Thursday, March 15, 2012

Prosecutors to investigate rigging claims in Spain

The Spanish football federation has asked prosecutors to investigate reports that players from second-division club Tenerife were bribed to lose a match to allow Malaga to be promoted to the top flight.

Spanish news reports said this week that former Tenerife player Jesus "Jesuli" Mora had admitted during a meeting with Real Sociedad president Inaki Badiola that he and his teammates had received money to throw the game against Malaga.

Malaga beat Tenerife 2-1 in the last round of last season in June. Malaga's promotion meant Sociedad stayed in the second division.

Jesuli reportedly said he was paid 6,000 euros (now $7,600), and …

New AIDS cases set record in city

A record 29 new cases of AIDS were reported in Chicago lastmonth, three more than the previous record set in February, accordingto the Chicago Health Department.

Of the 361 cases of AIDS reported here since 1980, 178 of thevictims have died, including three from the March group. Only 12women have been diagnosed with AIDS since testing began.

All of the …

Colorado Beats Calgary 5-4 in Shootout

DENVER - Ryan Smyth had a goal and an assist, then scored the decisive goal in the shootout as the Colorado Avalanche rallied from a four-goal deficit to beat the Calgary Flames 5-4 on Tuesday night.

Jarome Iginla, who had two goals and an assist, had Calgary's only goal in the shootout.

The Flames took a 4-0 lead on Iginla's second goal of the game 2:50 into the second period. Iginla took a pass from Alex Tanguay, blew by defenseman Brett Clark and beat Peter Budaj with a high shot. That ended Budaj's night, who was pulled in favor of Jose Theodore.

That's when the Avalanche started their comeback, and it came with plenty of help from the Flames. Three of …

Niger opposition leader released after arrest

A party spokesman says that Niger's main opposition leader was released two and a half hours after he was arrested and questioned by police.

But Hindatou Mamane, the information secretary of the country's opposition Nigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism, says their leader's release is conditional. He says police told …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Burning couches now a felony

Fire starters, beware: The city of Morgantown will begin filingfelony charges against people caught setting celebratory street andtrash bin fires, and convictions can carry prison time.Traditionally, the hometown of West Virginia University has reliedon its misdemeanor malicious burning ordinance to handle studentsand others who start hundreds of potentially dangerous bonfires eachyear. Conviction carries a mandatory $1,000 fine. But FireDepartment Capt. Ken Tennant and Police Chief Ed Preston saidWednesday theyre teaming up this year to add the third- and fourth-degree state arson charges to their tool kits. Conviction could meanone to three years in prison, depending …

SPECIAL PRICE

Olympic games will cost the city, bring wave of business

When the 2009 Special Olympics World Winter Games descend upon Idaho next month, Boise is poised to garner 75 percent of a potential $11 million windfall generated by the influx of people coming to watch and participate in the games. The substantial figure is based on the fact that Boise will be the venue for three-fourths of the activities associated with the games.

But while the games are a welcome and much-needed revenue boon for Boise's private businesses, many of which have been struggling as the recession deepens, the games, which begin Feb. 7, will cost the City of Boise a chunk of change.

At its Jan. 13 …

China says quake killed 12.5 million farm animals, will hurt rice production

China's devastating earthquake killed 12.5 million farm animals _ mostly chickens _ and wrecked vegetable crops and irrigation systems needed to grow rice, the government says.

More than 20,000 hectares (50,000 acres) of vegetables and more than 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres) of wheat were destroyed by the May 12 quake in Sichuan province, according to the Agriculture Ministry.

Damage to irrigation systems could prevent farmers from growing rice on as much as 100,000 hectares (250,000 acres) of rice paddies, the ministry …

BECK AND B.B. ARE BOTH ROYALTY IN ARIE CROWN SHOW

Jeff Beck and B.B. King

AT the Arie Crown Theatre

You look for a point of reference to express Jeff Beck's greatnessas a guitarist, but there is none.

Jeff Beck stands alone.

Let's try the sports world, where excellence is quantifiable.Muhammad Ali the night he knocked out Cleveland Williams? MichaelJordan in Game 1 of the Portland finals? Kerry Wood in his 20-strikeout masterpiece vs. Houston?

That's roughly how high Beck sets the bar for himself these days.And Tuesday night, relegated to the semiwindup slot for the B.B. KingMusic Festival at the Arie Crown Theatre, he vaulted effortlesslyover his impossibly high standards. Despite suffering some …

Farrakhan raps Bush plans to invade Iraq

In an address at Muhammad's Mosque Number 11 Sunday Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan spoke out against the United States' planned invasion of Iraq saying President Bush is "embarking on an illegal course of action that will make America and its leadership war criminals."

In his address to a capacity audience at the Grove Hall mosque Farrakhan criticized the Bush administration's push to invade Iraq, saying the president is motivated by a vendetta against Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and a desire to maintain a high popularity rating with the United States public.

"His popularity is the basis of the so-called war on terrorism," Farrakhan said. "He has to unseat …

Juan Culio's 2 goals bring calls for citizenship

Juan Culio's two-goal performance for CFR Cluj in its upset win at AS Roma has prompted calls for the Argentine to receive Romanian citizenship.

The 25-year-old midfielder scored a goal in each half Tuesday to lead Cluj to a come-from-behind 2-1 win at Roma in its first ever Champions League game.

"I've called (the authorities) and said that if there are some players who are playing well we should naturalize them," Romanian Football Federation head Mircea Sandu said Wednesday.

Juan Culio has previously indicated interest in becoming a Romanian citizen, and Romania coach Victor Piturca said Tuesday he would like him in the team.

Clearance aiming to cut deer collisions

FOLIAGE is set to be cleared away this week as part of efforts toreduce the number of deer deaths on the roads in Epping Forest.

Verges will be cleared throughout the week in a bid to improveroad safety and cut the number of animals involved in fatalcollisions.

It is hoped that clearing scrub and undergrowth will enable deerto have a better sight of oncoming traffic when crossing roads, andprovide greater visibility to motorists as they pass through thelocations where deer-vehicle collisions …

GOP Chooses Boehner As Minority Leader

WASHINGTON - Cast into the minority by an angry electorate, House Republicans chose Rep. John Boehner of Ohio on Friday to lead a return to power as quickly as possible. "We're going to earn our way back into the majority," he vowed.

To do that, he said, "we need to fight for a smaller, less costly and more accountable federal government."

Boehner defeated Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana for minority leader on a secret ballot vote of 168-27, a margin that demonstrated fellow lawmakers do not hold him responsible for the election losses the party suffered on Nov. 7. The Ohio Republican has been serving as majority leader, the second-in-command in the leadership, since February. …

Daniel Williams, 83, local musician and repairman

Daniel Williams, 83, local musician and repairman

Daniel Williams, a widely-respected local musician, bandleader and instrument repairman, will be remembered tomorrow in a memorial service at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Griffin Funeral Home, 3232 S. King Dr.

Mr. Williams, 83, was born in Chicago on April 21, 1916, and died in the same home of his birth, a house his father had built in 1905.

A musician born into a musical family, the small child they called "Danny" sometimes toured Europe and the United States with his parents, who were part of the Williams Jubilee Singers.

His schools were all noted for producing talented musicians: McCosh Elementary, Englewood High School, the VanderCook College of Music, and finally Kentucky State University.

His first aggregation was appropriately call "The Danny Williams Orchestra," which he founded after graduation from high school.

