Thursday, March 15, 2012

Surviving Wal-Mart A former Wal-Mart strategist tells you how to survive and thrive in a world dominated by the retail giant.

WAL-SMART

William H. Marquard

Tata McGraw-Hill

Pp: 272

Price: Rs 450

In the history of American business, there have been corporationsfar more powerful than Wal-Mart--for instance, Standard Oil and usSteel--but none of them was as feared or reviled as Wal-Mart istoday. True, this is a different day and age, but the universal awethat this hyphenated "beast from Bentonville" evokes is a left-handed compliment to its growing sphere of influence. It is not justsuppliers, competitors, state administrations, and technologyinnovators, but also employers who need to keep an eye on Wal-Mart.Consider this: Wal-Mart spends $240 billion every year on …

Jui Li sets aftermarket part recall in motion

After CAPA decertifies part, Jui Li takes responsibility for 5,000 hoods

OEMs conduct hundreds of recalls each year, but 2002-2003 marks the first year that an aftermarket part manufacturer has voluntarily recalled its wares since the parts were introduced in 1979. Beginning in December 2002, Taiwan-based Jui Li Enterprise Co. Ltd. began reeling in as many as 5,000 of its Toyota Tacoma hoods that were sold in the United States from July 15,1997 to March 29, 2002. A CAPA-certified hood that flew up as a repairer was taking a customer's Tacoma for a test ride sparked the recall. After examining the part, CAPA decertified all lots of Jui Li's P/N JLH13900. (See "NonOEM Tacoma hood …

Trouble understanding? EU nations will send police units abroad to tourist hotspots

European Union justice and interior ministers have agreed that member states can deploy special police units to tourist hotspots across Europe to handle complaints and problems when their citizens get in trouble with the law.

The EU-wide plan would see national police officers stationed abroad for several months at a time where large numbers of their nationals go on vacation or are attending a sports event.

"If you are abroad and you have been pickpocketed ... you will want local police that speak your language to help to solve the problem," said French Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie, who was chairing security talks in Cannes on …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Lukas is ready for challenge of Triple Crown

NEW YORK - In his Hall of Fame career, D. Wayne Lukas has trained18 Eclipse Award winners, won 13 Breeders' Cup races and saddled thewinners of four Kentucky Derbies and five Preakness Stakes.

He also won three Belmont Stakes in a row, from 1994-96, and thatexperience could work to his advantage on Saturday, when he sendsoutCharismatic in his bid to become only the 12th horse in history tosweep the Triple Crown.

"The first couple of times I tried it, I came away very, veryhumbled and very, very distressed over the Belmont Stakes," saidLukas, whose first Belmont starter, Preakness winner Codex, finishedseventh in the 1 1/2-mile race in 1980. "And then we had a …

Israeli settlements hinder Mideast peace, Clinton says

WASHINGTON President Clinton said today that Israel is nothelping Mideast peacemaking by its settlement activity. He said heis concerned and has informed Jerusalem of his views.

At a news conference, Clinton said Israel and the Palestinianshad agreed to deal with the explosive settlement issue throughnegotiations. "It just stands to reason that anything that preemptsthe outcome . . . cannot be helpful in making peace.

"I don't think anything should be done that would be seen aspreempting the outcome," Clinton said.He also called on the two sides to conclude their negotiationson a partial Israeli withdrawal in the West Bank town of Hebron.Former Secretary of …

Steelers fans' loyalty goes beyond Super Bowls

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Proud, tough and resilient. The same adjectives that could describe the Pittsburgh Steelers could also apply to their large and fiercely loyal fan base.

Now the team has rewarded its black-and-gold faithful with a shot at another Super Bowl. Only the Green Bay Packers stand between the Steelers from a seventh title when the tradition-rich teams play in Super Bowl XLV on Feb. 6 in Dallas.

Shuttling between stores for the latest Steelers gear, fans Monday in Pittsburgh's commercial Strip District were still giddy over the 24-19 victory over the New York Jets to win the AFC title.

"It's in your blood. I have the Terrible Towel that I was wrapped in as a …

Report: Ex-tennis star Nastase sick of Romania

A television station reports that tennis great Ilie Nastase is considering leaving Romania because of an allegedly interfering press.

Realitatea TV reported on its website on Tuesday that the 63-year-old Nastase was tired of having to hide from "the …

Local sports

WVC HONORS

Salem International's Wykeen Kelly was named to the Division IIall-America third team Wednesday.

Kelly helped the Tigers to a 23-3 record and a berth in theDivision II East Regional championship game, where they lost toIndiana, Pa.

The junior guard from Philadelphia also was the West VirginiaConference player of the year. He averaged 18.8 points per game whileshooting 55 percent from the floor.

Concord's Brian Atkins and the University of Charleston's KalanSmith were honorable mention picks and Bluefield State's Leon Smithwas named to the all-freshman team.

Glenville State's Tracy Wyatt and West Liberty's Kelly West werenamed to the …

2 French police to stand trial in deaths of teens

PARIS (AP) — Two French police officers will stand trial accused of failing to save the lives of two teens whose 2005 deaths sparked weeks of riots around the country, lawyers said Friday.

The officers will face charges of "non-assistance to a person in danger," said a lawyer for the victims' families, Jean-Pierre Mignard. The charge carries up to five years in prison and up to euro75,000 ($95,400) in fines.

Two boys, 15-year-old Bouna Traore and 17-year-old Zyed Benna, died while hiding from police in a power substation in the Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois on Oct. 27, 2005 when they were electrocuted. Another boy with them suffered severe burns.

Local youths blamed …

Peirson's Milk-vetch

Peirson's Milk-vetch

Astragalus magdalenae peirsonii

Status Threatened
Listed October 6, 1998
Family Leguminosae (Fabaceae)
Description Stout, short-lived perennial with stems covered with fine silky hairs and dull-purple files.
Habitat Sonoran Desert on the slopes and hollows of windblown dunes.
Threats Off-highway vehicle use; recreational development.
Range California; Mexico

Description

Peirson's milk-vetch (Astragalus magdalenae peirsonii ) is a stout, short-lived perennial reaching 8-27 in (20.3-65.6 cm) in height. The stems and leaves are covered with fine silky hairs, and the leaves are 2-6 in (5-15.2 cm) long, with 3-13 small oblong leaflets. The dull-purple flowers are arranged in 10-to 17-flowered racemes; the resulting pods are 0.8-1.4 in (2-3.6 cm) long, …

The Holy Spirit will be with them, graduates told

Taking a cue from the church calendar which showed eight days until Pentecost, Dorothy Nickel Friesen told graduates that the Holy Spirit will be with them in their ministry

The John 15:9-17 passage that Dorothy used as the basis for her message at the May 23 service comes within a section in which Jesus is preparing his disciples for his death. The disciples are asking, "Where are you going? Can we go, too? Who will stay with us?"

