четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Tastings Around Town

Tax time doesn't have to be taxing, thanks to specials planned atChicago restaurants and lounges:

MCCORMICK & SCHMICK'S SEAFOOD RESTAURANT

41 E. Chestnut

The restaurant presents a Tax Relief gala on Monday (because April15 falls on a Saturday this year, tax returns are due on the 17th).

The celebration includes Ketel One martinis for $10.40 and chairmassages for $1 a minute from 3 to 7 p.m. All guests who visit therestaurant Monday will receive a Tax Relief Dining Certificate" goodfor $10.40 off their next dinner. Also offered will be $10.40 dinnerspecials and cocktail specials.

For reservations or more information, call (312) 397-9500. …

It's about time [Percussion instruments] [Part 2]

Part 2

Greetings all you timekeepers. Now that you had two months to get acquainted with your metronome, you may be a little frustrated at first. Let's go further with ways of practicing with it

Counting Is A Must

Throughout my years of teaching I have heard so many students say they can't count and play their drum part at the same time. We'll that would be a challenge like somebody playing piano then learning to sing at the same time. It all takes practice and patients. If I am playing a piece that is only consisting of quarter and eighth notes I would be counting "1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &" representing the eighth notes. If the piece has sixteenth notes, I …

Egypt privatization bid draws mixed reviews

A revamped plan that would give lower-income Egyptians a chance at owning stocks was met Tuesday with a measure of skepticism by some commentators who view it as a back-channel attempt by the government to muster support for an unpopular privatization program.

The new program, outlined by the ruling National Democratic Party, would give some 40 million Egyptians over the age of 21 coupons to be exchanged for shares in state-owned enterprises slated for privatization. Officials said the program was aimed at achieving greater social and economic equality.

But in a country where previous privatization bids have been marred by claims of corruption and nepotism …

Just as in physics, there is a cause and effect in history

One of the most fascinating habits of the human race is the way weinterpret "history" to fit in with our preconceptions. It is theeasiest thing in the world to do, and one of the most deceptive.

A classic instance of this distortion is our popular view ofpresent-day Iran. Most Americans will tell you solemnly that theregime of the shah was far preferable to the brutal and regressiverule of the mullahs.

What is ignored in this estimate is precisely the fact that itwas the corruption and injustice of the shah's administration thatmade the revolution at first possible, and then inevitable.

In the same way, we believe that the czarist government inRussia was …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Iraqi FM Warns Against U.S. Withdrawal

BAGHDAD - Iraq's foreign minister warned on Monday that a quick American military withdrawal from the country could lead to a full-scale civil war, the collapse of the government and spillover conflicts across the region.

The White House said President Bush is not contemplating withdrawing forces from Iraq now despite an erosion of support among Republicans for his war policy.

But the administration also tried to lower expectations about a report due Sunday on whether the Iraqi government is meeting political, economic and security benchmarks that Bush set in January when he announced a buildup of 21,500 U.S. combat forces.

Attacks in Baghdad killed 13 people as …

Marine told fellow Marines to stop alleged hazing

KANEOHE BAY, Hawaii (AP) — A Hawaii-based Marine says he told a fellow platoon member to "chill out" after he slapped another Marine as punishment for falling asleep while on watch duty in Afghanistan.

The Marine who was slapped, Lance Cpl. Harry Lew, committed suicide hours later.

Lance Cpl. Michael Morris spoke at a military hearing held Thursday to determine if there is enough evidence …

Eurozone economy grew 0.2 percent in Q3 as France, Germany hold up despite debt woes elsewhere

BRUSSELS (AP) — Eurozone economy grew 0.2 percent in Q3 …

Porn stars tie knot - and so do Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Wanda Sykes?

(ProQuest-CSA LLC: ... denotes text stops here in original.)

"Let me tell you, if 'Robin' somehow crops up in one of the new 'Batman' films along the line, I'll be chaining myself up somewhere and refusing to go to work."

- Christian Bale makes a stand regarding any sidekick showing up for "Batman." While I'm sorry to not see him cavorting with "Robin," the idea of Christian chained up is quite titillating.

How was my Fourth of July weekend? Fine, if you skip the part about the paramedics rushing to the scene and my head covered in blood! Oh, what a weekend. If nothing else, I now can say I've been inside of an ambulance- conscious! Who in Ptown could say that?? A …

Islanders-Rangers, Sums

N.Y. Islanders 1 2 0 0_4
N.Y. Rangers 0 2 1 0_3
N.Y. Islanders won shootout 2-1
First Period_1, N.Y. Islanders, Comeau 5, 18:43. Penalties_None.
Second Period_2, N.Y. Rangers, Dawes 11 (Gomez, Tyutin), 2:29 (pp). 3, N.Y. Islanders, Bergenheim 8 (Satan, Berard), 3:10. 4, N.Y. Islanders, Hunter 10 (Fedotenko, Vasicek), 5:10. 5, N.Y. Rangers, Drury 22 (Straka, Rozsival), 7:14. Penalties_Martinek, NYI (tripping), 1:47Avery, NYR (roughing), 12:36Witt, NYI (roughing), 12:36Jagr, NYR (hooking), …

Showtime at Wrigley Sosa-Bonds duel spices up Cubs' series with Giants

Sammy Sosa understands why the long ball means more than just aquick run on the scoreboard.

It's entertainment, baby," he said with a smile.

That's why it will be lights, camera, action starting tonight atWrigley Field when Sosa and the Cubs host home-run king Barry Bondsand the San Francisco Giants.

It's going to be nice [for fans] because of myself and what he didlast year and so far this year," Sosa said of Bonds, who set thesingle-season record of 73 homers in 2001 and has eight this season.It'll be exciting. People want to see that."

And if he wasn't playing in the game, Sosa might join the crowd.

I'd come to watch Barry Bonds because he's …

Activists: just say `no' to Silver Line plan

Activists: just say `no' to Silver Line plan

Calling the MBTA's allocation of resources in the inner city "transportation racism," a coalition of activists is calling on the MBTA to scrap its plans to develop the Silver Line bus route in Roxbury and instead build a trolley route along Washington Street Corridor.

Members of the Washington Street Corridor Coalition spoke at an MBTA Board meeting last week.

"We just think the project has gotten to the point where it's indefensible," he said. "They're wasting $1.3 billion on a project that nobody wants. We think it's a gross misuse of the taxpayers' money and we don't think it's a suitable replacement for the Orange …

Stocks fall as jobs data stirs fear about economy

Wall Street slid for a second straight session Friday on news that the economy shed jobs for the eighth straight month in August and at a faster-than-expected pace.

The Labor Department said payrolls shrank by 84,000 last month, more than the 75,000 economists predicted, and higher than the 51,000 jobs lost in July. The unemployment rate rose to a five-year high of 6.1 percent from 5.7 percent.

The report confirmed Wall Street's fears that the economy continues to weaken. The nation has lost nearly 550,000 jobs so far this year, eroding investors' hopes for a late-year recovery.

"This was an ugly number that pretty much confirms that our …

A raft made of junk crosses Pacific in 3 months

Tanned, dirty and hungry, two men who spent three months crossing the Pacific on a raft made of plastic bottles to raise awareness of ocean debris finally stepped onto dry land.

"We made it," hollered Marcus Eriksen to a crowd of about two dozen gathered at Ala Wai Harbor on Wednesday. "Where's the food?"

Friends greeted Eriksen and fellow eco-mariner Joel Paschal with lei, fresh food and beer to celebrate the end of their 2,600-mile (4,200-kilometer) voyage on what they call the JUNK raft.

"We got used to eating fish and peanut butter," said Eriksen, who celebrated his 41st birthday at sea.

The pair left Long Beach, California, on June 1. Their 30-foot (9-meter) vessel had a deck of salvaged sailboat masts, six pontoons filled with 15,000 plastic bottles and a cabin made from the fuselage of a Cessna airplane.

While at sea they realized they were only traveling half a mile per hour (0.8kph) and it would take them much longer to reach Hawaii than the previously anticipated six weeks.

"We had to go to half rations for awhile," said Paschal, 32.

Without a backup plan, the two used a satellite phone to get in touch with Roz Savage, who was crossing the Pacific solo in a rowboat and happened to be in the same area at the time.

Savage, who was heading from San Francisco to Hawaii, was in dire need of water after both her potable water makers broke. When the three met up, Savage got onboard the raft, Paschal speared a mahimahi and the three dined together. Before parting, the men gave Savage a water maker and she gave them some of her extra food.

