четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

World Features Digest

Below is a list of feature stories that The Associated Press plans to move in the coming week. Questions about the stories may be addressed to the North America Desk supervisor in New York at 212-621-1650 (fax 212-621-5449) or e-mail amidesk(at)ap.org or to individual bureaus in your country or region.

We will update this digest daily, adding new features as available. Feature stories that moved in the previous three days are included at the bottom for editors who may not have seen them.

New this digest:

AP ON TV-AMC LOOKS AHEAD

MOBILE SHOPPING STANDSTILL

TV-RUSSIAN DOLLS

FILM-FIVE MOST

MAGGIE GOES ON A DIET

SEPT 11-CONVICTED FOR …

Blues-Red Wings Sums

St. Louis 1 0 1_2
Detroit 0 2 2_4
First Period_1, St. Louis, Kariya 17 (Backes, Johnson), 5:39. Penalties_Ericsson, Det (hooking), 6:06St. Louis bench, served by Winchester (too many men), 16:41.
Second Period_2, Detroit, Zetterberg 23 (Bertuzzi, Rafalski), :26. 3, Detroit, Bertuzzi 17 (Zetterberg, Filppula), 4:35. Penalties_Jackman, StL (hooking), 8:44Stuart, Det, double minor (high-sticking), 11:29.
Third Period_4, St. Louis, McClement 10 …

We will survive

After the initial shock of the Virginia Tech tragedy, I justwanted it to go away -- I didn't want to see any more pictures,didn't want to hear any more words or try to understand it. It justhurt too much!

But for some reason I was drawn to Rick Telander's column ofApril 18 and was somewhat salved ["Va. Tech copes with tragedy,"sports]. Somehow, the column took it out of the realm of starkrealism and made it more calming when he portrayed the convocationstarting with the …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Rights group says democracies ignore abuses

BRUSSELS (AP) — Democracies around the world are ignoring abuses by repressive regimes and opting for improved relations rather than condemning rights violations and curtailing aid, Human Rights Watch said Monday.

In its annual report, the international watchdog decried what it called the increasing use of soft measures without any guarantees to ensure that changes occur in regimes.

"'Dialogue' and 'cooperation' with repressive governments is too often an excuse for doing nothing about human rights," said Kenneth Roth, the group's executive director.

For instance, he criticized EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso for meeting in Brussels on Monday with autocratic …

Beckett struggles again in Game 2 of ALCS

Josh Beckett's reputation as a postseason ace is taking a beating.

The Boston star struggled for a second consecutive playoff start Saturday night, lasting only 4 1-3 innings against Tampa Bay in Game 2 of the AL championship series.

Fortunately for Beckett, the Red Sox hitters offset his troubles on the mound, and the game went into extra innings. Tampa Bay tied the ALCS with a 9-8 win in 11 innings.

The 2003 World Series MVP never found his rhythm and was tagged for eight runs and nine hits. After such an outing, there were sure to be more questions about whether Beckett had fully healed from late-season injuries.

"He's been …

Man who aided killing of in-law dies

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Matthew Stuart, who helped his brother Charlescover up the shooting death of his pregnant wife in 1989 in akilling that inflamed racial tensions in Boston, has died,authorities said Sunday.

Carole DiMaiti Stuart was shot to death more than two decades agoand the child she delivered after she was shot died days later. Herhusband, Charles Stuart, blamed the crime on a black man,heightening racial strife in Boston. Police focused on a paroledconvict, William Bennett, as a suspect. He later sued the city afterbeing cleared.

Matthew Stuart admitted to police a few months after the shootingthat he helped hide the gun believed to have been …

Economy Nearly Stalled in First Quarter

WASHINGTON - The economy nearly stalled in the first quarter with growth slowing to a pace of just 0.6 percent. That was the worst three-month showing in over four years.

The new reading on the gross domestic product, released by the Commerce Department Thursday, showed that economic growth in the January-through-March quarter was much weaker. Government statisticians slashed by more than half their first estimate of a 1.3 percent growth rate for the quarter.

The main culprits for the downgrade: the bloated trade deficit and businesses cutting investment in supplies of the goods they hold in inventories.