Dorothy noted that as graduates leave the seminary and move into ministry, they, too, are asking, "Who will stay with us?" She reassured them that as they make hospital visits, wait with grooms as weddings begin, and do other ministry tasks, the …

Lawyer says US paid $2.34 million to secure release of CIA contractor in Pakistan

LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) — Lawyer says US paid $2.34 …

Soccer league formed U.S. beats Israeli basketball team

The MISL is back. Commissioner Steve Ryan announced the launch ofthe new Major Indoor Soccer League today. The league will operate asa single ownership entity, with a collection of individual teamoperators who each hold a financial stake in the MISL. The MISLreplaces the National Professional Soccer League, which disbandedthis week. Members of the NPSL's board of directors said the leagueno longer was financially viable. Eight former NPSL clubs haveindicated they will join the MISL. Baltimore; Cleveland; Harrisburg,Pa.; Kansas City, Mo.; Milwaukee; and Philadelphia plan toparticipate in the upcoming season. Detroit and Toronto will takepart in the 2002-03 season.

Caron Butler of Connecticut scored 21 points and keyed a third-quarter run today, leading the United States past Israel 98-74 for aquarterfinal berth in the World Basketball Championship for YoungMen.

Carlos Boozer of Duke added 16 points for the Americans, whoimproved to 5-0 in the 12-nation tournament for players under 21. TheAmericans will play Slovenia on Friday. "The more we play togetherthe stronger we get," said Boozer, the team's leading scorer in thetournament. Israel lost for the first time and will face the DomincanRepublic next.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Interpol issues alert for Gadhafi in move to help enforce sanctions

PARIS (AP) — Interpol issues alert for Gadhafi in move to help enforce sanctions

Texas is shooting donkeys, stirring burro backlash

PRESIDIO, Texas (AP) — Unofficially, the state of Texas celebrates donkeys and their historical and cultural significance in shaping the American West.

Officially? The policy on wild burros out here is shoot to kill.

Texas park rangers are trying to wipe out hundreds of free-roaming donkeys in Big Bend State Park, killing nearly 130 to date with .308-caliber bolt-action rifles on this side of the Rio Grande. But in the process, the shootings are stirring a whole new kind of cross-border controversy, pitting state officials against burro-lovers who believe the animal holds a special place in history and deserves protection.

The state's stance: wild donkeys wandering over from Mexico simply don't belong. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department considers an estimated 300 burros in Big Bend to be destructive intruders, hogging forage and lapping up precious water in the drought-starved mountains — thereby threatening the survival of hundreds of native species.

Outraged locals, however, claim there's only one animal the state really cares about — bighorn sheep.

"They say we're doing this just so four rich white guys can hunt bighorn sheep out here," said David Riskind, director of natural resources for the parks agency. "That's just not true."

Once extinct in Texas for decades, bighorns made a heralded homecoming to Big Bend last year when a herd of nearly four dozen was relocated to the 316,000-acre (127,883-hectare) range. But even that's not big enough for what the state says are foreign burros and the native bighorns.

Skeptics suspect the state's stance is all a wink to wealthy and well-connected hunters. Coveted state permits to bag bighorns fetch upward of $100,000 at auction in Texas, and opponents like Margaret Farabee of the Wild Burro Protection League believe that's why the state wants to eliminate any threat to the sheep's survival so the bighorn hunters can one day return to Big Bend.

Riskind said it will take decades before the bighorn population is robust enough to possibly allow hunting in Big Bend, but that doesn't quiet the doubts of a growing campaign to save the burros — for a second time.

Among those trying to stop the shootings include a Wisconsin woman who's bombarded the state with open records requests; a former state park supervisor in Big Bend; and more than 94,000 supporters on Change.org, making it one of the website's most popular petitions ever.

But their biggest ally may be history. In 2007, a similar uproar caused the state to temporarily suspend its first foray into "lethal control" after park rangers killed 71 wild burros.

Luis Armenderiz, the former Big Bend supervisor who retired following the initial controversy, said the burros are no more destructive to the park than humans who put in bike trails.

"We are invading their ecosystem. They're not invading ours," Armenderiz said.

Shooting wild animals doesn't generally create much of a stir in Texas, where hunting is a celebrated pastime. A year ago, Gov. Rick Perry famously paused from a morning jog to take aim at a coyote. This past summer, state lawmakers made gunning down feral hogs from helicopters legal.

No one sticks up for the ugly, rooting, beastly feral hog. So why the burro backlash?

"They're charismatic," Riskind said.

Opponents say the reasons are cultural. Donkeys did the dirty work of hauling supplies during America's westward expansion in the 1800s, and here along the border, families owned burros like households today have dogs. When the peso was weak, Mexican families strapped American-bought microwaves to their burro's backs to haul across the Rio Grande.

Even at Big Bend National Park, right next door to the state-owned land, killing wild burros is prohibited by a 40-year-old federal ban that Congress said protects the "living symbols and pioneer spirit of the West."

Riskind is quick to call burros "historically significant" and said the state tells the animal's important legacy through its books and museums. But he said those creatures were domesticated donkeys — and times have changed.

Heightened border security has made walking a donkey across the Rio Grande nearly impossible, and Mexico's violent drug war has decimated small towns in northern states and sent families fleeing inward. Riskind said many of the wild burros in Big Bend today were simply abandoned by Mexican ranchers.

The donkey dust-up is playing out in an isolated, rugged region that looks like a stock Texas landscape in some old western shoot-'em-up. Residents proudly call it the Lone Star State's last frontier, but attitudes here lean more progressive than small-town rustic.

An hour up the road is Marfa, the arty desert oasis where Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant played a surprise show last month. In nearby Alpine, ranchers who drive into town to buy hay bales and horse feed drive past two yoga studios. Rachael Waller, who runs an equine rescue in Alpine, hands out "burro-friendly store" stickers to shop owners and said nearly every business in town is on board, including the local taxidermist.

Waller, who is the daughter of Robert Waller, author of "The Bridges of Madison County," has a 7-year-old burro named Penny on her 400-acre (162-hectare) ranch.

"We like going to Big Bend and seeing all the wildlife. It's all supposed to be there," she said.