"We exchanged the necessities of life," Eriksen said. "And that kept us going."

Food wasn't the only problem the men encountered on their trip. The raft, which can only sail down wind, had a hard time leaving the Long Beach area. The raft encountered storms that tore it apart during the first two weeks. Some of the bottles that were supposed to help the raft stay afloat started to sink. Eriksen and Paschal had to anchor the raft 100 miles (160 kilometers) off shore and rebuild it, before setting sail again.

The voyage was part of Algalita Marine Research Foundation's project called, "JUNK." The third person of the group, who didn't make the trip, was Anna Cummins, Eriksen's fiancee. Cummins took care of land support, blogs and fundraising.

She said the goal of the trip was to creatively raise awareness about plastic debris and pollution in the ocean. Ironically, this was the same goal that Savage had in her trek across the Pacific.

The three want "single-use plastics" to be banned, saying they're wasteful and usually end up in the ocean.

"Recycling is one solution, but it's just a small part of the puzzle," Paschal said.

Each day the men posted online videos and blogs of their trip and kept in touch with Cummins. They also spent two to three hours a day maintaining and repairing the raft.

The men said a variety of marine life gathered under the raft throughout the trip.

One day, said Paschal, they caught a fish after watching it grow for five weeks. They were going to eat it, but when they cut it open they found its stomach was full of plastic confetti.

The team hopes to visit schools around Oahu and share their experiences, and is working on a documentary film about the voyage to raise public awareness of the danger of plastics.

___

On the Net:

http://www.junkraft.com

http://rozsavage.com

Mexican Lawmakers Block Fox's Speech

MEXICO CITY - President Vicente Fox refused to deliver his state-of-the nation report to Congress Friday, after leftist lawmakers seized control of the stage. It was the first time a Mexican leader hasn't given the annual address.

Fox's office said he would give a televised speech to the nation later Friday, exactly three months before he steps down. The written copy of his address called on Mexico to mend deep divisions that he said threatened the country's newfound democracy.

"Whoever attacks our laws and institutions also attacks our history and Mexico," Fox said, a veiled reference to leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. "No one can say that he supports the people when he attacks it."

The fast-paced developments followed weeks of tensions over the disputed July 2 presidential race.

The opposition lawmakers waved Mexican flags and held placards calling Fox a traitor to democracy. They ignored demands that they return to their seats, shouting "Vote by Vote" - a rallying cry for Lopez Obrador's bid for a full recount in the July 2 election.

They raised up leather-covered copies of the Mexican constitution and flashed the sign for victory as they stood at the front of the congress while the 102 senators and 462 representatives sang the national hymn to close the session.

The standoff came six days before the top electoral court must declare a president-elect or annul the July 2 vote and order a new election. So far, rulings have favored ruling party candidate Felipe Calderon.

Lopez Obrador has already said he won't recognize the electoral court's decision, and he plans to create a parallel government and rule from the streets.

Fearing violent protests, authorities earlier surrounded Congress for up to 10 blocks with multiple layers of steel barriers; attack dogs in cages, ready to be released; water cannons; and riot police in full protective gear. Entire neighborhoods were sealed off, preventing some of the city's sprawling markets from opening, and nearby subway stations were shut down.

Police used mirrors and dogs to inspect cars for explosives before allowing them to pass, and opposition lawmakers said police even tried to prevent them from arriving despite their credentials. Some said they were pushed and shoved by authorities.

"It's completely militarized around here. It is completely illegal, unconstitutional," Democratic Revolution congressman Cuauhtemoc Sandoval told The Associated Press. "Vicente Fox started out as a president, and is finishing up as a dictator."

Many had feared the deepening political turmoil over the election to replace Fox could explode into violence, but leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called on his supporters to remain peacefully gathered in Mexico City's Zocalo plaza, instead of marching on Congress as they had previously planned.

"We aren't going to fall into any trap," he told tens of thousands who waited in a driving rain to hear him speak.

Lawmakers from each party opened the session with speeches, many of which criticized Fox and listed his lack of accomplishments.

"Vicente Fox is a traitor to democracy, and even worse, he's leaving the country having turned it into a powder keg," said Edgardo Cantu of the Labor Party, part of Lopez Obrador's coalition.

The tense situation was a far cry from the optimism and enthusiasm that followed Fox's victory six years ago. That election ended 71 years of one-party rule and prompted the world to declare Mexico a true democracy.

Protesters occupying Mexico City's center said they were ready to do whatever it takes to support Lopez Obrador. Fernando Calles, a 26-year-old university professor, said he was ready to fight for the former Mexico City mayor "until the death, until the final consequences."

"We lived 500 years of repression, and now we represent the new face of Mexico," he said.

The tight election left the nation deeply divided, with Lopez Obrador - who portrayed himself as a champion of the poor - alleging that fraud accounted for an official count showing him 0.6 percent behind Calderon.

Fox, a former Coca-Cola executive, ushered in economic stability and brought inflation to record lows, but he has been unable to secure a migration accord with the U.S. or significantly reduce poverty.

---

On the Net:

http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/en/

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Australian bank chief says high credit cost to affect banks, businesses for some time

The difficulty of obtaining credit and its high cost will adversely affect banks and businesses for some time, the chief executive of Australia & New Zealand Banking Group said Thursday.

"These pressures aren't over globally and not over in Australia," ANZ's Mike Smith said at a business forum.

A global credit crunch flowing out of the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis has pushed money market interest rates higher in Australia, eating into bank profits and forcing up the cost of borrowing for businesses and home owners.

"Liquidity is placing pressure on some corporates and there is increasing volatility in the share market," Smith said.

ANZ said Monday it will take higher provisions for potential bad debts _ including a US$200 million (euro136.5 million) charge for exposure to a U.S. monoline insurer _ which will offset an anticipated 11.5 percent rise in underlying profit.

It will also make a 90 million Australian dollar (US$82 million; euro55.95 million) provision for exposure to an unnamed Australian property group, which analysts expect is Centro Properties, and a A$51 million (US$47 million; euro32 million) provision for a failed miner.

The crisis has pushed Australian bank share prices sharply lower in recent weeks.

Smith didn't comment on ANZ's precise exposure to Centro Properties but said the bank didn't perceive the exposure to be material.

He also said there was more bad news to come in Europe and the U.S. but that Australian banks were well placed to ride out future turmoil. Smith was speaking Thursday at the City of Sydney's China Business Summit about investment both in and from China.

Separately, St. George Bank Ltd. said it has exposure to several Australian companies facing problems repaying debt, sending the bank's shares sharply lower.

In a statement, St. George, Australia's fifth-largest lender by market capitalization, said it has exposure to MFS Ltd., Centro Properties Ltd. and Allco Finance Group Ltd.

Although St. George said it expects to recover most of its exposures, jitters about the group's potential problem loans sent its shares to a three-and-a-half-year low and again rocked sentiment toward the sector.

St. George shares dropped more than 5 percent to A$23.25 before recovering to finish at A$24.60, down 2 Australian cents.

National Australia Bank shares fell 0.3 percent to A$29.55, ANZ shares were flat at A$22 and Commonwealth Bank of Australia shares rose 0.3 percent.

The market's benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index rose 1.6 percent Thursday to 5,583.4 points.

War's no excuse to deprive U.S. citizens of legal rights

For more than two years, two American citizens have been held in aNavy brig in Charleston, S.C., without being charged with any crimesand with limited and belated access to attorneys. One was seized inAfghanistan, where he is said to have fought as a Taliban. The otherwas a former Chicago gang member arrested at O'Hare for plottingwith terrorists to detonate a radioactive device in the UnitedStates.

This week, in two separate cases, the U.S. Supreme Court beganconsidering whether the constitutional rights of Yaser Esam Hamdi andJose Padilla have been violated during their incarceration -- whetherthey can be held indefinitely, without the right to challenge the"enemy combatant" status conferred upon them by the military. Inlower courts, it was ruled that the government was justified inholding Hamdi in this manner, but not Padilla. We are in no rush tomake life easier for either of these men, who might have killed anynumber of American soldiers and civilians had they not been captured.But whatever danger they do or do not pose, their status as Americancitizens merits them, at the very least, the right to a judicialhearing.

We hope the court will be careful not to intrude upon theconstitutional powers and duties of the president to conduct war --powers that enhance the abilities of the country to root out itsenemies and protect Americans from them. But it is crucial that theopenness and fairness of the American rule of law be demonstrated --that the world sees that we pay more than lip service to the rightsof individual citizens before the law. Among those rights is to betold what one is charged with and to get a chance to respond to thosecharges, with legal counsel.

