Thursday, March 15, 2012

Let a fiesta be your farewell to summer

It might be quite an event to host an end of the summer cocktailparty with Latin flavors and salsa music. Everyone will love it.Especially after a caipirinha.

You might even want to enlist a dance instructor.

Caipirinha

This is a fabulous new drink. The lime taste is particularlyrefreshing when it is very hot--like this summer. Cachaca is aBrazilian sugar cane-based liquor (available at liquor stores), butyou can also make it with vodka. If you make it with vodka, call it acaipiroshka.

Queso fundido

I love melted cheese. And it does not get better than this withspicy chiles and other flavors in the mix, then swooped up with crisptortilla chips. …

A microphone guide

Dynamic Microphone

Dynamic moving coil microphones employ a coil of wires attached to a diaphragm, which is suspended within a magnetic field. Acoustical vibrations cause the diaphragm and the coil to vibrate within this magnetic field, creating an AC (alternating current). This current electrically represents the audio signal.

Dynamic microphones tend to be robust and are commonly used for close miking louder instrument setups including guitar amplifiers, individual drums and live vocals. Characteristics include a good transient response, a natural midrange peak, (about 5 kHz) solid low frequency response and tight polar pattern to keep leakage at bay. Because of their …

Brazil conducts military drills to protect oil

More than 10,000 Brazilian troops are taking part in military drills to protect the nation's oil fields and offshore platforms.

Brazil's official Agencia Brasil news service says the exercises will take place until Sept. 26 and will simulate military conflicts to control the nation's top oil fields.

Members of the army, air force and navy are …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Carmarthen Ramblers

ON October 24, Andrew Graham led the ramblers on a 10-mile walkthat started from a woodland car park off a country road about twomiles north west of Llangennech.

They followed the road about two miles until they reached ajunction with the B4306 then accessed a field onto a right of waythrough scrub land in a conservation area on Rhos Cefn Bryn to reacha green lane just below Tirlan farm.

They followed the lane about two miles and crossed a footbridgeover the Afon Gwili to reach Pent-wyn about a mile from PontAbraham. Here they walked the bridge over the M4 and immediatelycrossed the A48 onto a quiet country road for a quarter of a milebefore entering …

NFL executive to be new MLS boss

Doug Logan reportedly is out and NFL executive Don Garber is in ascommissioner of Major League Soccer.

Logan's ouster first was reported Tuesday by the Associated Press.He canceled his weekly teleconference call with MLS media, and theleague called a news conference for 10:30 a.m. today in New York.

Garber, 41, has been the senior vice president and managingdirector of NFL International since October 1996. His duties involvepromoting interest in American football worldwide and management ofNFL Europe.

His connection to MLS came through Lamar Hunt and Robert Kraft,franchise owners in both leagues. Hunt owns the NFL Kansas CityChiefs and the MLS Kansas City …

Official: Obama, Calderon reach trucking agreement

WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. official says President Barack Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderon have reached an agreement on resolving a long-standing dispute over cross-border trucking.

The official says the leaders will announce a clear path to open U.S. highways to Mexican trucks during a joint news conference at the White House Thursday. Calderon is in Washington for wide-ranging meetings with Obama on …

Stoudemire hopes to start 'new era' in New York

The New York Knicks have lost long enough. Amare Stoudemire is ready for what he calls the "start of a new era."

Stoudemire joined the Knicks on Thursday, coming to a team that has never had a winning season since he entered the league out of high school in 2002.

"It's about challenges and this is definitely the ultimate challenge for myself to eventually bring the Knicks back to where they rightfully belong," Stoudemire said at a news conference at Madison Square Garden.

The All-Star power forward agreed to a deal Monday with a team looking to win again after a franchise-worst nine straight losing seasons.

The last two …

ShanghaiTex 2006 (July 5th to 8th)

The International Exhibition on Textile Industry (ShanghaiTex 2006) will be held from July 5th to 8th at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre in Pudong, Shanghai.

According to the organizers, ShanghaiTex 2006 will be one of the largest and most authoritative textile exhibitions in Asia. More than 500 exhibitors from Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Macau, the Netherlands, China, Singapore, Switzerland, Taiwan Province, USA, etc. will show their latest products in four exhibition halls totaling 50,000 sq. meters.

This year, the focus will be on machinery for knitting, dyeing and finishing, and ShanghaiTex will be comprised …

DNA Test Expected to Free Texas Inmate

A man imprisoned since 1981 for sexual assault was freed after a judge recommended overturning his conviction.

Charles Chatman, 47, was released on his recognizance after serving nearly 27 years of a 99-year sentence. He was freed on the basis of new DNA testing that lawyers say proves his innocence and adds to Dallas County's nationally unmatched number of wrongfully convicted inmates.

Chatman became the 15th inmate …

Plenty of frozen nopes

During batting practice before the game Tuesday at Wrigley Field, the newly installed heating units in the dugouts were operating at full blast.

Well, the one in the visiting dugout was, anyway. In the Cubs' dugout, the vent was quiet and the home dugout icebox cold.

It didn't get much better for the Cubs' hitters on the coldest game night of the year so far at Wrigley.

''It wasn't a real good hitting day,'' Cubs manager Lou Piniella said after the Washington Nationals beat the Cubs 3-1 despite another good performance from the Cubs' rotation.

Well-traveled Nationals starter Livan Hernandez baffled into the eighth inning to put at least a temporary end to …

CONNECTING KIDS WITH COMPOST, HEALTHY FOODS

HANDS-ON LEARNING

Olivewood Gardens and Learning Center in San Diego County uses gardening, composting and cooking to educate school children and adults about a healthier lifestyle.

OLIVEWOOD Gardens and Learning Center in National City, California has made impressive strides towards fulfilling its vision "to connect and motivate students and families from diverse backgrounds through organic gardening, environmental stewardship and nutrition education" and empower them "to be healthy and active citizens." Fertile compost-amended soil in the gardens sprouts healthy fruits and vegetables that school kids and volunteers help to grow. Between student field trips, community …

EUROPE NEWS AT 1800GMT

UPCOMING COVERAGE FOR TUESDAY, OCT 12:

BALKAN-CLINTON

SARAJEVO — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton starts her Balkan tour in Bosnia. By Matthew Lee.

ALBANIA-DEFENSE MINISTERS

TIRANA, Albania — Defense Ministers of Southeastern European countries convene in Tirana to discuss ways of jointly coping with natural emergency situations.