Riskind described "lethal control" as a reluctant but necessary measure of last resort. Park rangers don't actively hunt for burros, and pull the trigger only when they stumble upon a herd. Conservancy groups tried trapping the burros in 2007 after the state backed down to protesters, but spent months without wrangling one donkey from the impossibly rocky terrain.

For now, Riskind doesn't see the state giving into opposition again.

"I think it's safe to say we're not re-evaluating," he said.

Partnership circles hold promise for Native ministry

Winnipeg, Man.

The emergence of "partnership circles" at a Native Ministry consultation here on March 12-13, signalled a shift for Mennonite Church Canada Witness involvement in native communities in northern Manitoba.

[Graph Not Transcribed]

The "partnership circles" (one for congregations and communities to work together, the other for native communities only) evoked lively discussion as representatives from nine congregations/communities met with MC Canada and Manitoba staff to talk about relationships in the light of last year's budget cuts and a shared history of more than half a century.

In that context, the idea of partnership circles is "very significant," noted Jack Suderman, Witness executive secretary. "They point a way forward which is viable and sustainable."

The meetings were also an opportunity to speak frankly about how MC Canada budget decisions affected each group's ministry. Some said that this process couldn't have happened earlier because the pain was too deep.

"These conversations open the door for future ways of getting congregations involved with each other," concluded Suderman. "It was good to hear the passion...to hear each group identify needs and priorities," such as leadership, youth work, fundraising and building programs. The group also explored together how to address them.

For example, Norman Meade, of Manigotagan Community Chapel, noted that their partnership approach will be to come asking (not begging), and giving in return. They'll bring back to others what they received over the years, including love and wisdom, as well as their pain.

Norm Voth, MC Manitoba staff, was encouraged to hear people from native communities articulate their dreams as well as their frustrations. "There was a clear sense of them saying, 'Here's what we'd like to do, this is what we need, this is what we bring.'" He is excited about the potential of the partnership circles.

Manitoba congregations are willing to work with native communities in leadership training, providing resources and community building. He sensed that some "southern" congregations seem to be ready to connect more directly as a result of this meeting.

The consultation included a paper on the history, challenges and future role of Native Ministry, given by Walter Franz (see related story).

Donovan Jacobs, Native Ministry staff, agreed that partnership circles (which have been under discussion for about a year) created "a lot of energy." The Riverton Fellowship immediately offered to host the first native partnership circle meeting within the next few months.

"As churches come of age, they need a forum in which they can come together," he observed. "The model in how we related to native communities has had a dramatic shift...and to enter a new relationship we need to acknowledge each others' gifts and needs."

Jacobs felt that another goal of the consultation--to set direction for Native Ministry and clarify its role--requires further attention.

Participants in the consultation included native groups from Manigotagan, Pauingassi, Riverton. Churches represented were Bethel (Winnipeg), Morden Bergthaler, Sargent, Springstein, Steinbach Mennonite and Winkler Bergthaler.

The upcoming North American Native Assembly, to be held in Riverton July 26-29, will be an opportunity to strengthen relationships among native groups.

ASK BADGER BOB

Snob Bob turns down a job

Hey Badger Bob,

From what as near as I can tell, you are like a regular feller. Not a sissy animal: loving puke, which is what I mean. I even bet you've done have some hunting in you're time. I's right aren't I? I don't know what you're are doing hanging around that Cope puke for, but we fellers here in the Anti-Wolf Coalition figure it's is because you're are related to him. I know how that goes. You can choice your friends but you can't not choice your family. Me, myself, have a younger brother what lives in Seattle. If he nots a mess, I don't not know whose is.

What's I want to ask is if you'll be our official spokesman for ours initiative deal. You probably have will heard of it. It says to get every wolf out of Idaho by what's every mean it takes, and that includes my favorite mean which is shooting them. I would have no compunctuation with shooting every wolf, personally. If they real are part of nature like the animal pukes say, they shouldn't not be. We don't needed that kind of nature in Idaho.

Did you know that it is just a matter of time till a hunter gets' eating by a pack of those Canadian wolves? The "land sharks," as my old huntering buddy Ron Gillette calls them, are already eating all ours elk and deer and herefords, so hunters are next. Just a few couple weeks ago, there was a man out in the woods whats walking his dog and wolves were stalking him he thinks. They're probably would have eaten him, if not they were so full of elk and deer meat. Which should have been eaten by hunters instead of those rotten Canadian wolves. Did you know that its' is us hunters what's hunting license money what pays for those elk and deer, not the wolve's money. So if anybody should be eating Idahos elks and deers, it should be Idahos' hunters, not stinking rotten Canadian wolves.

But we need an official spokesman to do the spoking for us and write ours press releases to the press. Ron Gillette does a pretty good job of spoking our message out, but he's not a media-savvy person as yourself is. We believe you would do a good job because 1) you have a name which sounds like you mean business 2/ you are not a sissy puke I hope, 3: you have experience writing things on paper and 4) I can't think of what 4 is.

Anyway, woulds you be our official spokeman? It doesn't not pay, but you could helps us shoot the wolves if it passes and you could get to hang around regular fellers for a change. Contact me, Wolverine Jim, ASAPCA at wolverinejim@fedssuck.org.

Hey back, Wolverine Jim,

Received your kind offer but afraid I must decline. While I'm certain you fellers at the Anti-Wolf Coalition would be funner'n hell to hang out with, I am already involved in a number of initiative drives and I don't feel I have time to do yours justice.

First if not foremost is the Anti-Squirrel Initiative that is vital for the safety of our urban outdoorsmen. I tell you, the squirrels are going through Idaho's peanuts like bushy-tailed sharks through a school of Brady fish. That's what I call them: "Tree Sharks." Or sometimes, "Branch Piranhas." Miniature grizzlies, that's what they are, and they aren't even Idaho squirrels, did you know that? They were brought here from places like England and Tennessee and Vermont by squirrel-loving pukes and forced down our throats.

Furthermore, I'm convinced it's just a matter of time until a North Ender gets taken down by a gang of the little bastards. After all, there are only so many bird feeders for them to raid, peanuts to pilfer, desiccated corn cobs to gnaw on ... and then what? Not a week ago, a guy over on Hays Street was walking his Shih Tzu and three of the beasts started chartering at him. You heard me ... chattering at him! What's it going to take? A school kid being dragged into an elm tree by 50 or 60 vicious monsters?