During these times of war, when the enemy is hidden and spreadacross a multitude of national borders, the most optimisticforecasters are saying the fighting could go on indefinitely --there's that tell-tale word. It's possible that an innocent man heldas a combatant could spend the rest of his life in confinement. Asthe American Bar Association's brief on behalf of Hamdi said, "wherethe deprivation of liberty is complete, ongoing, potentially withoutend, and based entirely upon a secret record, the need for counselcould not be more compelling."

If the government's case against these two enemy combatants is asstrong as it says it is, there will be an opportunity to prove that -- not behind closed doors, but out in the open. Or, if a hearingwould truly pose a threat to national security by revealing more thanit is prudent to reveal, a detention hearing could be held in camera.What's important is that American citizens are not unduly deniedtheir rights under the Constitution. There are standards to upholdhere, however uncomfortable we may be in upholding them.

Missiles found, trucker detained

DALLAS A truck driver and the four dummy Air Force missiles hehad been carrying were found 300 miles apart on Friday, a day afterthe tractor-trailer vanished from Pentagon computer screens.

The driver, Ronald D. Coy of Middletown, Ohio, put up noresistance and was unarmed and apparently alone when he was found ata truck stop in the town of Orange, Texas, near the Louisiana line,FBI agent Robert Loosle said.

Coy's intentions were not immediately known, authorities said.Nor was it clear whether he was even authorized to haul weaponsfor the military. The Pentagon routinely uses private contractorsthat meet certain security standards to carry munitions."We just detained him to question him," Loosle said. "Once wefinish the interview based on the investigation we'll have to decidewhat happens next."The FBI said he could face such charges as theft of aninterstate shipment and theft of government property.

Ex-teacher accused of sending sex video to boy

McMINNVILLE, Tenn. -- A former teacher who served time in jailafter being accused of having sex with a 13-year-old boy was arrestedfor the second time in two weeks, with prosecutors saying shecontacted the victim again and sent him sexually explicit videos ofherself.

A judge Wednesday ordered Pamela Rogers, 28, who had been free onbond after an April 11 arrest on a probation violation charge, toremain in jail until a July hearing.

Prosecutor Dale Potter has said he would seek to revoke Rogers'probation and send her to prison for seven years.

Rogers' attorney, Peter Strianse, said he would have to questionher mental competency if prosecutors substantiate the new charges.

Rogers pleaded no contest last year to having sexual intercourseand oral sex with the student. She was sentenced to a six-month jailterm.

From Bad Breaks to Boons

D.C.'s Sisterspace plans a comeback and other tales of black survival. By Gwendolyn E. Osborne

On the evening of July 28, a standing-room only crowd gathered at Sisterspace and Books in Washington, D.C., for a book signing. They were not there to see a hip-hop, artist-turned-writer or a best-selling author of erotica. The group had come to hear Mindy Thompson Fullilove discuss a subject many in the audience knew about first-hand.

Fullilove, professor of clinical psychiatry and public health at Columbia University and author of Root Shock: How Tearing Up City Neighborhoods Hurts America, and What We Can Do About It (One World/Ballantine, June 2004) had come to the store in Washington's historic Cardozo/U Street neighborhood. It is a community Sisterspace's owners Faye Williams and Cassandra Burton say is under siege by developers and others who would destroy it. The bookstore is at the heart of the battle. (See BIBR, September-October 2004, MARKETBUZZ, "We Shall Not Be Moved.")

"The fight to save Sisterspace was symbolic and part of a larger struggle to prevent the dismantling of African American communities throughout the country" says Fullilove, who has researched the destruction of 1,600 communities by urban renewal.

There was a certain irony in Fullilove's visit because seven days later, U.S. Marshals carried out an eviction order against Sisterspace and Books. The contents of the store were unceremoniously placed on the sidewalk, and the business's name was removed immediately from the storefront. Supporters quickly helped collect the store's belongings from the street. Later in the day, Williams held a scheduled book signing for Harvard law professor Charles Ogletree at a D.C. law firm.

According to Williams, the eviction followed a battle for five of the seven years Sisterspace has been located in the building at 1515 U Street. Disputes involved rents, repairs and philosophies, and a failed effort to buy the building outright. Williams says it was also a fight against gentrification in the area that is driving black residents and businesses out. The building is owned by a trust that benefits an African American whose brother had maintained a business in the building, and the trust is suing for back rent, according to The Washington Post. As the dispute continued, rent had been withheld in protest of building repairs not being made and paid into escrow. In May, the D.C. Superior Court said Sisterspace had no legal right to remain in the building because it did not renew the lease when it expired last fall. Still, it seemed like an ignoble end for Sisterspace, which began as a consignment shop 10 years ago and evolved from bookstore to a community resource.

While the on-site bookstore operations on U Street have stopped, many of the community services, handled by its nonprofit arm at another location long before the eviction were, uninterrupted. (See BIBR, March-April 2001, MARKETBUZZ, "A Black Women's Oasis for Reading and Empowerment.") "Sisterspace is out, but we are not down," emphasizes Williams. "We are looking forward to celebrating our tenth anniversary the weekend of November twentieth at a new location."

While Sisterspace's ousting is the most dramatic, other black bookstores are in jeopardy. By the end of 2003, African American bookstores in Arlington, Texas; Baltimore, Detroit, Denver and Philadelphia had closed their doors. At the beginning of this year, still other black booksellers throughout the country were teetering on the brink.

Rallying Around Dallas' Black Images

All eyes are on Dallas, where after nearly three decades Emma Rodgers and Ashira Tosihwe of Black Images Book Bazaar announced in early April the bookstore might close when its lease expires in August 2005.

Black Images, founded in 1977, is the oldest black-owned bookstore in Texas. It has nurtured readers, writers and other bookstore owners. It was Rodgers who provided the inspiration for Ms. Cozy Brown, Bertice Berry's fictional bookseller in Redemption Song (Doubleday Books, January 2000). Romance Slam Jam, an annual event created by Rodgers and Tosihwe with author Francis Ray, has grown in 11 years from an afterwork event to a conference that draws participants from the United States, Canada and the Caribbean over a four-day period. Rodgers and Tosihwe's efforts have been recognized by grateful authors who have created awards in their honor.

As in the case of Sisterspace, authors, book clubs, community groups and other supporters rallied to help Black Images. In May, Ebony Dimensions Literary Review Club organized a book-a-thon to spark action from businesses, churches, community groups and black Greek-letter organizations that resulted in the second-largest sales day in Black Images's history. (The largest one-day gross came at a 1996 Pntti LaRelle book-signing event.) In July, African American romance writers in Dallas for a national convention made a concerted effort to visit Black Images to sign books. Earlier that month, a local supporter coordinated a "Buy It Out" campaign to increase sales and build upon Black Images's consumer base.

While Rodgers is grateful for the outpouring of support, she remains cautiously optimistic about the future of Black Images beyond next August. "We are still weighing our options and are taking things one day at a time," she says.

The crisis facing African American booksellers is endemic throughout the industry. According to Meg Smith, associate director of the American Booksellers Association's (ABA) Book Sense Marketing, "Independent bookstores, whether African American, other specialty or not, encounter the same challenges as other small businesses. Independent bookstores of all kinds face not only competition from big box stores and the national chains, but they may also be undercapitalized, in less than optimal locations, and without the resources to adequately market themselves in their community." Smith says the ABA does not collect information that would pinpoint the number of bookstores that have closed during 2004. However, economic problems for African American booksellers tend to be magnified because of the bookstores' dual roles. While communities are often unable to support these small businesses, they count on the jobs, programs, information, products and other services African American bookstores provide.

On the Good Foot

There were positive notes during the year. In the spring, Desir�e Sanders of Afrocentric Books in Chicago was named Blackboard's "Bookseller of the Year." Sanders, who began selling books in leased space in the back of a Loop beauty supply business, moved into a larger space within DePaul University's downtown campus. Afrocentric recently opened another store in Chicago's historic Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side.

The release of former President Bill Clinton's memoir, My Life (Knopf, June 2004), was a boon for two African American booksellers-Hue-Man Bookstore in New York and Eso Won in Los Angeles. The booksellers, among those included on Clinton's national tour schedule, reaped the benefit. Thousands of copies were sold and several visitors to the stores-new and old-made other purchases.