CROATIA-EX-PREMIER

ZAGREB, Croatia — Former Prime Minister Ivo Sanader expected to testify before the parliamentary commission probing whether Hungarian MOL was privileged when buying shares in local oil monopoly. It'll be his first public appearance since abruptly resigning on July 1, 2009, coming amid widespread …

Faithful pianist devoted to music for 50 years

DAILY MAIL STAFF

The first hymn Ruth Anna Perry ever played in front of a churchcongregation was "What a Friend We Have in Jesus."

And what a friend Perry has been for the past 50 years.

She started playing the piano for churches as an 11 year old, andshe's never stopped. By now, the faithful pianist has played themall: "How Great Thou Art," "The Old Rugged Cross" and hundreds more.

The years of musical service have been her way of paying herparents back for the sacrifices they made so she could learn toplay. Her playing has also been a way to honor the memory of hersinging father.

Along the way, Perry has played at many an area church - theSoutheast Church of the Nazarene, Capital View Church of theNazarene, Valley Grove Church of the Nazarene, Elk River Church ofthe Nazarene, Dunbar Church of the Nazarene, and, most recently,South Hills Church of the Nazarene.

"It's about time to take a back seat, don't you think?" Perry, aCharleston resident, said this week. "Let someone else do it."

But chances are, Perry will keep on playing. It's in her blood.

Her father, Harry C. Shock, was a tenor who sang at area churchesand revivals. If someone requested a song, Shock's family recalled,he would drop whatever he was doing to oblige.

"He loved to sing better than he loved to eat," said Edna Poole,Perry's sister. "If anyone called him, he was there. He'd say, 'I'mawfully tired, but let me get my clothes changed.'"

As a young boy, the family stories say, Shock would stop onstreet corners to sing just because he loved to. People passing bywould give him nickels. But the young boy faced punishment.

"He said his dad would whip him all the way home," Poole said.

When Perry showed an interest in the piano around age 6, herparents encouraged her. With six children in their Kanawha Cityhome, her parents had to sacrifice to let her take lessons.

"I felt like they were taking their money they could have usedfor something else to help me," she said.

But Perry paid her parents back, in a way.

When her father would sing in churches, Perry would play thepiano to accompany him. On the way home, she recalled fondly, theywould often stop for a milkshake.

"My dad wanted me to take the lessons," she said. "He wantedsomeone to play with him."

She started playing at her family's church when she was 11. Itwas a long time ago, but Perry believed the church's regular pianoplayer must have either moved or been gone during the occasion.

Perry is sure she played "What a Friend We Have in Jesus,"though. She chose that hymn because it is relatively simple.

"I'm sure I was real nervous the first time I had to play," shesaid. "I still get nervous certain times if it's something big."

Perry, 61, has played not only the piano and the organ at churchservices, but also at countless weddings and funerals. She receivespraise for her skill and knowledge.

"They don't come any better," said Minnie Turley, who worked withPerry when Turley was the choir director at Dunbar Church of theNazarene. "If she hears it, she can play it. She's just a natural."

Turley often filled in as the church choir director during timeswhen there was no regular director. She said Perry helped her withreading music and getting the timing right.

"Ruth Anna really helped me or I never would have gotten throughit," said Turley, who has been a member of Dunbar Church of theNazarene for 67 years.

Perry, who works for the Public Employees Insurance Agency, isthinking of retiring soon and spending more time traveling. But onSundays, she'll probably be perched at the church keyboard.

After all, why waste 50 years of lessons?

"You learn by practicing," she said. "I've had lots of practice."

Writer Brad McElhinny can be reached at 348-1244.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Ashe is ideal as a leader for change

Unfortunately, the announcement by civil rights activist andformer tennis star Arthur Ashe that he has AIDS makes anythingwritten or said on the subject sound like an obituary. Put that outof your mind.

Prospects are excellent that Ashe will continue a full andproductive life for some time to come, given the fact he has learnedwell how to live with this dreaded affliction for more than threeyears already.

How unfair can life be? We're not talking about sexualpromiscuity, filthy needles being stuck into drug-craving arms orheredity and environment here, but of a terrific man catching analmost unfathomable series of lousy breaks.

But Ashe has never taken a backward step. In the realm ofsports, Arthur was and is a Gandhi, a Martin Luther King. He neverkicked a door down; instead, with his words and actions, he talkedhis way in, then gained invitation without reservation. Just as Jackie Robinson was the man to spearhead the obliterationof the racial barrier in baseball, Ashe was the ideal man to lead thecharge for change all over, not just here.

Marquez accepts deal to fight Katsidis

Lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez has agreed to fight Michael Katsidis at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas on Nov. 27.

Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer says Marquez has accepted the terms of a deal to defend his WBO belt against mandatory challenger Katsidis, the all-action Australian slugger.

Marquez (51-5-1, 37 KOs) generally is considered Mexico's top boxer. He decisively won a rematch with Juan Diaz on July 31 in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather Jr. last year.

After failing to interest Manny Pacquiao in a third fight, Marquez agreed to fight Katsidis (27-2, 22 KOs), who has revitalized his career with four straight victories following back-to-back losses to Joel Casamayor and Diaz.

BC-GLF--Greater Hickory Classic Scores, GLF

BC-GLF--Greater Hickory Classic Scores,0701

A Chocolate Affair

A Chocolate Affair

by Sheila Copeland

BET Books, October 2001, $15.00

ISBN 1-58314-234-7

In the follow-up to her debut novel, Chocolate Star, Sheila Copeland takes us on a voyage to Hollywood -- home of glamour, sex and drugs. The thought of entering this world terrifies Keisha, the compassionate homemaker who wants everyone to be as happy as she is with her NBA star husband, Eric. It's Eric's move to the Los Angeles Lakers that throws Keisha into a world in which she must learn to adjust.

Knowing she is separated from her friends, Eric encourages her to become friends with his teammate's wife, Jade. Jade scoffs at the idea of being the perfect housewife and fights a constant battle between motherhood and her career. Her sharp tongue gets everyone's blood boiling. Fortunately, Keisha is reunited with her friend Topaz, who is now a multiplatinum R&B artist. Keisha makes it her mission to help Topaz rebuild her family and reunite with a lost love.

