insealation is water-based and contains noformaldehyde or other chemicals known to cause allergic reactions.

Kirkland says the cost initially is slightly more than regularinsulation, about $1 a square foot. Icynene, (800) 758-7325. The Chicago area distributor isEnvironmental Foam, (708) 674-2203.

Hilary Anderson is a Chicago area free-lance writer.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Israeli commandos storm aid flotilla; 9 killed

Israeli naval commandos stormed a flotilla of ships carrying aid and hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists to the blockaded Gaza Strip on Monday, killing nine passengers in a botched raid that provoked international outrage and a diplomatic crisis.

Dozens of activists and six Israeli soldiers were wounded in the bloody predawn confrontation in international waters. The violent takeover dealt yet another blow to Israel's international image, already tarnished by war crimes accusations in Gaza and its 3-year-old blockade of the impoverished Palestinian territory.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanhayu canceled a much-anticipated meeting with President Barack Obama in Washington on Tuesday in a sign of just how gravely Israel viewed the uproar. In Canada, Netanyahu announced he was rushing home but said he had called the American president and agreed to meet again.

President Barack Obama voiced "deep regret" over the raid and "expressed the importance of learning all the facts and circumstances" surrounding the incident.

The activists were headed to Gaza to draw attention to the blockade, which Israel and Egypt imposed after the militant Hamas group seized the territory of 1.5 million Palestinians in 2007.

There were conflicting accounts of what happened early Monday, with activists claiming the Israelis opened fire without provocation and Israel insisting its forces fired in self defense.

Speaking alongside the Canadian prime minister, Netanyahu expressed "regret" for the loss of life but said the soldiers had no choice. "Our soldiers had to defend themselves, defend their lives, or they would have been killed," he said.

Israel said it opened fire after its commandos were attacked by knives, clubs and live fire from two pistols wrested from soldiers after they rappelled from a helicopter at about 4 a.m. to board one of the vessels.

Night-vision footage released by the military showed soldiers dropping from a helicopter one by one and being grabbed by a mob of men wielding sticks on the lead boat, the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara. The soldiers succumbed to the assailants and fell to the deck, where the men continued to beat them and dump one of them from the top deck.

A commando who spoke to reporters on a naval vessel off the coast, identified only as "A," said he and his comrades were taken off guard by a group of Arabic-speaking men when they landed on the deck.

Some soldiers were stripped of their helmets and equipment and thrown from the top deck to the lower deck, and some had even jumped overboard to save themselves, the commando said. At one point one of the activists seized one of the soldiers' weapons and opened fire, the commando said.

Communications to the ships were cut shortly after the raid began, and activists were kept away from reporters after their boats were towed to the Israeli port of Ashdod.

Helicopters evacuated the wounded to Israeli hospitals, officials said. Five ships had reached port by early evening and some 136 activists had been removed without serious incident, the military said.

Sixteen were jailed for refusing to identify themselves, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. Israel had said activists would be given the choice to be deported or imprisoned.

Israeli officials said the death toll was nine with 30 wounded, after earlier saying 10 people were killed. It said the final tally was reached after bringing all six boats in the flotilla under control.

A high-ranking naval official displayed a box confiscated from the boat containing switchblades, slingshots, metal balls and metal bats. Most of the dead were Turkish, he said.

In a sign the soldiers didn't anticipate such fierce resistance, two commandos told The Associated Press that the primary weapons were guns that fired paintballs _ a nonlethal weapon that can be used to subdue crowds. They said they resorted to lethal handgun fire after they were assaulted.

Turkey's NTV network showed activists beating one commando with sticks as he landed on one of the boats. Dr. Arnon Afek, deputy director of Chaim Sheba Medical Center outside Tel Aviv, said two commandos were brought in with gunshot wounds. Another had serious head wounds from an unspecified blow, Afek added.

Activists, however, painted a completely different picture, saying the commandos stormed the ships after ordering them to stop in international waters, about 80 miles (130 kilometers) from Gaza's coast.

A reporter with the pan-Arab satellite channel Al-Jazeera, who was sailing on the Turkish ship leading the flotilla, said the Israelis fired at the vessel before boarding it, wounding the captain.

"These savages are killing people here, please help," a Turkish television reporter said.

The broadcast ended with a voice shouting in Hebrew, "Everybody shut up!"

At Barzilai hospital in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon, a few activists trickled in under military escort. "They hit me," said a Greek man, whose right arm was in a sling, calling the Israelis "pirates." He did not give his name and later was escorted away with a neck brace.

At a news conference in Tel Aviv, Israel's military chief of staff and navy commander said the violence was centered on the lead boat, which was carrying 600 of the 700 activists. Troops took over the five other boats without incident, military chief Gabi Ashkenazi said.

Reaction was swift and harsh, with a massive protest in Turkey, Israel's longtime Muslim ally, which unofficially supported the mission. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of "state terrorism," and the government said it was recalling its ambassador and called off military exercises with the Jewish state.

The U.N. Security Council held an emergency meeting later Monday, while the Arab League planned to meet Tuesday in Cairo.

Robin Churchill, a professor of international law at the University of Dundee in Scotland, said the Israeli commandos boarded the ship outside of Israel's territorial waters.

"As far as I can see, there is no legal basis for boarding these ships," Churchill said.

Many of the activists were from Europe.

The European Union deplored what it called excessive use of force and called for the Gaza blockade to be lifted immediately, calling it "politically unacceptable."