I'm also instrumental in an initiative drive that, if it passes, would eliminate all potentially life-threatening elements from Idaho's wild lands. For instance, hills. How many hunters will have to keel over from a fat-induced heart attack before we realize it would have never happened had not there been a goddam hill in the way?

And rocks. All true mountain men know how dangerous rocks can be. 'Specially those mossy rocks. They're the worst. Stinking mossy rocks.

Then there's the matter of water. I maintain water has no place in Idaho. Most of it isn't native to our state, anyway-it sneaks across the border from god-knows-where or worse yet, sissies introduce it from places like Evian and Aquafina-and how many lives could we save if there were no place to drown? Especially after slipping off a stinking mossy rock into a rotten alpine lake?

But as a hunter, you'll be particularly happy to know that I am circulating a petition for an initiative that would eliminate once and for all the greatest peril to hunters there is or ever will be: Hunters!

Hills and mossy rocks and water account for a only a fraction of the tragic deaths we see in the hunter population every year. And like you, I'm convinced that someday, somewhere, a wolf will almost maybe certainly eat an Idahoan-particularly if that wolf stumbles across a dead one that rolled down some stinking, rotten hill.

But by far the greatest threat to Idaho's hunters are Idaho's hunters. How many times must we hear of Joe 30-30 mistaking his hunting companion for an eight-point buck? How many times must we hear of Joe 30-30, after insisting his weapon is unloaded, "accidentally" blowing his own head off as he throws his stuff into his rig? And never forget, just because a man knows how to crap in the woods and open a Bud long-neck with his teeth doesn't mean he's a natural part of nature.

Don't you see, Wolverine Jimmy? There's only one way for you he-men to be totally, 100 percent safe out there in the wilderness. Don't go! And my initiative would make it easy for you not to go. In fact, if my initiative is approved by the voters in November, you would be helped in not going by whatever means necessary. I'm distributing a bumper sticker that says it best: SAVE A HUNTER! SHOOT A HUNTER!

Sorry I don't have time to help out on your initiative drive. Wolverine. But at least we're on the same page. Nothing's more important than keeping us regular fellers safe and sound, am I right? (Incidentally, "page"... that's something you find in a "book." Or am I getting too complicated for you?)

'Shark Tale' to be shown under the stars tonight

Take advantage of the warm summer weather tonight with theoutdoor screening of "Shark Tale," the final Evanston Art Center'sCinema Under the Stars showing of 2005.

Oscar the fish (Will Smith) leads a normal life as an average guyworking at the Whale Wash. One day, he wanders into shark territoryand is chased by a shark named Frankie. Unfortunately for Frankie,the chase ends in his accidental demise. Oscar sees this event as anopportunity to "be someone" and quickly takes the credit for thekill. The fish world begins to call him the "Shark Slayer" while theshark godfather Don Lino (Robert De Niro) makes it his business tofind the murderer of Frankie, his son.

The presentation will begin at dusk on the back lawn of the ArtCenter with a sampling of video shorts by digital video students andfaculty. Bring a blanket and picnic.

The Art Center is located at 2603 N. Sheridan in Evanston. Call(847) 475-5300.

'Indiana Jones' star Shia LaBeouf arrested for drunk driving in Hollywood

"Indiana Jones" star Shia LaBeouf was injured and arrested for drunk driving after an early Sunday morning car accident in Hollywood.

LaBeouf was the driver of a vehicle that was involved in a 3 a.m. collision at a street intersection in Hollywood, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department Sergeant S. Wolf said.

LaBeouf and his passenger were injured, as was the other driver; Wolf said the extent of the injuries are unknown at this time.

"It was immediately apparent to officers responding on the scene that LaBeouf was intoxicated and he was subsequently placed under arrest," Wolf said.

Wolf said it is unknown whether the 22-year-old LaBeouf will face felony or misdemeanor charges.

"That is being hammered out right now," Wolf said.

LaBeouf has been working as an actor for 10 years, and starred on the Disney Channel show "Even Stevens."

In recent years, LaBeouf has been working on action movies, with a star turn in last year's blockbuster "Transformers" and a role opposite Harrison Ford in "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull."

The arrest marks the second time in a year that LaBeouf has been in trouble for public intoxication.

In November, LaBeouf was charged with misdemeanor criminal trespassing after a drunken tirade in a Chicago Walgreens drug store.

After the incident LaBeouf told TV talk show host David Letterman: "Drinking and driving is one thing, but drinking and shopping ... it's just as bad."

Prosecutors later dropped charges because Walgreen Co. and a security company indicated they did not want to continue the case.

Messages left with two of LaBeouf's publicists were not immediately returned Sunday, neither was a message left with attorney Michael Norris, who has previously represented LaBeouf.

Audi strikes back at Le Mans

Audi has taken a commanding lead at the 24 Hours of Le Mans after making the most of rival Peugeot's reliability concerns.

The German manufacturer had two cars in front early Sunday after 17 hours of racing with German driver Timo Bernhard leading ahead of the R15 TDI driven by Marcel Fassler of Switzerland.

Peugeot, considered a huge favorite after securing the four top spots on the starting grid, had clearly the fastest cars but ran into problems during the race.

Harrah's ends involvement in Bahamas resort complex

U.S. casino operator Harrah's Entertainment Inc. has announced that it has pulled out of a six-hotel resort proposal in the Bahamas worth more than US$2 billion (euro1.3 billion) because it has taken too long to organize.

Harrah's had agreed to team up with developer Baha Mar Resorts Ltd. and Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide to create the mega-resort along Nassau's famed Cable Beach. But the U.S. casino company said Monday that plans for the ambitious complex have stalled.

"Unfortunately, it has taken Baha Mar Development Company longer to organize the project than anticipated and circumstances have changed such that it is simply not prudent to move forward," Harrah's said in a statement e-mailed Monday. It did not disclose specifics.

The mixed-use resort, planned for a 1,000-acre (405-hectare) beachfront site that included an investment of more than US$2 billion (euro1.3 billion) in its initial phase, was expected to have a work force of 10,000 people upon its completion in 2011.

Baha Mar Resorts asserted that Harrah's withdrawal from the deal was a breach of faith. The development company said it was committed to moving forward with the resort project and challenged Harrah's ability to "unilaterally terminate the arrangements."

"We hope they will reconsider their action before they cause harm to both Baha Mar and the Bahamas," Baha Mar Resorts said in a Monday statement.

Baha Mar last year formed a joint venture with Harrah's, and the companies signed a deal with Starwood to manage the complex. Plans called for the resort to feature the Caesar's Resort Hotel, the St. Regis, the Westin Hotel, W, the Sheraton Hotel and a renovated Windham Nassau Resort.