Although readers may expect for wealthy and famous characters to be shallow, Copeland develops memorable personalities and weaves an engaging tale of infidelity, lost loves and sisterhood. While A Chocolate Affair is a smooth read, the one flaw with this novel is that the characters' problems are solved too easily. Coincidences are too frequent, which caused suspenseful scenes to be predictable and unrealistic. If Copeland had allowed for more things to come together in a subtle way, the book would read more like a novel and less like a soap opera.

Photo (Sheila Copeland)

Sichuan government says confirmed death toll from earthquake rises to 21,000

The Sichuan government says the official death toll from this week's powerful earthquake in the province has risen to 21,000 people.

Vice Governor Li Chengyun announced the figure at a news conference Friday in the provincial capital of Chengdu. It is up about 2,500 from a day earlier.

State TV has already reported that the Earthquake and Disaster Relief Headquarters of the State Council has already said deaths could rise above 50,000. The council is the country's Cabinet.

Taste of Hong Kong on menu for horse bettors

Race and sports books are major components of the gamblingoperations at casinos in Las Vegas and elsewhere around Nevada, yetthe marketing of them is low-profile when compared with the moreprofitable gambling options.

People who make a study of betting on sports and handicappinghorse races perceive themselves more as investors than gamblers inmuch the same way as poker professionals. Collectively, theyrepresent a demographic profile quite apart from slots and table-games players.

About the only time all year that race and sports books occupythe gambling spotlight is for the Super Bowl, when point spreads,odds and over-under figures attract national media attention andbecome a part of workplace vernacular.

This month, a blockbuster business deal was announced that has aslarge a potential impact on betting on horse races as a worldwidearea of linked machines would nave on slot machines. The deal wouldbring live simulcasting and legalization of co-mingled betting onraces from the renowned 123-year-old Hong Kong Jockey Club.

"Big deal," you say? You bet it is. Thoroughbred horse racing isthe No. 1 spectator sport in the Hong Kong region. Betting handle ona typical day's races exceeds $100 million. When bets from Americanhorse players are co-mingled in pools of that magnitude, which areunheard of at U.S. tracks except for the Kentucky Derby andBreeders' Cup, it sets the stage for monster payoffs and value forserious handicappers.

The Chinese government had previously banned foreign betting onits races, which are conducted twice a week at two tracks in HongKong from early September to early July. The racing cards start at10 p.m. Central time.

Las Vegas Dissemination Company (LVDC), the exclusive pari-mutuel service provider for Nevada's gaming industry and all majorout-of-state casinos, inked the deal with the Hong Kong Jockey Cluband will act as the exclusive provider of full betting services andlive broadcast of the races.

Vincent Magliulo, LVDC's vice president of marketing andcorporate development, said that his company is hopeful of sellingthe Hong Kong signal to off-track betting and simulcast locationsaround the United States, which means it may eventually come to theChicago area.

Interest is high among Nevada casinos and is even spreadingnationally. The giant American Indian-owned Foxwoods Resort Casinorecently obtained exclusive rights in Connecticut to present racingfrom Hong Kong in its Ultimate Race Book.

John G. Brokopp is a local free-lance gaming writer.

CASINO NEWS & NOTES

Complimentary live entertainment at the casino destinations inJoliet will be hopping this weekend with Five Guys Named Moeappearing onstage at Empress tonight and Saturday night. Over atHarrah's it will be Libido Funk Circus tonight and the Crown VicsSaturday night.

- In addition to a full slate of musical entertainment on tap inRocks Lounge at Blue Chip Casino Hotel in Michigan City, Ind., thisweekend, don't miss the Rock Art Show in the casino's GrandBallroom. Free and open to the public, the exhibit features art,lithographs, photographs, paintings, drawings and autographedhandwritten song lyrics from many of the world's most popularmusicians, singers and songwriters. Hours: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. today andSaturday, and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday.

America's first legal gigolo leaves rural brothel

America's first legal male prostitute has left a rural Nevada brothel after a two-month stint that generated plenty of attention but fewer than 10 paying customers.

Brothel owner Jim Davis said Friday the Shady Lady Ranch had parted ways with the "prostitude" who worked under the name Markus.

A replacement has been hired, but Davis hinted it was possible that Markus, a 25-year-old Alabama native, could be back.

"I don't know, he hasn't told us yet," Davis said.

The tiny yellow brothel is 150 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

Markus, who like other sex workers has asked that his real name not be used, didn't immediately respond to an e-mail message seeking comment.

He remained listed under the name "Markus Destin" by adult talent agency OC Modeling.

Bobbi Davis, who co-owns the brothel with her husband and runs it as its madam, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal the departure of Markus was a mutual decision.

She said the brothel would keep employing men to have sex with women, including its latest hire, a Las Vegas man in his mid-30s who works under the name Y. Not and has had about 10 customers.

The focus of the business, however, will remain on women prostitutes serving men, she said.

Male companions were "never the main course," she said. "We're going to try it for a while longer."

The Shady Lady Ranch created a stir in Nevada's brothel industry when it successfully won state and county approval to hire a male sex worker.

After hiring Markus, the Davises cut him off from speaking with reporters after his first two interviews, in which he compared himself with Rosa Parks and Mahatma Gandhi.

Markus was the subject of a first-person story by the New York Post after a female reporter hired him but said they did not have sex.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling of Gandhi.)

Stripper plans to plead guilty in murder

PHOENIX - A stripper accused of killing of a millionairebusinessman plans to plead guilty Tuesday to second-degree murder,her attorney said.

Brandi Hungerford, 26, originally faced a first-degree murdercharge in the death of Rick Chance.

The body of Chance, former owner of Empire Glass, was found in aTempe hotel room on Aug. 9 - the day after he checked in withHungerford and a briefcase reportedly containing $1 million in jewelsand watches.

Hungerford has been cooperating with authorities and reached aplea deal, Hungerford's attorney, Clark Derrick, said Friday.

"I think it's pretty much driven by contrition and the feelingthat she would like to do something to make this right," saidDerrick.

Monday, March 12, 2012

PLUS SPORTS

MIAMI PLAYER KILLED: University of Miami reserve fullback KevinGibbs was killed in an auto accident in Coral Gables, Fla. Gibbs, 20,died Wednesday after a car in which he was a passenger slammed into autility pole. The accident occurred at about 9 p.m. The car wasdriven by Gibbs' friend, Leroy Josey, who was in stable conditiontoday at a Miami hospital. SOX TICKETS ON SALE: Tickets will go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday forthe White Sox final season at Comiskey Park. They can be obtained atthe Sox ticket office at 35th and Shields and through Ticketmaster(312-559-1212). Tickets for the final weekend series at ComiskeyPark (Sept. 28-30 against the Seattle Mariners) won't go on saleuntil April.