Israeli security forces were on alert across the country. Protesters gathered at two universities and burned tires and threw rocks in Israel's largest Arab city, but no injuries were reported.

Organizers said two prominent activists, 1976 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Corrigan Maguire and Holocaust survivor Hedy Epstein, 85, did not join the flotilla as planned.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned the Israeli "massacre," declared three days of mourning across the West Bank.

Ismail Haniyeh, leader of the rival Hamas government in Gaza, condemned the "brutal" Israeli attack and called on U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to intervene.

In Uganda, Ban condemned the deaths and called for a "thorough" investigation.

Before the ships set sail from waters off Cyprus on Sunday, Israel had urged the flotilla not to try to breach the blockade and offered to transfer some of the cargo to Gaza from an Israeli port, following a security inspection.

Organizers included the IHH, an Islamic humanitarian group that is based in Istanbul but operates in several other countries. Israel outlawed the group in 2008 because of its ties to Hamas.

The flotilla of three cargo ships and three passenger ships carrying 10,000 tons of aid and 700 activists was carrying items that Israel bars from reaching Gaza, like cement and other building materials.

Israel has allowed ships through five times, but has blocked them from entering Gaza waters since a three-week military offensive against Gaza's Hamas rulers in January 2009.

___

Goldenberg reported from aboard the Israeli warship INS Kidon. AP writers Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara, Rob Gillies in Toronto and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

Housing sales skyrocketing in city's `hot' neighborhoods Series: HOT HOUSES

Chicago's home sales market is in orbit.

"Nothing is going down. Everything is going up," said JimAscot, president of the Chicago Association of Realtors.

Sales of houses, condominiums and town houses for the first sixmonths of 1998 set records, association statistics show.

A total of 9,460 homes were sold in Chicago during the period,surpassing last year's record of 8,117 for the same period. Pricesalso rose, and homes were on the market for an average of 55 days, 10fewer than in 1997, the data show.

The demand for condos and town houses in "highly desirable"areas is so strong that bids are being made within 10 minutes oftheir posting on the Multiple Listing Service computer, said FranGoldstein, an agent for Koenig & Strey Realtors who specializes inGold Coast and Lincoln Park properties.

Before the markets began to soar, Goldstein would scheduleshowings only on Saturdays.

"But now the market is so hot that by the time Saturday rollsaround, nearly 50 percent of the properties are sold," saidGoldstein, who described the current buying frenzy as the most heatedof her career.

Every city neighborhood enjoyed an upswing in sales from 1997 tothis year.

The hottest spot was in the downtown area, where sales of condosand town houses were up 24.1 percent in the first half of the year(5,101 vs. 4,109 the year before) and prices were up 11.1 percent.

The 15 "hottest" condo and town house markets and the number ofunits sold in them were:

Near North Side (976), Lake View (834), Lincoln Park (668),Uptown (356), Edgewater (332), Near West Side (294), West Town (274),Loop (206), West Ridge (157), Rogers Park (149), Logan Square (97),Hyde Park (93), Lincoln Square (68), North Center (49), Near SouthSide (47).

Goldstein says the home ownership boom is being fueled by ashortage of rental property, the narrowing gap between the expense ofrenting and owning and the availability of low-interest mortgages.

"People can own for almost what it cost to rent, and unless youare extremely rich or poor, you should not be renting. There is toomuch mortgage money out there with low down-payment programs,"Goldstein said.

Realtors interviewed for this series agreed that the ingredientsfor a hot neighborhood are proximity to downtown Chicago, proximityto public transportation, accessibility to expressways and diversehousing options - condos and single-family and vintage homes.

The surge continues to be led by the Lincoln Park, Lake Viewand Near North Side areas along the lakefront, all of which havesimilar housing stock, say North Side broker Roger Lautt and otherRealtors.

Empty-nest baby boomers and their adult children, some withchildren of their own, are fueling the skyrocketing housing marketnear the city center and along the lakefront, Lautt said.

"It's a double effect," said Lautt, who said that Chicago'simproving public school system is making young families less leery ofrearing their children in the city.

Still, single people are big business on the north lakefront,as always. And the economic incentives are inviting them to buy atyounger ages.

Amenities and the desire to build equity prompted Jean Chiang,26, an accountant for a Loop brokerage firm, to purchase aone-bedroom condo in a Lincoln Park high-rise this month.

Convenience also was a factor. "It was close to everything -restaurants, my job, the park and running path," said Chiang, who hadconsidered buying in the Loop but felt it was more of a business areathan a community.

"Lincoln Park gets sort of loud on weekends, but it's betterthan living downtown and having to deal with a lot of tourists."

Pamela Booras, in her 30s, was one of the buyers who "got tiredof throwing my money away on rent" and late last year purchased aone-bedroom condo in an older high-rise in the 3900 block of NorthLake Shore Drive in Lake View.

"With everything - mortgage, assessments and parking - I ampaying the same as my rent payment was, but I am also gettingequity," said Booras, a child life specialist at Cook CountyChildren's Hospital.

The housing demand has created a ripple effect. As prices haverisen in Lincoln Park, the Near North Side and Lake View, pockets inLincoln Square, North Center, Edgewater, Uptown and, to a lesserdegree, Rogers Park are becoming more attractive, said Thom Boyd, asalesman at Coldwell Banker Residential-Lincoln Park.