In the Bay area, Xi Gamma Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. partnered with Marcus Books in Oakland to provide books for its "Conversations with Authors," an annual program that draws more than 350 readers.

In Florida, The Montsho Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit arm of Montsho Books in Orlando, promotes family literacy through a variety of community-based programs. Montsho's "Summer Full of Saturdays" was a well-received weekly program designed to encourage children to read and collect books. Montsho also served as the bookstore of record for the annual Zora Neale Hurston Festival and for the first Rochelle Alers's Hideaway Series retreat. The latter program drew more than 100 African American readers to Florida from as far away as California, Iowa, Nebraska and Oklahoma.

[Sidebar]

Evicted in August, Sisterspace looks forward to celebrating its tenth anniversary in November in a new location.

[Author Affiliation]

Gwendolyn E. Osborne is a contributing editor for BIBR. Osborne is the public affairs director for Illinois Institute of Technologies Downtown Campus.

US Supreme Court blocks execution in Texas that was to be state's first with new drug cocktail

HOUSTON (AP) — US Supreme Court blocks execution in Texas that was to be state's first with new drug cocktail

Redskins will take their crack at Highlanders: Prep Clippings

Hurricane will take its shot at Huntington tonight when theRedskins visit the unbeaten, top-ranked and defending championHighlanders.

The Redskins won their second game of the season - 66-58 over Poca- but have since lost three consecutive games.

Even without All-State post player Patrick Patterson in the lineupmuch of the season because of a sprained ankle, the Highlanders are 5-0 and coming off an emphatic 85-55 drubbing of Capital lastWednesday.

Patterson missed two games, but played in a 51-50 victory overBeckley.

The Redskins are led by senior J.J. Jones, averaging close to 30points for the Redskins.

* n n

WHEN HERBERT Hoover takes the floor tonight against 5-1 Winfield,the Huskies will do it without their leading scorer.

Forward Grant Buckner, who averages 19.9 points, is in Pasadena,Calif., getting ready to watch top-ranked Southern Cal play No. 2Texas in the Rose Bowl.

You see, Buckner won a trip for two to the Rose Bowl just for text-messaging his vote for the NCAA Division I-A Player of the Year aspart of a contest sponsored by Cingular.

Buckner won round-trip airfare, two nights at the Hilton atUniversity City, $200 cash and limousine transportation to and fromthe game - a total package worth $6,200.

Grant and his father, Kevin, the Herbert Hoover baseball coach,left today and will return Thursday morning.

* n n

A HANDFUL of area teams will take winning streaks into the newyear.

Charleston Catholic and South Charleston top the list at 4-0,while Winfield has won four consecutive games after a loss to Nitro.St. Albans has won three straight after a season-opening defeat toGeorge Washington.

* n n

SOUTH CHARLESTON'S Josh Daniel is inching ever closer to breakingthe school record for career points.

In four games for the unbeaten Black Eagles, Daniel has 117 points- an average of 29.3 points. He needs just 354 to break the schoolrecord held by Gay Elmore (1979-82).

At his current pace, Daniel will set the record at home Feb. 4 vs.Ripley.

In fact, the odds of the Eastern Kentucky recruit setting therecord at home are pretty good. The Black Eagles are on the road justthree times between Jan. 21 and Feb. 21.

South Charleston's schedule has the Black Eagles playing on theroad nine times, at a neutral site twice - at the South CharlestonCommunity Center - and at home 10 times.

In their next four games, the Eagles play at Riverside, Beckley,Huntington and George Washington before concluding the five-game roadswing with a visit to Williamson on Jan. 14.

* n n

ON ONE final prep football note, Class AAA state championMorgantown is ranked 58th in the final MaxPreps.com Top 100 rankings.

The Mohigans, who captured their second consecutive state titlewith a 27-24 overtime victory against Nitro, will take a 28-gamewinning streak into next season.

* n n

UNBEATEN Ravenswood lost out on reaching the state tournament lastyear when Winfield won the Region 5 championship.

The Red Devils are 6-0 and appear to be on track to reach thestate tournament for the first time since 2003.

Ravenswood is led by all-stater Anthony Sayre, who is sixth on theschool's all-time scoring list.

He averages 25.6 points and is third in school history for careerrebounds, shots made and free throws made.

Kirk Ritchie, who with Sayre also has been a starter since hissophomore season, has a 6-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio. He was anall-stater in soccer and is third all-time in school history inassists and steals.

The Devils host Parkersburg Catholic tonight.

* n n

ON THE girls' side of the court, Huntington senior CourtneyMcComas is closing in on a career milestone.

McComas, whose Highlanders play at South Charleston Wednesdaynight, has 937 career rebounds and more than 450 assists and 800points.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Custody battle launched over Palin's grandson

Sarah Palin's oldest daughter appears to have lost her bid to keep a bitter legal dispute with her 1-year-old son's father confidential.

An Alaska judge last week denied Bristol Palin's request to keep the legal proceedings of her custody dispute with Levi Johnston closed.

Palin, 18, filed a petition in early November seeking sole custody of her son, Tripp, and child support payments. She had argued that the scrutiny the case could attract would turn it into a "media circus" that potentially could cause her son embarrassment as he grows older.

"In this day and age of the internet, media stories remain available for years, even decades, after they are first published, and anything printed in the media (whether it is true or not) will be available to Tripp when he is old enough to read," she said in an affidavit.

Levi Johnston, who is seeking joint custody, has pushed for open court proceedings, saying he "just wants a simple case on the merits."

"I do not feel protected against Sarah Palin in a closed proceeding," Johnston said in an affidavit. "I hope that if it is open she will stay out of it. Bristol's attorney is her attorney."

Bristol Palin said that her mother, who resigned as Alaska governor in July, would not be involved in the case other than as "grandmother."

Palin's petition also seeks a visitation schedule for Johnston, who she says has exercised "sporadic visitation rights."

Relations between the Palins and Johnston and his family have frequently been strained since the couple broke off their engagement after their son was born in late December 2008.

Johnston denies in court documents that he has avoided his responsibilities.

Sarah Palin announced her daughter's pregnancy days after being named the running mate of Republican presidential candidate John McCain.

Ball-hawking defense bailing out No. 9 Florida

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Florida's defensive philosophy is simple: When the ball is in the air or on the ground, the Gators better get it.

The coaches preach it, the players practice it and the results show.

No. 9 Florida leads the nation with 12 takeaways, including a staggering 10 interceptions through three games. The Gators (3-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) have scored 55 points off those turnovers, taking advantage of short fields, seizing momentum and turning close games into lopsided affairs.

Although the defensive performances have been overshadowed by Florida's offensive struggles, they haven't been overlooked by players, coaches or opponents.

"Defense, we're just taking care of business," cornerback Jeremy Brown. "We know if we handle our half, we'll be good."

Kentucky, which visits Gainesville on Saturday, feels the same way. The Wildcats (3-0) The haven't turned the ball over this season, a big reason they are undefeated. Coach Joker Phillips would love to keep the streak intact against Florida, whose defense has done more than its share.

The Gators have allowed less than 300 yards twice, including in last week's 31-17 victory at Tennessee. Brown, who had been picked on early in the game and beaten for a touchdown, provided one of the key plays with an interception in the third quarter.

"Gave up a big play," Brown said. "Gotta have amnesia and forget about it. It was a big relief to come back."

The Gators have used turnovers to come back in every game.

Cornerback Janoris Jenkins returned an interception 67 yards for Florida's first touchdown of the season against Miami (Ohio). Two series later, safety Ahmad Black returned another one 40 yards to set up a short TD run. Linebacker Jon Bostic sealed the victory with the fourth pick of the game.

Black got two more the following week against South Florida. His first set up Florida's first touchdown, which tied the game at 7 late in the second quarter. Defensive end Justin Trattou's 35-yard interception for a score gave the Gators a three-touchdown lead.

"It's not the way we've won a lot of games around here," coach Urban Meyer said. "We've outscored people, but that's not efficient, championship-style football. Our defense has to do that."

And get this: Florida's success the first two weeks came without one of the team's best defenders. Safety Will Hill was suspended for two games for an undisclosed violation of team rules. He returned against the Volunteers, but was somewhat rusty. He bit on two underneath routes and gave up two long TD passes.

The Gators expect Hill to play better Saturday against Kentucky. They might need him to.

Led by senior quarterback Mike Hartline, senior running back Derrick Locke and junior receiver Randall Cobb, Kentucky has been efficient and error-free to start the season. They can only hope for the same results in Gainesville.