BO'S AGENT EYES DOUGH: Bo Jackson's agent Richard Woods said thetwo-sport star could become the highest paid player in baseball ifthe Kansas City Royals outfielder were a free agent - and in one wayhe already enjoys such contract clout. "In our view he is a freeagent because he has the football option with the Los AngelesRaiders," Woods said. SYRACUSE BRAWL: Derrick Coleman, a senior basketball co-captain attop-ranked Syracuse, was involved in an altercation with FredDeReggi, a senior nose guard on Syracuse's football team, at a campusbar. The two scuffled at 1 a.m. Wednesday. SURGERY FOR UTAH COACH: University of Utah basketball coach RickMajerus underwent coronary bypass surgery today in Salt Lake City andhospital officials said it would be several hours before they wouldhave word on his progress. A hospital spokesman said Majerus, 41,went into surgery at 7:30 a.m. Earlier, Majerus said he expects to be"on the shelf" the rest of the season. GOALIE HEXTALL HURT: Philadelphia Flyers goaltender Ron Hextallagreed to play a game in the minors to tune up for a return to theNHL after an injury, but now he may be sitting out again. Hextall,playing for the Hershey Bears, injured his right groin in a gameagainst the New Haven Nighthawks. SURGERY FOR PITT GUARD: Pittsburgh point guard Sean Millerunderwent successful surgery on his left ankle today and has had hisleg placed in a cast. Miller had a bone graft operation to reducepain caused by a partial fusion of two bones in his left ankle. SKINS' WILLIAMS FREE AGENT? Washington Redskins quarterback DougWilliams says he expects to become an unprotected free agent. TheRedskins have made Mark Rypien the quarterback for the rest of theseason and are eager to test third-stringer Stan Humphries. AUSTRIAN SKIER INJURED: Peter Wirnsberger of Austria injured hisright knee in a spill today on "camel's bumps" in Val Gardenia,Italy, during the final day of practice for the season's first WorldCup downhill race. Wirnsberger, 19, damaged his kneecap when he fellin the most difficult part of the Saslong track. HOLLYWOOD INTEREST IN AUNESE: Hollywood is interested in filming astory about Colorado quarterback Sal Aunese, who died of inoperablestomach cancer Sept. 23. Beverly Hills agent Ed Hookstratten hasbeen retained by the Aunese family to represent its dealings withmovie studios interested in the life of the late athlete. UBRIACO REVEALS MISTAKES: Fired coach Gene Ubriaco says his biggestmistake was treating the Pittsburgh Penguins "like men" and thatstars Mario Lemieux and Paul Coffey deserted him in his final weeksas coach. Ubriaco also said he found it almost impossible to coachthe talented Lemieux. "It was like trying to teach a shark tablemanners," Ubriaco said.

BOA declared 'noncompliant' by WADA

MONTREAL (AP) — The British Olympic Association's lifetime ban on drug cheats was declared "noncompliant" with global anti-doping policy by the World Anti-Doping Agency on Sunday.

The decision was voted on at WADA's foundation board meeting and came at the end of a week in which WADA and the BOA exchanged barbs in a public spat between two major sports organizations.

WADA president John Fahey said he was "very disappointed that it's come to this."

A BOA bylaw from 1992 bars British athletes from the Olympics for life if they are found guilty of doping. Britain, which will host the 2012 London Olympics, is the only country that has such a rule.

In a statement, the BOA said it "looked forward to receiving the formal findings from WADA setting out how they have determined the BOA's Selection Policy is noncompliant with the World Anti-Doping Code."

However, the association made it clear that it would resist being forced to drop its lifetime ban.

"On behalf of the overwhelming majority of British athletes we will vigorously defend any challenge to the selection policy which bans drug cheats from representing Team GB and we will publish the process we intend to follow in the near future," the BOA said.

That process is set to involve taking the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

BOA chairman Colin Moynihan said last week that its board of directors had agreed at a meeting to inform WADA that "it will vigorously defend the interests of clean athletes by seeking a hearing before the CAS to address the enforceability of its selection policy, and bring clarity and closure to this issue."

Among British athletes covered by the ban are sprinter Dwain Chambers, the former European 100-meter champion who served a two-year ban in the BALCO scandal, and cyclist David Millar.

Sunday's decision by WADA increases those athletes' chances of becoming eligible to compete in their home Olympics next summer in London.

In a separate barbed exchange, Moynihan accused WADA last week of failing to catch the world's biggest drug cheats and dragging the doping fight into a "dark age."

Those comments clearly still rankled with Fahey on Sunday.

"We had their decision conveyed to us through a vitriolic spray in a speech that was circulated to everyone except us earlier this week," he said.

As for the BOA turning to CAS, Fahey acknowledged that right existed and was "a matter for the BOA.

"We can only send our report. Anyone who is aggrieved or feels that any decision taken by the WADA board is not right has a right of appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport so that is open to them if they should choose."

The BOA's bylaw has been under fire since CAS nullified the International Olympic Committee's rule that would have banned any athletes who received a doping suspension of more than six months from competing in the next Games.

The court ruled that the IOC provision amounted to a second sanction and did not conform with the WADA Code, which sets out rules and sanctions for all sports and countries.

The ruling cleared American 400-meter runner LaShawn Merritt, who completed a 21-month doping ban in July, to defend his Olympic title in London next year.

Chattanooga defeats Appalachian State 85-80

Ridge McKeither finished with 18 points and 12 rebounds to lead Chattanooga to an 85-80 victory over Appalachian State on Saturday night.

Ty Patterson scored 18 points and grabbed eight rebounds for the Mocs (13-10, 5-5 Southern Conference), while Ricky Taylor added 11 points and eight rebounds.

Appalachian State's Jeremi Booth made two free throws to cut Chattanooga's lead to 83-80 with 18 seconds remaining in the game. Taylor then made 1 of 2 free throws to put the Mocs up by four, but Booth missed a layup on the other end with 10 seconds left.

Taylor would again make 1 of 2 free throws for the final score, as Booth's last-second jumper was off the mark.