"It was a pretty nice sounding little group," he recalled in a 1999 interview. "We were young and not very good musicians, but we got better as we went along. We played in Chicago. All the popular dance bands of the day influenced me. All the great bands that were broadcasting on the radio or recording records. Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway. The Bama State Collegians was a famous college band; they were out of Bama State College in Montgomery, Ala. They were young like us."

During a tour of Kentucky, the band got an offer from Kentucky State University. In exchange for free tuition, the band changed its name to the Kentucky State Collegians and played concerts in the south. Deeply affected by the southern segregation laws during that time, the band returned to Chicago.

"I never protested it, because it was the law," said Mr. Williams. "In 1938, my friends and I from Chicago certainly weren't going to go down to Kentucky and start infringing their laws."

Drafted in 1940, Mr. Williams spent the war years leading Army bands. He was stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.

Following the war, Mr. Williams played saxophone with the Cootie Williams Orchestra, playing concerts across the United States during the closing years of the Swing era.

As the big band era faded, Mr. Williams returned to Chicago to continue his career. Even in Chicago, Mr. Williams could not escape segregation. "The Chicago public schools hired band directors," he recalled, "but there was only one Black band director in the school system. When he died, they hired one more. So there didn't seem to be a great future in being a band director."

Mr. Williams opened his own musical instrument repair business. He spent eleven years running the repair shop at Lyon & Healy. He taught instrument repair at VanderCook College of Music. Before his death he had been helping to establish a technical training center for musical instrument repair in Normal, Illinois.

Mr. Williams was born, lived and died in his family home, a house built by his father in 1905. He died Thursday of heart failure, a condition from which he had suffered for about seven years. Mr. Williams is survived by his wife, Alma Williams, two children, Erick Williams, a lawyer in Michigan, and Yvonne Williams, a social worker in Washington, D.C. He has one grandchild, Elling Nielsen-Williams.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (Daniel Williams)

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

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Dad's fears after family attacked by airgun yobs A Man today claimed his family was under attack by gun-wielding yobs.

A Man today claimed his family was under attack by gun-wieldingyobs.

George Ferguson said two of his cars and two of his son's carshave been hit by air pellets over a six week period.

In the latest incident George found an inch-long bullet on hisdoorstep.

The 45-year-old said: "It worries me and my wife that somethingcould happen to my family. It seems to happen at night and any one ofus could be out at that time when we are putting the dog out.

"I don't know who's doing this but it really worries me."

George first noticed the attacks around six weeks ago when he wascleaning his Ford Focus outside his Bucksburn home.He spotted aroundfive dents in the car, which he has since sold.

Around two-and-a-half weeks ago George found a hole in theheadlight of his 18-year-old son Nicholas' Citroen Saxo.

A week and-a-half ago George's BMW window was smashed and dayslater they found two dents on the bonnet of Nicholas' Fiat Punto.

But the final straw was when he found a bullet on his doorstep andcalled police.

George, 45, said: "I was emptying out the boot of my car and I putsome things down on the doorstep. When I looked down, there was abullet there. This was not an air gun pellet but an inch-longbullet." He phoned the police immediately.

George, who lives with his wife Debra, 38, sons Nicholas andScott, 12, and daughter Louise, 17, said he was worried for hisfamily.

He said: "It particularly worries me because Scott has learningdifficulties and epilepsy and he could be on the receiving end."

A Grampian Police spokesman said: "I can confirm we areinvestigating an incident in the Kepplehills area of Aberdeen wherebya resident's cars have been damaged by what would appear to be an airweapon.

"No one has been charged and inquiries are ongoing."

Comment, Page 6

cstewart@ajl.co.uk

Vettel takes pole in European GP

Sebastian Vettel has won the pole for the European Grand Prix after posting the fastest time in qualifying.

Vettel drove a lap of 1 minute, 37.587 seconds Saturday to give Red Bull its eighth pole in nine races this season.

Vettel's teammate Mark Webber was second, with Lewis Hamilton of McLaren third.

Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher was eliminated after the second qualifying round, meaning he was unable to compete for the pole.

Home favorite Fernando Alonso of Ferrari was fourth, with teammate Felipe Massa fifth.

Hamilton leads the standings with 109 points, followed by Jenson Button on 106 points. Webber is third on 103 points, ahead of Alonso on 94 and Vettel on 90.

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

VALENCIA, Spain (AP) _ Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel has posted the fastest lap in the final practice session ahead of qualifying for the European Grand Prix.

Vettel's lap of 1 minute, 38.052 seconds was 0.102 seconds faster than Renault's Robert Kubica at the 3.4-mile Valencia street circuit Saturday. Vettel's teammate Mark Webber was third, 0.261 seconds behind.

Adrian Sutil of Force India was fourth. Fernando Alonso, who was quickest on Friday, was fifth fastest.

World champion Jenson Button was ninth and championship leader Lewis Hamilton was 10th.

Hamilton has 109 points in the standings, followed by Button on 106 points. Webber is third on 103 points, ahead of Alonso on 94 and Vettel on 90.

Qualifying for Sunday's race is later Saturday.

UK reggae singer died from stab wound to heart

LONDON (AP) — The British police watchdog says reggae star Smiley Culture died from a single stab wound to his heart while police officers were executing a search warrant at his home earlier this week.

British media earlier had reported that the stab wound was self-inflicted.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission says an investigation is ongoing into the death of the artist — whose real name was David Emmanuel.

The watchdog said Thursday that facts established so far show that four officers arrived at Emmanuel's home at around 7 a.m. on March 15 and an ambulance was called to the scene at around 8:30 a.m.

Emmanuel, 48-years old, shot to fame in the 1980s with hits such as "Cockney Translation" and "Police Officer."

Gaza: Fatah Hopes for Comeback

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Alaa Siyam's limbs are purple from a beating by Hamas police - but he says that won't stop him from joining protests against the militant group's leaders now running Gaza.

Hamas' defeated rival, the Fatah Party of moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, is counting on loyal foot soldiers like Siyam as it takes hesitant first steps to rebuild its shattered organization in Gaza.

After staging small anti-Hamas prayer vigils in recent weeks, Fatah hopes to intensify protests in the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which started Thursday, and galvanize its supporters. Some in Fatah are floating even bigger dreams, of a popular uprising that would force Hamas to agree to new elections.

Analyst Jihad Hamad says expectations of large-scale protests against Hamas are unrealistic at this stage. Many Gazans are increasingly disillusioned with both political parties, and Fatah has failed to clean up its corrupt image, which helped the Islamic Hamas to defeat it in 2006 parliament elections.

Hamas, which wrested control of Gaza in June by vanquishing Fatah security forces, insists it firmly controls Gaza.

However, it has outlawed the prayer protests and beaten, detained or threatened some of those involved, a sign it's concerned about the demonstrations spreading.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri accused the West Bank-based Abbas and his supporters of conspiring to overthrow Hamas by fomenting unrest. He said Fatah was wasting its time, noting that even when Fatah controlled a large arsenal of weapons and most of Gaza's security forces, it could not drive out Hamas.

"Are fireworks here and there going to bring any benefits?" he asked dismissively.

Yet a recent poll indicates Hamas' popularity is slipping, with three in four Palestinians saying they opposed Hamas' violent Gaza takeover.

Support for Fatah is now 48 percent, up five points from June, while backing for Hamas dropped two points to 31 percent, according to the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, an independent think tank that questioned 1,270 people with an error margin of 3 percentage points.

If presidential elections were held today, Abbas would win 59 percent, compared to 36 percent for Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas prime minister he deposed after the group's Gaza takeover. In June, Abbas was ahead by seven points.