"I think it's a little bit of everything," Locke said. "A lot of it has got to do with Hartline. We've been throwing a lot and if he's making bad decisions, they can be picks. But right now he's doing a good job, and when I'm running the ball or Cobb is running the ball, we've got to hold onto it."

Phillips also credited Hartline with the offense's ball security, saying he's done a solid job of getting rid of the ball and not forcing passes.

"You'd better be lucky, too," Phillips said, pointing out a few times the ball has bounced his team's way. "I've never been on a team that had not put the ball on the ground or turned it over in three games. I'd like to be on one that has done it in four games, too."

Kentucky, which has lost 23 in a row in the series, has been on the wrong end of several turnovers the last two years. Florida blocked a punt for a touchdown in 2009, blocked two punts in 2008 and returned an interception for a score.

"If we go down there and fumble and give their offense the ball and give them good field position, man," Locke said, recalling the woes. "Worse comes to worse, that's what can happen. If we continue to hold onto the ball and we continue to make good decisions and we just play Kentucky football, we have a chance."

___

AP Sports Writer Will Graves in Lexington, Ky., contributed to this report.

Schaumburg squeezes past Libertyville for title

Schaumburg won the Illinois High School Baseball CoachesAssociation summer baseball state championship with a 3-1 victoryover Libertyville on Saturday at North Central College in Naperville.

The game featured only one extra-base hit, a 375-foot solo homerun from Schaumburg designated hitter and tournament MVP Rob Zavila.

Zavila's home run made it 1-1 in the fifth inning.

Schaumburg (22-5) took the lead for good on a controversialsuicide squeeze play in the sixth inning.

With runners on first and second and no outs, Anthony Serio'ssacrifice bunt advanced the runners to second and third. The nextbatter, Brad Jackowski, squared around to bunt on the first pitch butpulled his bat back when he saw it was a pitchout. Eric Mahler, whowas streaking toward home plate, stopped and was caught in a rundown.Third baseman Dan Petric made a diving attempt to tag Mahler as heran toward home plate.

Mahler crossed the plate, but no call was made by the third-baseor home-plate umpires. After almost 30 seconds of deliberation,Mahler was called safe by the home-plate umpire.

Mahler admitted he might have been tagged.

Something could have hit my foot, but I'm not sure," Mahler said.

I knew [the suicide squeeze] was coming," Libertyville coach JimSchurr said. You can't do anything but put yourself in a position towin, and we did that. We have to make that play either way."

Zavila then singled in Al Cesario from third base, and the Saxonsled 3-1.

That two-out hit turned out to be huge," Schaumburg coach PaulGroot said. It took a lot of pressure off."

Serio, Schaumburg's starting pitcher, allowed one run on threehits in four innings, and Jackowski pitched three scoreless inningsto pick up the win.

BANNED

World-class climbing routes closed

From the road to City of Rocks, rock climbers can see another set of buttresses and spires in the distance. The largest visible formation, Castle Rock, lies in Castle Rocks State Park in southern Idaho and has climbs bolted and ready for rock-hungry fingers. But beyond that, to the northwest, the land changes at an unmarked boundary between state park and federal land controlled by the Bureau of Land Management. There, climbing goes from encouraged to banned.

That ban was issued on March 31, following an environmental assessment on climbing by the BLM that required contacting Native American tribes with cultural resources in the area to determine if climbing would negatively impact those resources. The tribes said it would, and the BLM shut down 40 climbing routes and cancelled all plans to develop what climbers saw as a potential for hundreds of new routes in a world-class climbing area. The Access Fund, an advocacy organization that works to keep climbing areas open and to conserve the climbing environment, has called the ban too restrictive and filed an appeal in April that, if not resolved by the BLM, could land in federal court.

Brian Fedigan, president of the Boise Climbers Alliance and Southern Idaho regional manager for the Access Fund, climbed in the Castle Rocks area more than 20 times last year. He described it as an amazing wilderness setting with bullet-proof granite. It's also a popular destination for Boise climbers who established many of the routes in the area, Fedigan said.

Both agencies he represents support cultural closures, he said, but he disagrees with BLM's blanket closure on an area that has 33 climbable rock formations. Other regions have employed more location- and time-specific closures in a compromise Fedigan said he would like to see reached at Castle Rocks.

"We want to take care of it - tribes and cultural resources - but we want to be able to use it," Fedigan said. Hiking, hunting and grazing are all still permitted on the BLM land.

Because of the litigation, BLM officials are not allowed to discuss the issue, according to - Mike Courtney, field manager for the BLM field office in Burley, which handled the field survey that led to the ban. The field survey was specifically crafted to analyze the effects of climbing, he said.

"I wouldn't say we picked on one user group, but we had a proposed action, we analyzed it, and for various reasons we were unable to come to a finding of most significant impact, which only means that with an [environmental assessment], we can't authorize the climbing," he said. "At some point in the future we could, but it would take a more significant document, like an environmental impact statement."

At present, BLM officials have no immediate plans for such an analysis but will start a land use plan for the area again in 2012, which will include an environmental impact statement, Courtney said. Completing the statement generally takes between four and five years.

During the survey, the BLM approached the Shoshone-Bannock and Shoshone-Paiute tribes to ask if they wanted to have input in the decision on climbing at Castle Rocks. Based on the Fort Bridger Treaty of 1868 formed between the U.S. government and the Shoshone-Bannock tribal government, those are rights still kept by the Shoshone-Bannock. Claudeo Broncho, fish and wildlife policy representative for the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, was involved in those conversations.

For the tribe members who still live in Idaho and Wyoming, the Castle Rocks area is one of the closest spots to pick pinyon nuts - which are still a significant part of their diet - and to hunt, according to Broncho.

"It's not an altar," he said. "It's hard to understand because ... some of the cultural significance is a lot different than what yours would be, so the values are different in regards to what I believe in and what you believe in."

He acknowledged that the tribe had been contacted by the Access Fund but wasn't certain if anyone from the tribe had responded.

They're open to talk, he said, but activity like climbing that is going to impact the culture would be met with opposition.

"It's like somebody going into the cemetery, maybe in downtown Boise, and having a picnic and having a party there on the graves," he said. "There's a cultural significance there, and you're not going to go climbing around in a church. Myself, I would respect it because it's someone else's belief."

Castle Rocks is almost 2,000 acres, 1,440 of which is the state park. A few hundred acres are Forest Service Land, and 320 acres are managed by BLM. Only about 300 climbs have been closed, according to Wallace Keck, superintendent for City of Rock National Reserve and Castle Rocks State Park manager.

"There's plenty of places in Castle Rocks to climb, but some of the better spires and taller pinnacles are on BLM, and so they would be off limits," said Keck.

When Castle Rocks State Park was created in 2003 and an environmental assessment was completed, Keck said, park developers talked to the Native American tribes with cultural resources in the area. The tribes only asked to continue gathering pine nuts and hunting, both of which are allowed in state parks. But with the BLM land, he said, the tribes protested climbing.

Closing a few routes, he said, won't stop people from coming to the area, where more than 700 routes exist, according to Keck.

Climbers comprise a small user group - the Boise Climbers Alliance has between 60 and 100 members - but it's a group that has invested in the Castle Rocks area. The Access Fund helped purchase the land that went into making Castle Rocks State Park, Keck said.

Jason Keith, director of the Access Fund, said he has seen maps from the BLM that mark specific cultural sites, which would allow for climbing restrictions just in those areas.

"We're saying, it's obvious. Instead of closing 400 acres, they could have limited their closure to probably about 20, and left a lot of climbing areas open," he said.

When Keith met with Courtney in November to look over the Climbing Access Plan, it looked good to go, he said, with perhaps just some restrictions on bolting. The appeal the Access Fund filed on the ban asked for an administrative remedy to what they have called a capricious and arbitrary decision that led to an overly restrictive ban, Keith said. During this appeals process, he expects Access Fund members may participate in a conversation that will bring all the invested parties to the table to discuss ways to resolve the dispute without taking the matter to court.

"The closure of public lands is an extreme measure that should be justified," Keith said, arguing that BLM needs to consider a reasonable range of alternatives. Keith worked during the process to open Castle Rocks State Park for climbing and said neither the tribes nor the State Historic Preservation Office mentioned cultural resources in need of protection then.

"They raised a few concerns, but they never said, 'Hey, climbing is going to cause these adverse effects to cultural resources in the state park,'" he said. "These cultural sites on the BLM land are literally a stone's throw away. So, either they dropped the ball before and didn't recognize the significance or they're really overstating the significance now."