The joint venture called for 57 percent to be owned by Baha Mar Resorts and 43 percent by a Harrah's unit, effective upon confirmation by the Bahamian government of certain required approvals and concessions.

Bahamian government officials and Starwood did not immediately return calls for comment.

Obie Ferguson, chief of the Bahamas Hotel Managerial Association, which represents 200 middle managers on the Baha Mar parcels, said Harrah's departure would likely be a blow for the local economy. He said little visible work had started at the work site.

"We were of the view that the project was going as scheduled," Ferguson said during a phone interview from the Bahamian capital of Nassau. "This will definitely have an impact on our work force, and I'm getting many from calls from people trying to figure out what is happening here."

Monday, March 12, 2012

Kings blank Stars

Justin Williams kept the Los Angeles Kings' faint playoff hopes alive.

Meanwhile, the Dallas Stars wasted a chance to improve their long-shot playoff chances.

Williams converted in the third round of the shootout and the Kings ended a three-game losing streak with a 1-0 victory over the Stars on Thursday night.

"We can't lose a game," Williams said. "We know we have to win out to have a chance."

The Stars, 0-4-1 in their past five and 2-7-1 in their past 10 at home, are 12th in the Western Conference with 75 points. That's three points better than the Kings, 1-5-2 in their past eight.

Dallas and Los Angeles both have eight games left, five each on the road.

The Stars, who came within two wins of reaching last year's Stanley Cup finals, are in danger of missing the playoffs for the second time in the past 12 seasons.

"We left a point out there," Stars goalie Marty Turco said. "We had a lot of chances that didn't go our way. Unfortunately, we're just running out of time. We're going to fight until they tell us to go home."

Anze Kopitar gave the Kings the advantage in the first round of the shootout, making a nifty move to fake Turco out of position, then tucking the puck into the net one-handed.

But Jere Lehtinen drew the Stars even in the third round, beating Jonathan Quick with a forehand shot from the slot.

Williams was up next, and he gave the Kings the extra point when his shot trickled into the net after Turco appeared to make the stop. At first, the referees ruled no-goal, but they went to video replay, which showed the puck over the goal line.

"I thought I saw it go into the back of the net," Williams said. "But I looked at our bench and nobody was celebrating."

As soon as the goal was announced as good, the Kings poured off the bench to congratulate Williams and Quick.

The Kings had a little luck on their side when Dallas' James Neal hit the post with his second-round attempt.

Turco made 30 saves. Quick stopped 29.

Turco kept the game scoreless with less than two minutes left in regulation, making a sharp glove save on Teddy Purcell's shot from the slot.

The injury-depleted Stars are without top players Brenden Morrow, Brad Richards and Sergei Zubov, and Dallas also lost defenseman Trevor Daley less than three minutes after the opening faceoff when he crashed headfirst into the boards.

Daley was trying to take possession of the puck behind the Stars net when he was checked by Kings left wing Raitis Ivanans. Daley's head struck the end boards and he was down for several minutes before being helped off the ice.

Daley did not return, leaving Dallas short a defenseman. Daley will be evaluated on Friday.

"We hung around, but we had five (defensemen) back there and some fatigue set in," Stars coach Dave Tippett said.

Los Angeles has two goals in the past four games, both on the power play, and hasn't scored at even strength since a 3-2 win at Boston on March 19.

The Stars have seven goals during the past five games and are 1-for-23 on the power play during that span.

"We have lots of try from a lot of people, but we needed to bury one of those chances," Tippett said. "We have to win games to keep ourselves in the race. Each game we scratch and claw. We still have this in our hands."

Dallas held a 12-3 shots edge in the first period, but Los Angeles had the shots advantage in the second period 14-6.

Notes:@ The Kings were making the fifth stop on a six-game road trip. ... LW Alexander Frolov, the Kings' No. 2 scorer, missed his second straight game with a lower-body injury. Frolov has two goals and four assists against Dallas this season. ... Los Angeles C Jarret Stoll had to be helped to the locker room in the third period, but he was back on the ice later in the period. ... Rookie C Tom Wandell, who completed his Swedish Elite League season, was playing his sixth game for Dallas. ... Stars RW Krys Barch missed the third period with a lower-body injury.

Not your average schoolboy crush

If you tap me on the shoulder and ask me how sick the world is, Iwill reply, "Deeply sick."

If you ask, "Are there entire subcultures of staggeringly weirdand twisted individuals bent on perversions beyond the normalimagining?" I will reply, "Yes, there are."

And yet, the fresh evidence always comes as a shock. You fancyyourself savvy, even jaded. Then you stumble upon some new quiveringhorror that just drops your jaw.

We're working our way into this slowly, you may notice. So thatthose of you who aren't in the mood, at the moment, for somethinghead-spinningly gross, can set this aside, perhaps until afterbreakfast.

Put it this way: Have you ever killed a mouse? Then you know howgrim the process is. You notice holes chewed in the cereal boxes inthe pantry. You trek to the hardware store, buy a couple of traps:rectangles of cheap wood with spring-loaded clamps. You set them,gingerly, and forget about them.

Until . . . kersnap! The unlucky mouse gets a brass bar embeddedin its head. You dispose, again gingerly, of the contraption and itsvictim, trying to avoid the gaze of its black eyes, feeling somewhatguilty.

That's the normal reaction, at least. The thought that theremight be somebody who takes pleasure in it astounded me, so much sothat when I heard that they are pushing legislation in California toban "crush videos" - films of women crushing small animals, sold tofetishists who get a thrill from the sight - I thought that nobodycould be that sick. At first I suspected the story had to be somesort of hoax.

"So did I," said Michael Bradbury, the district attorney ofVentura County. "I had a hard time believing it until myinvestigators brought me the videos."

He viewed a few of the films, with titles such as "Stomper'sCrushfest," "Missy - Crush Specialist," "California Crush" and "TwoSisters Fiesta Crush." It wasn't a hoax.

"In 33 years of law enforcement, this is one of the sickest thingsI've seen," he said. "And I've seen a lot of sick stuff."

Bradbury said the videos are sold through the Internet.

"They've been around a while, both national and international," hesaid.

What does it really matter, I asked him, if a mouse is killed in atrap, or killed by a stiletto heel? Is it really harmful that sometiny band of fetishists gets pleasure from it?

"They start with mice, then move up," he said. "Unfortunately,they want larger and larger animals to get the sexual kick. We havephotos of them crushing a monkey.