Encouraged by signs of a backlash against Hamas, Fatah activists in Gaza have been stirring in the past month.

Many senior Fatah leaders fled Gaza in June, most Fatah offices are still closed after having been trashed by Hamas gunmen, and party officials often work from home or local coffee shops.

However, the Fatah youth movement Shabiba, the party's women's organization and social service groups have found a new home in the former British Council building in Gaza City.

On a recent morning, Shabiba leader Nabil Kattari held a strategy session in his ground floor office with Fatah student activists. Kattari said Shabiba has some 50,000 members in Gaza and claimed many would turn up for protests during Ramadan.

Hamas' tough measures have "given new strength to Fatah in the street," he said. "New elections are the main goal."

Fatah officials portray the protests as a joint effort of various Palestine Liberation Organization factions, not just of Fatah, apparently to avoid the impression that the party is instigating a new power struggle with Hamas, an unpopular notion in Gaza. However, the other factions are tiny and appear to be little more than a figleaf.

In a new tactic, to be highlighted during Ramadan, a time of increased religious fervor, Fatah is also trying to challenge Hamas' claim to a monopoly on all things Islamic. "We can compete with them on a religious level," said Fatah spokesman Hazem Abu Shanab.

Last Friday's prayer protests drew just a few hundred worshippers who placed their prayer mats in the streets, but the televised images of Hamas riot police firing in the air and clubbing protesters prompted widespread anger among Palestinians.

Siyam, a 26-year-old Fatah activist, said Hamas police seized him several hours after a prayer vigil in Gaza City, took him to a remote location and beat him with clubs and rocks. Four days later, his arms and legs were swollen and covered with deep purple bruises.

Siyam said he believes he was targeted because he had helped Spanish journalists film Hamas' violent dispersal of the prayer vigil from a rooftop near his home.

He said he's so angry he's ready to join the next protest, even with a sore body. "I just hate what Hamas is doing," he said, sitting on a bed in his small cinderblock house.

Macias' return puts luxury of 12 pitchers in doubt

ATLANTA -- The Cubs might be a week away from bringing backinfielder-outfielder Jose Macias and reducing their 12-man pitchingstaff to make room for him.

Macias will start playing this week in extended spring-traininggames in Arizona. Later in the week, the Cubs will send him on aminor-league rehab assignment. He is on target to return as early asApril 18 or 19, during the last two games of a series against theCincinnati Reds. It's possible he'll be activated when the Cubsreturn to the road April 20-22 in Pittsburgh.

As it stands, the Cubs would have a tough choice in shipping oneof their 12 pitchers to Class AAA Iowa. Left-hander Andy Pratt, whowas acquired last month in the trade that sent Juan Cruz to theAtlanta Braves, is the likely choice, even though he had pitched wellin the majors until Saturday.

YOUNG GUNS: General manager Jim Hendry is happy to see how wellyoung pitchers such as Pratt, Todd Wellemeyer and Michael Wuertz havedone with the Cubs. He wasn't even displeased to see Cruz pitch wellFriday for the Braves against the Cubs.

"I'd much rather have a trade with [Braves general manager] JohnSchuerholz where he is happy in the end and I'm happy because itmakes the next deal between us a lot easier," Hendry said."Schuerholz is as good as it gets, maybe as good as there has everbeen as a GM. We get right to the point [in trade talks]. There isnever any deception.

"It is really a trade that should work well for both of us. I takeno satisfaction in making a trade that looks one-sided in the end.That does no one any good."

SECOND DECK: There is a dusty cliche in baseball about someprospects becoming suspects when they pitch in stadiums with seconddecks rather than the less ornate minor-league and spring-trainingfacilities. Hendry used it when praising Wuertz, Wellemeyer and Prattfor living up to expectations so far.

"Sometimes when you think you have prospects and that second deckgoes on, they can't handle it," Hendry said. "All three of those guyshave proven that part of the issue isn't a problem. What Wuertz hasdone in three appearances [this season] after being a guy that'skicked around for six years in our system, it's really hard tobelieve.

"He hasn't had a bad inning since we started camp. Here is a guythat when he knew he had to show it because it may be his lastchance, he did it and showed no nervousness. This guy never threw 94miles an hour before now. To reach down and get something he neverhad before is impressive.

"He used to be 88 to 91, maybe 92 tops. He has hit 94 three, fourtimes this year and is working at 92 [regularly] when he used to workat 90. He weighs the same. He can't even figure out how he got theextra stuff."

SMART MANAGING: After Corey Patterson played 15 innings Friday,manager Dusty Baker knew that Saturday was a perfect game to give thecenter fielder a break. He was thinking of Patterson's comeback fromleft-knee surgery in July.

"This is when you reinjure something that's barely healed," Bakersaid of not taxing Patterson's anterior cruciate ligament after thestrain of extra innings.

CATCHING A BREAK: The Cubs were still feeling good about beatingthe Braves in 15 innings Friday night

They know if that decision had gone against them, it was the kindof game that could crawl into the team's psyche and gnaw at it for awhile.

"You can lose pennants in April, but you can't win them in April,"Baker said. "There is also a difference psychologically between being2-2 and 1-3."

GETTING UP: If Mark Prior feels good today after playing lightcatch Saturday, trainer Dave Groeschner said the plan is for somemore flat-ground throwing today.

But Prior also might take the mound in this workout, Groeschnersaid, although he would be flinging a towel instead of a baseball ashe comes down the incline and simulates his delivery.

Jailers: 40 inmates escape in Mexican border town

Police were searching for two prison guards and 40 prisoners who disappeared after a pre-dawn jailbreak Thursday in the Mexican city of Matamoros across the border from Brownsville, Texas.

Prison director Orlando Saucedo Pinto was put on temporary pending an investigation into how the prisoners got away, Mexican prison officials said at a news conference. Prison staff were also being investigated, they said.

The federal Attorney General's Office said in a statement Thursday night that 40 prisoners escaped, while local authorities had earlier put the number at 41.

Fifty prison employees were being held for questioning, the statement added.

The office said all the prisoners who escaped had been charged under federal law but were being held at the state institution. Five were serving sentences following convictions and 35 were on trial. The statement did not specify the offenses, but drug trafficking is the among the most common federal charges.

State leaders in Mexico have complained in the past that they do not have facilities secure enough to accommodate more serious, federally charged prisoners.

Last year guards stood by as more than 50 prisoners walked out of another jail in northern Mexico.

Eddie Perez, a spokesman for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Brownsville, said agents at the border were on alert because of the prison escape.

"We do have a contingency plan in effect, and we will do anything that we can to ensure the safety of the traveling public and our officers," he said.

WORK THAT NEVER ENDS

ACADEMIA

FEELING OVERWORKED? That's probably because you are. A new report, "Overworked Faculty: Job Stresses and Family Demands," finds that the average workweek for academies is 50 hours-plus, and a third of you put in more than 60 hours a week. Some of the extra time may be self-imposed by professors who enjoy their work and want to ensure they're performing at acceptable levels. But there's no doubt that academies also feel time-squeezed by job demands, including research, publishing, classroom time, and endless meetings. Jerry A. Jacobs, a University of Pennsylvania sociologist who co-wrote the report -which is based on Department of Education statistics thinks most professors are overworked mainly because of increasing demands. Those who work the longest hours report the most job dissatisfaction. "The common view that academics work such long hours because they love their work so much does not fit with that finding," he says. Other possible factors include poor time-management and technology making "it hard to turn off the constant flow of information. One positive result of long workweeks: Professors who put in the most hours are the most productive. The study didn't, however, measure the quality of their work. "In general, it's assumed that there is a correlation between publishing more" and qualitv, Jacobs says. One bright spot is the flexibility of academic schedules and the ability to often work from home.-THOMAS K. GROSE

Monday, March 12, 2012

More tools needed to fight elder abuse

Two 75-year-old men show up at a bank. Each is with a womandecades younger than himself. Each withdraws $10,000. One of theseniors suffers from dementia and is being ripped off by a conartist. The other one is a vibrant rake heading to Vegas with his newgirlfriend. The problem society faces is telling them apart.