Brad Shilling has climbed and worked as a climbing ranger at Castle Rocks for 15 years. He was one of the climbers and land managers who saw the potential in this corner of Idaho as a world-class climbing area, a development challenged by the BLM ban on climbing.

"It was a surprise. I thought we were moving forward," he said. "Management by closure is so extreme." But, he said, BLM's assessment states the reasons for the closure and he understands why protecting cultural resources sometimes comes with blanket bans.

As climbing ranger for the Castle Rocks State Park and City of Rocks, Shilling maintains trails, processes applications for routes, and educates visitors on issues. He says the boundary for the ban is basically invisible.

"The BLM has not posted this on site, so somebody walking out there, they wouldn't even know when they crossed onto BLM, and much less that you couldn't climb beyond this invisible line," he said. "I have high hopes that they're holding back because they don't really want to go forward with this action."

[Sidebar]

Castle Rocks State Park, near Almo, is Idaho's newest state park.

[Sidebar]

A climber braves rock formations in Castle Rocks State Park, near Almo, Idaho.

[Sidebar]

About 300 cilmbs have been closed in Castle Rocks State Park.

Man Takes Laptop From Praying Preacher

When the Rev. Fidelis Obdike opened his eyes after a prayer, the setting wasn't the same. Gone were his laptop computer and the man with whom he was praying. Police arrested Carl Hagy, 41, on Wednesday on a theft charge after he allegedly pawned the computer.

Police responded to a call at Destiny Global Ministries on Friday, where Obidike told officers he had bought a laptop computer from Hagy two weeks before. He said Hagy returned to the church on Friday and asked to pray. Obdike said he was praying with Hagy inside the church, but when he opened his eyes, Hagy and the computer were gone, police said.

Hagy was booked into the Sebastian County Jail, where he was freed on $1,500 bond.

___

Information from: Southwest Times Record, http://www.swtimes.com/

South African activists say Jewish settlers yelled at them in West Bank city of Hebron

A delegation of South African human rights activists say settlers verbally abused them while they visited the West Bank city of Hebron.

The group is on a mission to Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Former anti-apartheid activists Zackie Achmat and Edwin Cameron are participating in the tour.

"Settlers yelled and cursed at the group," said Avner Inbar, an Israeli accompanying the activists.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the activists entered a restricted zone, and three Israelis were arrested for disturbing the peace.

Hebron is home to a holy site revered by both Jews and Muslims and is a frequent flash point for violence.

About 500 Jews live in heavily guarded enclaves in the city, among 160,000 Palestinians.

Homemade tacos may be best of all

It's is hard to pin down what is great about a great taco. Is itthe succulent, smoky carne asada? The tender, charred hand-madetortilla? The sweet, ripe, spicy brightness of pico de gallo? Morelikely it's the way all those things come together.

You can find such taco greatness at restaurants, corner taqueriasand taco trucks with cult followings. But the best tacos in the worldmight come out of your own kitchen.

Imagine a warm corn tortilla filled with thinly sliced, pan-seared duck breast, tomatillo sauce and a cherry-chile compote. Orgrilled lamb sausage with watercress and harissa. Or achiote-marinated yellowtail with shredded cabbage and chipotle mayonnaise.

Leave classics like tacos de barbacoa, carnitas and al pastor toyour favorite neighborhood taco truck. When you're inventing them athome, you can let your imagination take the wheel.

A terrific taco is about mouth-feel as well as flavor. There areno set rules about what goes into a taco; they're more aboutimprovisation, maybe a happy accident, some smart calibration. A hotrush of habanero chiles, then a cool tempering of creme fraiche orwatermelon salsa. The rich succulence of leftover wine-braised shortribs, then a bright, fresh celery-leaf salsa. A little crunch, alittle heat, a sudden burst of flavor. A well-orchestrated tacoshould seem like a sudden inspiration of flavors that coalesce at thevery last moment.

Start with a good tortilla as the foundation. Fresh, handmade corntortillas, from a local source or ones that you make yourself (it'seasier than you think), can make the difference between ordinary andextraordinary. Quickly heat them in a dry skillet or right on the gasburner or outside on the grill.

Although flour tortillas can be amazing vehicles if they'refreshly made (they're traditionally used in tacos in Sonora, Mexico),the richer flavor and rougher texture of a corn tortilla elevate thedish. Corn's subtle dimension is a terrific backdrop for otheringredients: Shrimp works beautifully with it, as does grilled fish;cherries and corn are unexpectedly wonderful together.

Use the best ingredients, considering how their flavors will worktogether. The classic taco combos work because they rely on balance.The deep flavor of cochinita pibil (pork slow-roasted in bananaleaves) contrasts with the tart note of pickled red onions. Thewonderful char of carne asada is offset by the fresh, bright flavorsof pico de gallo. Grilled wild salmon rocks with a spicy cucumber-serrano salsa verde or a garlicky aioli.

A contrast of texture and temperature is important too. The coolcrunch of shredded raw jicama plays deliciously against fat shrimp,still warm from a simmer in a rich, nutty pepita-cilantro sauce, justas the hot fried fish in a Baja-style taco gets cold crunch from rawcabbage as well as the reprieve of cool, luscious crema.

And all of it against the warm tortilla that envelops it -slightly chewy, redolent of the corn that adds yet another dimension.

Tacos don't necessarily have to be built from the ground up - youcan use last night's grilled tri-tip or leg of lamb, or leftoverdirty rice and beans. Even ratatouille. Just think of what would takethose tacos to the next level. Grilled chorizo with that ratatouille,for example, or mint pesto and julienned radishes with those thinslices of leg of lamb.

Pile tortillas high with the leftovers from a fantastic daube orroast chicken, then mix up a quick salsa from the greens in yourgarden and the heirloom tomatoes now loading market stalls. Doctor ajar of mayonnaise or some sour cream, or add a squeeze of lime orMeyer lemon.

The jolt and fire of one ingredient aligns with the cool notes ofanother, giving a balance but also creating quadrants of flavor. Asthe heat of chiles often operates on a kind of time release, theother ingredients you pair with them create layers of tastes andaftertastes. A cool dice of mangoes or grilled corn cut off the cobstretches out the fire of a serrano as it tempers it. A spoonful ofsour cream can then offer both contrast and reprieve.

Serve and eat your haute tacos right as they come off the griddleand out of the kitchen - they're immediate food, and the alliance oftextures and temperatures are ephemeral.

Speed counts more than manners. The best tacos demand to be eatenbite by bite, with no more utensils than your hands. You fold thelast nub of sauced tortilla into your mouth, brazenly lick aioli fromyour fingers, wipe errant chile sauce from your chin.

Had enough already? We didn't think so. Just grab another - thepossibilities are endless.

Shrimp Tacos with Pumpkin Seed Sauce

1 bunch cilantro 1/2 cup sour cream 1/2 cup raw pumpkin seeds 2Tbsp. olive oil 2 cloves garlic 1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt 1 serranochile, seeded and inner ribs removed 1 jalapeno chile, seeded andinner ribs removed 1/4 large jicama, peeled 1 pound medium rawshrimp, peeled and deveined 8 small corn tortillas Lime wedges

Cook's note:If you would like a spicier pumpkin seed sauce, doublethe amount of chiles. Finely chop about 1/3 of the cilantro to yield2 tablespoons, setting aside the rest. In a small bowl, mix thechopped cilantro with the sour cream and set aside. In a medium sautepan over medium heat, toast pumpkin seeds until they pop and turnslightly golden, 8 to 10 minutes; do not let them brown. Set asidebriefly to allow to cool. In a food processor or blender, place thepumpkin seeds, olive oil, garlic, salt, chiles, remaining cilantroand 1/2 cup of water. Blend to a smooth paste. Return the mixture tothe saute pan, add 1/2 cup water and cook over low heat for about 20minutes to develop the flavors. Stir frequently to make sure thesauce doesn't burn and add more water if the sauce thickens too muchor too quickly. Meanwhile, shred the jicama using a box grater.Refrigerate until needed. Increase heat to medium-high and addshrimp. Cover and cook until the shrimp are pink, about 5 minutes,stirring and turning the shrimp occasionally for even cooking. Placea skillet or griddle over medium heat and warm the tortillas. Arrange2 tortillas per plate, slightly overlapping. Divide the shrimp amongthe tortillas, add shredded jicama and 1 spoonful of cilantro sourcream. Serve immediately, with lime wedges. Total time: About 50minutes. Servings: 4.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Taken for Granted

by Earl Sewell

BET/Sepia, November 2002

$13.00, ISBN 1-583-14357-2

What do you do when you wake up one morning and realize that the person you are married to isn't the person you once knew? In Earl Sewell's novel Taken for Granted, readers contemplate that very question.