"We've received information that there is interest in crushing ahuman child. In fact, they do (in the films) crush dolls thatresemble a human child."

Yes, that would be worrisome.

Bradbury said the district attorney's office sent a femaleinvestigator undercover to a film shooting, posing as a model.

"She was going to do the crushing," he said. "The filmmakersasked her if she was willing to do puppies and kittens, things ofthat nature."

Just before the cameras rolled, the cops burst in.

Bradbury held a news conference Monday, announcing a drive to seekCongressional action to make depictions of animals being tortured,maimed or killed a federal crime.

"Right now, all we have is local anti-cruelty laws," he said.

I asked him what the reaction to his news conference has been.

"It's the biggest news conference I've ever seen," he said. "Farexceeding the press conferences we had for mass murderers. That'sthe reaction we always get when we prosecute animal cruelty - we hearfrom all over the world. You never get that response when a humanbeing is injured."

Which just goes to show that there is more than enough sickness togo around.

WEBCASTS

MAKING THE GRADE: EXPECTATIONS ON TODAY'S CORPORATE BOARDS

Complying with Sarbanes-Oxley and the new exchange listing requirements means directors must be adaptable while they balance their role: partnering with management to the shareholders' benefit while keeping a watchful eye on the company's coffers.

RECOGNIZING THE NEW RISKS OF SERVING ON A CORPORATE BOARD

William A. Cotter, chief underwriting officer and senior vice president at National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA, a member company of American International Group Inc., reviews the impact Sarbanes-Oxley is having on director risk.

BOARD GUIDELINES FOR RECOGNIZING AND MANAGING FINANCIAL DISTRESS

Martin J. Bienenstock, partner at Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, discusses ways to detect financial distress and the critical path directors must take to stamp out these problems before a crisis develops.

Media group asks US to stop detaining journalists

A media watchdog group is urging President Barack Obama to end the U.S. military's practice of detaining journalists without charges and has asked for a full investigation into killings of journalists by U.S. military forces.

Officials with the Committee to Protect Journalists said Tuesday that the detention of journalists without trial by U.S. authorities in such countries as Iraq has emboldened other countries to do the same.

Paul Steiger, the group's board chairman, said he sent a letter to Obama's transition team last month. He noted in it that 14 journalists have been held without due process for long periods in Iraq and Afghanistan and at the U.S. prison center in Guantanamo.

He also said 16 journalists have been killed by U.S. fire in Iraq since 2003.

Banks deposit record amount overnight at ECB

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Banks in the countries that use the euro held a record amount of money overnight at the European Central Bank in a sign of stress in the financial system from the eurozone debt crisis.

The region's central bank said Tuesday that overnight deposits from Monday hit €481.93 billion ($613.4 billion) — beating the previous record of €463.56 billion from the day before.

The high deposits mean banks are keeping spare cash in a safe place at a low interest rate rather than lending it one another on a short-term basis. This move has sparked fears of a further credit crunch across Europe as banks become wary about lending funds for fear they will not be paid back.

The deposits also reflect large amounts of cash put into the banking system by the ECB in its efforts to steady the system. An ECB offer of emergency three-year loans resulted in €489 billion being taken up by more than 500 banks in late December.

The climate of anxiety means that some of that loaned money — on which the ECB currently charges 1 percent annual interest — is washing back into the ECB overnight deposit facility even though it only earns 0.25 percent.

Europe's government debt crisis has put intense pressure on the banking system, because banks typically hold government bonds. Fears that a heavily indebted government may default — and cause losses on those bonds — has left many banks viewed as poor credit risks and unable to borrow from any one but the ECB.

Additionally, many banks have bonds coming due in the first months of the year and will need cash for that if they cannot sell new bonds to pay off the old ones.

Meanwhile, political leaders are still working on measures aimed at containing the crisis. Governments have yet to agree on a proposed treaty to toughen limits on future debt, and are trying to raise an additional €150 billion to backstop financially troubled governments through the International Monetary Fund. Greece is negotiating with bondholders about a 50 percent write-off of their investments, a step aimed at getting the country's heavy debt load down to a sustainable level.

"With sovereign debt uncertainties still unresolved and banks facing heavy bond redemptions in the first months of the year, it is not difficult to understand why banks remain risk-averse and prefer to hoard liquidity," Marco Valli, chief eurozone economist at UniCredit, said in a note to investors.

What Columbus' arrival may have looked like

Caption only.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

HARRY POTTER STAR RUPERT GRINT GOES STARK NAKED IN NEW FILM

Report from Asian News International brought to you by HT Syndication.

London, Jan. 15 -- (ANI): Actors who starred in the famous 'Harry Potter' franchise seem to have come all out after their stint with magic, with Rupert Grint now shedding off his clothes for new film 'Cherrybomb'.

English actor Daniel Radcliffe, who played the role of Harry Potter in the film series, was the first to shed off his clothes on stage in Equus.

Now, Grint, 20, who shot to fame with his role as Ron Weasley, has shed off his clothes in the new movie.

The film is about three teenagers who embark on a debauched weekend of drink, drugs, shoplifting and stealing cars.

According to the Sun, Grint no longer sports the floppy hair, and he showed a lot of confidence doing the naked scene with his co-star Kimberley Nixon. (ANI)

Published by HT Syndication with permission from Asian News International.

-960427

HARRY POTTER STAR RUPERT GRINT GOES STARK NAKED IN NEW FILM

Report from Asian News International brought to you by HT Syndication.

London, Jan. 15 -- (ANI): Actors who starred in the famous 'Harry Potter' franchise seem to have come all out after their stint with magic, with Rupert Grint now shedding off his clothes for new film 'Cherrybomb'.

English actor Daniel Radcliffe, who played the role of Harry Potter in the film series, was the first to shed off his clothes on stage in Equus.

Now, Grint, 20, who shot to fame with his role as Ron Weasley, has shed off his clothes in the new movie.

The film is about three teenagers who embark on a debauched weekend of drink, drugs, shoplifting and stealing cars.

According to the Sun, Grint no longer sports the floppy hair, and he showed a lot of confidence doing the naked scene with his co-star Kimberley Nixon. (ANI)

Published by HT Syndication with permission from Asian News International.

-960427

Belarus boycotts summit in Russia dispute

Two former Soviet republics refused to sign onto a deal Sunday to create a NATO-style rapid-reaction force for a Moscow-dominated security alliance, undermining a Kremlin bid to bolster its power and prestige amid a struggle with the West for regional clout.