Crime against the elderly is a serious, under-recognized crisis.As described in chilling detail in the Sun-Times in a four-partseries that concludes today, it is too easy for trusting, isolatedelderly people to find themselves victims of a variety of scams.Repairmen who charge outlandish fees for non-existent work.Caretakers who drain bank accounts. Even children who betray alifetime of love for mere financial gain. To make matters worse, wedon't even know how bad the problem really is, because often elderlyvictims are so embarrassed--they think that by this point in theirlives they should know better--they don't report the crimes againstthem.

Much needs to be done. Every police department worthy of the nameshould have an officer specializing in crimes against the elderly--right now two-thirds of the forces in the Chicago area don't--andtrained with the often delicate police work needed to coaxinformation out of humiliated, confused victims. Banks should beadded to the list of "mandatory reporters"--professions required bylaw to notify the state if they suspect elder abuse in theircustomers. Banks may try to shirk this duty by claiming it violatesthe confidentiality of their customers, but they are uniquelypositioned to detect fraud, and if the law requires veterinarians toreport suspicions of animal abuse--which it does--then a banker whosees a feeble customer withdrawing huge sums of moneyuncharacteristically should also be compelled to act.

The Department on Aging needs more money. Its budget is less thana quarter of the funding for the Department of Children and FamilyServices, while its population of potential clients--those over 65--is nearly half the number of people under 18. Some sort of publicguardian for the elderly, such as is already in place for children,would also help.

Finally, this is one social problem where each one of us has animportant role. If we are elderly, we need to make a conscious effortto protect ourselves. This means being savvy and suspicious of peoplewho show up at your house or want money. This means getting youraffairs in order with someone you trust--and being sure that theperson you trust is actually trustworthy. Or as Ronald Reagan onceput it: Trust, but verify.

Those of us who are not elderly need to keep tabs on our agedrelatives. This can be difficult, as solicitousness can be seen asprying, and concern mistaken for conniving. Even under idealcircumstances, many people are not comfortable discussing financialmatters with their parents or their children. It is a discussion thatcan be very difficult for all involved, and can itself lead totrouble. For every senior ripped off by a con artist, there must betwo or three who are making life hell for a well-intentioned nephewwho is just trying to get his elder's electric bill paid.

But the effort must be made. Too many seniors lose the fruits of alifetime of labor, and once those fruits are gone, getting them backis nearly impossible. As our society ages, this problem will only getworse, and we need to act immediately to address it.

Marlins beat Phils 3-2 in 11, tighten National League East Division

Jorge Cantu hit a bases-loaded single off the scoreboard with none out in the 11th inning, and the Florida Marlins tightened the NL East race by beating the Philadelphia Phillies 3-2 Sunday.

Alfredo Amezaga led off the 11th with a single against Clay Condrey (2-2), and Hanley Ramirez walked on a 3-2 pitch. Jeremy Hermida bunted to Condrey, who looked to third base before throwing late to first, and the infield single loaded the bases.

Cantu singled on a 1-1 pitch and was mobbed by his teammates.

By winning two of three games in the series, the Marlins closed to within one-half game of the Phillies and New York Mets.

Dodgers 6, Diamondbacks 5

In Phoenix, Andre Ethier hit a go-ahead triple to highlight a five-run ninth-inning rally and Los Angeles beat Arizona.

The Dodgers took two of three from Arizona to pull even with the Diamondbacks in the National League's West Division

Cubs 9, Astros 0

In Houston, Ryan Dempster struck out seven in eight shutout innings to earn his first road win in two years and Chicago snapped a three-game losing streak with a win over Houston.

Mike Fontenot hit a solo homer and a two-run double and Derrek Lee had three RBIs to help Chicago shake out a mini-offensive slump that bridged the Major League Baseball All-Star Game break.

Dempster (11-4) allowed six hits, all singles, and got his first road win since June 2, 2006, at St. Louis.

Mets 7, Reds 5, 10 innings

In Cincinnati, third baseman Edwin Encarnacion hit one of Cincinnati's three homers off Mike Pelfrey, then made a throwing error in the 10th inning that helped New York rally for a victory and a split of their four-game series.

The Mets have won 11 of their last 13 games, salvaging their season one month after they fired manager Willie Randolph.

Rockies 11, Pirates 3

In Denver, Matt Holliday and Jeff Baker homered and had three hits each, Aaron Cook won his team-leading 12th game and Colorado completed a four-game sweep of Pittsburgh.

Cook (12-6) was roughed up for three runs in the first but gave up just one hit over his final six innings to get the victory.

Clint Barmes had three hits and Ian Stewart was 2-for-4 with two runs and three RBIs for the Rockies, who swept a four-game series for the first time this season.

Brewers 7, Giants 4

In San Francisco, Ryan Braun hit a three-run homer and drove in a career-high five runs, pitcher Manny Parra had an RBI single en route to winning his eighth straight decision and Milwaukee completed a season sweep of San Francisco.

Corey Hart added a solo shot for the Brewers, who took all six meetings with the Giants this year.

Tim Lincecum (11-3) struck out eight in his first start since missing last Tuesday's All-Star game and being hospitalized in New York with the flu and dehydration.

Nationals 15, Braves 6

In Atlanta, former Braves outfielder Willie Harris drove in five runs and reached base five times, Jesus Flores had five hits and Austin Kearns hit a two-run homer as Washington routed Atlanta.

Washington outscored Atlanta 23-8 to win the last two games of the series.

The only highlights for Atlanta were two homers by Mark Teixeira, who had three hits and drove in three runs, and a two-run homer by Martin Prado in the fourth off Odalis Perez (3-7).

Cardinals 9, Padres 5

St. Louis, Aaron Miles' grand slam in the ninth inning, the first game-ending hit of his career, helped St. Louis recover from another blown save by Jason Isringhausen to wrap up a four-game sweep of San Diego.

Troy Glaus' three-run homer off Heath Bell in the eighth gave the Cardinals a two-run lead but the Padres rallied against Isringhausen, who blew his eighth save in 19 chances.

British sculptor involved in tragic accident dies

British police say a sculptor whose inflatable artwork blew away and killed two people in a 2006 accident has died.

Durham Police said Thursday that Maurice Agis died at the age of 77 in Spain where he lived. The cause of death was not disclosed.

Two women aged 68 and 38 were killed when they were hurled from Agis' inflatable artwork "Dreamspace" as it was blown 30 feet (9 meters) into the air by a gust of wind in Chester-le-Street, northeast England.

Agis was charged with manslaughter but convicted in March of lesser health and safety violations and fined.

"Dreamspace" was a structure made of translucent PVC sheets which allowed spectators to crawl through its network of tunnels.

It had toured Europe without incident for a decade before the accident.

Platini: decision on whether Poland, Ukraine can still host Euro 2012 to be made in September

UEFA president Michel Platini said that a crunch decision on whether Poland and Ukraine will host the 2012 European Championship will take place in September amid fears that the capitals Warsaw and Kiev may be unable to provide adequate stadiums.