Donald Sims led Appalachian State (12-9, 6-4) with 24 points. Booth finished with 21 points and six rebounds.

China moves to make competitive publishing giants

China is relaxing its grip over its traditionally drab media with plans to create half a dozen major publishing houses to compete globally and spread the influence of Chinese culture, a Chinese media watchdog agency said Tuesday.

The reforms _ billed as a way to combat the global economic downturn _ encourage some state-owned publishing companies to slowly separate from the government or Communist Party departments that run them, according to state news reports Tuesday and a government Web site.

The General Administration of Press and Publication said it wants state-owned publishers to merge to create six or seven influential publishing houses in the next three to five years, according to a notice carried on the official Web portal of the State Council Information Office.

State publishers previously were the only ones allowed to officially publish books, magazines, and newspapers. However, private publishers have increasingly moved into the market through joint ventures or by gaining government permits.

Private companies recently have produced many of the country's best-sellers, while state-owned publishers are widely seen as bureaucratic and inefficient.

Fan Weiping, director of the publishing industry development department with GAPP, was quoted as saying by the China Daily newspaper Tuesday that the post-merger publishing companies would shoot for annual revenues of more than 10 billion yuan ($1.46 billion). He did not give additional details.

The GAPP also told state-owned publishers that produce books, videos and electronic products to become more competitive globally by boosting the creativity of their content and marketing overseas, according to the notice.

News organizations should run newspapers or magazines overseas to "further spread the influence and popularity of Chinese culture," it said.

While GAPP is the official watchdog of the media industry, the country's Central Propaganda Department can still monitor content and censor information considered undesirable by the ruling Communist Party.

The notice called for listing the state-owned companies on stock exchanges and having them join ventures with private companies, while indicating that the majority of their shares should remain in state hands. It said their restructuring should be complete by 2010.

"A market-oriented mechanism means it will be more diversified and have less censorship," said Cui Baoguo, a professor with the School of Journalism and Communication at Tsinghua University.

The GAPP notice said the plans do not cover media that serve the "public interest." It did not provide details, but Cai said that likely meant that the reforms would not affect prominent state-run organizations such as China Central Television and the Xinhua News Agency.

Jordan youth critical of king gets jail time

AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — A military prosecutor says a young Jordanian activist has been found guilty of "harming the king's dignity" for burning a street poster of the monarch and has been sentenced to two years in prison.

The prosecutor says 18-year-old Odai Abu-Issa torched King Abdullah II's poster in front of a government office in southwestern Jordan two weeks ago.

The motive remains unclear. Abu-Issa belongs to a small group of young Jordanians who have been demanding Abdullah's absolute powers be curbed.

The prosecutor said the verdict by the military State Security Court was issued Thursday. He insisted on anonymity in line with military regulations.

Abu-Issa's lawyer, Moussa Al-Abdallat, says the sentence is "harsh" and that he will appeal.

Blake ousts in-form Simon in 2nd round

Rafael Nadal needed little time to win his 30th straight match.

The Spaniard spent only 48 minutes on court and earned a 6-0, 6-1 victory over Florent Serra of France in the second round of the Cincinnati Masters on Wednesday.

Nadal hasn't lost since May, winning five titles, including an epic five-set victory over Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final. In his first match on Cincinnati's extremely fast courts, he hardly missed a shot.

Serra, who hasn't won consecutive matches since May, managed to win only 20 points, and two of those came on double-faults. Nadal dropped only 13 points in winning the first nine games of the match.

"It's important when you're playing a lot of matches to have one like this," he said.

Nadal, ranked No. 2 in the world for a record 158 weeks, has closed the gap with No. 1 Federer, who needed three sets to win his opening match in Cincinnati. There is a chance that Nadal could overtake him this week.

"Everyone wants to be No. 1, but now my focus is Cincinnati," Nadal said. "My only goal is to continue playing like I have the last four or five weeks. I do that, I will have a lot of chances to be No. 1."

Nadal had a much easier time than third-seeded Novak Djokovic, who struggled with his serve and had to save 10 break points while beating rising Italian Simone Bolelli 7-6 (2), 7-6 (2).

"I didn't play at my top level," said Djokovic, the defending champion. "I was up and down with my serve."

Last year's runner-up James Blake, who ousted the inform Gilles Simon 6-4, 6-3, advanced along with No. 8-seeded Andy Murray, and No. 10 Fernando Verdasco, but No. 5 David Ferrer, a quarterfinalist the previous two years, was upset by Nicolas Lapentti of Ecuador. No. 11 Richard Gasquet also fell.

Blake didn't have much trouble with Simon, who was coming off a breakthrough win on hardcourts. The 23-year-old Frenchman won in Indianapolis, his first ATP title in the United States, was a semifinalist last week in Toronto, and at a career-best No. 14 ranking. But he couldn't keep up with the seventh-seeded Blake, who ran off four straight points to break Simon's serve and clinch the first set. Blake then held serve throughout a 26-minute second set.

"I'm just as surprised as anyone," Blake said. "I figured it was going to be a really tough match."

Last year, Blake made it to the final of the Western & Southern Financial Group Masters before losing to Roger Federer. He's on the upswing again, having reached the semifinals at Indianapolis two weeks ago and the quarterfinals in Toronto.

"This is always the time of year I appreciate most," said Blake, who improved to 24-8 on hard courts. "I've had my best results on this kind of court, getting ready for the U.S. Open. So it fits my game the best, and I feel good and healthy and strong."

Reassured that the pain in his right knee was nothing serious, Murray relaxed and beat Sam Querrey of the United States 7-6 (3), 6-1, showing better movement on the court as the match went along.

Murray had a scan on Monday on the knee, which bothers him when he plays a lot of matches in a short time. He was assured that there was some inflammation but nothing else wrong.

"It was just some inflammation around the kneecap," Murray said. "Every time I have a scan it's always there, but at certain times of the year it gets worse when I play a lot of the matches, and also on the hard courts as well."

Murray reached the semifinals in Toronto last week before losing to Rafael Nadal. He arrived in Cincinnati with a No. 9 world ranking and concern that the knee could prevent him from having another good week.

"For me, it is a really important tournament and I want to do well," Murray said. "I've got a good chance of moving my ranking up again this week. To try to get myself seeded in the top eight for the U.S. Open is key, so I want to try and do better than the guys that are ranked around me."