Nina Epps is a beautiful, fitness guru who is also an accountant. Sorry that she married at such a young age and didn't enjoy being single, Nina decides her life needs a change. Her husband, Jay, is a couch potato whose biggest thrill is going out to eat. Theirs is a relationship that Nina has outgrown, as she distances herself from the man she once clung to as a naive, scared young girl. Unappreciated, Nina longs for a man who will give her the attention, romance and excitement she's been missing for 20 years.

Enter Richard Vincent, a handsome dentist who is a member of Nina's aerobics class. Richard has marital problems, as well. Tied down to his wife, Estelle, and her con-artist mother and call-girl sister, Richard is drowning in debt because of his wife's underhanded schemes. Once he was easily appeased by Estelle's manipulative sex, now he has had enough.

Though the two present an appealing package, Sewell is careful not to make their love story a complete fairy tale. The book makes clear that marriage is not an easy thing to walk away from and that there are consequences affecting more than just two people in love. Sewell's writing is clear and concise, and he has a solid grasp of how to weave each character's individual story into one. Taken for Granted offers readers of contemporary fiction another enjoyable book to add to their list.

Huge avalanches claim lives of three mountaineers

THREE climbers have died after they were caught in two separateavalanches on Scottish mountains yesterday.

Two were swept to their deaths as they climbed in a five-strongparty, and were caught in a moving wall of snow several hundredmetres in length which hurtled down the Coire na Ciste area of BenNevis.

Their bodies were found by rescuers buried under tons of snow,having been thrown 400 metres down the mountainside.

A third man was carried several hundred feet down the LiathachRidge in Torridon in Wester Ross. He was found alive by a companionsitting on top of the snow and appeared at first to have sufferedonly a broken arm.

However, he later died in hospital from internal injuries.

In a third incident, another man was being treated for a headinjury after surviving an avalanche on Beinn an Dothaidh in Argyll.

The alarm was raised on Ben Nevis at 10:50am by another climberwho watched in horror as the men were caught in the moving slab ofsnow.

Some members of Lochaber mountain rescue team walked into thecorrie to begin the search while others were airlifted further upthe mountain by a helicopter from RAF Lossiemouth.

They were later joined by a team from RAF Leuchars, who were onexercise near Newtonmore, and search and rescue dogs.

Both bodies were discovered in an area known as No 3 Gully on thenorth face of the mountain.

One body was found in the debris about 12:50pm by rescuers usingsnow probes and a second was discovered about 90 minutes later, alsoburied in deep snow.

The names of the climbers had not been released last night whilenext of kin were being told. Northern Constabulary said a reportwould be submitted to the procurator fiscal.

One of the dead was from the Wiltshire area and the other fromWales. The survivors were still being interviewed last night.

Chief Inspector John Chisholm, of Northern Constabulary, said:"They were all well-equipped, highly experienced and European-accredited climbers. But it appears they were in the wrong place atthe wrong time."

He said a search of the area was carried out in case others werecaught up in the avalanche but no-one else was reported missing.

"Hundreds of people have been on the mountains in the last fewdays and thankfully we have had only one report of an avalanche.

"There was the possibility of more casualties but fortunatelynone occurred."

John Stevenson, leader of Lochaber mountain rescue team, said themen were near the top of the gully when they were struck by the wallof snow.

"They were caught in a slab avalanche which took them down thehill quite a distance and buried them at the bottom."

He said it was not a particularly risky route. "It shouldn't havebeen but we have quite a bit of snow about and the wind tends toshift it quite a bit. Unfortunately, they were just caught in thewrong place at the wrong time.

"These things do happen and I think these boys were just veryunlucky.

"You can see in a few places where the snow tends to build up,you get a very white, smooth finish to it, and these are the kind ofareas you would stay away from."

He said strong winds made conditions difficult for rescuers: "Itwas quite windy and there was always the risk of other slabs comingdown so you have to be very careful when putting people out there."

Avalanche experts said the cause of the avalanche remained amystery.

The Sportscotland Avalanche Information Service's (SAIS) reportfor Lochaber from 6pm on Tuesday to 6pm last night put the risk ofavalanches between 200m and 900m as low. Between 900m and 1,340m therisk was moderate, with natural avalanches "unlikely" and human-triggered avalanches "possible".

Mark Diggins, spokesman for SAIS, said: "This is a tragedy andit's a bit of a mystery. Until we go in to investigate, we cannotsay what happened and how they got avalanched in that location."

He said the area where the incident occurred was on a north-easterly slope.

Fresh snow and strong winds had created more hazardous areas butgenerally on south, west and north-westerly aspects, and not oneasterly faces.

"This avalanche occurred on an east or northern-easterly aspect.But maybe there was an anomaly that created a patch or an area ofunstable snow.

"We are going to send some people to investigate and hopefullyhave some answers soon. We don't know the circumstances of thisincident but we need to learn from it."

SAIS has also been monitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rare inScotland but seen recently, mainly in the Cairngorms.

Mr Diggins said: "We have had an extremely cold and calm spell.What normally happens is you get a process of freezing and thawingand a consolidation of the snow pack.

"What we've had recently is almost the opposite of that becauseit's been so cold the snow has become sugar-like and has not bondedand consolidated."

WHY SO DEADLY?

CLIMBERS across the Highlands had been warned that unusually calmand extremely cold weather has raised the risk of avalanches.

Members of the Scottish Avalanche Information Service have beenmonitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rarely seen in Scotland.

The snow crystals form a slippery layer when buried under snowand are the cause of many avalanches in the Alps and North America,according to SAIS.

Mark Diggins of SAIS said hoar surface had formed over about tendays of calm and extremely cold weather.

Normally, the crystals, which are created by vapour rising upfrom layers of deposited snow and then freezing on the surface, aredestroyed in a thaw or by high winds.

Mr Diggins said: "What we have got is an unusual climate becauseof this prolonged cold spell.

"This has been throwing up some unusual things, one of them beinghoar surface.

"The crystals can be quite dangerous if buried by further fallsof snow as they form a very, very weak layer. The crystals are a bitlike soap flakes and create a very slippery layer."

SAIS teams have been checking for hoar surface during routineassessments of avalanche risks in the northern and southernCairngorms, Lochaber, Creag Meagaidh and Glencoe.

The SAIS posts reports and forecasts online.

Huge avalanches claim lives of three mountaineers

THREE climbers have died after they were caught in two separateavalanches on Scottish mountains yesterday.

Two were swept to their deaths as they climbed in a five-strongparty, and were caught in a moving wall of snow several hundredmetres in length which hurtled down the Coire na Ciste area of BenNevis.

Their bodies were found by rescuers buried under tons of snow,having been thrown 400 metres down the mountainside.

A third man was carried several hundred feet down the LiathachRidge in Torridon in Wester Ross. He was found alive by a companionsitting on top of the snow and appeared at first to have sufferedonly a broken arm.

However, he later died in hospital from internal injuries.

In a third incident, another man was being treated for a headinjury after surviving an avalanche on Beinn an Dothaidh in Argyll.

The alarm was raised on Ben Nevis at 10:50am by another climberwho watched in horror as the men were caught in the moving slab ofsnow.

Some members of Lochaber mountain rescue team walked into thecorrie to begin the search while others were airlifted further upthe mountain by a helicopter from RAF Lossiemouth.

They were later joined by a team from RAF Leuchars, who were onexercise near Newtonmore, and search and rescue dogs.

Both bodies were discovered in an area known as No 3 Gully on thenorth face of the mountain.

One body was found in the debris about 12:50pm by rescuers usingsnow probes and a second was discovered about 90 minutes later, alsoburied in deep snow.

The names of the climbers had not been released last night whilenext of kin were being told. Northern Constabulary said a reportwould be submitted to the procurator fiscal.

One of the dead was from the Wiltshire area and the other fromWales. The survivors were still being interviewed last night.

Chief Inspector John Chisholm, of Northern Constabulary, said:"They were all well-equipped, highly experienced and European-accredited climbers. But it appears they were in the wrong place atthe wrong time."

He said a search of the area was carried out in case others werecaught up in the avalanche but no-one else was reported missing.