Football's European governing body has already instructed the two co-hosts to speed up work on building stadiums and improving roads and transport infrastructure, and a 12-man delegation will visit the two nations next week for an update. Platini said UEFA is still backing Poland and Ukraine to stage the tournament but, if there are no guarantees that Warsaw and Kiev will have completed the stadiums in time, it could be moved.

"We have already sent lots of experts in the past few months to Ukraine and Poland, and September at Bordeaux we will take a final decision," Platini said Saturday, one day before the Euro 2008 final between Germany and Spain in Vienna.

"This will answer all the questions that you have. At the last meeting of (executive committee) in Zagreb, we asked the two countries to wake up and we gave them four months to show us progress. In September, we will examine the situation again."

Platini said a decision on whether the number of teams will be increased from 16 to 24 after Euro 2012 will also be made at the Sept. 23 meeting.

"Decisions will be taken in Bordeaux about 24 teams or not and other decisions regarding the next Euros," he said. "I think that this will give me more of a headache than having too much to drink."

Poland and Ukraine were surprisingly awarded the championships ahead of Italy and a co-hosted bid by Croatia and Hungary in April last year. Warsaw is set to stage the opening game in a new national stadium, but work has not yet started. Kiev will hold the final in its redeveloped Olympic stadium, but similar construction delays have led to repeated speculation that UEFA has plans for a backup host, possibly Italy, Germany or Scotland.

"I repeat: the executive committee of UEFA awarded the 2012 Euros to Poland and Ukraine and we will do everything that we can and more to see that it's held in Poland and Ukraine," Platini said.

"There is no backup plan. We have had no second thoughts and we respect our decision to go to Poland and Ukraine. The only thing that would make us decide not to go to Poland and Ukraine would be if there were no stadiums in the two capitals, Warsaw and Kiev. That would be the only decision to make us decide not to have the tournament in Poland and Ukraine. If no stadiums, no tournament.

Platini blamed the rumors of a backup plan on the Ukrainian media.

"There are no rumors coming from UEFA," Platini said. "It's the Ukrainians who have said they will not be ready and that causes rumors.

"People in (Ukraine) are perhaps talking a bit too much and should be a bit more restrained. We are taking a decision in September. We will do everything to hold the tournament in Poland and Ukraine. It's a decision of our (executive committee) and we will respect that decision unless there's a disaster."

Wallace Smith interprets the role of John in the hit Broadway musical 'Miss Saigon'

Young people think large about their ambitions but many times parents just say "Hush, you don't know where you're going and what you're going to be." Then a little boy by the name of Wallace responded, "Yes I am. I'm going to be on the stage, I'm going to sing and dance." Mom just said, "Hush, finish your breakfast and go school."

When Miss Saigon returns to Chicago for two weeks only, Tuesday, June 10 through Sunday, June 22 at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theater, 24 W. Randolph St. that same little boy, now a young singer and actor, will be on the stage interpreting the character of John, who is a friend of the principal character.

When talking to Wallace, I asked, "Well, how did you become one of the stars in Miss Saigon?" His answer was, "I auditioned in New York City and in two weeks they called. I was ready because when I was very young I began singing at 5 years old in the Pentecostal Church where my grand parents would take me every week. I was five years old and every time the choir would perform, I would be right there."

It was the same thing at school, little Wallace was always singing and dancing and even at home his folks could hardly shut his mouth. Finally they realized that he had talent and would be singing somewhere or burst. He lived with his single mother and two other sisters who gave him all their love and support even when he was a little boy. After chores, he didn't run to the basketball court, or the baseball ground to play sports. Don't get him wrong, he did play sports a little. His whole mind, however, was on the theater, the television or music.

Wallace was 10 years old when he made his stage debut as Travis in a production of Raisin In The Sun. He was in his own little heaven, but shared his make-believe-people with others.

As a teenager, Wallace was constantly involved in some kind of theatrical activity. He has appeared in many cameo roles in television. Constantly performed on stage in his neighborhood. All of these activities kept him busy during his teenage years. His two years in college prepared him for greater activities.

Among his most important roles was Soul Food and Port Charles on ABC. He finished Junior College in Santa Monica after deciding to fulfill his own aspirations and become a great artist on the stage, thus making his own vision come true. His mother would often say that "My son knew he was going to be an actor," and she gave him the freedom too fulfill his ambition. She is one of those mothers who permitted their son to live his life.

Miss Saigon is, at the present time, his first big Broadway production and his first tour. "Music," he says, "has brought me this far.

"Traveling around the United States and now the Middle West has been a great experience. Wallace is one of the many young people who have realized their destiny and are appearing in the modern love-story.

Set in 1975 during the final days leading up to the American evacuation of Saigon, Miss Saigon is the story of two young lovers torn apart by the fortunes of destiny and held together by a burning passion and the fate of a small child. This musical, from the creators of Les Miserables, with its soaring melodies and powerful emotions has captured hearts - and awards - around the world.

Miss Saigon is written by Alain Boublil (book, lyrics and original French lyrics), Claude-Michel Schonberg (book and music) and Richard Maltby Jr. (lyrics), Miss Saigon was originally produced by Cameron Mackintosh at The Theater Royal Drury Lane, London, in September 1989.

Subsequently, the production opened on Broadway in April 1998 with three North American Companies following. This newly conceived touring production of Miss Saigon that will play the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Oriental Theater is produced by Big League Theatrical.

Photograph (Wallace Smith)

Sharapova Reaches Australian Open Semis

MELBOURNE, Australia - Maria Sharapova advanced to the Australian Open semifinals with a 7-6 (5), 7-5 win Wednesday over Anna Chakvetadze, another 19-year-old Russian.

The top-seeded Sharapova, assured of gaining the No. 1 ranking next month, had trouble on her serve, serving double-faults on break point three times. But she had the only point on serve in the tiebreaker, where the last eight points finished on unforced errors.

The U.S. Open champion was broken when serving for the match at 5-3 and wasted a match point with a backhand error in the next game.

Sharapova got two more match points in the 12th game and finished it off in 2 hours, 14 minutes when Chakvetadze netted a forehand.

"It was very difficult, I didn't feel like we had a lot of easy rallies," Sharapova said. "I felt I had to work on every point."

Sharapova was very inconsistent, smacking clean winners to take one game, then committing glaring mistakes to lose the next. She finished with 32 winners but six double faults and 41 unforced errors and won only three more points than her opponent.

Sharapova, who looks toward her father, Yuri, after almost every point, got a warning for getting coaching from him as she served at 0-30 with the score tied at 2-2 in the second set. She then ran off four straight points to take the game.

"I was a little up and down, a bit scratchy," Sharapova said. "I am glad I got through, but next time will even be tougher."

Sharapova is into the semifinals at Melbourne Park for the third straight year and is among the last four at a major for the eighth time. She is the defending U.S. Open champion and also won Wimbledon in 2004.

Chakvetadze, who had won 20 of her previous 21 matches, had never been beyond the fourth round of a major.

No. 4 Kim Clijsters and three-time champion Martina Hingis were to meet in a quarterfinal here for the second consecutive year.

Clijsters won at that stage last year, ending Hingis' remarkable run after coming to Melbourne Park with a ranking of 341 following three years in retirement.

In men's quarterfinals later Wednesday, second-seeded Rafael Nadal faced No. 10 Fernando Gonzalez of Chile and Tommy Haas was against No. 3 Nikolay Davydenko.

On the other side of the draw, Andy Roddick was ruthless, treating his close friend like little more than warmup fodder for his semifinal showdown with Roger Federer.