Verdasco beat Australian qualifier Chris Guccione 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4) while Lapentti downed Ferrer 7-6 (2), 3-6, 6-3 for his first win over a top-10 player on hardcourts in five years. He also reached the Cincinnati third round for the first time since 1999.

Also, Dmitry Tursunov removed Gasquet 7-6 (80, 6-0, Ernests Gulbis of Latvia defeated Arnaud Clement of France 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (5), and Tommy Haas of Germany moved on when Gael Monfils of France retired with illness while trailing 5-1.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

DON'T FORGET THE AMPERSAND

David Silverberg talks to the artist about the mysteries of what comes next

The first thing you notice about iain baxter& is his name. All caps, ampersand anchoring the surname. It's unusual, but BAXTER& doesn't like conformity. One of Canada's best known conceptual artists, the 73 -year-old Windsor, Ontario resident doesn't think along the same brain-paths as 99.9% of the population. He's too busy dreaming up courageous challenges to our assumptions of art.

Take his most recent remounting. During the all-night artfest Nuit Blanche, in the heart of Toronto's financial district, BAXTER& restaged his take on capitalism, Monopoly with Real Money. It's exactly as it …

2 AP journalists wounded in Afghanistan bombing

A bombing has wounded two Associated Press journalists embedded with the U.S. military in southern Afghanistan.

Photographer Emilio Morenatti and AP Television News videographer Andi Jatmiko were traveling with a unit of the 5th Stryker Brigade of Fort Lewis, Wash., when their vehicle ran over a bomb planted in the open desert terrain, the military said.

Both men were immediately taken to a military hospital in Kandahar. Jatmiko suffered leg injuries and two broken ribs. Morenatti, badly wounded in the leg, underwent an operation that resulted in the loss of his foot.

The attack took place in open country 15 miles north of the town of Spin Boldak near the Pakistani border, and 120 miles southeast of Dahaneh, a Taliban-held town where helicopter-borne U.S. Marines launched an operation before dawn Wednesday to uproot the militants.

Morenatti, 40, a Spaniard, is an award-winning photographer based in Islamabad who has worked for the AP in Afghanistan, Israel and the Palestinian territories. He was named Newspaper Photographer of the Year in 2009 by Pictures of the Year International.

In Spain, where Morenatti is widely known, Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos spoke with Morenatti's wife, Marta Ramoneda, to offer assistance, the Foreign Ministry said.

Jatmiko, 44, of Indonesia, has reported for the AP from throughout Asia for more than 10 years. Indonesian diplomats contacted the AP in Kabul to express concern for Jatmiko and obtain assurances that he would be cared for.

AP President Tom Curley said their injuries reflected "the risks that journalists like Emilio and Andi encounter every day as they staff the front lines of the most dangerous spots of the world. We are grateful for their bravery and their commitment to the news. Our hearts are with them and their families, especially Emilio's wife, Marta, and Andi's wife, Pingkan."

Journalists have faced increasing danger from improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, as they go on assignment with Western troops carrying out new offensives as part of the effort by the United States and its allies to turn the tide of the Afghan war.

IED attacks are now the cause of the majority of U.S. and NATO deaths in Afghanistan.

According to figures from the U.S.-based Joint IED Defeat Organization, the number of incidents from IEDs soared to 828 last month, the highest level of the war and more than twice as many as in July 2008.

The IED used in Tuesday's attack employs a pressure-plate detonation mechanism to complete an electrical circuit under the weight of a passing vehicle.

Eighteen journalists were killed in Afghanistan between 1992 and 2008, making it the 11th most dangerous country in the world for media workers, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. At least one more has been killed this year.

Journalists have also been kidnapped in Afghanistan.

In June, New York Times journalist David Rohde and Afghan journalist Tahir Ludin escaped after being held more than seven months by the Taliban. They were abducted Nov. 10 south of Kabul while heading to interview a Taliban leader, and were later moved across the border into Pakistan.

Morenatti, too, has been kidnapped, although not in Afghanistan. In October 2006, the AP photographer was abducted in Gaza City and freed unharmed after 15 hours.

2 AP journalists wounded in Afghanistan bombing

A bombing has wounded two Associated Press journalists embedded with the U.S. military in southern Afghanistan.

Photographer Emilio Morenatti and AP Television News videographer Andi Jatmiko were traveling with a unit of the 5th Stryker Brigade of Fort Lewis, Wash., when their vehicle ran over a bomb planted in the open desert terrain, the military said.

Both men were immediately taken to a military hospital in Kandahar. Jatmiko suffered leg injuries and two broken ribs. Morenatti, badly wounded in the leg, underwent an operation that resulted in the loss of his foot.

The attack took place in open country 15 miles north of the town of Spin Boldak near the Pakistani border, and 120 miles southeast of Dahaneh, a Taliban-held town where helicopter-borne U.S. Marines launched an operation before dawn Wednesday to uproot the militants.

Morenatti, 40, a Spaniard, is an award-winning photographer based in Islamabad who has worked for the AP in Afghanistan, Israel and the Palestinian territories. He was named Newspaper Photographer of the Year in 2009 by Pictures of the Year International.

In Spain, where Morenatti is widely known, Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos spoke with Morenatti's wife, Marta Ramoneda, to offer assistance, the Foreign Ministry said.

Jatmiko, 44, of Indonesia, has reported for the AP from throughout Asia for more than 10 years. Indonesian diplomats contacted the AP in Kabul to express concern for Jatmiko and obtain assurances that he would be cared for.

AP President Tom Curley said their injuries reflected "the risks that journalists like Emilio and Andi encounter every day as they staff the front lines of the most dangerous spots of the world. We are grateful for their bravery and their commitment to the news. Our hearts are with them and their families, especially Emilio's wife, Marta, and Andi's wife, Pingkan."

Journalists have faced increasing danger from improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, as they go on assignment with Western troops carrying out new offensives as part of the effort by the United States and its allies to turn the tide of the Afghan war.

IED attacks are now the cause of the majority of U.S. and NATO deaths in Afghanistan.

According to figures from the U.S.-based Joint IED Defeat Organization, the number of incidents from IEDs soared to 828 last month, the highest level of the war and more than twice as many as in July 2008.

The IED used in Tuesday's attack employs a pressure-plate detonation mechanism to complete an electrical circuit under the weight of a passing vehicle.

Eighteen journalists were killed in Afghanistan between 1992 and 2008, making it the 11th most dangerous country in the world for media workers, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. At least one more has been killed this year.