"We are still keeping our head above water - barely," said …

AP Source: Prosecutor seeking FBI tapes of Burris

A county prosecutor exploring the possibility of perjury charges against U.S. Sen. Roland Burris has asked federal officials for FBI tapes of phone conversations between Burris and ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich's brother, an individual with knowledge of the case said Friday.

Sangamon County State's Attorney John Schmidt wants to compare the taped conversations with what Burris said under oath before the House committee that voted to impeach Blagojevich, said the individual, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter could come before a grand jury.

Schmidt's request, first reported in Friday editions of the Chicago Sun-Times, comes after Burris …

Water rate hike on tap; 1,000 jobs on the line

The City Council is expected to raise water rates 16 percenttoday to avert more than 1,000 layoffs and a reduction in the city'sbond rating.

The long-expected increase will be coupled with a decrease inthe sewer surcharge, officials said, resulting in a slight savingsfor homeowners from a proposal last year by former Mayor Sawyer.

Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th), who is expected to be reinstatedtoday as Finance Committee chairman, said a water fund shortfallcoupled with a deficit of up to $120 million in the city's corporatefund could prompt Wall Street rating services to reduce the city'sbond rating.

"To leave the water fund in deficit would send …

US widens probe of HP bribery allegations

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. investigators have widened their probe of alleged kickbacks paid to Russian authorities by employees of a Hewlett-Packard Co. subsidiary in Germany.

Authorities in Russia, Germany and the U.S. have been looking into alleged bribes totaling $11 million paid to secure a $44.5 million contract that ran from 2001 until 2006.

Now, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is also investigating governmental and "quasi-governmental" transactions in Russia dating to 2000, according to a quarterly financial statement the computer maker filed Thursday.

HP says it is cooperating with the investigation, which so far has not produced any allegations aimed at …

Italy avalanches kill 7, including 4 rescuers

Seven people, including a German teenager, have been killed by avalanches in northern Italy, officials said Sunday.

In one incident, two Italian tourists were killed when an avalanche hit them in the Italian Alps, said local Carabinieri police. Four rescuers who were looking for them were hit by a subsequent avalanche and were also killed.

The two tourists had gone missing Saturday afternoon while mountain climbing in the Trentino Alto Adige region.

In a separate incident in the same region, rescue and Carabinieri police officials said Sunday that a 14-year-old from Germany was hit by an avalanche when he was skiing with his brother and a friend. …

Envoy Says N.Korea Process to Begin Soon

BEIJING - U.S. nuclear envoy Christopher Hill said Monday a stalled process to shut down Pyongyang's nuclear program could resume within weeks now that a dispute over the transfer of North Korean funds is over.

But Hill, who arrived in Beijing for talks Monday, said there was still a lot of work to do to get the process back on track after it was stalled for months by a dispute over frozen North Korean funds.

North Korea invited inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency during the weekend to visit as the transfer of about $25 million appeared complete.

"Political will is something we are going to need, but from the technical point of view I think all of it is quite doable," Hill told a news conference after a less than 10-hour stop in Beijing.

"Our sense is that it will be down to a matter of weeks, not months," Hill said about restarting the process. He said North Korea had to close and seal its Yongbyon reactor, and IAEA inspectors had to monitor that.

In Vienna, IAEA spokeswoman Melissa Fleming confirmed the North Korea invitation had been received and said the "next steps" would be discussed on Monday.

North Korea said a "working-level delegation" from the U.N. nuclear watchdog had been invited to discuss procedures for the verification and monitoring of the reactor's shutdown. North Korea expelled IAEA inspectors in December 2002.

Hill met his Chinese counterpart Wu Dawei to discuss when the next round of six-party talks can be held. He has already said they are likely in early July.

It was "a good opportunity to review with the Chinese hosts of the six-party process where we are in the process," Hill said.

Hill said the participants in six-nation talks on North Korea's nuclear disarmament - the U.S., host China, Russia, Japan and the two Korea - should now move to fully implement a February agreement.

North Korea had refused to move on its February pledge to shut down the Yongbyon reactor until it receives the funds that were frozen in a Macau bank. The U.S. accused Banco Delta Asia of helping North Korea's government pass fake $100 bills and launder money from weapons sales.

Claiming the financial freeze was a sign of Washington's hostility, North Korea boycotted the six-nation talks for more than a year, during which time it conducted its first-ever atomic bomb test last October.