The 2003 U.S. Open champion flattened Mardy Fish without blinking Tuesday, making only four unforced errors in a 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 quarterfinal win.

"I played pretty flawless, I thought," Roddick said. "I feel good going into the semis."

Federer, who lost to Roddick in the final of an exhibition tournament 10 days ago but has a 12-1 record in official ATP matches, dropped his serve four times in a 6-3, 7-6 (2), 7-5 win over No. 7 Tommy Robredo.

"The break of serves, they're due to the wind I assume," Federer said. "I had to kind of change my game around a little bit. I think my attacking style really worked out well - I'm really happy to have come through."

Federer has been ranked No. 1 since February 2004 and next month he'll break Jimmy Connors' record of 160 consecutive weeks atop the rankings.

Roddick and eight-time Grand Slam winner Connors teamed up as student and coach last July to try and challenge Federer's domination.

And that has coincided with Roddick returning to the top 10 and becoming a contender again to take a major from Federer.

"For the past probably five or six months, the gap has either been closing a little bit or just he hasn't been extending it," Roddick said. "That's a good thing.

"I feel like I'm in good form. I'd love to see where I match up."

Serena Williams continued her improbable run for an eighth Grand Slam title, fending off 10 break points and coming within two points of defeat before beating Shahar Peer 3-6, 6-2, 8-6.

That put her into a semifinal against 17-year-old Nicole Vaidisova.

"I am the ultimate competitor," said Williams, who missed most of last season with recurring knee trouble. "I don't think anyone thought I would get this far, except for me and my mom."

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Hard workers, but no results

Jay Cutler could take a lesson or two from Adewale Ogunleye on how to handle an awkward question.

When Ogunleye was asked this week to explain why Gaines Adams and Mark Anderson have struggled to make an impact -- a fair question for a coach, but a no-win situation for a teammate -- he could've gotten away with saying, ''That's a coach's question'' and been done with it. But he came up with an answer anyway. It's called playing the game.

''That's not for me to answer,'' he said. ''I don't know. The guys are working hard. Gaines is definitely working hard trying to get his thing together. Mark is one of the hardest-working guys I know. I work out with him in the offseason a lot. I see he's trying. I think it's just opportunities. Guys have to make the most of their opportunities, and they just haven't been happening. The reason why? I really don't know. But I know these guys work hard.''

In a way, Ogunleye's answer might've been too good because it indirectly illustrated part of the Bears' problem: If Adams and Anderson are working that hard and still not getting the job done, maybe they're just not good enough.

Adams has an excuse -- he joined the team in October. But Anderson has been working for nearly three seasons to regain the 12-sack form of his rookie year. It has been a theme of the Bears' 2009 season: the offensive line -- working hard but can't seem to ''jell.'' Cutler -- working hard, going straight to Halas Hall after a road game to watch film but still struggling. Everybody's working hard -- but with nothing to show for it but victories over the Steelers (6-7), Lions (2-10), Browns (2-11) and Rams (1-11). It almost would be better if they weren't working hard. Then at least they could start working hard and get somewhere.

This town has lost faith in this team, this coach and this organization. And even if wholesale changes aren't in order -- Jerry Angelo and Lovie Smith aren't going anywhere -- can we at least see something from this team that restores our faith? Something that shows us the Bears as presently constituted can at least someday be what they purported to be this season?

Holding the Rams to 142 yards doesn't count.

The opportunity against Green Bay today at Soldier Field has nothing to do with satisfying the meatball contingent that would settle for 2-14 as long as the victories are against the Packers (if those people are for real, they need some serious counseling). It has to do with stemming the tide of public opinion by beating a playoff-caliber team; beating a team that beat you earlier in the year; showing signs of progress, anything that lets us know that all this hard work is getting them somewhere; showing us that Cutler and Adams are worth not having first- and second-round draft picks in 2010.

All we have to go on so far is blind faith.

''We want to play better than we did last week,'' Smith said. ''There's no reason to think we won't.''

With all due respect, I think there's more reason to think they won't than they will. The Packers have won four consecutive games. Their quarterback-of-the-future is here right now. Their once-porous offensive line is solidifying. Their rookies, particularly first-round pick Clay Matthews, are thriving.

Their defense, 20th in the NFL last season in total yards, is No. 1 this season in a totally different defense with a new coordinator. (Can you see the Bears transitioning to a 3-4 defense? They'd still be in the ''transition phase'' today.)

Linebacker Nick Barnett, who's coming off knee surgery, leads them in tackles with 89 and has three sacks, despite only playing full-time since Week 4.

And the Bears? Still a work in progress. We've seen the work. Can we please see the progress?

Photo: Jonathan Daniel, Getty Images / Running back Matt Forte is only one of many Bears who haven't lived up to expectations this season.

Study: Too much weight gain during pregnancy may increase postmenopausal breast cancer risk

00-00-0000
Dateline: SAN FRANCISCOPutting on extra weight during pregnancy appears to increase women's chance of having breast cancer after they go through menopause decades later, according to a new study.

While adequate weight gain is essential for the baby's health, the new work suggests that putting on too many extra 10 pounds (kilograms) may be risky.

Doctors have long known that obesity increases a woman's chance of breast cancer. In fact, staying slim is one of the few things a woman can do that clearly lowers her risk.

Until now, experts assumed that all weight gain is bad. But the latest study, presented Tuesday, suggests that piling on the pounds (kilograms) during pregnancy may be especially hazardous.

The study found that women who put on more than 38 pounds (17 kilograms) during pregnancy had a 40 percent increased risk of developing breast cancer after menopause, although the risk before menopause was no higher than usual.

Fat cells produce estrogen, and many believe the extra hormone is what puts overweight women at higher risk of breast cancer. Dr. Leena Hilakivi-Clarke, who directed the latest study, said that getting a burst of estrogen during pregnancy may be especially bad.

"Timing of estrogen exposure is important in terms of its effect on the breast," she said. "During times when the breast is rapidly developing, estrogen might be particularly harmful. Pregnancy is one such period."

Hilakivi-Clarke, a researcher at Georgetown University, presented the findings at a meeting in San Francisco of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"The data are provocative because they suggest there may be times when the breast is particularly susceptible to increased estrogen levels," said Dr. Joyce O'Shaughnessy, a breast cancer specialist at Baylor-Sammons Cancer Center in Dallas.

However, Dr. Eugenia Calle, director of analytic epidemiology at the American Cancer Society, questioned whether weight gain during pregnancy is any worse than weight gain in general, especially if women fail to take off all the extra pounds after they give birth.

"Pregnancy is a time when many women accumulate excess weight that they don't then lose," she said.

Calle said women who put on an extra 30 pounds (13 kilograms) to 50 pounds (22 kilograms) during adulthood face approximately double the usual risk of breast cancer after they reach menopause. "The message to women is to maintain their young adult weight through life."

Hilakivi-Clarke said her team has not yet examined whether women who gain extra weight during pregnancy and then take it all off have an increased risk of later breast cancer.

Her study was based on a follow-up of 4,020 postmenopausal women in Finland, 185 of whom developed breast cancer at an average age of 58. The researchers checked medical records to see how much the women gained during pregnancy.

Adequate weight gain during pregnancy is essential to the baby's health. Guidelines from the Institute of Medicine say how much women need to put on depends on their body mass index, a widely used measure of fatness.