Journalists have also been kidnapped in Afghanistan.

In June, New York Times journalist David Rohde and Afghan journalist Tahir Ludin escaped after being held more than seven months by the Taliban. They were abducted Nov. 10 south of Kabul while heading to interview a Taliban leader, and were later moved across the border into Pakistan.

Morenatti, too, has been kidnapped, although not in Afghanistan. In October 2006, the AP photographer was abducted in Gaza City and freed unharmed after 15 hours.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Digital Clues Led FBI to Slaying Suspect

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Patsy Hughes felt sick when she learned a pregnant friend was killed and her baby was cut from her womb on the same day another friend claimed to have given birth under strange circumstances.

"Of course I was shocked," Hughes testified Wednesday in the federal trial of Lisa Montgomery. "Then I had a really uneasy feeling. My stomach was hurting."

Prosecutors allege Montgomery, 39, had been faking a pregnancy for about nine months when she drove to Bobbie Jo Stinnett's home in Skidmore on Dec. 16., 2004, and strangled the 23-year-old dog breeder.

Montgomery has pleaded not guilty, and her lawyers are pursuing an insanity defense.

Union makes a final stand from church courtyard.(opposing Daewoo's takeover by General Motors)(Brief Article)

INSIDE SANGOK-DONG CATHEDRAL, INCHON, South Korea - In the compound of this Roman Catholic cathedral a few blocks from Daewoo Motor Co.'s sprawling Pupyong assembly plant, the remnants of the automaker's union leadership plan their resistance to a GM takeover in noble, if squalid, exile.

Cut off from their members and supporters by police outside who carry arrest warrants for them, and protected only by the Catholic Church's tradition of sanctuary, some 17 union leaders and their families live and work in a ragged collection of tents and lean-tos that ring the cathedral's interior courtyard.

Inside the tents, fax machines, video gear, bedding and cooking utensils vie for space. Union aides, wearing the traditional blood-red headbands of protest, talk into cell phones or attend fax machines as they go about the business of …

BIA to relocate to Irongate.(THE BUZZ: Tips, rumors & miscellaneous pieces of business information)

The Building Industry Association of Whatcom County is planning to build and relocate to a new Irongate-area administration and education center twice the size of its current home on Northwest Avenue.

The BIA submitted building permit applications to the city for the new 7,800-square-foot facility at 1650 Baker Creek Place in August, said Bill Quehrn, executive officer of the BIA. The project is part of the city's pilot program to test a new permit review process (see story on page A14).

Quehrn said he hopes to break ground on the building sometime this month and complete construction by late spring or early summer 2008.

Quehrn said the BIA needs …

FICTION.(PREVIEW)(Correction notice)

"Turtle Meat and Other Stories." By Joseph Bruchac. Holy Cow! Press.

$10.95.

The author - a resident of Greenfield Center in Saratoga County - has

toured widely telling stories of Native Americans in the Northeast and has

collected several volumes of them. So it`s hardly surprising that his original fiction echoes these tales.

Many of his brief stories focus on conflicts between Native Americans

and Caucasians. "Wolves" depicts the struggle between men who want to conquer the Earth and people who want to live in harmony with it; a clash with a

bootlegger becomes a metaphor for the destruction of Amerindian …

Castro: US uses al-Qaida to justify foreign policy

Fidel Castro suggested Sunday that the U.S. government has promoted Americans' fears about al-Qaida and other terrorist groups to justify its plans for world domination.

In an essay published on a government Web site, the 82-year-old former Cuban president wrote that al-Qaida "was born from the empire's own entrails," using "the empire" to refer to the United States, but failing to elaborate.

He said the terrorist group was "a typical example of an enemy that the hegemonic power dangles in a place of its choosing where it needs to justify its actions, as it has done throughout its history, fabricating enemies and attacks destined to …

[ NFL INSIDER ]

ACTING UP

Joey Galloway, Cowboys: A devout fan of "The Young and theRestless," the Dallas receiver had a non-speaking part on the showrecently, playing a security guard in back-to-back episodes. Itremains to be seen how he'll play at receiver after suffering asevere knee injury in last year's season opener that cost him all of2000.

ADDING UP

Eric Davis, Broncos: Davis, the former Carolina Pro Bowlcornerback signed a one-year, $600,000 contract with the DenverBroncos this week joining Denard Walker, Tyrone …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Closer than the average co-worker.(workplace intimacy can enhance job satisfaction)(Brief Article)

The company picnic. The office Christmas party. Those functions are more than just the company's way of thanking employees for their hard work. They're also designed to increase the level of intimacy between co-workers, so everyone can work even better together.

"Workplace intimacy shouldn't be confused with sexuality," cautions B.J. Walker, director of community operations for the Illinois Department of Human Services in both Chicago and Springfield. Walker defines intimacy as genuine caring; being concerned about and considerate of fellow team members, as the team works together to accomplish a common goal.

"Intimacy between co-workers and colleagues begins …

United they stand: church-based business corporation 'reveals' new way to bring black dollars together. (Revelation Corp. of America)

Talk, of course, is about as cheap as it gets. Maybe that's why countless discussions on how to pool the approximately $400 billion blacks spend annually in the U.S. have never gone anywhere--until now. A new plan to accomplish this lofty goal is getting some notice because it is an actual plan.

Five of the nation's largest black church denominations recently announced the creation of the Revelation Corp. of America. The organizers plan to leverage the collective purchasing power of its approximately 20 million members across the country.

"Together we can do better than any of us could do separately," says Henry J. Lyons, president of the National Baptist …

... AND SEES VOLUME INCREASES ACROSS THE BOARD.(increase in sales volume of Visa International)(Brief article)

Visa broke down its sales and volume totals for its individual card products in its 2006 annual report released late yesterday with increases seen by all its market segments. In individual card products, nearly 283 million Visa consumer credit cards tied to more than 220 million accounts generated $589 billion in sales volume in 2006, representing a volume increase of 10% over 2005. Some 193 million Visa debit and prepaid cards tied to more than 147 million accounts rang up more than $575 billion in sales in 2006, up 23% from the previous year. At the end of 2006, more than 65 million Visa Signature and Visa Traditional Rewards accounts participated in the Visa Incentive …

Lots of luxury, but what price exclusivity?(luxury automobiles sales)

Luxury-brand vehicles take a much bigger slice of the U.S. market than they did a few years ago. They now represent well over 10 percent of total sales, the share having almost doubled in the past decade, according to the Power Information Network.