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko angrily boycotted the Moscow summit of the Collective Security Treaty Organization amid a politically charged trade dispute with longtime ally Russia. Central Asian power Uzbekistan attended the summit but balked at signing a deal that could increase Moscow's influence over its affairs.

Russia and its partners in the seven-nation Collective Security Treaty …

Monday, March 5, 2012

Searchers Expand Search for Lost Aviator

MINDEN, Nev. - Search teams dramatically expanded their hunt for adventurer Steve Fossett to encompass 10,000 square miles of rugged mountains and desert Thursday after nearly four discouraging days yielded no trace of his single-engine plane.

"As you can imagine, trying to make that needle stand out in a haystack that big is going to be a real challenge," Nevada Civil Air Patrol Maj. Cynthia Ryan said. "It's going to be frustrating for a lot of people who were hoping for results early on."

Ten airplanes and helicopters made repeated passes over a search area the size of Massachusetts known for its 10,000-foot peaks, strong winds and unrelenting harshness.

DISPELLING THE CLOUDS.(Brief Article)

Faced with community concerns over the Doppler radar his station plans to mount atop a 10-story building, Miami meteorologist Roland Steadham apparently convinced leaders that it will not only be safe, but ultimately make the community safer. Steadham, top weatherman at WTVJ-TV, told attendees at community meetings that the 14-foot Doppler setup planned for the top of the Eastern Financial Credit Union …

When less is more ... on a shiny grey floor.(Life)

Exhibition: Jeremy Wafer at Goodman Gallery Cape until October 13. Melvyn Minnaar reviews

The super high-gloss of the Goodman Gallery Cape's grey floor seems custom-made for our visiting minimalist; so too, the delicious expanse of its eastern wall.

There is also the ambient "breathing space", provided by the gallery's industrial history. It's particularly friendly towards this kind of no-nonsense, thought-provoking art.

Capetonians may well come to inspect and appreciate up-country Wafer's first full-on show in this fine installation.

Don't forget to take a good look out the window. The artist's abstract pieces, inspired by simple …

STANDOFFISH RABIN COULD BE WORRISOME.(MAIN)

Byline: William Safire

What does President Clinton think of the muttering on the right in Israel that when Likud comes back into power, Monday's agreement with the PLO would be abrogated?

"It concerns me, although our information is that Mr. (Benjamin) Netanyahu has been quite careful about his comments. Israel is a democracy, and historically democracies have honored the commitments that their governments have made with others along their borders, even with a transition government," President Clinton said in an interview on the eve of the signing of the first pact between Israel and the PLO.

"But I think to insure that, what we have to do is …

Son of Osama bin Laden loses asylum bid in Spain

Spain rejected an asylum request from a son of Osama bin Laden on Wednesday after deciding he had not met the conditions necessary for him to remain.

Omar Osama bin Laden, 27, flew to Spain earlier this week and remains in a transit area at Madrid's Barajas Airport, an Interior Ministry official said. He has 24 hours to appeal the government's decision.

"The Interior Ministry has not accepted the request for asylum because this does not meet the conditions necessary for entering Spain," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with government policy.

The official would not elaborate or discuss the younger bin Laden's …

Ex-spy gives up after 3 years in exile

LONDON Former British spy David Shayler has stopped running.

After nearly three years in exile in France, the man whoinfuriated Britain's spy agencies with his allegations ofincompetence and illegal plots arrived home Monday and walked intopolice custody.

No sooner had he been charged with disclosing state secrets thanthe burly, blunt-speaking former agent was vowing to dig further intohis revelations-particularly claims that Britain was involved in aplot to assassinate Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

Shayler, who was released on bail, had worked for Britain's MI5internal security agency since 1994, and fled to France after anAugust 1997 article in London's Mail …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Bonds continue bumpy ride.(ST)(Brief Article)

Investors contend with another seesaw market

Events--from the Fed chairman's comments to the air strikes in Yugoslavia--have rocked the bond market. The most noticeable spike in the first quarter occurred on February 14 when Alan Greenspan testified before Congress that the economy was starting to overheat and raised concerns about rising inflation and interest rates. The news roiled the bond market, pushing the price of the bell-wether 30-year Treasury bond down more than 1 point, or over $10 per $1,000 bond, and boosting the yield--which moves inversely to the bond's price--above 5.5% for the first time since August 20.

That's not all. The bond market …

Pollution testing delays skate park.

BRIDLINGTON'S proposed skate park is unlikely to be open this year as planned.

It is not money issues causing the delay but the fact extra tests have to be carried out on the land to check if it is polluted.

It had been hoped the Gasworx park would be ready this autumn.

But, following initial tests, it was recommended that further samples should be taken from the site at Dukes Park and sent to be tested in a laboratory.

Town clerk Chris Smith said: "It is some years since East Riding of Yorkshire Council carried out a similar investigation into possible industrial contamination left by the former gasworks at Dukes Park.

"After …

CATBIRDS VS. PATS: BATTLE OF CBA TITANS.(Sports)

Byline: Tim Wilkin Staff writer

It doesn't take much to get Gerald Oliver excited. When he talks about the teams his Albany Patroons play in the Continental Basketball Association, he tells all who will listen how good the opponent is. Usually, the Pats then go out and beat the stuffing out of these would-be powerhouses.

Oliver never has a bad thing to say about anyone or any team.

Oliver is saying good things about tonight's opponent, and he's more excited than usual. The Pats, winners of nine straight games at home, are playing a team that is on par with them. Albany, with a 19-7 record and 118 1/2 standings points, has the best record in the CBA. …

Smith, Rice lead 7 new football Hall of Famers

NFL greats Jerry Rice and Emmitt Smith led a class of seven into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday.

The NFL's career receiving and rushing leaders were joined in the Hall by John Randle, Russ Grimm, Rickey Jackson, Floyd Little and Dick LeBeau. Little and LeBeau were elected as senior committee nominees.

"I am just honored ... to stand up there with greatness," Rice added before breaking down in tears.

Rice and Smith both made it in their first year of eligibility. They were elected a day before the Super Bowl, a game they each won three times.

"This is almost perfect," Smith said. "I don't think even …

Venus, Henin Win Matches at Wimbledon

WIMBLEDON, England - Venus Williams faced 23 break points, double-faulted 14 times, trailed 3-5 in the third set, drew criticism from her dad, and still won Monday at Wimbledon. The three-time champion rallied past Akiko Morigami 6-2, 3-6, 7-5 in a third-round match suspended Saturday.