A woman who is underweight should gain 28 to 40 pounds (13 to 18 kilograms). One who is normal weight should gain 25 to 35 pounds (11 to 16 kilograms). Someone who is overweight should add 15 to 25 pounds (7 to 11 kilograms). And obese women should put on no more than 15 pounds (7 kilograms).

Statistics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest most pregnant women probably put on more than this. In 2000, 64 percent of women gained at least 26 pounds (12 kilograms) during pregnancy. The median weight gain was almost 31 pounds (14 kilograms). Twelve percent put on 46 pounds (20 kilograms) or more.

Pregnancy itself can protect against breast cancer, though only if women get pregnant by age 20. Those who get pregnant after age 30 actually have a higher risk than women who never have children. Breast feeding also is modestly protective.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: Medical Editor Daniel Q. Haney is a special correspondent for The Associated Press.

___

On the Web:

Conference site: http://www.aacr.org/
Study: Too much weight gain during pregnancy may increase postmenopausal breast cancer risk00-00-0000
Dateline: SAN FRANCISCOPutting on extra weight during pregnancy appears to increase women's chance of having breast cancer after they go through menopause decades later, according to a new study.

While adequate weight gain is essential for the baby's health, the new work suggests that putting on too many extra 10 pounds (kilograms) may be risky.

Doctors have long known that obesity increases a woman's chance of breast cancer. In fact, staying slim is one of the few things a woman can do that clearly lowers her risk.

Until now, experts assumed that all weight gain is bad. But the latest study, presented Tuesday, suggests that piling on the pounds (kilograms) during pregnancy may be especially hazardous.

The study found that women who put on more than 38 pounds (17 kilograms) during pregnancy had a 40 percent increased risk of developing breast cancer after menopause, although the risk before menopause was no higher than usual.

Fat cells produce estrogen, and many believe the extra hormone is what puts overweight women at higher risk of breast cancer. Dr. Leena Hilakivi-Clarke, who directed the latest study, said that getting a burst of estrogen during pregnancy may be especially bad.

"Timing of estrogen exposure is important in terms of its effect on the breast," she said. "During times when the breast is rapidly developing, estrogen might be particularly harmful. Pregnancy is one such period."

Hilakivi-Clarke, a researcher at Georgetown University, presented the findings at a meeting in San Francisco of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"The data are provocative because they suggest there may be times when the breast is particularly susceptible to increased estrogen levels," said Dr. Joyce O'Shaughnessy, a breast cancer specialist at Baylor-Sammons Cancer Center in Dallas.

However, Dr. Eugenia Calle, director of analytic epidemiology at the American Cancer Society, questioned whether weight gain during pregnancy is any worse than weight gain in general, especially if women fail to take off all the extra pounds after they give birth.

"Pregnancy is a time when many women accumulate excess weight that they don't then lose," she said.

Calle said women who put on an extra 30 pounds (13 kilograms) to 50 pounds (22 kilograms) during adulthood face approximately double the usual risk of breast cancer after they reach menopause. "The message to women is to maintain their young adult weight through life."

Hilakivi-Clarke said her team has not yet examined whether women who gain extra weight during pregnancy and then take it all off have an increased risk of later breast cancer.

Her study was based on a follow-up of 4,020 postmenopausal women in Finland, 185 of whom developed breast cancer at an average age of 58. The researchers checked medical records to see how much the women gained during pregnancy.

Adequate weight gain during pregnancy is essential to the baby's health. Guidelines from the Institute of Medicine say how much women need to put on depends on their body mass index, a widely used measure of fatness.

A woman who is underweight should gain 28 to 40 pounds (13 to 18 kilograms). One who is normal weight should gain 25 to 35 pounds (11 to 16 kilograms). Someone who is overweight should add 15 to 25 pounds (7 to 11 kilograms). And obese women should put on no more than 15 pounds (7 kilograms).

Statistics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest most pregnant women probably put on more than this. In 2000, 64 percent of women gained at least 26 pounds (12 kilograms) during pregnancy. The median weight gain was almost 31 pounds (14 kilograms). Twelve percent put on 46 pounds (20 kilograms) or more.

Pregnancy itself can protect against breast cancer, though only if women get pregnant by age 20. Those who get pregnant after age 30 actually have a higher risk than women who never have children. Breast feeding also is modestly protective.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: Medical Editor Daniel Q. Haney is a special correspondent for The Associated Press.

___

On the Web:

Conference site: http://www.aacr.org/
Study: Too much weight gain during pregnancy may increase postmenopausal breast cancer risk00-00-0000
Dateline: SAN FRANCISCOPutting on extra weight during pregnancy appears to increase women's chance of having breast cancer after they go through menopause decades later, according to a new study.

While adequate weight gain is essential for the baby's health, the new work suggests that putting on too many extra 10 pounds (kilograms) may be risky.

Doctors have long known that obesity increases a woman's chance of breast cancer. In fact, staying slim is one of the few things a woman can do that clearly lowers her risk.

Until now, experts assumed that all weight gain is bad. But the latest study, presented Tuesday, suggests that piling on the pounds (kilograms) during pregnancy may be especially hazardous.

The study found that women who put on more than 38 pounds (17 kilograms) during pregnancy had a 40 percent increased risk of developing breast cancer after menopause, although the risk before menopause was no higher than usual.

Fat cells produce estrogen, and many believe the extra hormone is what puts overweight women at higher risk of breast cancer. Dr. Leena Hilakivi-Clarke, who directed the latest study, said that getting a burst of estrogen during pregnancy may be especially bad.

"Timing of estrogen exposure is important in terms of its effect on the breast," she said. "During times when the breast is rapidly developing, estrogen might be particularly harmful. Pregnancy is one such period."

Hilakivi-Clarke, a researcher at Georgetown University, presented the findings at a meeting in San Francisco of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"The data are provocative because they suggest there may be times when the breast is particularly susceptible to increased estrogen levels," said Dr. Joyce O'Shaughnessy, a breast cancer specialist at Baylor-Sammons Cancer Center in Dallas.

However, Dr. Eugenia Calle, director of analytic epidemiology at the American Cancer Society, questioned whether weight gain during pregnancy is any worse than weight gain in general, especially if women fail to take off all the extra pounds after they give birth.

"Pregnancy is a time when many women accumulate excess weight that they don't then lose," she said.

Calle said women who put on an extra 30 pounds (13 kilograms) to 50 pounds (22 kilograms) during adulthood face approximately double the usual risk of breast cancer after they reach menopause. "The message to women is to maintain their young adult weight through life."

Hilakivi-Clarke said her team has not yet examined whether women who gain extra weight during pregnancy and then take it all off have an increased risk of later breast cancer.

Her study was based on a follow-up of 4,020 postmenopausal women in Finland, 185 of whom developed breast cancer at an average age of 58. The researchers checked medical records to see how much the women gained during pregnancy.

Adequate weight gain during pregnancy is essential to the baby's health. Guidelines from the Institute of Medicine say how much women need to put on depends on their body mass index, a widely used measure of fatness.

A woman who is underweight should gain 28 to 40 pounds (13 to 18 kilograms). One who is normal weight should gain 25 to 35 pounds (11 to 16 kilograms). Someone who is overweight should add 15 to 25 pounds (7 to 11 kilograms). And obese women should put on no more than 15 pounds (7 kilograms).

Statistics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest most pregnant women probably put on more than this. In 2000, 64 percent of women gained at least 26 pounds (12 kilograms) during pregnancy. The median weight gain was almost 31 pounds (14 kilograms). Twelve percent put on 46 pounds (20 kilograms) or more.