Russia's Interfax news agency, citing an unnamed North Korean official, reported Monday that North Korea plans to shut down Yongbyon in the second half of July.

"Based on our specialists' evaluations, it will take one month to technically shut down the reactor. This way, we expect to seal it in accordance with agreements reached at six-party talks in the second half of July 2007," the official was quoted as saying.

South Korea plans to start shipping 50,000 tons of heavy fuel oil to North Korea by the time it shuts down its nuclear reactor, South Korean chief nuclear envoy Chun Yung-woo has said, adding preparations could begin in the coming weeks.

The North is to eventually receive further energy or other aid equivalent to 950,000 tons of heavy fuel oil in return for irreversibly disabling the reactor and declaring all nuclear programs.

Report: Goalkeeper in UAE attacked

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Men wielding knives and swords attacked a goalkeeper for the United Arab Emirates club Baniyas after he tried to break up an argument at a cinema.

Mohammad Ali Ghuloom told The National newspaper Tuesday that about 20 men ambushed him early Friday following a dispute about seating between the men and a family at a cinema in Mirdif City Center in Dubai.

Ghuloom said he suffered hand, abdomen and head injuries that kept him out of Friday's match against Sharjah. Three men have been detained over the attack, police said.

It is the latest setback for the club after star winger Theyab Awana was killed in a car accident in September. Diego Maradona, who coaches rival Al Wasl, offered condolences to Awana's family.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Howie Beck finds True North

After four years of silence, Howie Beck has finally returned with a new record and a new label. True North Records has managed to pin down the elusive songwriter and will be releasing his new, self-titled album this coming July.

Since the release of his last album, 2001's Hollow, Beck's music has been finding peoples' ears by word of mouth and immense critical praise. Howie Beck songs began to appear in television show and feature films including Felicity, Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Queer As Folk while still not signed to a label. The idiosyncratic songwriter records and produces each of his records in his apartment by himself; performing almost every note alone and producing what the President of True North Bernie Finkelstein calls "beautiful, timeless songs."

Besides producing and recording his latest album Beck has toured with and opened shows for The Wallflowers, Hayden, The Dandy Warhols, Sarah Harmer, and Interpol among many others and appears on the latest albums by Harmer and Hayden.

To find out more about Howie Beck, visit www.howiebeck.com.

Loe Tosses 8 Scoreless to Lead Rangers

PITTSBURGH - Kameron Loe threw eight shutout innings, Gerald Laird, Jerry Hairston, Jr. and Travis Metcalf homered and Texas Rangers beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-0 on Thursday night.

Loe (2-6), called up earlier Thursday from Triple-A Oklahoma, allowed five hits and three walks with a career-high seven strikeouts. He had been sent down to Triple-A Oklahoma last week after giving up nine runs in 2 2-3 innings in an 11-4 loss to Detroit.

Loe, who had never gone deeper than seven innings in an outing, did not permit a Pirate to reach third base.

He entered the game with a 7.40 ERA and on a personal six-game losing streak since winning his first start of the season April 21.

The Rangers snapped a three-game losing streak.

Metcalf's first major league hit was a home run to left to lead off the sixth off Pirates starter Tom Gorzelanny (6-4). The shot on the 1-0 pitch came during the third baseman's sixth at-bat in the majors.

Hairston, Jr. hit Gorzelanny's fourth pitch of the game into the left field bleachers. It was his second homer of the season and sixth leadoff home run of his career.

Chris Duffy and Ryan Doumit each had two hits for Pittsburgh, which had won the first two games of the series.

Heading into the seventh, Gorzelanny had an impressive line: Two runs and four hits with one walk. But Laird hit a three-run homer to break the game open, scoring Michael Young and Marlon Byrd. It was Laird's fourth of the season.

Gorzelanny ultimately allowed five runs and seven hits in his seven innings, walking one and striking out four.

Young drove in Loe with a single in the eighth off of Dan Kolb, the former Brewers' closer who was making his Pirates debut.

Masumi Kuwata, the 39-year-old rookie and former Japanese league star, made his home debut for the Pirates by pitching a perfect ninth. About 40 members of the Japanese media were in attendance for the series.