"People are going where they get more bang for their buck andstill have access to amenities and public transportation," Boyd said.

Boyd predicted that the Buena Park and Margate Park sections ofUptown, Ravenswood and Ravenswood Manor in Lincoln Square, and theincreasingly trendy Andersonville, Balmoral and Lakewood sections ofEdgewater will get "even hotter" over the next three to five years.

West Ridge, on the Far North Side, west of Rogers Park, showed a16 percent jump in the median price of single-family homes from 1995to the first half of this year. Demand also was strong for condosand town houses, with the average market time falling from 72 days to46 days.

Young single professionals are leading the charge on the NearWest Side, where less-expensive loft units are the mainstay of theonce mostly industrial area, real estate agents say. Two other areaswest and northwest of downtown, West Town and Logan Square, areshowing strength, too.

Young two-income couples are spearheading the gentrification andoccupying the town house and loft condos of the once mostly transientand desolate Near South Side, which includes portions of the SouthLoop.

The area, which runs along the lakefront from Roosevelt Road toCermak Road, is home to Mayor Daley, who lives in its Grand Centralsection. The mayor's home is a stone's throw from Lake Shore Drive,Soldier Field and the museum campus.

The lively lakefront market isn't just for the North Side anddowntown. Hyde Park and Kenwood on the South Side showed increasesof more than 60 percent in the median prices of condos and townhouses sold between 1995 and 1998.

In communities away from the city center and Lake Michigan, thebulk of the transactions were for single-family homes that, in mostcases, make up more than three-quarters of their housing stock, datashow.

There were 4,359 houses sold during the first six months thisyear, compared with 4,008 during the same time last year. Thecitywide median price was $150,000.

The most houses were sold in the Ashburn area on the SouthwestSide, where 301 properties sold. There were 227 sales in PortageParand 226 each in Belmont Cragin and Dunning, all of which are on theFar Northwest Side.

"With Chicago schools coming back, those communities are viableas starter homes for younger couples, many of whom owned condos whenthey were singles," said Cam Benson, owner of Wildwood Caravan Realtyon the Northwest Side.

Tuesday: The next hot spots

Kidnapped boy safe

((PHOTO CAPTION))

Pressure on Ranieri as Inter visits Marseille

MARSEILLE, France (AP) — Inter Milan has lost five of its past six games and pressure is mounting on coach Claudio Ranieri to get a win in Wednesday's Champions League match at Marseille.

After drifting out of contention in the Italian title race and out of the Italian Cup, Inter's thinning trophy hopes rest firmly with the Champions League. And only a positive result at Stade Velodrome will appease animosity toward Ranieri.

Inter fans protested during and after Friday's 3-0 loss to Bologna, chanting for 2010 treble-winning coach Jose Mourinho, and Marseille senses the Italian club is there for the taking.

"Inter is in trouble," Marseille assistant coach Guy Stephan said. "I get the impression there isn't too much unity in the team, that there isn't a great atmosphere. But you have to be wary, as there are some top-level players at Inter."

Inter's nosedive is in contrast to Marseille's impressive run of form. Although Marseille dropped points in Saturday's 1-1 home draw with Valenciennes, its unbeaten run was extended to 15 games.

The only drawback for Marseille is that striker Loic Remy will miss the game because of a thigh injury.

Remy has been one of Marseille's best players this season, scoring 17 goals in all competitions and forming an impressive partnership with winger Mathieu Valbuena, who has set up several of his France teammate's goals.

Marseille was boosted with the news that midfielder Alou Diarra has shaken off a toe injury he picked up on Saturday and is expected to play. Striker Andre-Pierre Gignac was a surprise inclusion in Marseille's squad, having been out since early December with a groin injury.

Striker Diego Milito and midfielder Dejan Stankovic are back for Inter after missing the Bologna game with the flu. Meanwhile, Uruguay striker Diego Forlan is set to make his European debut for Inter after he was ineligible for the group stage.

Inter clearly needs Forlan, having struggled for goals recently.

Milito is the only Inter player to have scored in the last six games, and all those came in one match: a 4-4 draw at home to Palermo earlier this month which exposed Inter's frailty at the back.

Inter has conceded 15 goals in the last six games, a glaring weakness that gives Marseille hope of getting a couple of goals to take to the San Siro for the return leg in three weeks' time.

But Marseille coach Didier Deschamps is not falling into the trap of writing off Inter, and expects the Italian side to raise its game.

"I'm convinced that the real strength of this team and its players hasn't been shown over the last four or five league games," Deschamps said Tuesday. "Given how important the match is, Inter will have a different attitude."

Brazilian defender Maicon, who played under Deschamps when he led Monaco to the Champions League final in 2004, vows that Inter is ready to snap out of its slump.

"We are a great team," Maicon said. "It will be a hard match for them because we are ready to play a great game."

Thiago Motta, a tough-tackling midfielder who recently left Inter to join big-spending Paris Saint-Germain, says Inter's lean spell is nothing to be alarmed about and predicts his former teammates will bounce back.

"These are the kind of things that happen sometimes at Inter, they came up against teams that weren't suited to their way of playing," Motta told Marseille's website. "Nevertheless, I still hope my old team qualifies."

Sources: US senator intends to switch parties

Several officials say veteran Republican Sen. Arlen Specter intends to switch parties pushing Democrats one step closer to the 60 votes they need to exercise total control of the U.S. Senate.