Pregnancy itself can protect against breast cancer, though only if women get pregnant by age 20. Those who get pregnant after age 30 actually have a higher risk than women who never have children. Breast feeding also is modestly protective.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: Medical Editor Daniel Q. Haney is a special correspondent for The Associated Press.

___

On the Web:

Conference site: http://www.aacr.org/

Monday, March 5, 2012

Question grows whether Evans has the right stuff

Ald. Timothy C. Evans (4th) is battling the wimp factor in hisbid to become the city's next mayor. And there are growing questionswhether he will be able to shake it.

Struggling with the label has left the mild-mannered Evansperplexed in his attempt to build a citywide constituency. Evanshasn't done much in his mayoral campaign to convince thenon-converted that he's a very tough fellow.

He looked weak and indecisive last week when he declined commenton State's Attorney Richard M. Daley's entry into the Democraticmayoral contest. During the City Council's vote on Mayor Sawyer'sbudget, Evans missed the debate, then got into a silly proceduralargument with Finance …

Dermatological Sciences touts skin care advance.

NEW YORK -- Dermatological Sciences Corp., maker of Somme skin care products, is poised to launch a new line.

"Not since the introduction of alpha-hydroxy acids has there been a more significant advance in skin care," vice president of sales Jan Hogan says about the new bioSomme line. "After years of research our scientists have created the ultimate formula for skin perfection."

The new line includes:

* A 30-minute antiwrinkle collagen patch that is billed as being able to reduce fine lines and wrinkles by 60% after just one application. Hogan the patch can provide a 39% increase in cell renewal after 30 days of usage as recommended. The product's …

SPORTS IS BACK IN NYC.(SPORTS)

Byline: ARTHUR STAPLE Newsday

NEW YORK -- The seats were far from full and the play was as ragged as expected in an early preseason game. But sports returned to New York City Wednesday night, as welcome a sight as any in the past nine days of sadness.

The Rangers defeated the Devils, 6-1, as Eric Lindros made his debut in a New York uniform by scoring a goal. But the story was simply that two hockey teams and about 6,000 fans came out to Madison Square Garden on Wednesday. It was the first event of any kind in the Garden since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.

Rangers captain Mark Messier was a late scratch because of neck spasms. But he gauged the …

F1 can hurt brand image.(News; media scrutiny of Formula One racing offers opportunities and disadvantages for automakers )

Byline: Jesse Snyder

For automakers, the business of Formula One is an intense world of images that are seen by a huge global audience.

But unlike advertisers, team sponsors can only indirectly control what images the audience sees - a classic high-risk, high-reward proposition.

This season the stakes are even higher. The F1 calendar has more events in more places - such as the Middle East and China - broadening the television and live audiences for the eight-month, 18-race campaign.

That means automakers have even more chances to make a good, or bad, impression.

World champion Michael Schu-macher in his red Ferrari has a huge …

Curlin Nips Street Sense in Preakness

BALTIMORE - Curlin nipped Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense by putting his head in front on the final stride, winning the Preakness Stakes in a riveting finish Saturday and ending any chance for a Triple Crown this year.

Street Sense seemed to have the race won after another of his patented rallies, taking the lead in the stretch under the guidance of Calvin Borel. But under a fierce ride by Robby Albarado, Curlin snatched away the victory.

With Street Sense in his sights, Curlin relentlessly narrowed the margin with every stride. Albarado, sensing the Derby winner was his, went into an all-out drive for the finish, furiously whipping the big chestnut colt in one of the …

A very tony Tony

Ask Tony Bennett what it's like to be 85 and you can almost hear the smile in his voice.

"I just love it," he says beaming. "I have very good health and everybody keeps saying I'm in top shape and that they've never heard me singing better. I'll take that."

At an age when most octogenarians would be taking life just a wee bit easier, Bennett, who celebrated the milestone birthday on Aug. 3, is moving forward at breakneck speed. In addition to his regular tour schedule — including a "birthday celebration concert" at Ravinia on Aug. 26 — he'll be feted at the opening ceremonies of the U.S. Open on Aug. 29 (Bennett's an avid tennis fan), making his concert debut at New York's …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

NordLB ups SAP price target, stance.

(ADPnews) - Jan 28, 2010 - NordLB upgraded on Thursday its recommendation on German software company SAP (ETR:SAP) to "buy" from "hold" and increased the share price target to EUR 37 from EUR 33.

SAP's financial figures for the past year met market expectations, analyst Jan Goehmann wrote. Despite the relative uncertainty of the company's further business development, there is a substantial growth potential in the medium-term, Goehmann …

KEYCORP TO ACQUIRE IDAHO, TROY BANKS.(Business)

Byline: Mark S.R. Suchecki Business writer

KeyCorp has reached a definitive agreement to add yet another to its snowbelt acquisitions, this time, the largest state-chartered bank in Idaho.

The financial services company has agreed to acquire IB&T Corp., according to Victor J. Riley Jr., president and chief executive officer of KeyCorp, and Richard K. Hemingway, chairman of the board of IB&T Corp., the Boise- based parent company of Idaho Bank & Trust Co. and First Bank of Troy.

Under the terms of the agreement announced jointly by officials of both firms Friday, IB&T shareholders will be paid about $58 million in cash.

IB&T Corp., with 31 …

CAMPBELL BACK AT WORK AFTER DRUG REACTION.(MAIN)

Supermodel Naomi Campbell returned to work Monday and was feeling ``very well'' after an adverse reaction to antibiotics, her agency said, denying reports she had overdosed on drugs.

Paparazzi surrounded the Hotel Bristol, where Campbell usually stays while in Paris, but an Elite agency spokeswoman said the 27-year-old model was …

Cytokine flow cytometry analyzes T-cell responses to cytomegalovirus.

2004 SEP 6 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Cytokine flow cytometry analyzes T-cell responses to cytomegalovirus.

"T-cell responses to human cytomegalovirus (CMV) are readily detected in chronically infected adults, and are thought to be important for protection from CMV-related pathology," wrote investigators in the United States.

"Antigen -specific cytokine flow cytometry (CFC) has been used to establish the range of CMV-specific CD4 and CD8 T-cell frequencies in healthy CMV-seropositive (and seronegative) adults," H.T. Maecker and coworkers reported, "as well as the dynamics of these cells over time.

"There are also emerging data regarding the …

Medvedev, chosen Russia's president, faces future alongside mentor Putin

Dmitry Medvedev won a crushing victory in Russia's presidential elections and lost no time Monday in acting tough: Gazprom, the state-controlled energy giant Medvedev chairs, cut gas supplies to Ukraine in an apparent show of force to neighbors seeking closer ties to the West.

The decision to squeeze Ukraine's gas supplies may be an early indication that Medvedev intends to continue the course set by his mentor, President Vladimir Putin _ reasserting his country's power abroad while keeping a tight grip on society at home.

Nearly final results _ from 99.45 percent of precincts _ showed that the 42-year-old Medvedev had received 70.2 percent of the vote, the …

Used-home sales slip 0.5% in 2nd qtr.

WASHINGTON Sales of existing homes slipped 0.5 percent in thesecond quarter compared to a year ago as psychological paralysisgripped homebuyers, a real estate trade group said today.

The National Association of Realtors said resales ofsingle-family homes, townhouses, condominiums and cooperativestotaled a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.68 million units,compared with 3.70 million in 1989.

Sales gained 4.2 percent to 990,000 units at an annual rate inthe Midwest and 4.4 percent to 1.41 million units in the South.Sales fell 14.5 percent to 650,000 units in the Northeast and 3.1percent to 620,000 units in the West.

"The credit …