Mainly that's because more nameplates than ever are classified as "luxury.''

In 2000, Power counted 59 luxury nameplates and 13 luxury brands - ranging from Acura to Volvo. This year there are 14 brands (Hummer was added) and 85 nameplates. (We're leaving out the superluxury makes: Ferrari, Rolls, Bentley, etc.)

Mercedes-Benz and Cadillac have each added four nameplates this decade; Porsche and Lincoln …

Perry wins Rep nomination for Texas governor

Gov. Rick Perry has defeated Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison in their tough primary fight to become the Republican Party's nominee for Texas governor.

Texas' longest-serving governor had 51 percent of the vote with about three-quarters of precincts reporting Tuesday. Hutchison had about 31 percent, while party activist Debra Medina had 18 percent.

Perry has …

Stock Futures Fall Ahead of Reports

NEW YORK - U.S. stock futures fluctuated Thursday as investors digested reports showing a rebound in worker productivity, fewer jobless claims and robust August retail sales.

Stock futures pared earlier losses and Dow futures turned positive after the Labor Department said claims for unemployment benefits dropped last week for the first time in seven weeks and after it reported that worker productivity jumped to an annual growth rate of 2.6 percent in the April to June quarter, better than the 1.8 percent initial estimate.

Investors have been alert for any sign that recent financial market turmoil has hurt consumer spending, which makes up two-thirds of the U.S. economy. …

In Brief: Principal Financial OKs 4% Buyback.(Principal Financial Group Inc. )(Brief Article)

Principal Financial Group Inc. announced that its board of directors has authorized the repurchase of up to 15.3 million shares, or about 4% of the company's outstanding common stock.

The program's primary intention, the company said Dec. 4, is to buy in the shares issued under the exercise of an overallotment option by the …

CLARK.(UNKNOWN)

Byline: DANIELLE FURFARO

STAFF WRITER

Williamstown, Mass.

From the front, the Clark Art Institute's new Stone Hill Center looks like a blank slate. A bare concrete wall fortresses the building, breaking only in the middle, where it shows the matching stark surface of the center itself.

Take the few steps beyond this barrier and around the tile pathway, and you are greeted by a pair of stone sculptures. The path continues under a glass door, into the building and out the other side to a terrace with a mind-blowing view of the Green Mountains.

The Stone Hill Center will open to the public today with its inaugural exhibition, "Homer and Sargent From the Clark." Paintings from American artists Winslow Homer and John Singer Sargent from the museum's collection will be featured. Also opening today, in the Clark's main gallery, is "Like Breath on Glass: Whistler, Inness, and the Art of Painting Softly."

The center was designed by Pritzker Prize-winning …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

EXPERT SAYS GREEK DIG FOUND ANCIENT PLAYWRIGHT'S CAVE.(MAIN)

Byline: -- Associated Press

ATHENS, Greece -- Archaeologists have found the hideaway used by Euripides to write at least one of his timeless plays 2,500 years ago, one expert said Friday.

Yannos Lolos, the archaeologist who excavated the site, said he discovered a clay cup bearing the playwright's name in a limestone cave on an island near Athens a year ago.

The fragmented, fifth-century B.C., black-glazed cup bears the first six letters of Euripedes' name in Greek.

Euripides, …

SAfrican player charged with policeman's murder

South African rugby union player Bees Roux has been charged with murder after allegedly beating a policeman to death in Pretoria.

Roux's lawyer says his client intends to plead not guilty. He says Roux claims his car was being stolen and that he was acting in self defense.

The 28-year-old Blue Bulls prop spent the weekend …

Fretz fund provides grant for book on Lorna Bergey

Briefly noted

The J. Winfield Fretz Fund of the Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario has provided $2,000 to the Waterloo Chapter of the Pennsylvania German Folklore Society of Ontario for publication of a book of the selected writings of Lorna Bergey. For more than 30 years, Bergey prepared and presented research on Mennonites in Waterloo Region, becoming one of the area's most respected historians. J. Winfield Fretz was the first president …

Scouts celebrate 100th anniversary.

A scout group marked its 100th anniversary at the weekend with the opening of a new scout hut.

In celebration the Henlow Clifton Scout Group enjoyed a camping and activities weekend at Henlow's Boyd Field.

The group consists of a beaver pack, two cub packs, a scout pack and an explorer pack.

They have spent the last five years raising Au28,000 in donations and fundraising for the hut.

A further Au12,000 grant was given by …

BROWN, ACTIVIST SPAR OVER BOARD.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: ELIZABETH BENJAMIN Staff writer

Albany Common Council Majority Leader Michael Brown on Thursday said he fears the ``name calling and game playing'' that took place after last Monday's council meeting could hamper passage of legislation to create an independent civilian police review board.

Brown and community activist Vickie Smith exchanged racially-charged insults as the meeting adjourned after Smith demanded to know why Brown and two of his colleagues -- council members Shirley Foskey and Sarah Curry-Cobb -- had left the council chamber during the public comment period while residents spoke in favor of legislation proposed by Council Member …

Consumer group sues Anthem over policy changes

A consumer watchdog group filed a lawsuit Monday against California's largest for-profit health insurer on behalf of policyholders, claiming they were pushed to take coverage with fewer benefits and higher deductibles.

In the case filed in Ventura Superior Court, Anthem Blue Cross is accused of violating a California law requiring health insurers to offer new, comparable coverage or minimize premium increases when they close a policy.

According to the lawsuit, plaintiffs Mary Feller and Randy Freed received similar form letters from the Woodland Hills-based insurer, stating their policies were closed and they could "switch to any Anthem Blue Cross …

SLUMP IN JAPAN LEADS YANASE TO POST FIRST LOSS IN 3 YEARS.

TOKYO - Yanase & Co., the importer and distributor of Mercedes, Opel, Cadillac, Chevrolet and Saab cars in Japan, swung into the red for the first time in three years in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30.

A weak car market in general and slumping imports in particular hurt Yanase. But a five-month delay in the debut of the Opel Astra, which led to a 29 percent drop in Astra sales for the year, hit especially hard.

There is little sign that Japan's economy will improve in the coming year. Even so, Yanase predicted that its sales will rebound in the current fiscal year because of a backlog of orders for the Mercedes A class, M class and S class.

In …