The sources said an announcement could come later in the day or Wednesday. The officials who provided the information did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to discuss his plans.

Specter is a 79-year-old veteran who has served 30 years in the Senate, and one of only a handful of moderate Republicans left in Congress in a party made up largely of conservatives.

Switching parties would enhance his chances of winning a new term in elections next year in heavily Democratic Pennsylvania, the state he represents.

Saugatuck hosts LGBT family fun this week

Picnics, crafts and barbecues highlight Family Week

A country-style barbecue, family crafts and pool parties will be just a few ways to celebrate Family Week 2008, which runs from July 12 to July 18 in Saugatuck and Douglas.

Also, the six days will be packed with other family fun, including beach picnics and parents' nights out. The week will include youth programming by COLAGE for children ages 9 years old and up. COLAGE is a national movement of children, youth and adults with one or more lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and/or queer parents (www.colage.org). Kids will be able to make new friends with other COLAGErs as they share stories and attend a broad range of programs, including how to cope with homophobia at school.

Rainbow Families Great Lakes will also have age-appropriate activities for younger children, including pre-school playtime, hiking, berry-picking and arts-and-craff activities.

For more information, visit www.rfgl.org.

четверг, 8 марта 2012 г.


Apple's slicing into App Store's potential by taking 30%


The phrase "30 percent" now amounts to fighting words in the media and gadget industries.
That's the share of revenue Apple will keep from new subscriptions and media purchases made in an iPhone or iPad application through its App Store - part of a feature it launched Tuesday for its mobile devices.
Apple knows a thing or two about smartphones, tablets and getting users to buy things on them through its App Store. So why is this a problem?
Because Apple doesn't just want to offer the store's one-click buying as an option to companies that sell subscriptions or extra content inside programs. It will require that they add App Store transactions - and demand that they offer users the same price in the App Store and at their own Web site.
Developers have until June 30 to correct existing applications.
Further, Apple's news release spells out that an app cannot even include a link to an outside Web store. And Apple won't tell developers who their customers are unless they allow that disclosure, a move guaranteed to infuriate publishers used to knowing their readers.
Essentially, Apple proposes to annex a developer's subscription business - then charge that firm 30 percent for the privilege.
That 30 percent figure is the same share Apple keeps from sales of applications, where it provides valuable hosting services, copious bandwidth and one-click installation and updates.
But in providing subscription billing, Apple won't do much more than move money from one party to another. The fees for that sort of financial convenience, whether you conduct your transaction through PayPal or the check-cashing place a few blocks from my house, tend to be around 2 percent.
Apple cites only one exemption to this new policy: Subscriptions that come free with the purchase of something else, such as a print subscription to a newspaper.
(Web-based applications, meanwhile, remain unaffected by Apple's App Store rules.)
Remember when people in the news business were hoping that Apple was throwing them a lifesaver with the iPad? That device may look more like an anvil after this news.
The picture isn't much brighter for electronic bookstores such as Amazon's Kindle (which, coincidentally enough, competes with Apple's own iBooks). It's even worse for interactive music services, which already face tight business margins thanks to the royalties they must pay to record labels, composers and performers.
Representatives for Netflix, Hulu and The Post declined to comment. Publicists at Amazon and the Ongo news service (as well as Apple itself) have yet to reply to e-mails sent Tuesday morning.
Some publishers seem content to accept Apple's terms, factoring in the high costs of acquiring subscribers. But Time Inc., has already given up on Apple and is instead bringing publications like Sports Illustrated to Google's Android and HP's webOS.
The Rhapsody music service openly objected Wednesday, suggesting that it would yank its application from the App Store rather than submit to Apple's 30 percent tax.
Apple's main public justification for that steep rate consists of a quote from chief executive Steve Jobs in its news release: "Our philosophy is simple - when Apple brings a new subscriber to the app, Apple earns a 30 percent share."
That could be true for a small magazine publisher that few people will necessarily trust with their credit cards. But for the likes of Netflix or Amazon (or even, perhaps, The Post), Jobs's quote evokes a rooster taking credit for the sun rising.
Apple didn't have to take this route. It could have made App Store billing an option or taken a smaller share.
Google provided one example Wednesday, when it launched its own subscription feature called One Pass that takes care of billing and subscriber authentication across multiple devices. In that, Google will keep 10 percent of the proceeds.
It's difficult to regard Apple's extortionate arrangement as a benefit to anybody but Apple.
And yet since I wrote the scathing blog post this column is based on, readers have been jumping to Apple's defense. Why?
Some say that it's a free market and that companies will only charge what the market can bear. But under that logic, how can anybody ever call something overpriced? Would you accept that defense if it came from OPEC? Your cable company? This newspaper?
The other response is to say that Apple deserves to get a cut of the proceeds when somebody makes money off its platform. I know this argument well: I'm used to hearing from people in the entertainment industry who want record labels and movie studios get a cut of any possible reuse of their content.
Apple users, however, should know why it's unhealthy to bill for every last bit if they've ever used iTunes or an iPod to listen to music copied from a CD.
This statement also neglects how the efforts of third-party developers have made Apple's devices more valuable - something I believe Apple has mentioned in more than one ad.
Remember, Apple doesn't come to this debate with a history of upstanding behavior. It has repeatedly abused its oversight over the App Store - the only easy way to add third-party programs to the iPhone and iPad - to reject or evict programs for illogical, inconsistent or unfair reasons.
Apple does a lot of things better than other tech companies. I know-I've repeatedly spent my own money on its computers and software. That doesn't mean it's stopped being a for-profit company that merits reasonable skepticism from the rest of us.
robp@washpost.com

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Police: Blast in northwest Pakistan kills 12

An explosives-laden car rammed into a security checkpoint in Pakistan's volatile northwest Saturday, setting off a massive blast that killed at least 12 people and wounded more than 50 others, police said.