Williams will next face 2004 champion Maria Sharapova, one of only two players to win Saturday in a rain-abbreviated schedule. Williams trailed 1-4 in the second set when her match was halted.

"If Venus moves up to the ball and takes it off the bounce instead of waiting behind the baseline, she'll be the only one here, including Sharapova," said Williams' father and coach, Richard. "She's …

Investors Want an Energy Overhaul.(want Mexico's natural gas resources to be used for low-cost energy for chemical production)(Brief Article)

Pemex Plans Incentives for the Private Sector

BUSINESS LEADers in Mexico are lobbying government officials to remove the roadblocks preventing investors from exploiting the country's vast natural gas resources for low-cost chemicals production. Local chemical producers say political foot-dragging and legal constraints in the past have prevented state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) from fully developing those resources, causing them to miss out on the chance to rake advantage of Mexico's large domestic market and trade agreement with the U.S. Executives hope the National Action Party administration of President Vicenre Fox, the first opposition party candidate to win the presidency in more than 70 years, has the political will to attract the first …

Man sold drugs while he was informant, records say; Reputed career criminal got plea deal on gun charge after promising to help with gun, narcotics cases.(Main)

Byline: BRENDAN J. LYONS - Senior writer

ALBANY - The man indicted as the co-leader of a drug ring that allegedly included the wife of a former Schenectady police chief was dealing massive quantities of narcotics in the Capital Region while also working as an informant for the federal government, court records show.

Oscar Mora, 30, a reputed career criminal from the Bronx who resides in Watervliet, struck a plea deal on a federal gun charge last year that kept him on the streets in exchange for helping federal authorities "on gun and drug matters," according to a memorandum filed this week in U.S. District Court.

In taking the deal, Mora had cast himself as not being involved in the drug trade and promised not to break any laws or use drugs while free on bond. He also pledged to help the DEA and …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

TOWN BOARD URGES COUNTY TO REVIEW LANDFILL PLAN.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: KENNETH C. CROWE II Staff writer

The Greenfield Town Board has called on Saratoga County not to rush to build a landfill even as the county prepares to open bids today to construct the dump in the town of Northumberland.

Greenfield wants the county to hold onto its construction permit from the state Department of Environmental Conservation in case it's needed, but not to proceed with the project.

``The Town Board authored a resolution that the town encouraged the county to do anything possible to retain the permit but not to begin construction immediately,'' Supervisor Robert D. Stokes, R-Greenfield, said.

``We have the permit. It …

50-year-old Ottey to compete at Europeans

Fifty-year-old Merlene Ottey could become the oldest athlete to compete at the European Championships after Slovenia named the sprinter to its 4x100 relay team.

Ottey, a naturalized Slovenian of Jamaican origin, would make her Barcelona debut in the July 31 heats. She was one of five athletes named by the Slovenian Athletics Federation alongside Tina Murn, Sabina Veit, Kristina Zumer and Maja Mihalinec.

Ottey has won 29 medals at major …

Farm Show complex gets green award

Environmental advocacy group PennFuture recently awarded the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex & Expo Center its Green Power: Leading the Way award for environmental and energyefficient improvements at the facility.

The 24-acre complex has incorporated recycling programs, energy-efficient retrofit projects and a wind turbine to generate electricity. Efforts have reduced annual operating costs by more than $300,000, according the Department of Agriculture, which owns and operates the facility.

A $3.6 million …

Sweden's economic tendency indicator grows to 110 pts in May 2010.

(ADPnews) - May 31, 2010 - Sweden's economic tendency indicator (ETI), which measures the sentiment of businesses and households, rose to a higher-than-expected 110 points in May 2010 from a revised 104.6 points in the preceding month.

Analysts polled by SME Direkt had on average expected a growth to 105.8 points for this month.

The current level of the indicator still signals stronger-than-normal business and consumer sentiment, the National Institute of Economic Research, KI, said today.

The confidence indicator for the business sector grew to 24 points in May 2010 from a revised 14 points in April.

The indicator for the manufacturing …

AVOID IN-LAW SITUATION.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: CAROLYN HAX Washington Post Writers Group

DEAR CAROLYN: Please sort this out and suggest a position to take. I married the most wonderful woman in the world; we have two wonder- ful children. All is right with the world until we come to Mother's Day and Father's Day.

My wife's sister is unmarried and has been living with this guy for 10 years. They have no children nor do they plan to have any. On Mother's Day my mother-in-law has consistently given this daughter a present. On Father's Day the daughter's live-in gets a gift. When asked by my wife why, mom-in-law says she doesn't want anyone left out.

Am I crazy to ask what's wrong with this …

China salutes Zheng Jie's Aust. Open win

Back home, Zheng Jie is being hailed as "China's golden flower."

The 26-year-old player advanced to the Australian Open semifinals Tuesday, marking a second day of good news for China.

Compatriot Li Na reached the last eight a day earlier, which gave China two players in the quarterfinals at the same Grand Slam for the first time.

"It's a big surprise for China," Zheng said, after beating Russian Maria Kirilenko in a convincing 6-1, 6-3.

Her next opponent will be seven-time Grand Slam winner Justine Henin, who has reached the semis in her Grand Slam comeback after taking 20 months off from tennis.

Zheng …

Canada: the (Delwin) Vriend case.

Edmonton - Early in April, the Supreme Court of Canada "real in" sexual orientation as a prohibited ground for discrimination under Alberta's Human Rights Code. The provincial legislature has consistently refused to insert such a clause in its code; so the Court forced Alberta to put it in on the request of Delwin Vriend, a chemistry teacher, who had been dismissed from King's University College in 1991 because his homosexuality conflicted with the college's Christian principles. The Supreme Court held that the Alberta code should conform to the Charter of Rights, which the Court said protected sexual orientation. After a bitter debate in his badly divided caucus, Premier …

European goodies without the travel: East Side store offers diners and shoppers a taste of the Old World.

Byline: Kristen Cook

Jun. 1--With its deep-green awnings, French-accented staff and shelves upon shelves of imported olive oil, paprika and other European goodies, Ferranti's Fine Foods adds a definitively cosmopolitan air to East Grant Road.

Step inside and it's hard to believe that a giant dinosaur looms just two buildings down at the McDonald's.

If you can't escape to Europe, the least you can do is lose yourself inside Ferranti's.

Strolling the aisles of a foreign grocery store is one of the great pleasures of traveling abroad. You glimpse how people eat and discover things like fleur de sel in little sacks. Ferranti's gives you that same culinary voyeuristic thrill with delicacies …