Notes:@ Loe also added his first major league hit, ending an 0-for-30 streak for Rangers pitchers. Ricardo Rodriguez was the previous Texas pitcher to collect a hit, on June 12, 2005. ... The Pirates have not swept an interleague series since taking three in a row from the Cleveland Indians at PNC Park in 2001. ... Pittsburgh turned 11 double plays during the series. ... Of the 52 home runs hit at PNC Park this season, 36 have come with the bases empty (69 percent). ... The Rangers entered the game last in the majors in ERA and had given up less than four runs in a game only four times since May 6.

Fielder, Hart lead Brewers over M's split squad

With young sluggers Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder and Corey Hart grabbing most of the headlines, pitching often can be an afterthought for the Milwaukee Brewers.

But if the team hopes to contend in the National League Central in 2010, pitching will have to pick up the pace. The starters are doing their part so far this spring.

In the team's first give games of the spring, the starting pitcher has not given up a run _ six hits, three walks and six strikeouts in 11 innings.

Left-hander Manny Parra was the latest to make his mark on Monday. He gave up four hits in three scoreless innings as the Brewers defeated a Seattle Mariners split squad 6-2.

Right-hander Dave Bush, also expected to be a key element in manager Ken Macha's rotation, followed Parra to the mound and had a solid effort, giving up a run on four hits in 2 2/3 innings.

Seattle had eight extra-base hits but was just 1 for 12 with runners in scoring position, leaving 10 men on base.

Braun, Fielder and Hart did their jobs, too.

Milwaukee had a three-run first inning, with Braun producing one run with a single and Fielder getting his first two RBIs with an opposite-field double to left. Braun hit his second home run of the spring, a solo shot in the fifth inning.

"All the guys going for those five (starting) spots have been exceptional, really," Macha said. "They're all going out and pitching as good as they can."

Parra, who in two separate stints with the Brewers last season was 11-11 in 27 starts, threw the ball well but rushed his delivery at times, Macha said.

Bush was 5-9 in 21 starts in 2009 but missed nearly two months with a torn triceps muscle. He admitted he was a bit out of his routine, entering the game in relief, but generally was pleased with his outing.

"I felt good. I'm trying the simple things mechanically. I'm trying to get comfortable," Bush said. "I used all of my pitches and worked both sides of the plate. That's what I have to do, because I don't overpower people and I never will."

The Brewers are looking to solidify their rotation. Former ace Ben Sheets missed all of 2009 with an injury and signed with Oakland as a free agent, and Braden Looper, who was 14-7 in 34 starts for Milwaukee last season, is a free agent.

In addition to Parra and Bush, the other starters are expected to be right-handers Yovani Gallardo and Jeff Suppan and left-hander Randy Wolf.

The 5-foot-11, 268-pound Fielder showed his athleticism in addition to his hitting. He scored all the way from first base on a double by Casey McGehee in the third inning. And he made a good defensive play in the fourth, ranging far to his right to snag a ground ball, planting and throwing to Bush covering the bag.

"He went from 17 errors in 2008 to seven last season," Macha said. "He works on it (defense) every day. He wants to be a complete player."

NOTES: 3B Matt Gamel left the game in the third inning, but it wasn't because of the hard-hit ball by Eric Byrnes off his leg to begin the game. Gamel had shoulder difficulties, and will be re-evaluated, according to Macha. ... Veteran CF Jim Edmonds, a non-roster invitee, is making a strong bid for an Opening Day spot after sitting out the 2009 season. He hit a double and had one of his trademark diving catches in the ninth inning, holding a runner at third. ... The Mariners appear to be experimenting with INF Jose Lopez at third base and former Los Angeles Angels third baseman Chone Figgins at second . . . The Brewers optioned right-hander Alex Periard to Double-A Huntsville and sent right-handers Eric Arnett and Kyle Heckathorne to their minor-league camp for reassignment.

Patriotism, 2008

I backed the war in Nam okay,

Though I used pull to stay away.

A patriot? But can't you tell?

I wear a flag in my lapel.

My company's now based offshore;

We don't pay taxes any more.

A patriot? But can't you tell?

I wear a flag in my lapel.

That clean air stuff's not meant for me.

I drive a German SUV.

A patriot? But can't you tell?

I wear a flag in my lapel.

We needn't build a grand memorial

To patriots. It's all sartorial.

-Calvin Trillin in The Nation.