The suicide attack occurred on the outskirts of Peshawar on the day Pakistani lawmakers voted for a new president, underscoring the challenges facing the leaders of the U.S.-allied country.

Mohammed Sulman, a top police official in the area, confirmed the death toll and said many people were trapped under the debris of collapsed shops in a nearby market that was crowded with shoppers. Civilians dug frantically with their hands in hopes of finding survivors.

Television footage showed obliterated vehicles and pieces of the destroyed checkpoint scattered across a large area. The blast left a crater three feet (a meter) deep.

Nisar Khan, an area police official, said more than 50 people were injured, with some in critical condition. At Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, officials said about 30 wounded people had come for treatment.

"They have got multiple wounds," physician Mohammad Idrees said. "Some of them have their arms and legs broken, and others have got head injuries. We have declared an emergency here."

Sher Zaman, 15, told The Associated Press from a hospital bed that he was selling fruit from a cart at the market when he heard a large explosion and was knocked down when something hit him in the chest. He said residents quickly gathered and helped transport casualties to hospitals.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the blast.

In recent weeks, the Pakistani Taliban have said they were to blame for a string of suicide bombings they called revenge for military offensives in the northwest region, which borders Afghanistan.

The U.S. has pushed Pakistan to crack down on insurgents, warning they are using pockets of the northwest as safe havens from which to plan attacks on American and NATO forces in Afghanistan. A recent U.S.-led ground cross-border assault on a Pakistani tribal region, however, prompted protests from the government.

Asif Ali Zardari, widower of slain ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, was expected to win the presidency and has vowed to be tough on militancy.

___

Associated Press writers Munir Ahmad and Asif Shahzad in Islamabad contributed to this report.

Robot wars: In order to win, these high school engineers must cooperate as well as compete.(The Home Forum)

The competition starts the way many sporting events do, with rock music, cheerleaders, and screaming fans as referees and competitors take the field. But in this contest, the players are mechanical and the real brains stay out of the arena. They are the high school students who direct the robots they built and learned to control.

After competing in regional finals across the United States, more than 300 high school teams are gathering at Walt Disney's EPCOT Center in Orlando Fla., April 5-7 for the 2001 FIRST Robotics Competition national championship. FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) is a national, nonprofit group created by noted physicist, engineer, and inventor Dean Kamen in 1989.

It's not just about building the best robot. The competition aims to inspire students, provide hands-on activities, foster teamwork, and give students access to engineers who help them build the robots.

"Teamwork is a really big factor in this project," says Ben Surpless, faculty coordinator for the team from Bellarmine College Preparatory High School in San Jose, Calif. "And that's not just within the individual teams." For instance, there's a website where teams can post problems they're having with their robots and ask for help. Other teams will share how they solved similar problems. "The kids really learn how to work together," he says.

More than 530 teams have been involved in the program this year. It began with a kickoff workshop in January, when the details of this year's competition were announced. (The robots' tasks change each year.) High school teams worked with engineers for six weeks to design, construct, and test their robots. Thirteen regional competitions in March winnowed down the field.

The contest is as much about strategy as it is about engineering. Each team joins three other teams for each match. Each of the four teams receives the score that they all earn by working together.

First, the four teams agree on their strategy. They weigh the abilities of each robot. Points can be earned lots of ways. The robots can place balls into seven-foot-high goals (1 point each). They can balance larger balls on top of the goal (10 points). The total score is doubled if a goal itself can be balanced on the teeter-totter bridge in the middle of the playing field. If both goals are balanced, the score is quadrupled. A robot can be carried on a stretcher into the "end zone" (10 points for the stretcher, 10 for the robot). Robots placed in the end zone at the end of the match earn 10 points. And stopping the match before the two-minute time limit ends can double or even triple the score.

Each team is allied with three others for several qualifying matches. Top scorers - still in four-team alliances - compete in an elimination tournament. The teams may never meet until just before a match.

So teams have a lot to think about. Some team alliances decide to try to race down to the end zone and stop the match in the first 30 seconds. This triples their score. If all four robots can get into the end zone, 4 robots x 10 points = 40; tripled = 120. That's a good score in a qualifying round, but probably won't win the championship. And robots can't just streak from one end of the playing field to the other. There is a dividing rail midfield, with a teeter-totter bridge to cross. Some teams work to fill the goals and balance one or both goals on the bridge. Most try to get some of the robots into the end zone and end the match early.

Robots must have a variety of skills. Some can pick up balls and put them in goals. Others are good at pulling a teeter-totter bridge up and down to go across. Some are designed to pull goals or stretchers across the field or help right a fellow robot that has tipped over. And some robots can do it all.

Teams receive kits with motors and other parts for the robots. But every robot ends up with its own personality. Each high school team not only has students and faculty advisers, but also sponsoring organizations. These might be universities, or high-tech companies. Sponsors may also provide engineers to help.