"Hundreds of people have been on the mountains in the last fewdays and thankfully we have had only one report of an avalanche.

"There was the possibility of more casualties but fortunatelynone occurred."

John Stevenson, leader of Lochaber mountain rescue team, said themen were near the top of the gully when they were struck by the wallof snow.

"They were caught in a slab avalanche which took them down thehill quite a distance and buried them at the bottom."

He said it was not a particularly risky route. "It shouldn't havebeen but we have quite a bit of snow about and the wind tends toshift it quite a bit. Unfortunately, they were just caught in thewrong place at the wrong time.

"These things do happen and I think these boys were just veryunlucky.

"You can see in a few places where the snow tends to build up,you get a very white, smooth finish to it, and these are the kind ofareas you would stay away from."

He said strong winds made conditions difficult for rescuers: "Itwas quite windy and there was always the risk of other slabs comingdown so you have to be very careful when putting people out there."

Avalanche experts said the cause of the avalanche remained amystery.

The Sportscotland Avalanche Information Service's (SAIS) reportfor Lochaber from 6pm on Tuesday to 6pm last night put the risk ofavalanches between 200m and 900m as low. Between 900m and 1,340m therisk was moderate, with natural avalanches "unlikely" and human-triggered avalanches "possible".

Mark Diggins, spokesman for SAIS, said: "This is a tragedy andit's a bit of a mystery. Until we go in to investigate, we cannotsay what happened and how they got avalanched in that location."

He said the area where the incident occurred was on a north-easterly slope.

Fresh snow and strong winds had created more hazardous areas butgenerally on south, west and north-westerly aspects, and not oneasterly faces.

"This avalanche occurred on an east or northern-easterly aspect.But maybe there was an anomaly that created a patch or an area ofunstable snow.

"We are going to send some people to investigate and hopefullyhave some answers soon. We don't know the circumstances of thisincident but we need to learn from it."

SAIS has also been monitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rare inScotland but seen recently, mainly in the Cairngorms.

Mr Diggins said: "We have had an extremely cold and calm spell.What normally happens is you get a process of freezing and thawingand a consolidation of the snow pack.

"What we've had recently is almost the opposite of that becauseit's been so cold the snow has become sugar-like and has not bondedand consolidated."

WHY SO DEADLY?

CLIMBERS across the Highlands had been warned that unusually calmand extremely cold weather has raised the risk of avalanches.

Members of the Scottish Avalanche Information Service have beenmonitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rarely seen in Scotland.

The snow crystals form a slippery layer when buried under snowand are the cause of many avalanches in the Alps and North America,according to SAIS.

Mark Diggins of SAIS said hoar surface had formed over about tendays of calm and extremely cold weather.

Normally, the crystals, which are created by vapour rising upfrom layers of deposited snow and then freezing on the surface, aredestroyed in a thaw or by high winds.

Mr Diggins said: "What we have got is an unusual climate becauseof this prolonged cold spell.

"This has been throwing up some unusual things, one of them beinghoar surface.

"The crystals can be quite dangerous if buried by further fallsof snow as they form a very, very weak layer. The crystals are a bitlike soap flakes and create a very slippery layer."

SAIS teams have been checking for hoar surface during routineassessments of avalanche risks in the northern and southernCairngorms, Lochaber, Creag Meagaidh and Glencoe.

The SAIS posts reports and forecasts online.

Huge avalanches claim lives of three mountaineers

THREE climbers have died after they were caught in two separateavalanches on Scottish mountains yesterday.

Two were swept to their deaths as they climbed in a five-strongparty, and were caught in a moving wall of snow several hundredmetres in length which hurtled down the Coire na Ciste area of BenNevis.

Their bodies were found by rescuers buried under tons of snow,having been thrown 400 metres down the mountainside.

A third man was carried several hundred feet down the LiathachRidge in Torridon in Wester Ross. He was found alive by a companionsitting on top of the snow and appeared at first to have sufferedonly a broken arm.

However, he later died in hospital from internal injuries.

In a third incident, another man was being treated for a headinjury after surviving an avalanche on Beinn an Dothaidh in Argyll.

The alarm was raised on Ben Nevis at 10:50am by another climberwho watched in horror as the men were caught in the moving slab ofsnow.

Some members of Lochaber mountain rescue team walked into thecorrie to begin the search while others were airlifted further upthe mountain by a helicopter from RAF Lossiemouth.

They were later joined by a team from RAF Leuchars, who were onexercise near Newtonmore, and search and rescue dogs.

Both bodies were discovered in an area known as No 3 Gully on thenorth face of the mountain.

One body was found in the debris about 12:50pm by rescuers usingsnow probes and a second was discovered about 90 minutes later, alsoburied in deep snow.

The names of the climbers had not been released last night whilenext of kin were being told. Northern Constabulary said a reportwould be submitted to the procurator fiscal.

One of the dead was from the Wiltshire area and the other fromWales. The survivors were still being interviewed last night.

Chief Inspector John Chisholm, of Northern Constabulary, said:"They were all well-equipped, highly experienced and European-accredited climbers. But it appears they were in the wrong place atthe wrong time."

He said a search of the area was carried out in case others werecaught up in the avalanche but no-one else was reported missing.

"Hundreds of people have been on the mountains in the last fewdays and thankfully we have had only one report of an avalanche.

"There was the possibility of more casualties but fortunatelynone occurred."

John Stevenson, leader of Lochaber mountain rescue team, said themen were near the top of the gully when they were struck by the wallof snow.

"They were caught in a slab avalanche which took them down thehill quite a distance and buried them at the bottom."

He said it was not a particularly risky route. "It shouldn't havebeen but we have quite a bit of snow about and the wind tends toshift it quite a bit. Unfortunately, they were just caught in thewrong place at the wrong time.

"These things do happen and I think these boys were just veryunlucky.

"You can see in a few places where the snow tends to build up,you get a very white, smooth finish to it, and these are the kind ofareas you would stay away from."

He said strong winds made conditions difficult for rescuers: "Itwas quite windy and there was always the risk of other slabs comingdown so you have to be very careful when putting people out there."

Avalanche experts said the cause of the avalanche remained amystery.

The Sportscotland Avalanche Information Service's (SAIS) reportfor Lochaber from 6pm on Tuesday to 6pm last night put the risk ofavalanches between 200m and 900m as low. Between 900m and 1,340m therisk was moderate, with natural avalanches "unlikely" and human-triggered avalanches "possible".

Mark Diggins, spokesman for SAIS, said: "This is a tragedy andit's a bit of a mystery. Until we go in to investigate, we cannotsay what happened and how they got avalanched in that location."

He said the area where the incident occurred was on a north-easterly slope.

Fresh snow and strong winds had created more hazardous areas butgenerally on south, west and north-westerly aspects, and not oneasterly faces.

"This avalanche occurred on an east or northern-easterly aspect.But maybe there was an anomaly that created a patch or an area ofunstable snow.

"We are going to send some people to investigate and hopefullyhave some answers soon. We don't know the circumstances of thisincident but we need to learn from it."

SAIS has also been monitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rare inScotland but seen recently, mainly in the Cairngorms.

Mr Diggins said: "We have had an extremely cold and calm spell.What normally happens is you get a process of freezing and thawingand a consolidation of the snow pack.

"What we've had recently is almost the opposite of that becauseit's been so cold the snow has become sugar-like and has not bondedand consolidated."

WHY SO DEADLY?

CLIMBERS across the Highlands had been warned that unusually calmand extremely cold weather has raised the risk of avalanches.

Members of the Scottish Avalanche Information Service have beenmonitoring surface hoar, a phenomenon rarely seen in Scotland.

The snow crystals form a slippery layer when buried under snowand are the cause of many avalanches in the Alps and North America,according to SAIS.

Mark Diggins of SAIS said hoar surface had formed over about tendays of calm and extremely cold weather.

Normally, the crystals, which are created by vapour rising upfrom layers of deposited snow and then freezing on the surface, aredestroyed in a thaw or by high winds.

Mr Diggins said: "What we have got is an unusual climate becauseof this prolonged cold spell.

"This has been throwing up some unusual things, one of them beinghoar surface.

"The crystals can be quite dangerous if buried by further fallsof snow as they form a very, very weak layer. The crystals are a bitlike soap flakes and create a very slippery layer."

SAIS teams have been checking for hoar surface during routineassessments of avalanche risks in the northern and southernCairngorms, Lochaber, Creag Meagaidh and Glencoe.

The SAIS posts reports and forecasts online.