Focus on ...: Law

Intellectual property (IP) attorneys have become a vital part of the hightech economy and a NH institution is one of the leaders in teaching the field's next generation. Those working in the IP field say they are seeing a transformation unlike any they have experienced before.

Since the opening of the Pierce Law Center in Concord more than 30 years ago, the state's only law school has focused on intellectual property as a specialty and, as a result, the industry considers it a top school for IP law.

In fact, IP is so ingrained in the state's legal profession that Pierce Law has a separate Web site dedicated to the subject (www.ipmall.info). In addition, large firms like McLane, Graf, Raulerson and Middleton in Manchester are producing IP newsletters.

Terri Tucker, a partner at Grossman, Tucker, Perreault and Pfleger in Manchester, specializes in trademark issues. She has been involved in the field for more than 20 years, first as a paralegal and then as an attorney.

"Intellectual property law is certainly growing in the state," says Tucker, who graduated from Pierce Law Center in 1993. "More companies in New Hampshire and from abroad recognize that they do not have to go to Boston or New York City It is happening here, but without the cost of doing business in a major city."

The Online Revolution

However, just because IP is thriving in NH does not mean that the business is local. The Internet revolution has forever changed the way many IP lawyers handle their practice.

"There are many clients who we never meet face-to-face," says Dan Coolidge, a partner with Coolidge and Graves in Warner. "Many of our clients are international arid, in the past, many of those companies would have representatives in the United States. However, with the Internet, I do 99 percent of my work over e-mail. Research that used to take me up to two weeks now takes minutes."

Scott Asmus, a partner with Maine and Asmus in Nashua, says the advent of the Internet, beyond the convenience of communication, has provided more opportunities for his law firm.

"Early on, domain name 'squatters' rights issues were big because there were millions of addresses being issued," Asmus says, adding that the government acted by issuing an anticyber squatting act in 1999 that made it possible for trademark owners to take cyber-squatters to court.

Asmus says this law highlighted the many nuances involved with IP and the Internet. "Many of these laws on the books, now and in the future, you wouldn't think would be an issue, but they are. Unfortunately, legislation is a necessary evil to keep people honest," he says.

As new laws and rulings try to keep up with evolving technology, larger firms are committing more resources to the practice area. "For a long time, the business of IP was left to boutique firms that worked on referral," Coolidge says. "Now every large firm has an IP department."

IP and Small Businesses

A trend that IP attorneys in NH see is that more small businesses, especially in the technology and biotech industries, are in need of IP training and representation.

"We are seeing more smaller companies looking for representation," Asmus says. "They know that IP is a complicated process and a headache to manage even one patent."

The convenience of the Internet has proved to be a doubleedged sword, Tucker says, particularly filing of IP-related paperwork with the U.S. government. "If someone wants to file for a patent, a trademark or a copyright, it has never been easier and, in fact, people can practically do all the steps from their computer," she says. "However, it is so simple, a layperson can have a false sense of oversimplification. Most people do not have the full background and can make a costly mistake."

As a result, Asmus says that the business community has clamored for more education and training in the area of IP, "We and the New Hampshire Bar Association have responded to this by offering more tools for businesses dealing with IP issues," Asmus says, such as IP forums for small businesses to help them stay abreast of trends.

Sean `Diddy' Combs says he wants to move to Hollywood and become a movie star

Sean "Diddy" Combs says he wants to move to Hollywood and become a full-time movie star.

The East Coast-based entertainment mogul aims to get top billing on the big screen.

"Yeah, leading man kind of stuff; you know, jumping off of buildings," Combs says in an appearance scheduled to air Friday on CBS' "Late Show With David Letterman."

Besides action-packed adventure, the rapper-producer's ideal film roles would also include "making love to beautiful women" and "very emotional, heart-wrenching scenes."

Letterman advises Combs to start out doing a smaller, independent movie rather than a big-budget picture that could bomb at the box office.

"Oh, no, no, no, I'm going to take my time with it," said Combs, who has a clothing line, Sean John, and heads Bad Boy Worldwide Entertainment and its record label.

Combs, 38, has had small roles in "Monster's Ball" and "Made." He headlined a Broadway revival of "Raisin in the Sun" in 2004, and co-stars with Phylicia Rashad and Audra McDonald in an ABC film version, which airs Feb. 25.