Team No. 254, the Bellarmine College Preparatory High School team, won the Southern California Regional in Los Angeles and the Silicon Valley Regional in San Jose, Calif., last month. NASA's Ames Research Center is one of their sponsors. The students built and tested their robot at a NASA airbase and got advice from NASA engineers. They have 27 students and 7 adult leaders on their team.

Tony Watson, one of the students, says he enjoyed working with a NASA engineer and fellow team member George Stern to build the robot's arms. They tackled some "major mechanical issues," he says. "Some of these issues would have been nearly impossible" to solve alone, "but by working together, we learned a lot about each other, and I learned quite a bit about mechanical systems."

Competing isn't cheap. Mr. Surpless estimates that the cost for Bellarmine's participation is $30,000 to $40,000, including travel. But many parts are donated, and corporate sponsors pick up a large part of the expenses.

There's no limit to how many people can be on a team, but each team is allowed only three students and two mentors in the alliance area behind the playing field during the competition. During the match, students direct the team's robots by remote control. They can also toss balls into a goal if their robot moves the goal close to them.

Bellarmine's robot was often able to grab both goals, one filled with balls, and balance them on the bridge - in about one minute. Finishing so quickly doubled the score. Balancing both goals doubled it again, twice. With other robots placing balls in goals and reaching the end zone, their total scores sometimes exceeded 400.

You can watch for Bellarmine at the nationals, live on NASA TV, a satellite station that is also available on the Web: spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/nasatv/index.html.

Saturday's final will run from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, with portions broadcast (and webcast) by NASA.

If you'd like to join next year's competition, details are available from FIRST's website: www.usfirst.org/thecomp.html.

Why NASA wants you to compete

Encouraging students to explore and enjoy robotics is a high priority at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. At the FIRST Southern California Regional Competition last month, 24 of the 49 teams had been awarded scholarships by JPL, which is also paying for three schools to go to the nationals in Florida April 5-7.

NASA's JPL also provided mentor engineers to numerous high schools for the event. Why is JPL so interested in a robot competition for high-schoolers? It needs robotic engineers, and this is a good place to develop them. JPL's mission is to explore outer space, and robots make excellent explorers.

Robots at the FIRST competitions are built to play a game, but many of the tasks they do are similar to those done by working robots. The robotic rovers created by JPL also move around or over obstacles and move objects. But they are designed to do it on moons, other planets, comets, and asteroids.

Sojourner, the Pathfinder robot that landed on Mars in 1997, was similar in many ways to the robots in the FIRST competition. About the size of a child's wagon, Sojourner had six wheels, cameras, and other sensors, and moved over uneven terrain. Now scientists at JPL are experimenting with new types of robot explorers, including tiny "nanorovers" only 20 centimeters (about 8 inches) wide, and inflatable rovers with huge tires. They hope some of the human competitors in the FIRST contests will later join in this research.

Not all robots are space explorers. Many are used to help build cars and do other assembly-line work. Robots perform repetitive or dangerous tasks, too - even some distasteful ones, like cleaning out sewers. Space exploration is probably one of the most interesting uses for a robot -except for winning robot competitions here on earth.

You can check out robotic science and the robots being developed by JPL at their website: robotics.jpl.nasa.gov.

(c) Copyright 2001. The Christian Science Monitor

Robot wars: In order to win, these high school engineers must cooperate as well as compete.(The Home Forum)

The competition starts the way many sporting events do, with rock music, cheerleaders, and screaming fans as referees and competitors take the field. But in this contest, the players are mechanical and the real brains stay out of the arena. They are the high school students who direct the robots they built and learned to control.

After competing in regional finals across the United States, more than 300 high school teams are gathering at Walt Disney's EPCOT Center in Orlando Fla., April 5-7 for the 2001 FIRST Robotics Competition national championship. FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) is a national, nonprofit group created by noted physicist, engineer, and inventor Dean Kamen in 1989.

It's not just about building the best robot. The competition aims to inspire students, provide hands-on activities, foster teamwork, and give students access to engineers who help them build the robots.

"Teamwork is a really big factor in this project," says Ben Surpless, faculty coordinator for the team from Bellarmine College Preparatory High School in San Jose, Calif. "And that's not just within the individual teams." For instance, there's a website where teams can post problems they're having with their robots and ask for help. Other teams will share how they solved similar problems. "The kids really learn how to work together," he says.

More than 530 teams have been involved in the program this year. It began with a kickoff workshop in January, when the details of this year's competition were announced. (The robots' tasks change each year.) High school teams worked with engineers for six weeks to design, construct, and test their robots. Thirteen regional competitions in March winnowed down the field.

The contest is as much about strategy as it is about engineering. Each team joins three other teams for each match. Each of the four teams receives the score that they all earn by working together.

First, the four teams agree on their strategy. They weigh the abilities of each robot. Points can be earned lots of ways. The robots can place balls into seven-foot-high goals (1 point each). They can balance larger balls on top of the goal (10 points). The total score is doubled if a goal itself can be balanced on the teeter-totter bridge in the middle of the playing field. If both goals are balanced, the score is quadrupled. A robot can be carried on a stretcher into the "end zone" (10 points for the stretcher, 10 for the robot). Robots placed in the end zone at the end of the match earn 10 points. And stopping the match before the two-minute time limit ends can double or even triple the score.

Each team is allied with three others for several qualifying matches. Top scorers - still in four-team alliances - compete in an elimination tournament. The teams may never meet until just before a match.

So teams have a lot to think about. Some team alliances decide to try to race down to the end zone and stop the match in the first 30 seconds. This triples their score. If all four robots can get into the end zone, 4 robots x 10 points = 40; tripled = 120. That's a good score in a qualifying round, but probably won't win the championship. And robots can't just streak from one end of the playing field to the other. There is a dividing rail midfield, with a teeter-totter bridge to cross. Some teams work to fill the goals and balance one or both goals on the bridge. Most try to get some of the robots into the end zone and end the match early.

Robots must have a variety of skills. Some can pick up balls and put them in goals. Others are good at pulling a teeter-totter bridge up and down to go across. Some are designed to pull goals or stretchers across the field or help right a fellow robot that has tipped over. And some robots can do it all.

Teams receive kits with motors and other parts for the robots. But every robot ends up with its own personality. Each high school team not only has students and faculty advisers, but also sponsoring organizations. These might be universities, or high-tech companies. Sponsors may also provide engineers to help.

Team No. 254, the Bellarmine College Preparatory High School team, won the Southern California Regional in Los Angeles and the Silicon Valley Regional in San Jose, Calif., last month. NASA's Ames Research Center is one of their sponsors. The students built and tested their robot at a NASA airbase and got advice from NASA engineers. They have 27 students and 7 adult leaders on their team.

Tony Watson, one of the students, says he enjoyed working with a NASA engineer and fellow team member George Stern to build the robot's arms. They tackled some "major mechanical issues," he says. "Some of these issues would have been nearly impossible" to solve alone, "but by working together, we learned a lot about each other, and I learned quite a bit about mechanical systems."

Competing isn't cheap. Mr. Surpless estimates that the cost for Bellarmine's participation is $30,000 to $40,000, including travel. But many parts are donated, and corporate sponsors pick up a large part of the expenses.

There's no limit to how many people can be on a team, but each team is allowed only three students and two mentors in the alliance area behind the playing field during the competition. During the match, students direct the team's robots by remote control. They can also toss balls into a goal if their robot moves the goal close to them.

Bellarmine's robot was often able to grab both goals, one filled with balls, and balance them on the bridge - in about one minute. Finishing so quickly doubled the score. Balancing both goals doubled it again, twice. With other robots placing balls in goals and reaching the end zone, their total scores sometimes exceeded 400.

You can watch for Bellarmine at the nationals, live on NASA TV, a satellite station that is also available on the Web: spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/nasatv/index.html.

Saturday's final will run from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, with portions broadcast (and webcast) by NASA.

If you'd like to join next year's competition, details are available from FIRST's website: www.usfirst.org/thecomp.html.

Why NASA wants you to compete

Encouraging students to explore and enjoy robotics is a high priority at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. At the FIRST Southern California Regional Competition last month, 24 of the 49 teams had been awarded scholarships by JPL, which is also paying for three schools to go to the nationals in Florida April 5-7.

NASA's JPL also provided mentor engineers to numerous high schools for the event. Why is JPL so interested in a robot competition for high-schoolers? It needs robotic engineers, and this is a good place to develop them. JPL's mission is to explore outer space, and robots make excellent explorers.

Robots at the FIRST competitions are built to play a game, but many of the tasks they do are similar to those done by working robots. The robotic rovers created by JPL also move around or over obstacles and move objects. But they are designed to do it on moons, other planets, comets, and asteroids.

Sojourner, the Pathfinder robot that landed on Mars in 1997, was similar in many ways to the robots in the FIRST competition. About the size of a child's wagon, Sojourner had six wheels, cameras, and other sensors, and moved over uneven terrain. Now scientists at JPL are experimenting with new types of robot explorers, including tiny "nanorovers" only 20 centimeters (about 8 inches) wide, and inflatable rovers with huge tires. They hope some of the human competitors in the FIRST contests will later join in this research.

Not all robots are space explorers. Many are used to help build cars and do other assembly-line work. Robots perform repetitive or dangerous tasks, too - even some distasteful ones, like cleaning out sewers. Space exploration is probably one of the most interesting uses for a robot -except for winning robot competitions here on earth.

You can check out robotic science and the robots being developed by JPL at their website: robotics.jpl.nasa.gov.

(c) Copyright 2001. The Christian Science Monitor

Robot wars: In order to win, these high school engineers must cooperate as well as compete.(The Home Forum)

The competition starts the way many sporting events do, with rock music, cheerleaders, and screaming fans as referees and competitors take the field. But in this contest, the players are mechanical and the real brains stay out of the arena. They are the high school students who direct the robots they built and learned to control.

After competing in regional finals across the United States, more than 300 high school teams are gathering at Walt Disney's EPCOT Center in Orlando Fla., April 5-7 for the 2001 FIRST Robotics Competition national championship. FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) is a national, nonprofit group created by noted physicist, engineer, and inventor Dean Kamen in 1989.

It's not just about building the best robot. The competition aims to inspire students, provide hands-on activities, foster teamwork, and give students access to engineers who help them build the robots.

"Teamwork is a really big factor in this project," says Ben Surpless, faculty coordinator for the team from Bellarmine College Preparatory High School in San Jose, Calif. "And that's not just within the individual teams." For instance, there's a website where teams can post problems they're having with their robots and ask for help. Other teams will share how they solved similar problems. "The kids really learn how to work together," he says.

More than 530 teams have been involved in the program this year. It began with a kickoff workshop in January, when the details of this year's competition were announced. (The robots' tasks change each year.) High school teams worked with engineers for six weeks to design, construct, and test their robots. Thirteen regional competitions in March winnowed down the field.

The contest is as much about strategy as it is about engineering. Each team joins three other teams for each match. Each of the four teams receives the score that they all earn by working together.

First, the four teams agree on their strategy. They weigh the abilities of each robot. Points can be earned lots of ways. The robots can place balls into seven-foot-high goals (1 point each). They can balance larger balls on top of the goal (10 points). The total score is doubled if a goal itself can be balanced on the teeter-totter bridge in the middle of the playing field. If both goals are balanced, the score is quadrupled. A robot can be carried on a stretcher into the "end zone" (10 points for the stretcher, 10 for the robot). Robots placed in the end zone at the end of the match earn 10 points. And stopping the match before the two-minute time limit ends can double or even triple the score.

Each team is allied with three others for several qualifying matches. Top scorers - still in four-team alliances - compete in an elimination tournament. The teams may never meet until just before a match.

So teams have a lot to think about. Some team alliances decide to try to race down to the end zone and stop the match in the first 30 seconds. This triples their score. If all four robots can get into the end zone, 4 robots x 10 points = 40; tripled = 120. That's a good score in a qualifying round, but probably won't win the championship. And robots can't just streak from one end of the playing field to the other. There is a dividing rail midfield, with a teeter-totter bridge to cross. Some teams work to fill the goals and balance one or both goals on the bridge. Most try to get some of the robots into the end zone and end the match early.

Robots must have a variety of skills. Some can pick up balls and put them in goals. Others are good at pulling a teeter-totter bridge up and down to go across. Some are designed to pull goals or stretchers across the field or help right a fellow robot that has tipped over. And some robots can do it all.

Teams receive kits with motors and other parts for the robots. But every robot ends up with its own personality. Each high school team not only has students and faculty advisers, but also sponsoring organizations. These might be universities, or high-tech companies. Sponsors may also provide engineers to help.

Team No. 254, the Bellarmine College Preparatory High School team, won the Southern California Regional in Los Angeles and the Silicon Valley Regional in San Jose, Calif., last month. NASA's Ames Research Center is one of their sponsors. The students built and tested their robot at a NASA airbase and got advice from NASA engineers. They have 27 students and 7 adult leaders on their team.

Tony Watson, one of the students, says he enjoyed working with a NASA engineer and fellow team member George Stern to build the robot's arms. They tackled some "major mechanical issues," he says. "Some of these issues would have been nearly impossible" to solve alone, "but by working together, we learned a lot about each other, and I learned quite a bit about mechanical systems."

Competing isn't cheap. Mr. Surpless estimates that the cost for Bellarmine's participation is $30,000 to $40,000, including travel. But many parts are donated, and corporate sponsors pick up a large part of the expenses.

There's no limit to how many people can be on a team, but each team is allowed only three students and two mentors in the alliance area behind the playing field during the competition. During the match, students direct the team's robots by remote control. They can also toss balls into a goal if their robot moves the goal close to them.

Bellarmine's robot was often able to grab both goals, one filled with balls, and balance them on the bridge - in about one minute. Finishing so quickly doubled the score. Balancing both goals doubled it again, twice. With other robots placing balls in goals and reaching the end zone, their total scores sometimes exceeded 400.

You can watch for Bellarmine at the nationals, live on NASA TV, a satellite station that is also available on the Web: spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/nasatv/index.html.

Saturday's final will run from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, with portions broadcast (and webcast) by NASA.

If you'd like to join next year's competition, details are available from FIRST's website: www.usfirst.org/thecomp.html.

Why NASA wants you to compete

Encouraging students to explore and enjoy robotics is a high priority at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. At the FIRST Southern California Regional Competition last month, 24 of the 49 teams had been awarded scholarships by JPL, which is also paying for three schools to go to the nationals in Florida April 5-7.

NASA's JPL also provided mentor engineers to numerous high schools for the event. Why is JPL so interested in a robot competition for high-schoolers? It needs robotic engineers, and this is a good place to develop them. JPL's mission is to explore outer space, and robots make excellent explorers.

Robots at the FIRST competitions are built to play a game, but many of the tasks they do are similar to those done by working robots. The robotic rovers created by JPL also move around or over obstacles and move objects. But they are designed to do it on moons, other planets, comets, and asteroids.

Sojourner, the Pathfinder robot that landed on Mars in 1997, was similar in many ways to the robots in the FIRST competition. About the size of a child's wagon, Sojourner had six wheels, cameras, and other sensors, and moved over uneven terrain. Now scientists at JPL are experimenting with new types of robot explorers, including tiny "nanorovers" only 20 centimeters (about 8 inches) wide, and inflatable rovers with huge tires. They hope some of the human competitors in the FIRST contests will later join in this research.

Not all robots are space explorers. Many are used to help build cars and do other assembly-line work. Robots perform repetitive or dangerous tasks, too - even some distasteful ones, like cleaning out sewers. Space exploration is probably one of the most interesting uses for a robot -except for winning robot competitions here on earth.

You can check out robotic science and the robots being developed by JPL at their website: robotics.jpl.nasa.gov.

(c) Copyright 2001. The Christian Science Monitor